Good Friday
Worship
Lectionary Worship Workbook
Series II, Cycle C Gospel Texts
Liturgical Color: Purple/Black; White in some cultures
Gospel: John 18:1--19:42
Theme: Jesus' Last Hours and Burial. "How rare it is to find a person still enough to hear God speak" (C. S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters). Is this why so many want Easter without Good Friday?
(Well in advance, invite the people to bring their favorite meditations about Good Friday with them to share in worship.)
Music for Preparation
"Processional to Calvary," Stainer.
Choral Invitation
"The Lord Is King," Conder.
Pastoral Invitation
I invite us to remain silent for five minutes.
Hymn of Good Friday
"Go to Dark Gethsemane," James Montgomery, 1820, 1825; alt.; Richard Redhead, 1853.
Prayer of Praise
Incorporate some of the events of this day in the prayer.
Meditation
Pastor
How could they? How could they kill him? Of all the people who had ever walked the face of the earth, how could they kill him? What had he done to deserve such a fate? Had he harmed anyone, except the pride of a few clergy? His only sin, if we want to call it that -- to love, to heal, to teach, to seek, and to save the least, last, lost, and lowest of earth. How could they take him outside of the Holy City (maybe because it was holy), and string him up as a common criminal? And why should he? Why should he die for them? After all, if they wanted to go to hell, to live in hell, why not let them? If they were so all-fired intelligent, why waste time on them? But, guess what, Jesus wept. (One minute of silence.)
Meditations
Ministers
Invite the people to share their Good Friday meditations. (One minute of silence after each one, if no one shares, invite them to offer sentence prayers, also with one minute of silence after each.)
Meditation
Pastor
Use any of these ideas.
(1) Enact Peter's denial.
Maiden: (Confronting Peter) You also were with Jesus, the Galilean.
Peter: I don't know what you're talking about.
Another: This man was with Jesus of Nazareth.
Peter: For God's sake, I don't know the guy!
Bystanders: (Insisting) Of course, you're one of them; it's obvious from your accent.
Peter: Damn it! (The Greek is stronger) Leave me alone, for God's sake! I sure as hell have never seen the guy.
The rooster crows. The eyes of Jesus (not to condemn, or shame, or punish, but because he loves him) and Peter met momentarily, in what must have seemed an eternity. Jesus' words hit Peter as a bomb, "Before the cock crows, you will deny me three times."
Pastor: Now, let's not be too hard on Peter. It's true, he and the rest had expected the wrong things from Jesus' ministry. All of them tried to fit Jesus into their own mold, but Jesus wouldn't fit. No wonder it was a dark night. But are we any different? Have we not denied our Lord by our sarcasm, cynicism, bitterness, hatred, anger, lovelessness, gossip, backbiting, scapegoat finding? Do we respect, appreciate, love others, especially those who are out to do us in? Put Christ's face on those folks; or put your own face on those folks and ask, "How would Jesus respond to them?"
(2) Speak slowly and deliberately the Seven Last Words From the Cross. Have someone offstage, out of sight, pound nails during the reading. Conclude with two minutes of silence.
(3) Or, if you want to take a large risk, read the meditation by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, from A Coney Island of the Mind. (See Appendix II for address.) The last line, partially, reads, "Him just hang there ... looking real Petered out ... and according to a roundup of late world news from the usual unreliable sources real dead."
Hymn of Response
"Calvary," African-American spiritual. Have someone respond to verse 2, hammer ringing; verse 3, calling his Father; verse 4, "It is finished!"
Charge to the Congregation
Before we act superior to the disciples, the crowd, we need to remember that we are no different from them; we are those folks, when we hurt others, use them, gossip about them. Of course, we're more subtle. But we still kill him. But remember, Jesus receives us, renews us, as we are. He came that we might have life and have it in abundance. As Helmut Thielecke writes in Our Heavenly Father, "Jesus' cross falls as a bridge across the chasm (between God and us) ... When God forgives us for hitting God with a club, we should manage to put up with ... pin-pricks ... for this is exactly the ratio between what God forgives us and what we have to forgive each other."1
____________
1. Our Heavenly Father: Sermons on The Lord's Prayer by Helmut Thielecke copyright © 1960 by John Doberstein. This book is published in Germany under the title Das Gebet Die Welt Umspannt. Copyright 1953 by Quell-Veriag, Stuttgart. Permissions Department, Harper-Collins Publishers, Inc., 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022-5299.
