Good Friday Service - April 15, 2022

BELLS CORNERS UNITED CHURCH

GOOD FRIDAY SERVICE

April 15, 2022 – 10 am

Ministers: Rev. Lorrie Lowes and Rev. Kim Vidal
Music Director: Abe TeGrotenhuis

Moment of Silent Reflection (Musical Prelude by Abe)  

Opening Words[1]
Rev. Lorrie

Dear friends, gather round
I have a story to tell
of one who reached inside himself
and took a handful of love
like a pile of stardust
and said: this is for you
it is all you need
it is all you will ever need
there is enough here
to change the whole world
take it
many laughed at him
mocked him
and ignored the invitation
but some dared to take it
and those who did
noticed something about this love
they found they could do what the gift-giver could do
they could stand with the lost
welcome the traveler
eat with the hungry
they found themselves doing what the man first did to them
give something of themselves to others
they became like the man
offering themselves
and as they offered themselves
others took the invitation
and many still do
and many still trust/
it is enough to change the whole world.

Today, I invite you to listen with your heart.
Through these words and music,
may we find our hearts warmed
by a love that is stronger than our fear,
and stronger even than the finality of death.  Welcome to Good Friday. 

Call to Gather[2]
Kim

Surely God is in this time and place.
Help me notice.
Help me notice.
Help me notice.

Never do we notice God’s presence more than today – this day we call “Good”.
Nowhere do our hearts break more than today – this day we call “Good”.
Nowhere do we experience the power of love more than today –
this day we call “Good”.

We bless God that we can come to this place,
in the sadness of our living,
and even here, find love,
as we wait with a dear one
for the kindness of death to arrive.
Come and let us worship God. 

Hymn: When I Survey the Wondrous Cross   VU 149

(Words: Isaac Watts, 1707; Music: Psalmody in Miniature, 1780)

1 When I survey the wondrous cross
on which the Prince of glory died,
my richest gain I count but loss,
and pour contempt on all my pride.

2 Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast,
save in the death of Christ, my God:
all the vain things that charm me most,
I sacrifice them to his blood.

3 See, from his head, his hands, his feet,
sorrow and love flow mingled down!
Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
or thorns compose so rich a crown?

4 Were the whole realm of nature mine,
that were a present far too small:
love so amazing, so divine,
demands my soul, my life, my all.

Opening Prayer
Kim

Into the shadows of chaos, the light of the world stops.
From the silence of death, the word of God breaks free.
For the emptiness of our souls, the Bread of Life is broken.
Together, let us pray. [3]

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
My Comforter, I have a need for your comforting presence.
In my troubled hours, you were always present.
Listen to my prayer.
Listen to my heart.
Holy God, you call us to walk the way of the cross,
but we choose the way that is easy,
or the one that promises us the best return.
Forgive us: open us to the faithful way,
the way of radical trust,
the way of true joy.
Journey with us as we take these final steps
of the Lenten journey.

(Moment of Silence)

Hear now God’s words of love:
On the cross, Jesus prayed, “Abba, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
That prayer is for us as well. We are loved, we are restored. Amen. 

Ministry of Music: My Lord is Weeping – Liebergen
BCUC Choir

Prayer for Illumination  (In Unison)
Reader: David Stafford

Holy God, we have followed Jesus to the cross. Help us to receive your Word in our midst and let it bring comfort to us as we sit awhile and mourn on this Good Friday. In your name. Amen.

Gospel Reading: “The Death of Jesus” Matthew 27: 45-50 (NRSV)  

45 From noon on, darkness came over the whole land until three in the afternoon. 
46 And about three o’clock Jesus cried with a loud voice, “Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?” that is, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”  
47 When some of the bystanders heard it, they said, “This man is calling for Elijah.” 
48 At once one of them ran and got a sponge, filled it with sour wine, put it on a stick, and gave it to him to drink.
49 But the others said, “Wait, let us see whether Elijah will come to save him.”
50 
Then Jesus cried again with a loud voice and breathed his last.

May these words of sorrow remind us that death is part of the human condition.
But God’s love assures us of life even in the midst of grief and fear. Amen.

