My
                    God, My God, Why Have You Forsaken Me?
                    The
                      Rev. Dr. Barbara Brown Taylor
                    Butman Professor of Religion and Philosophy
      Piedmont College
      Demorest, Georgia
        Today
                        is the quietest day of the church year. On no other day
                        do we sit together for so long with so little to say to
                        one
                        another, like family members gathered around the bed of
                        the Beloved, who is dying. Hour after hour, we just sit
                        here,
                        with sounds no larger than a cough or a dropped book echoing
                        through all this air. There is the sound of feet too--shoe
                        heels on stone--as people come to pay their respects and
                        go. Even the occasional siren has its place. It is the
                        sound some of us would make with our own mouths, if we
                        ever began
                        to let our sorrow come out--not only our sorrow for him,
                        the Beloved, but also our sorrow for ourselves and for
          the whole broken, bleeding world. Who named this Friday "Good"?
         Instead
                of wailing, we will sing some songs, say a few prayers. We are
                adults, after all, and this is a public place. Plus, we need the
                ballast of sound to keep us sitting upright in our seats. We need
                spoken attempts at meaning--however futile--to keep our anxiety
                at bay. But it is the silence we are really here for--that, and
              the story.
           The
                Bible contains not one but four accounts of Jesus' death. They
                agree on the essentials: Jesus died on a cross at a place called
                Golgotha, hung up between two other men with a sign above his head. "King
                of the Jews," it said. The charge was treason against the
                Empire. The method of execution was Roman. People were so sure
                he was not coming down that they divided up his clothes where he
                could see them. He was offered some sour wine before he died and
              then he died, just before sundown on the day before the sabbath. 
           Those
                are the bones of the story, which each gospel writer fills out
                in a different way. Matthew and Mark's accounts are almost identical,
                except for a few differences in phrasing. Their Jesus is a broken
                man, who is so injured in every way that he needs help carrying
                his cross and whose only word from the cross is a cry of abandonment
                at the end. 
                
      In Luke's gospel, Jesus has more to say. Luke adds a word of pardon from
      the cross--"Father forgive them, for they do not know what they are
      doing"--as well as a conversation between Jesus and the two men dying
      with him that the other gospel writers do not mention. When Jesus dies, he
      does not ask where God has gone. Instead, he uses his last few breaths to
      commend his spirit to God. Luke's Jesus is as gentle and forgiving in death
      as he was all his life.
        
      In John's gospel, however, Jesus is neither broken nor particularly gentle.
      He is brave, omniscient, and in charge all the way. John does not say anything
      about Simon of Cyrene carrying Jesus' cross for him. Jesus is strong enough
      to do that for himself. Nor does John allow anyone to mock Jesus while he
      dies. Even on the cross, Jesus is in charge. He arranges for his mother's
      care, says he is thirsty (in order to fulfill the scriptures), and when he
      dies there is no question about where God is. God is on the cross, pronouncing
      that "It is finished."
        
      While all four of these accounts report the same event, they are not easily
      harmonized. They are four alternative readings of that event, so different
      from one another and yet so faithfully told that the editors of the New Testament
      decided that none of them could be left out. By including all four, those
      early shapers of the gospel sent us a message between the lines: namely,
      that there is more than one way to view what happened on the cross, and all
      of them are right. 
        
      Even if they do not agree on everything-not even something as important as
      Jesus' last words--their very disagreement preserves the mystery of what
      happened on this day. There is no one definitive word. There is no one answer
      to the awful questions raised by this day--chief among which is why God allows
      the innocent to suffer. In the case of Jesus, we are asked to believe that
      God not only allowed the suffering but willed the tortured, humiliating death
      of the Beloved. 
        
      You have heard the same explanations I have heard. Before Jesus, sinful humanity
      was so deep in debt to God that no human being could pay it all. So God sent
      Jesus to die for our sins, erasing the debt once and for all. This is the
      most traditional view of the cross, but it does not answer the question of
      suffering. What kind of father demands the death of a son in order to pay
      off a debt to himself? 
        