Gospel: John 18:1--19:42
Theme: Jesus' Last Hours and Burial. "How rare it is to find a person still enough to hear God speak" (C. S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters). Is this why so many want Easter without Good Friday?
(Well in advance, invite the people to bring their favorite meditations about Good Friday with them to share in worship.)
Music for Preparation
"Processional to Calvary," Stainer.
Choral Invitation
"The Lord Is King," Conder.
Pastoral Invitation
I invite us to remain silent for five minutes.
Hymn of Good Friday
"Go to Dark Gethsemane," James Montgomery, 1820, 1825; alt.; Richard Redhead, 1853.
Prayer of Praise
Incorporate some of the events of this day in the prayer.
Meditation
Pastor
How could they? How could they kill him? Of all the people who had ever walked the face of the earth, how could they kill him? What had he done to deserve such a fate? Had he harmed anyone, except the pride of a few clergy? His only sin, if we want to call it that -- to love, to heal, to teach, to seek, and to save the least, last, lost, and lowest of earth. How could they take him outside of the Holy City (maybe because it was holy), and string him up as a common criminal? And why should he? Why should he die for them? After all, if they wanted to go to hell, to live in hell, why not let them? If they were so all-fired intelligent, why waste time on them? But, guess what, Jesus wept. (One minute of silence.)
Meditations
Ministers
Invite the people to share their Good Friday meditations. (One minute of silence after each one, if no one shares, invite them to offer sentence prayers, also with one minute of silence after each.)
Meditation
Pastor
Use any of these ideas.
(1) Enact Peter's denial.
Maiden: (Confronting Peter) You also were with Jesus, the Galilean.
Peter: I don't know what you're talking about.
Another: This man was with Jesus of Nazareth.
Peter: For God's sake, I don't know the guy!
Bystanders: (Insisting) Of course, you're one of them; it's obvious from your accent.
Peter: Damn it! (The Greek is stronger) Leave me alone, for God's sake! I sure as hell have never seen the guy.
The rooster crows. The eyes of Jesus (not to condemn, or shame, or punish, but because he loves him) and Peter met momentarily, in what must have seemed an eternity. Jesus' words hit Peter as a bomb, "Before the cock crows, you will deny me three times."
Pastor: Now, let's not be too hard on Peter. It's true, he and the rest had expected the wrong things from Jesus' ministry. All of them tried to fit Jesus into their own mold, but Jesus wouldn't fit. No wonder it was a dark night. But are we any different? Have we not denied our Lord by our sarcasm, cynicism, bitterness, hatred, anger, lovelessness, gossip, backbiting, scapegoat finding? Do we respect, appreciate, love others, especially those who are out to do us in? Put Christ's face on those folks; or put your own face on those folks and ask, "How would Jesus respond to them?"
(2) Speak slowly and deliberately the Seven Last Words From the Cross. Have someone offstage, out of sight, pound nails during the reading. Conclude with two minutes of silence.
(3) Or, if you want to take a large risk, read the meditation by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, from A Coney Island of the Mind. (See Appendix II for address.) The last line, partially, reads, "Him just hang there ... looking real Petered out ... and according to a roundup of late world news from the usual unreliable sources real dead."
Hymn of Response
"Calvary," African-American spiritual. Have someone respond to verse 2, hammer ringing; verse 3, calling his Father; verse 4, "It is finished!"
Charge to the Congregation
Before we act superior to the disciples, the crowd, we need to remember that we are no different from them; we are those folks, when we hurt others, use them, gossip about them. Of course, we're more subtle. But we still kill him. But remember, Jesus receives us, renews us, as we are. He came that we might have life and have it in abundance. As Helmut Thielecke writes in Our Heavenly Father, "Jesus' cross falls as a bridge across the chasm (between God and us) ... When God forgives us for hitting God with a club, we should manage to put up with ... pin-pricks ... for this is exactly the ratio between what God forgives us and what we have to forgive each other."1
____________
1. Our Heavenly Father: Sermons on The Lord's Prayer by Helmut Thielecke copyright © 1960 by John Doberstein. This book is published in Germany under the title Das Gebet Die Welt Umspannt. Copyright 1953 by Quell-Veriag, Stuttgart. Permissions Department, Harper-Collins Publishers, Inc., 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022-5299.