Ministry of Music: Throned Upon the Awful Tree – Ellerton/Hopkins
BCUC Choir

Sermon: “Jesus: The Forsaken One”
Kim

And about three o’clock, Jesus cried with a loud voice, ‘Eli, Eli lama-sabachthani?’ that is
‘My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’ (Matthew 27:46) 

I don’t understand why, but sometimes life is a big disappointment. People we love die. Families fall apart. Friends betray us and we too often hurt those we love most.  Life is not always a bed of roses. Or, as some would say, -- there are times when "Life sucks!" It sucks away our hopes and dreams; it steals away what is good and the beautiful; it robs us of joy and laughter; and even love itself seems to die.  Life just doesn't 'live up' to our hopes and expectations. And sometimes it is agonizingly disappointing when the pain and suffering become nearly unbearable.

And here is Jesus hanging on the cross feeling abandoned and forsaken by his dear daddy, Abba! Father, God - Why oh why have you forsaken me?

During the six hours before his death, according to Matthew, he expressed the full range of human anguish—from the absence of water to the absence of God. “Eli, Eli, lama-sabachthani”. In the execution of a man whose only fault was to speak truth to power, the most heart-wrenching word of the dying Jesus to God was uttered. Sabachthani, forsaken: do you know what this word means? It means "to abandon, to let go, to leave." It is awful to be forsaken. We like to say that no one is an island. It isn't natural for anyone to be totally alone. We long for companionship and we need others to go through our life’s journey. But when you are forsaken, you are on your own, you become an island in the flowing stream of humanity – lonely, isolated, alone. Jesus felt abandoned and forsaken by his disciples and friends. One betrayed him, another denied him, and who knows how many of them went to hide- afraid to be identified as his friends. To be forsaken means that no one is able or willing to help you. You are totally alone and helpless.

Some years ago, a famous scholar made a comparison of the death of Socrates and the death of Jesus. When the Greek philosopher Socrates was condemned to die, he drank a cup of hemlock poison with great serenity. In the face of death—with no god to call on—Socrates discussed the pros and cons of immortality with composure and reasonableness. He died the way we would like to die. Scholars call it “death with dignity.”

When we turn to the death of Jesus, we see it was nothing like the death of Socrates. In the Garden of Gethsemane, Mark says he was trembling. Matthew says he threw himself to the ground, while Luke says he was sweating and his sweat fell like great drops of blood. He doesn’t want to drink the cup of death. He doesn’t want to be alone. Can’t you watch for just one hour? When the end comes, he is not in control but is calling out desperately like a child abandoned by his parents.

"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?". Was not Jesus, the pious believer, simply reciting a verse he had known since childhood? After all, this was a verse quoted from Psalm 22. Dying people, amazingly, revert to prayers that formed them in their younger, healthier days—the way a person who hasn’t spoken for days may recite the Lord’s Prayer. "Now I lay me down to sleep," says the 90-year old in the nursing home, "I pray the Lord my soul to keep." O perhaps some would recite the ever-beautiful Psalm 23rd, “The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want…”

Was Jesus really forsaken by God or did he only feel abandoned? We have these moments ourselves. When we are plunged into a deep place and feel abandoned by God, we, too, will cry out to God. We may feel we are praying—desperately, fervently, unknowingly— for an Absence, like believers left hanging in the dark. St. John of the Cross spoke of the believer’s dark night of soul. Luther spoke tremblingly of the hidden God. The German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer said that his generation might have to live as if there was no God but always in the presence of God. 

Dear friends, take heart. “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me” was spoken by Jesus to express his despair – a human emotion that was so real when one faces death. Jesus' friends knew it. The women followers felt it. His mother Mary agonizingly witnessed her son slowly dying. Can you feel it? They, too, were devastated. Their leader, their wisdom teacher, their beloved friend dies. He was supposed to be the one who would lead them out of their social, political and religious oppressions. Without him, their hopes would die as well. And there is no one to replace him. Not in that moment of sorrow.

