4-15-22 Grace-Tucson Good Friday Sermon

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The First Word: A Word of Forgiveness Had we been in Jesus’ situation, we would have found the strength to utter some memorable words – words of power, words that would have blistered the ears of anyone who heard them. One thing they wouldn’t have been is the word of forgiveness that Jesus spoke. Forgiveness isn’t something that comes easily to us. And when the other person isn’t deserving of our forgiveness, then it usually doesn’t come at all! Our combination of anger and the twisted notion that forgiveness must be earned results in our iciness toward the person or our choice words spoken in the heat of the moment. Yet what does Jesus speak? A word of forgiveness! Don’t misunderstand Jesus when he says, “They do not know what they are doing.” The Jewish leaders understood that they had condemned an innocent man to death and trampled on the very concept of justice. The Roman soldiers, even if they didn’t know Jesus’ history, knew full well that Jesus didn’t deserve to be put to death for merely claiming to be a king. While neither group understood that they were putting the Son of God himself to death, they knew enough to understand that what they were doing was wrong. Jesus’ word of forgiveness doesn’t suggest that the Jewish leaders and Roman soldiers were free from blame. After all, ignorance of the law is no excuse as we well know from being pulled over for breaking an unknown traffic law. You still need to pay the price for doing something wrong. Rather, Jesus’ word of forgiveness charges the Jewish leaders and Romans soldiers with guilt. Otherwise, Jesus wouldn’t have spoken about forgiveness. So Jesus asks God the Father to delay his justice, to not immediately hold them accountable, but instead to give them more time to come to a recognition of their sin and, by the working of the Holy Spirit, to faith. Jesus’ prayer was perhaps later answered at Pentecost when 3,000 of the Jewish people finally realized what they had done. The book of Acts tells us that they were “cut to the heart” (Acts 2:37) when they recognized their sin in putting Jesus to death. When they asked Peter what they should do, he told them to repent and be baptized for the forgiveness of sins. They did, and they received forgiveness from their Father. Does this word of forgiveness also extend to us, who so often know what we are doing when we sin? Of course it does! When we were born in sin, God did not bring immediate judgment upon us. Nor did God merely delay judgment, but he actually answered Jesus’ prayer by bringing us to faith in Jesus. And in Jesus, we have the forgiveness he first requested for us on the cross—a forgiveness he was about to win on that cross. Amen.


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