“Good
Friday” instead of “Bad Friday” or something similar? Some Christian traditions
do take this approach: in German, for example, the day is called Karfreitag or
“Sorrowful In English, in fact, the origin of the term “Good” is debated, some
believe it developed from an older name, “God’s Friday.” Regardless of the
origin, the name Good Friday is entirely appropriate because the suffering and
death of Jesus, as terrible as it was, marked the dramatic culmination of God’s
plan to save his people from their sins.
In order
for the good news of the gospel to have meaning for us, we first have to
understand the bad news of our condition as sinful people under condemnation.
The good news of deliverance only makes sense once we see how we are enslaved.
Another way of saying this is that it is important to understand and
distinguish between law and gospel in Scripture. We need the law first to
show us how hopeless our condition is; then the gospel of Jesus’ grace comes
and brings us relief and salvation
In the
same way, Good Friday is “good” because as terrible as that day was, it had to
happen for us to receive the joy of Easter. The wrath of God against sin had to
be poured out on Jesus, the perfect sacrificial substitute, in order for
forgiveness and salvation to be poured out to the nations. Without that awful
day of suffering, sorrow, and shed blood at the cross, God could not be both
“just and the justifier” of those who trust in Jesus (Romans 3:26)
Paradoxically, the day that seemed to be the greatest triumph of evil was
actually the deathblow in God’s gloriously good plan to redeem the world from
bondage.
The
cross is where we see the convergence of great suffering and God’s forgiveness. Psalms 85:10 sings of a day when “righteousness and
peace” will “kiss each other.” The cross of Jesus is where that occurred, where
God’s demands, his righteousness, coincided with his mercy. We receive divine
forgiveness, mercy, and peace because Jesus willingly took our divine
punishment, the result of God’s righteousness against sin. “For the joy set
before him” (Hebrews 12:2) Jesus endured the cross on Good Friday, knowing it
led to his resurrection, our salvation, and the beginning of God’s reign of
righteousness and peace. We now have access to the holy of holies. The priest
can now stand on the alter and preach because the curtains separating us from
God was torn. Good Friday marks the day when wrath and mercy met at the cross. As
dark as it was; it was really a good day!
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