On this day, when death seems to take over our senses and our heart, Jesus affirms the truth about dying, of being abandoned and being forsaken by the God of love. But somehow, we forgot one thing. Others live with hope. There were the women and the beloved disciple at the foot of the cross. There was his mother who kept on praying that he would no longer suffer. Yes, they held on to the painful disappointment of losing Jesus, but they lived to spread the good news of God’s love and Jesus’ teachings to others. There was Joseph of Arimathea who came forward to wrap the body of Jesus with spices and lay it in a tomb. Deep in his heart, Joseph knew that Jesus deserved a burial fit for a decent, honourable man, and a stone was rolled in place to cover great sadness and disappointment.

When life is a painful disappointment, we do what we can. We wait. We sit at our agonizing loss and wait. It is all we can do to look at the stone in front of the tomb and to weep. Life may abandon us, forsake us, crucify us, but we are not alone. The women, the beloved disciple, mother Mary, those believers did not give up. They were with Jesus until his death. And did Jesus give up on God? I don’t think so. Jesus clung to God with all his might during the darkest hour of his life. And so, must we.

On this Good Friday, we take all the unbearable failures and let-downs of our lives, wrap them up with spices and lay them in the tomb. And we wait as we cling to the God of hope. And God would seem to speak, but barely a silent whisper to those parts of our souls, a voice buried in the despair of the cross: God says to you and me: “In this world of death, of violence, of hurts and pains, I will bring about something new. Just wait in hope. There is new life that awaits us at the tomb.”  Amen.

Ministry of Music:  Keep Me Near the Cross – Crosby/Willmington/Doane
BCUC Choir

Congregation:
In the cross, in the cross, be my glory every,
Till my raptured soul shall find rest beyond the river

Prayer of Lament  (Responsively)
Lorrie

“Forgive Us Lord and Remember Us”[4]                         

Jesus Christ, standing at the foot of your Cross on this Good Friday, we look back to see all those things that led you to the Cross. When you declared that you came to announce freedom to the poor from their poverty,
the affluent among the pious deeply resented it.
When you spoke about God’s inclusive and welcoming love,
those who took pride in their election and covenant sought to crush you.
Your proclamation of the nearness of the Just Reign of God,
incurred suspicion from powers-that-be.
You were deeply troubled.
Yet you retained your confidence in God.
If we had been there, we like to think we would not have done this to you.
But still some of us resent your bias towards the poor, while others find it a constant challenge.  We find loving people of other faiths difficult.
We sometimes erect barriers of fear and suspicion and do not accept inclusivity and justice as Gospel values.
Forgive us, Jesus. Forgive us, God.
Repentance opens us, Forgiveness frees us. May the acceptance of your forgiveness lead us to follow the truth you set before us.
Remember us in your reign. Amen. 

*Hymn: Were You There?  VU 144

(Words & Music: African-American spiritual, arr. Melva Wilson Costen, 1987)

1 Were you there when they crucified my Lord? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they crucified my Lord? (Were you there?)

2 Were you there when they nailed him to the tree? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they nailed him to the tree?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they nailed him to the tree? (Were you there?)

3 Were you there when the sun refused to shine? (Were you there?)
Were you there when the sun refused to shine?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when the sun refused to shine? (Were you there?)

4 Were you there when they pierced him in the side? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they pierced him in the side?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they pierced him in the side? (Were you there?)

5 Were you there when they laid him in the tomb? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they laid him in the tomb?
Oh! Sometimes it causes me to tremble, tremble, tremble.
Were you there when they laid him in the tomb? (Were you there?)

*The Dismissal[5]
Kim

This is a day of shadows.
This is a day called good,
but it is hard to see sit that good.
This day is a day when the presence of God can be seen
even within moments of despair.
And so, we say with confidence:
This is God’s Friday.
This day marks not just the end of life,
but the beginning of new hope.
Let us leave this place in hope, knowing God is with us.
We are not alone. Thanks be to God. Amen.
 

Musical Postlude (People leave in Silence)

[1] Roddy Hamilton, posted in Listening to the Stones blog.

[2] Bob Root, Gathering Lent/Easter 2021, Year B. Used with permission.

[3] Bev Ripley Hall & Beth W. Johnson, Gathering, L/E 2017. Used with permission.

[4] Worship Ways, UCC 2008 (Revised and shortened)

[5] Bill Steadman and Catherine Somerville, Gathering, L/E 2017 (Year A). Used with permission.