Monday 8 April 2019

Good Friday

Over the course of time, I've written two books for people to read during Lent. One was The Wilderness Within You, which is about encountering Jesus in the context of everyday life, and the other is the fourth in a sequence of nine novels under the collective series title of The Hawk and the Dove. The Lent one is called The Hardest Thing To Do, and is mainly about seeing things from someone else's point of view.

It tells the story of Lent unfolding in a Yorkshire monastery one year in the fourteenth century. The community has elected a new abbot, Father John Hazell, who has a not altogether easy beginning to his new role. 

There's an entry — not a chapter exactly — to each day of Lent, so that it can be read for lenten spiritual devotion. Here, for your enjoyment, is part of the Good Friday section:


THE FORTY-FIFTH DAY – Good Friday
Abbot John listened to the chapter, watched the reader return to his stall; and began to speak.
‘On Good Friday, I have nothing original to say.  This seems to me not a time to be clever or innovative – to try to improve the tradition with audacious new thoughts of my own.  I have no new thoughts.  All my sight is filled with Christ upon the cross, nailed in stark suffering, waiting through agony for a glory he has almost lost sight of: “Eli, eli, lama sabachtani.
‘Of all the Good Fridays I have sat in this Chapter House, keeping watch with you, my brothers, the one I remember most was five years ago.  Before Father Peregrine was taken ill.
‘I remember him talking to us quietly, the way he always did.  He spoke about how Jesus opened wide his arms for us on the cross; an embrace, Father said, that was big enough for everyone in the world.  He said that the thing about being nailed to a cross, wide open like that, is that you are brought to a place where you can no longer change your mind.  Do you remember that homily?
‘Father got a bit scholarly at this point!  He spoke about the holy Name of God in the Scriptures: I Am That I Am.  He drew our attention to the numerous times in the gospels – especially the gospel of John – where Jesus takes to himself that holy Name of God.  I Am the Good Shepherd.  I Am the Way, the Truth and the Life.  I Am the Bread of Life.  I Am the Light of the World.  Father said, Christ was consciously aligning himself – for our benefit – upon the pattern of God’s nature and identity.  He was conformed to the being of God the Father; by his choices, by his attitudes, and by who he essentially was.
‘But then, Father Abbot said that the heart of all this, the perfect living icon of God-in-Christ, becomes clear to us when we gaze upon Christ on the cross.  Helpless, hurting, his arms spread wide; no longer able to even see or feel the presence of his God, no longer able to teach or choose, to challenge or heal, he is just nailed there.  And his body announces the real presence of God, saying: “Here I Am”.
‘Father said, Jesus had stopped choosing for himself – he said when Christ opened wide his arms for us on the cross, that was anyone’s hug: friend, brother, enemy, betrayer – Christ was just there; it was over to us now to respond.  This was the finale; the moment we decide whether we are religious sight-seers, pausing to look and then moving on – or whether we will stop, and hug him back.  He reminded us, Christ is nailed to that cross.  Those who jeered at him to come down from it saw no miracles.  So anybody who accepts that embrace, hugs him back, has to accept the cross as well as the Christ.
‘Father said, we are the body of Christ, and we go the way of the cross.  If we are drawn to him, if we are in love with him, what we do is embrace each other – without question, exception or reservation.  In embracing each other, we find we have embraced the cross, but also the Christ.
‘He said; “Jesus opened wide his arms for you on the cross.  It’s up to you.  In each other, you have the chance to hug him back.”

‘I always remembered that.  I can’t put it any better.  It’s what seems to me to be true.’

10 comments:

Julie B. said...

Thank you Ember. I have learned so much from Father Peregrine. He is real to me. xoxo

Pen Wilcock said...

:0D

xx

Rebecca said...

So simple; so profound...
What a gift--your writing; what love--His.

greta said...

oh, my. i remember crying the first time i read this and i cried again this time. so much wisdom here. what struck me this time is that there is no place or situation that isn't an 'I am' moment. as if each experience, insight, realisation, glimpse of beauty or even horror is God saying to us 'I am this as well.' to see God in all things and to give thanks in all things - yes, yes, yes . . . .

Pen Wilcock said...

Hi Rebecca — waving!

Hi Greta — "I Am" in all things — yes — on my boxes at home, in which I keep underwear and tights and whatnot, I have quotations to remind me of things I want to hold in mind; one of them says "I Am enough", to remind me that in Christ I am made whole.

Elin said...

Send a little prayer for me if any of you are awake when Good Friday turns into Holy Saturday as I will then officially be doing my confirmation. I never did as a teen as I did not believe in God then and for a long time I have always felt that me being a believer and accepting my baptism was enough but I decided about 2 years agod that I wanted it to be official with the church as well. One of my friends in the group I have been part of in preparation for this is also getting baptized.

Pen Wilcock said...

May it be a moment of special blessing and real encounter with Jesus.

Lucie said...

This seems really pertinent these days Pen. I just finished the Hardest Thing to do and felt it touch so many aspects of my behaviour. I don’t want to get into politics but most recently I had felt angry at the possible return to the uk by Shamima Begum and felt, like Brother Tom, that I didn’t want our community shaken up again by someone who had transgressed our shared values. Like Tom, I rejected the idea completely. Your post came along and I realised that it does indeed mean me too, I must open my arms. Jesus faced bigger sins and forgave. I realise that I am getting there, like Tom, slowly! But I will. Thank you for this reminder Pen. Xx

Emily Stratmeyer said...

For the most part, I have been a silent observer of this blog. I love your thoughts and insights! But today, I am venturing into the comments. :)

Every year, for at least four years now, I’ve read through The Hardest Thing To Do during Lent. Each year I find something new that speaks to my soul. Thank you for your gift of words. Today I am laughing, though, because even as Brother Stephen is finding everything, even summer, more possible, I am watching it snow outside my window!

Pen Wilcock said...

Hi Lucie — Because I avoid the news when I can, I hadn't read *anything* about Shamima Begum, so I looked her up online. There was a lot to read! Amidst it all, I rather liked this that the Bishop of St Albans said: "The Rt Rev Dr Alan Smith, said of Begum: 'She should come back, be properly interviewed and, if it’s found that she has broken the law, she should face the law. If it’s found that she has been radicalised, she should be given help and support. The home secretary has a responsibility to ensure people in this country are protected. We could have done this by taking her through due process and it is to be regretted if we are not following it, because this is a human rights issue.'" Life is soooooo complex, and complicated, is it not!

Hi Emily — waving — always nice when someone emerges from the shadows! Yes, we here on England's south coast had hail and sleet over the weekend too, but only in short showers. Most days the sun is shining now, and all the spring flowers are out, but the wind is still very cold. I'm so glad you like to spend time in St Alcuins at Lent — thank you for telling me, that makes me happy.