Good Friday of the Passion of the Lord
The Trooper was talking to me one day about how he even loves changing his son’s diaper, because it’s his son. This Trooper has nieces and nephews already, and he doesn’t really change their diapers, and has no desire to do so. But, he said (and I’ve made this rated G since we’re at Mass), he is happy to wipe his son’s poop away because of how much he loves his son.
When we think about Good Friday, and what Jesus did for us, we often immediately go to the suffering, and how necessary it was that Christ should suffer and die. Our first reading today from Isaiah lays out how the suffering servant of the Lord, Jesus, would take our sins upon himself and suffer chastisements for us to make us whole.
We often immediately focus on Jesus paying the price for our sins. The wages of sin is death, St. Paul says, and so we recognize how Jesus took upon Himself that penalty that He did not earn (because He had never sinned) so that all of us sinners could have eternal life. Sometimes this can make us have an image of God that is not accurate, as if God is some masochist who enjoys making others, especially His own Son, suffer. We heard the agony of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, asking for another way, if it is possible, to save us, and it might make us wonder why God didn’t choose another means of salvation.
But, I would like to suggest to you that we look upon Good Friday through the eyes of this Trooper and his (so far) only son. Cleaning the feces from a baby’s butt is not an enjoyable task. It stinks, it’s messy, and it often doesn’t happen easily because the baby is squirming around, or sometimes is not even done relieving himself when you remove the diaper. But because it is his son, this Trooper finds delight in doing what he normally shuns and avoids.
So with us, God the Father, because of the Incarnation and by virtue of our baptism in which we were united to Christ, looks on us and sees His Son. And what would otherwise be unbearable (as horrific as crucifixion is) becomes bearable because He is our Father. And because Jesus and the Father are one, what the Father loves so does the Son (as well as the Holy Spirit). So the Lord looks upon us with so great a love that nothing will stop Him from securing our salvation, and the possibility that we can be united with Him forever in Heaven, rather than being forever separated from Him in Hell.
There is no length that our God would not go to in order to save us. He even descended to the gates of hell to rescue the just who were imprisoned there under Satan’s cruel guard. His love for us cannot be imagined, and even the love of our earthly parents or even the love of our spouse falls short when compared to God’s love for us.
That love is what makes today happen. Not some bloodlust. Not some warped desire to make one person suffer for another person’s ease. Simply love. The love that created the universe; the love that holds everything in being; the love that knit us together in our mother’s womb. That love will go to the greatest extreme possible to ensure the we, God’s beloved, are safe and wiped clean from the filth of sin with which we soiled ourselves.
And it is to that love that we are invited to respond. Yes, we are commanded to be obedient to God, just as we are commanded to be obedient to our parents, especially as young children. Sometimes the delight that we should have in God is not present in our hearts because of sin or because of our lack of gratitude. But that obedience is meant to stir back up in us the reciprocation of love for God that He first showered on us. That is part of how the Lord wants us to be like children. Children, especially babies, delight in their parents. There is nothing quite like the smile of a baby being held in the arms of his mother and/or father. The child, even before it can verbalize its love, senses the love from its parents and wants to return it. So we, the children of God, should want to return, to the best of our ability, that love that God has for us, the love that even made going to the Cross worth it so that we could be reunited with God.
Today, as you come forward to venerate the Cross, look upon it as the expression of how much God loves you and values your union with Him. See the pain and the suffering, yes, but see the love of our Heavenly Father and Jesus our Brother which took that suffering and death as simply another way that He could show much how much we are worth to Him, and how much He loves us.