Nota Bene: This is a repost of a previous years' Good Friday post
At this time, the universal Church celebrates the passion of its founder, Jesus
Christ. The events leading up to his death on Golgotha constitute the
most brutal tragedy known to man. Yet the ancient theologians of the
school of Alexandria, drawing heavily on the Gospel of John, describe
this moment as the time of Jesus' glorification. In what sense can we,
reflecting on the brutality of the cross, at the same time become
witnesses to the glorification of the man hanging on it?
A possible avenue would be a reflection on four tropes that are used to
describe Jesus that converge in the event of the crucifixion: the
Priest, the Lamb of God, the Bridegroom and the Second Adam. The Priest and Lamb motifs are obvious enough and often go together. Christ the
True High Priest (using the author of the Letter to the Hebrews) offers
Himself as the sacrificial Lamb and takes on the sins of many on the
cross. Jesus, taking on that sin and experiencing the consequent
separation from the Father, cries out in the words of Psalm 21: My God!
My God! Why Have you forsaken me?
But what of the other two themes? How are they played out in the context of the Passion?
In chapter 9 of the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus portrays himself as a
Bridegroom that will soon be taken away. Usually, we associate the being
taken away with his being taken up into heaven, only marrying the
Church at the wedding feast of the lamb at the conclusion Book of
Revelation. But it makes no sense to have a bridegroom and not have a
wedding on this side of the eschaton, until we remember that there was
another, more intermediate and more terrestrial episode of the
Bridegroom being taken away from his guests: namely the removal of Jesus
from the company of his Disciples during the Passion. The
eschatological wedding feast of the Lamb had already taken place within
history in the form of the Last Supper. But where's the wedding? And
where's the nuptial moment taking place? Scandal may probably set in at
this point as the reader realises that this post hints at the
crucifixion itself as the wedding and the consummation thereof. Is this
association unjustified?
It is here that the third motif of Jesus as an Adamic figure - the
Second Adam - comes into play. Paul's first letter to the Corinthians
makes a number of compelling parallels between Adam and Jesus, and these
Adamic themes in the Scriptures have been continued on in the writings
of Church Fathers like Justin Martyr, Irenaeus of Lyon and
John Chrysostom.
The Adamic theme in the Church Fathers is summarised in the fifth
paragraph of Vatican II's Constitution of the Sacred Liturgy
Sacrosanctum Concilium. In
the book of Genesis, as Adam slept, God created a woman out of his side
who was to be his bride. In a new Genesical moment in John 19:34, as
Jesus slept the sleep of death, God also caused a woman, the Church, to
be created out of his side, a woman who is also to be the Bride of
Christ.
But note also that in the Book of Genesis, the creation of the woman in
2:23 is immediately followed by a nuptial moment in 2:24, namely
For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.
The creation of the woman out of the side of Adam is at the same time a
nuptial union between him with Eve. If Jesus the Second Adam was meant
to complete in his humanity what was left incomplete in the first Adam,
the only logical conclusion is that the crucifixion forms the privileged
context in which the Second Adam marries the Church upon its creation
from the side of the Bridegroom. Speaking of the Passion, John
Chrysostom ended his Good Friday homily with the rhetorical question: Do you understand then, how Christ has united his Bride with Himself...?
The crucifixion is glorious because it is not only an execution, but
also a wedding. It is glorious because Christ the Second Adam brings
about on the cross a new Genesis, and it is glorious because it
constitutes the starting point for the unfolding of a new Eden within
history. It is glorious because the cross becomes the fulcrum by which
the old order, as mentioned in
last year's Good Friday post, is thereby overturned.
A blessed Pasch to all.
Labels: bible, Church Fathers, ecclesiology, John Chrysostom, liturgy