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Last
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March 18, 2007
The
Orthodox Church: A Visual Journey
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Troparion - Tone 2
The Noble Joseph,
When he had taken down Your most pure Body from the tree,
Wrapped it in fine linen,
And anointed it with spices,
And placed it in a new tomb.
Troparion - Tone 2
The angel came to the myrrh-bearing women at the tomb and
said:
Myrrh is fitting for the dead,
But Christ has shown Himself a stranger to corruption.
Kontakion - Tone 8
Come, let us all sing the praises of Him who was crucified
for us,
For Mary said when she beheld Him upon the tree:
Though You do endure the cross, You are my Son and my God!
Jesus Christ was betrayed, judged, jeered at,
crucified and buried by his friends who cheered His entry into Jerusalem
just a few days before. Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God, died on the Cross
at the sixth hour, about the same time the paschal lambs were ritually
killed. The lights of heaven hide themselves and are darkened until the
ninth hour as God hangs suspended upon the Cross. After He has been
taken down from the Cross, we place the Plashchanitza, a large Icon
representing Jesus Christ, on a special tomb in the center of the church
for all to venerate.
Matins of Holy Friday are generally
celebrated on Thursday night. The main feature of this service is the
reading of twelve selections from the Gospels,
all of which are accounts of the passion of Christ. The first of
these twelve readings is John 13:31-18:1. It
is Christ's long discourse with his apostles that ends with the
so-called high priestly prayer. The final gospel tells of the sealing of
the tomb and the setting of the watch (Matthew
27:62-66).
The twelve Gospel readings of Christ's passion
are placed between the various parts of the service. The hymnology is
all related to the sufferings of the Saviour and borrows heavily from
the Gospels and the prophetic scriptures and psalms. The Lord's
beatitudes are added to the service after the sixth gospel reading, and
there is special emphasis given to the salvation of the thief who
acknowledged Christ's Kingdom.
The Hours of Holy Friday repeat the Gospels of
Christ's passion with the addition at each Hour of readings from Old
Testamental prophecies concerning men's redemption, and from letters of
Saint Paul relative to man's salvation through the sufferings of Christ.
The psalms used are also of a special prophetic character,
e.g., Ps 2, 5, 22, 109, 139, et al.
There is no Divine Liturgy on Good Friday for
the same obvious reason that forbids the celebration of the eucharist on
the fasting days of lent
On Great and Holy Friday, Christ
died on the Cross. He gave up His spirit with the words: "It is
finished" (John 19:30). These words are better understood when
rendered: "It is consummated." He had accomplished the
work for which His heavenly Father had sent Him into the world. He
became a man in the fullest sense of the word. He accepted the baptism
of repentance from John in the Jordan River. He assumed the whole human
condition, experiencing all its alienation, agony, and suffering,
concluding with the lowly death on the Cross. He perfectly fulfilled the
prophecy of Isaiah:
"Therefore I will divide
him a portion with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with the
strong; because he has poured out his soul to death, and was
numbered with the transgressors; yet he bore the sins of many, and
made intercession for the transgressors." (Isaiah 53:12)
The Man of
Sorrows
On the Cross Jesus thus became "the man of sorrows; acquainted with
grief' whom the prophet Isaiah had foretold. He was "despised and
forsaken by men" and "smitten by God, and afflicted" (Isaiah 53:3-4). He
became the one with "no form or comeliness that we should look at him,
and no beauty that we should desire him" (Isaiah 53:2). His appearance
was "marred beyond human semblance, and his form beyond that of the sons
of men" (Isaiah 52:14). All these Messianic prophecies were fulfilled in
Jesus as he hung from the Cross.
As the end approached, He cried:
"My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" (Matthew 27:46). This cry
indicated His complete identification with the human condition. He had
totally embraced the despised, forsaken and smitten condition of
suffering and death - alienation from God. He was truly the man of
sorrows.
Yet, it is important to note that
Jesus' cry of anguish from the Cross was not a sign of His loss of faith
in His Father. The words which He exclaimed are the first verse of Psalm
22, a messianic Psalm. The first part of the Psalm foretells the
anguish, suffering and death of the Messiah. The second part is a song
of praise to God. It predicts the final victory of the Messiah.
The Formal
Charges
The death of Christ had been sought by the religious leaders in
Jerusalem from the earliest days of His public ministry. The formal
charges made against Him usually fell into the following two categories:
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violation of the Law of the
Old Testament,
e.g., breaking the Sabbath rest; |
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blasphemy: making Himself
equal with God. |
Matters were hastened
(consummated) by the moment of truth which followed His entrance into
Jerusalem on Palm Sunday. He had the people behind Him. He spoke
plainly. He said that the Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the
Sabbath. He chastised the scribes and Pharisees for reducing religion to
a purely external affair;
"You are like whitewashed tombs,
which outwardly appear beautiful, but within are full of dead men's
bones and all uncleanness. So you also outwardly appear righteous to
men, but within you are full of hypocrisy and iniquity" (Matthew
23:27-28).
It was the second formal charge;
however, that became the basis for His conviction.
