The Cross, as we all know, was a vile,
degrading instrument of torture. No one went willingly into this state of being
so unprotectedly exposed. The place that Karl Barth named Das Nichtige;
and Walter Bruggemann described as “the crushing irresistible force of disorder
as yet untamed and on the loose in our world.” No one willingly goes into this
place. But Jesus did. And John’s Passion narrative makes it abundantly clear
that this was a deliberate choice on Jesus’ part. “And bowing his head, he
handed over the spirit.” Why? In order to make unmistakably visible, God’s
love! God’s astounding desire to be ‘with us.’ And in so doing to transform
this hideous instrument of torture into something desperately beautiful.
I will
end by leaving you with this excerpt from our Fr. Simeon’s final volume on
Matthew’s Gospel. “The Passion will crush Jesus in every possible way; indeed
it will destroy him insofar as human eyes can tell. And yet his obliteration
will be like the crushing of grapes, a destruction that horribly disfigures the
fruit’s original shape and integrity yet only in order to transform it into an
inebriating elixir of life for others to drink and rejoice ecstatically. God
can use men’s evil intentions to achieve magnificent ends. If he could not,
would he still be the omnipotent, wise and loving Creator of all? The constant
marvel throughout, the unfathomable divine mystery that provides the key to the
Passion and the Cross, is this truth of Revelation: that, at the threshold of
the Passion, the Father - whose love for his only-begotten Son is the very
foundation of both the Godhead and of all creation—did not love us sinners less
than he loves the one Son.”
Safet Zec, Deposition, detail, 2014. Abbot Damian's homily for Good Friday.
Safet Zec, Deposition, detail, 2014. Abbot Damian's homily for Good Friday.