Good Friday of the Lord’s Passion
Even though Sam has offered to carry the ring to help, Frodo has made very clear (to put it lightly) that the ring can only be borne by Frodo. It is his burden to bear. So, as Frodo is exhausted on Mount Doom, full of despair and darkness, and cannot take another step, Sam says, “‘I can’t carry it for you, but I can carry you.” And Sam carries Frodo up the slopes towards a small door that grants passage to the fires that will destroy the One Ring. You can watch the rest of the movie, or, better yet, read the book, to learn how it all turns out.
J.R.R. Tolkien demonstrates his genius and masterful Catholic storytelling by not having any one character always correspond to one person in salvation and the Scriptures. Many often compare Frodo to Christ, because he carries the ring like Christ carries the cross and our sin. And in this sense, we are called to be like Sam, a friend who never leaves the side of the one he loves. We are to be like the Blessed Mother, John the Apostle, St. Mary Magdalen and the other holy women, Joseph of Arimathea, and Nicodemus, who stayed with Christ through His entire Passion, His entire agony on the cross. And we are here today to do precisely that. Through this long, ancient liturgy, begun last night at the Mass of the Lord’s Supper, we show our love for Christ, who showed His love for us by dying on the cross.
And it’s not much. We’re not fighting against the soldiers who nailed Jesus to the cross. We’re not arguing with the Pharisees and the Sadducees who convinced Pilate to crucify the Lord of Glory. We’re just here, with Jesus, in the liturgical presentation of His last hours before He dies. We remain here, mourning, recognizing that our sins led Jesus here and made this day necessary.
But, Samwise Gamgee also represents Christ. We are like Frodo, with the weight of sin around us. We know that sin has to be destroyed, and we have done all we can to destroy it, but without any success. The weight is too heavy for us to bear. Sin clouds our vision so that we can no longer remember our home of heaven, union with God. Sin gives the devil clear sight of us, a gaze which burns our souls and causes us to lose hope. But Christ does not abandon us, though we have no strength to carry on. He lifts us up on His shoulders and carries us so that sin can be destroyed and hope can be restored.
So today, we stand at the foot of the cross, remaining here with our Lord so that He does not have to be alone. We see the cost that our sins have created. But, let us make our own the words of Samwise Gamgee, the words Christ encourages us with as He suffers for our salvation: “Then let us be rid of it, once and for all.” As Christ destroys sin and death: come, let us worship.