The Religious Trial
Christ's conviction and death sentence required two trials: religious
and political. The religious trial was first and took place during the
night immediately after His arrest. After considerable difficulty in
finding witnesses for the prosecution who actually agreed in their
testimony, Caiaphas, the high priest, asked Jesus the essential
question: "Are you Christ, the Son of the Blessed?" Jesus, who had
remained silent to this point, now responded directly:
"I am; and you will see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of
power, and coming with the clouds of heaven" (Mark 14:61-62).
Jesus' reply recalled the many other statements He had made beginning
with the words, "I am." "I am the bread of life . . . I am the light of
the world. . . I am the way, the truth, and the life. . . before Abraham
was, I am." (John 6 through 15). The use of these words themselves was
considered blasphemous by the religious leaders. The words were the Name
of God. By using them as His own Name, Jesus positively identified
Himself with God. From the burning bush the voice of God had disclosed
these words to Moses as the Divine Name: "Say this to the people of
Israel, 'I AM has sent me to you'" (Exodus 3:13-14).
Now Jesus, as He had done on many other occasions, used them as His own
Name. The high priest immediately tore his mantle and "they all
condemned Him as deserving death" (Mark 14:64). In their view He had
violated the Law of the Old Testament:
"He who blasphemes the name of the Lord shall be put to death"
(Leviticus 24:16).
The Political Trial
The Jewish religious leaders lacked the actual authority to carry out
the above law: to put a man to death. Such authority belonged to the
Roman civil administration. Jesus had carefully kept His activity free
of political implications. He refused the temptation of Satan to rule
the kingdoms of the world by the sword (Luke 4: 1-12). He often charged
His disciples and others to tell no one that He was , the Christ,
because of the political overtones that this title carried for many
(Matthew 16: 13-20). He rebuked Peter, calling him Satan, when the
disciple hinted at His swerving from the true nature of His mission
(Matthew 16:23). To Pilate, the spineless and indifferent Roman
Governor, He said plainly: "My kingdom is not of this world" (John
18:36). Jesus was not a political revolutionary who came to free the
people from Roman control and establish a new kingdom based on worldly
power.
Nevertheless, the religious leaders, acting in agreement with the
masses, devised political charges against Him in order to get their way.
They presented Christ to the Romans as a political , leader, the "King
of the Jews" in a worldly sense, a threat to Roman rule and a challenge
to Caesar. Pilate became fearful of his own position as he heard the
charges and saw the seething mobs. Therefore, despite his avowed
testimony to Jesus' innocence, he passed formal sentence, "washed his
hands" of the matter, and turned Jesus over to be crucified (John
19:16).
Crucifixion - The Triumph of Evil
Before succumbing to this cruel Roman method of executing political
criminals, Jesus suffered still other injustices. He was stripped,
mocked and beaten. He wore a "kingly" crown of thorns on His head. He
carried His own cross. He was finaIly nailed to the cross between two
thieves at a place called Golgotha (the place of the skull) outside
Jerusalem. An inscription was placed above His head on the Cross to
indicate the nature of His crime: "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the
Jews." He yielded up His spirit at about the ninth hour (3 p.m.), after
hanging on the Cross for about six hours.
On Holy Friday evil triumphed. "It was night" (John 13:30) when Judas
departed from the Last Supper to complete his act of betrayal, and
"there was darkness over all the land" (Matthew 27:45) when Jesus was
hanging on the Cross. The evil forces of this world had been massed
against Christ. Unjust trials convicted Him. A criminal was released to
the people instead of Him. Nails and a spear pierced His body. Bitter
vinegar was given to Him to quench His thirst. Only one disciple
remained faithful to Him. Finally, the tomb of another man became His
place of repose after death.
The innocent Jesus was put to death on the basis of both religious and
political charges. Both Jews and Gentile Romans participated in His
death sentence.
"The rulers of the people have assembled against the Lord and His
Christ." (Psalm 2 - the Prokeimenon of the Holy Thursday Vesperal
Liturgy)
We, also, in many ways continue to participate in the death sentence
given to Christ. The formal charges outlined above do not exhaust the
reasons for the crucifixion. Behind the formal charges lay a host of
injustices brought, on by hidden and personal motivations. Jesus openly
spoke the truth about God and man. He thereby exposed the false
character of the righteousness and smug security, both religious and
material, claimed by many especially those in high places. The
constantly occurring expositions of such smugness in our own day teach
us the truly illusory nature of much so-called righteousness and
security. In the deepest sense, the death of Christ was brought about by
hardened, personal sin - the refusal of people to change themselves in
the light of reality, which is Christ.
"He came to His very own, and His own received Him not" (John 1:11).
Especially we, the Christian people, are Christ's very own. He continues
to come to us in His Church. Each time we attempt to make the Church
into something other than the eternal coming of Christ into our midst,
each time we refuse to repent for our wrongs; we, too, reject Christ and
participate in His death sentence.
The Vespers
The Vespers, celebrated in the Church on Holy Friday afternoon, brings
to mind all of the final events of the life of Christ as mentioned
above: the trial, the sentence, the scourging and mocking, the
crucifixion, the death, the taking down of His body from the Cross, and
the burial. As the hymnography indicates, these events remain
ever-present in the Church; they constitute the today of its life.