      According to another view, it was God who died on the cross, putting an end
      to divine bookkeeping through the voluntary sacrifice of divine power. But
      if Jesus was God, then whom was he talking to in the garden and from the
      cross? He clearly believed that someone else had the power to remove the
      cup of suffering from him, or at least to be with him while he drank it down--but
      who, in both cases, declined to do so.
        
      I don't pretend to understand any of it. Sometimes I think that the suffering
      of Jesus was not God's will at all. It was, instead, the will of those who
      were arrayed against him--those whose patriotic values he had offended, whose
      sense of God he had betrayed. It was the will of ordinary people like you
      and me, who prefer dead messiahs to living ones, since living ones are so
      much harder to tame.
        
      It seems entirely possible to me that God's will for Jesus was a long and
      fruitful life, brimming over with the divine justice and love he was born
      to embody. When the world opposed that justice, however--when the world reviled
      that love--God's will did not give Jesus license to stop being Jesus. God's
      will supported him to go on doing justice and loving mercy even in the face
      of deadly opposition. So in that sense, I suppose, it was God's will that
      Jesus suffer and die--since suffering and death turned out to be the unavoidable
      consequences of being who he was. It was God's will for Jesus to be fully
      who he was every day of his life--even if the fullness of that life shortened
      the length of it. 
        
      But if that was the case, then where was God at the end? According to at
      least two gospels. Jesus believed himself forsaken by heaven as well as earth.
      Couldn't God have spared one angel there at the end? Couldn't God have whispered
      one comforting word in Jesus' ear, just to help him get through the last
      few awful, parched hours? It happened at his baptism in the river Jordan.
      It happened on the Mount of the Transfiguration with Peter, James and John. "This
      is my son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased." Where was that
      same voice at the end, when the Beloved was panting his last few breaths?
      What difference might a word have made?
        
      But there was no word, except Jesus' own. "My God, my God, why have
      you forsaken me?" It was a quiet day for him too--the quietest day of
      his whole life, when he asked for bread and got a stone. Whatever else it
      was, it was the death of hope--that God might intervene, might stop the suffering,
      might at least say a word that would make the suffering bearable. None of
      that happened. God was, for all practical purposes, gone--and yet Jesus died
      seeking God. He died talking to the Abba who would not talk back to him,
      giving us the stripped down vision of faith that remains at the heart of
      our tradition. 
        
      When all of our own hopes have died, we still have this faith that seeks
      nothing for itself--not wisdom, not spiritual power, not rescue from suffering. "Success" is
      not in its vocabulary. This faith seeks nothing but God, to whom it is willing
      to surrender everything--up to and including its own cherished beliefs about
      who God is and how God should act. This faith is willing to sell all that
      it owns and bet the farm on one chance for union with God. If God plays hard
      to get, then this faith will never stop its wooing. 
        
      Purged of all illusion, weaned from everything that is not God, this relentless
      faith will devote itself to doing justice and loving mercy no matter what
      the consequences are, and if the consequences turn out to be a cross, then
      this faith will hang there for however long is necessary, asking God to be
      present, asking God to speak, regardless of whether or not God chooses to
      answer. This kind of faith, embodied by Jesus, is what makes him the Christ--God's
      own Being of Light, God's own Anointed One--whose self-annihilating love
      for us and for all creation is never more vivid than it is on this day.
        
      I actually know people who come to church on Good Friday and who don't come
      back on Easter. Easter is too pretty, they say. Easter is too cleaned-up.
      It is where they hope to live one day, in the land of milk and honey, but
      right now Good Friday is a better match for their souls, with its ruthless
      truth about the stench of death and the high price of love. It isn't that
      they don't care about what happens on Sunday. They do. They just don't believe
      that God is saving all the good news until then.