Good Friday and Holy
Saturday
Holy
Week – An Exploration of the Meaning of Kenosis
copyright 2010 by Sea Raven, D.Min.
Friday
John 18:1-19:37; Isaiah 52:13-53:12
John’s detailed story of the arrest, crucifixion, and burial of Jesus
is intricately interwoven with the third Song of the Suffering Servant
in Isaiah. John is especially interested in showing that Jesus
died in fulfillment of scripture. Two millennia of tradition,
visual art, musical art, and film confirm the basic belief of all
Christianity. “Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our
sorrows. . . he was wounded for our transgressions . . . and the Lord
has laid on him the iniquity of us all.” There isn’t a choir
member on the Planet who has not sung these choruses from Handel’s
great Messiah.
As should be evident from this past week of commentary, this
Christology cannot be reclaimed; it must be replaced. Neither
guilt nor self-loathing are emotions that empower people to love
others, or spur people to take action with justice as radical fairness,
or to give up systems that demand retribution and payback. Jesus
was not executed by the representatives of the Roman Empire because God
needed a scapegoat to carry away the sins of the world. Jesus was
executed because the way of life that he taught challenged and
contradicted the conventional order. Jesus’s Way overturns the
normal systems of piety, war, and victory, and restores God’s
Covenant: non-violence, distributive justice, and true peace.
The question for
21st Century Christians is not whether you accept Jesus as
your Lord and Savior, but whether your Jesus – your Christ – your Lord
– your God – is violent, demanding retributive justice, or non-violent,
expecting and desiring distributive justice-compassion. The choice we
make regarding the nature of our God determines the quality of life for
all sentient beings on the Planet. The non-violent,
non-interventionist, kenotic God,
without ego, without being, is the context within which and from which
the earth and all its creatures realize wholeness. The
crucifixion and death of Jesus – indeed the violent death of anyone
working for the cause of justice-compassion – signals the absence of
that kenotic god whose
presence is justice and life.
Kenosis, in this series of
essays, means the radical abandonment of self-interest in the service
of distributive justice-compassion. When we make that choice, as John’s Jesus showed and taught us,
we suffer because that choice can mean going against family, friends,
church, society, government. What is most difficult to deal with
is that seldom do we see any confirmation that our choice has made any
difference. The versions of Jesus’s death in Mark and Matthew graphically
describe Jesus’s certainty that he had been abandoned by God. If
injustice and death indicate the absence of the kenotic god, then Jesus was not
only betrayed and abandoned by his friends; he was indeed betrayed and
abandoned by his God.
Saturday
John 19:38-42; Job 14:1-14
"As waters fail from a lake, and a
river wastes away and dries up, so mortals lie down and do not rise
again; until the heavens are no more, they will not awake or be roused
out of their sleep . . . If mortals die, will they live again?
All the days of my service I would wait until my release should
come." So the writer of Job – taken out of the context
the writer intended – plunges us into the stark reality of the death of
the Servant, who dies in the service of God’s justice, and waits for
God’s vindication. Holy Saturday is the via negativa: the journey into
darkness, despair, hopelessness, death. (See Matthew Fox, Original Blessing (Bear
& Co., Santa Fe, 1983).)
The developers of the Revised Common
Lectionary, of course, have cherry-picked the passages from
Job, ending with the Servant’s anticipated release. If the entire
chapter is read, the mourning for loss is profound: If my release
should come, the servant Job says, “[God] would call, and I would
answer; [God] would long for the work of [God’s] hands. . . [God] would
not keep watch over my sin . . . But the mountain falls and crumbles
away, and the rock is removed from its place . . . so you [God] destroy
the hope of mortals . . . their children come to honor and they do not
know it; they are brought low, and it goes unnoticed. . . .” By
stopping with verse 14, the possibility is left open for the
theological argument about how Jesus descended into Hell to release the
souls of the martyrs. But as far as Jesus’ community of followers
was concerned, as of the Sabbath, the powers and principalities had
won. It is important to realize how possible such an outcome is
in the 21st Century.
The powers and principalities, the normalcy of civilization, the
seemingly inevitable domination of empire and systems of retribution
have brought us to the brink of human if not planetary
extinction. To quote Borg
and Crossan yet again, “ . . . we can do it already in
about five different ways – atomically, biologically, chemically,
demographically, ecologically – and we are only up to e” (p.
171). Politically, the United States is the first among equals of
violent empire, following the drumbeat of military and economic power
in pursuit of world domination. U.S. foreign, domestic, and
economic policies are grounded in violent ideology that is deaf to
reality, even provable, measurable, physical realities such as global
warming, mortal poverty, and ignorance. We should sit in dust and
ashes for a moment, and not skip blithely into Easter’s happy
ending. Without experiencing via
negativa, without traveling to the middle of the labyrinth, past
the demons, we can never arrive at the fire at the center where the
creative response is generated, and the key to the way out into
transformation is found.
Without death, there is no life. This is the law of the Universe.
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