The service is replete with readings from Scripture: three from the Old
Testament and two from the New. The first of the Old Testament readings,
from Exodus, speaks of Moses beholding the "back" of the glory of God -
for no man can see the glory of God face to face and live. The Church
uses this reading to emphasize that now, in the crucifixion and death of
Christ, God is making the ultimate condescension to reveal His glory to
man - from within man himself.
The death of Christ was of a wholly voluntary character. He dies not
because of some necessity in His being: as the Son of God He has life in
Himself! Yet, He voluntarily gave up His life as the greatest sign of
God's love for man, as the ultimate revelation of the Divine glory:
"Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends" (John 15:13).
The vesperal hymnography further develops the fact that God reveals His
glory to us in this condescending love. The Crucifixion is the heart of
such love, for the One being crucified is none other than He through
whom all things have been created:
Today the Master of creation stands before Pilate. Today the Creator of
all is condemned to die on the cross. . . The Redeemer of the world is
slapped on the face. The Maker of all is mocked by His own servants.
Glory to Thy condescension, 0 Lover of man! (Verse on "Lord I call", and
the Apostikha)
The verses also underscore the cosmic dimensions of the event taking
place on the Cross. Just as God who revealed Himself to Moses is not a
god, but the God of "heaven and earth, and of all things visible and
invisible," so the death of Jesus is not the culmination of a petty
struggle in the domestic life of Palestine. Rather, it is the very
center of the epic struggle between God and the Evil One, involving the
whole universe:
All creation was changed by fear when it saw Thee hanging on the cross,
0 Christ! The sun was darkened, and the foundations of the earth were
shaken. All things suffered with the Creator of all. 0 Lord, who didst
willingly endure this for us, glory to Thee! (Verse I on 'Lord, I Call')
The second Reading from the Old Testament (Job 42:12 to the end)
manifests Job as a prophetic figure of the Messiah Himself. The plight
of Job is followed in the services throughout Holy Week, and is
concluded with this reading. Job is the righteous servant who remains
faithful to God despite trial, humiliation, and the loss of all his
possessions and family. Because of his faithfulness, however, "The Lord
blessed the latter days of Job more than his beginning" (Job 42: 12)
The third of the Old Testamental readings is by far the most substantial
(Isaiah 52:13 to 54:1). It is a prototype of the Gospel itself. Read at
this moment, it positively identifies Jesus of Nazareth as the Suffering
Servant, the Man of Sorrows; the Messiah of Israel.
The Epistle Reading (I Corinthians 1:18 to 2:2) speaks of Jesus
crucified, a folly for the world, as the real center of our Faith. The
Gospel reading, a lengthy composite taken from Matthew, Luke and John,
simply narrates all the events associated with the crucifixion and
burial of Christ.
All the readings obviously focus on the theme of hope. As the Lord of
Glory, the fulfillment of the righteous Job, and the Messiah Himself,
humiliation and death will have no final hold over Jesus. Even the
parental mourning of Mary is transformed in the light of this hope:
When she who bore Thee without seed saw Thee suspended upon the Tree, 0
Christ, the Creator and God of all, she cried bitterly: "Where is the
beauty of Thy countenance, my Son? I cannot bear to see Thee unjustly
crucified. Hasten and arise, that I too may see Thy resurrection from
the dead on the third day! (Verse IV on "Lord I call.")
Near the end of the Vespers, the priest vests fully in dark vestments.
At the appointed time he lifts the Holy Shroud, a large icon depicting
Christ lying in the tomb, from the altar table. Together with selected
laymen and servers, a procession is formed and the Holy Shroud is
carried to a specially prepared tomb in the center of the church. As the
procession moves, fhe troparion is sung:
The Noble Joseph, when he had taken down Thy most pure body from the
tree, wrapped it in fine linen and anointed it with spices, and placed
it in a new tomb.
At this ultimate solemn moment of Vespers, the theme of hope once again
occurs - this time more strongly and clearly than ever. As knees are
bent and heads are bowed, and often tears are shed, another troparion is
sung which penetrates through this triumph of evil, to the new day which
is contained in its very midst:
The Angel came to the myrrh-bearing women at the tomb and said: "Myrrh
is fitting for the dead, but Christ has shown Himself a stranger to
corruption.
A new Age is dawning. Our salvation is taking place. The One who died is
the same One who will rise on the third day, to "trample down death by
death," and to free us from corruption.
Therefore, at the conclusion of Holy Friday Vespers, at the end of this
long day of darkness, when all things are apparently ended, our eternal
hope for salvation springs forth. For Christ is indeed a stranger to
corruption:
"As by a man came death, by a man has come also the resurrection of the
dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive.
But each in his own order: Christ the first fruits, then at his coming
those who belong to Christ." (I Cor. 15:21-32)
"If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his
cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, and
whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel's will save it." (Mark
8:35)
- Father Paul Lazor
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Great and Holy Friday - The
Crucifixion of Christ

Taking Christ Down from the Cross |
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