Good Friday....

by AK - Jeff 18 Replies latest jw friends

  • truthsearcher
    truthsearcher

    On My Cross

    How wide is Your love
    That You would stretch Your arms
    And go around the world
    And why for me would a Savior's cry be heard

    I don't know
    Why You went where I was meant to go
    I don't know
    Why You love me so

    Those were my nails
    That was my crown
    That pierced Your hands and Your brow
    Those were my thorns
    Those were my scorns
    Those were my tears that fell down
    And just as You said it would be
    You did it all for me
    After You counted the cost
    You took my shame, my blame
    On my cross

    How deep is Your grace
    That you could see my need
    And chose to take my place
    And then for me, these words I'd hear You say

    Father no
    Forgive them for they know not what they do
    I will go
    Because I love them so

    Those were my nails
    That was my crown
    That pierced Your hands and Your brow
    Those were my thorns
    Those were my scorns
    Those were my tears that fell down
    And just as You said it would be
    You did it all for me
    After You counted the cost
    You took my shame, my blame
    On my cross

    ABR: I am glad that your guardian angel kept you safe from the fire! I suggest you stay away from Catholic services and Christmas Eve services (the only time when most evangelicals use candles).

    Jeff: Did you attend a service today? We went as a family and the difference between it and Monday's Memorial was like day and night, light and shadow, life and death, truth and lies, worship overflowing from hearts of love versus cold unfeeling ritual.

  • kimoko
    kimoko

    We sang In Christ Alone today Emo :) it was really powerful we were stood at the top of a hill where our cross is and just could look at all these people below in the valley!

    Btw Does anyone know why we can only eat fish on good friday :) I thought it was like sacraficing the lamb and such or like blood being shed im not sure. Its been a tradition in my family and im like allergic to fish so for me it was just veg boring :)

  • Crumpet
    Crumpet

    My Good friday was excellent - I had an anti religious symbol tattooed onto my body especially! It was a very spiritual moment. Here are some pics of Good Friday in my area:

  • skeeter1
    skeeter1

    "Still He Walked"He could hear the crowds screaming "crucify" "crucify"...
    He could hear the hatred in their voices,
    These were his chosen people.
    He loved them,
    And they were going to crucify him.
    He was beaten, bleeding and weakened...
    His heart was broken,
    But still He walked.

    He could see the crowd as he came from the palace.
    He knew each of the faces so well.
    He had created them.
    He knew every smile, every laugh, and every shed tear,
    But now they were contorted with rage and anger
    His heart broke,
    But still He walked.

    Was he scared? You and I would have been
    So his humanness would have mandated that he was.
    He felt alone.
    His disciples had left, denied, and even betrayed him.
    He searched the crowd for a loving face and he saw very few.
    Then he turned his eyes to the only one that mattered
    And he knew that he would never be alone.
    He looked back at the crowd...
    At the people who were spitting at him
    Throwing rocks at him and mocking him
    And he knew that because of him,
    They would never be alone.
    So for them, He walked.

    The sounds of the hammer striking the spikes echoed through the crowd.
    The sounds of his cries echoed even louder,
    The cheers of the crowd, as his hands and feet were nailed to the cross,
    Intensified with each blow.
    Loudest of all was the still small voice
    Inside his Heart that whispered "I am with you, my son",
    And God's heart broke.
    He had let His son walk.

    Jesus could have asked God to end his suffering,
    But instead he asked God to forgive.
    Not to forgive him, but to forgive the ones who were persecuting him.
    As he hung on that cross, dying an unimaginable death,
    He looked out and saw, not only the faces in the crowd,
    But also, the face of every person yet to be,
    And his heart filled with love.
    As his body was dying, his heart was alive.
    Alive with the limitless, unconditional love he feels for each of us.
    That is why He walked.

    When I forget how much My God loves me,
    ...I remember his walk.
    When I wonder if I can be forgiven,
    ...I remember his walk.
    When I need to be reminded of how to live like Christ,
    ...I think of his walk.
    And to show him how much I love him,
    ...I wake up each morning, turn my eyes to him,
    .......And I walk.

    Author Unknown

  • lv4fer
    lv4fer

    His love for us is so amazing.....He loves us before we love him and even if we don't love him. I’m forgiven because You were forsaken I’m accepted, You were condemned I’m alive and well, Your Spirit is within me Because You died and rose again Amazing love, how can it be That You, my King, would die for me? Amazing love, I know it’s true It’s my joy to honor You In all I do, To honor You You are my King You are my King Jesus, You are my King You are my King

  • bebu
    bebu

    Just returned from a Good Friday Tenebrae ("Shadows") service. Candles were extinguished at intervals as the passion of Christ (in Matthew) was read, and then pauses for meditation. All left in complete silence.

    The Ragman by Walter Wangerin, Jr.

    I saw a strange sight. I stumbled upon a story most strange, like nothing my life, my street sense, my sly tongue had ever prepared me for.

    Hush, child. Hush, now, and I will tell it to you.

    Even before the dawn one Friday morning I noticed a young man, handsome and strong, walking the alleys of our City. He was pulling an old cart filled with clothes both bright and new, and he was calling in a clear, tenor voice: "Rags!" (Ah, the air was foul and the first light filthy to be crossed by such sweet music.)

    "Rags! New rags for old! I take your tired rags! Rags!" "Now, this is a wonder," I thought to myself, for the man stood six-feet-four, and his arms were like tree limbs, hard and muscular, and his eyes flashed intelligence. Could he find no better job than this, to be a ragman in the inner city? I followed him. My curiosity drove me. And I wasn't disappointed.

    Soon the Ragman saw a woman sitting on her back porch. She was sobbing into a handkerchief, sighing, and shedding a thousand tears. Her knees and elbows made a sad X. Her shoulders shook. Her heart was breaking.

    The Ragman stopped his cart. Quietly, he walked to the woman, stepping round tin cans, dead toys, and Pampers. "Give me your rag," he said so gently, "and I'll give you another." He slipped the handkerchief from her eyes. She looked up, and he laid across her palm a linen cloth so clean and new that it shined. She blinked from the gift to the giver.

    Then, as he began to pull his cart again, the Ragman did a strange thing: he put her stained handkerchief to his own face; and then HE began to weep, to sob as grievously as she had done, his shoulders shaking. Yet she was left without a tear.

    "This IS a wonder," I breathed to myself , and I followed the sobbing Ragman like a child who cannot turn away from mystery.

    "Rags! Rags! New rags for old!"

    In a little while, when the sky showed grey behind the rooftops and I could see the shredded curtains hanging out black windows, the Ragman came upon a girl whose head

    was wrapped in a bandage, whose eyes were empty. Blood soaked her bandage. A single line of blood ran down her cheek. Now the tall Ragman looked upon this child with pity, and he drew a lovely yellow bonnet from his cart.

    "Give me your rag," he said, tracing his own line on her cheek, "and I'll give you mine." The child could only gaze at him while he loosened the bandage, removed it, and tied it to his own head. The bonnet he set on hers. And I gasped at what I saw: for with the bandage went the wound! Against his brow it ran a darker, more substantial blood - his own!

    "Rags! Rags! I take old rags!" cried the sobbing, bleeding, strong, intelligent Ragman.

    The sun hurt both the sky, now, and my eyes; the Ragman seemed more and more to hurry.

    "Are you going to work?" he asked a man who leaned against a telephone pole. The man shook his head. The Ragman pressed him: "Do you have a job?"

    "Are you crazy?" sneered the other. He pulled away from the pole, revealing the right sleeve of his jacket - flat, the cuff stuffed into the pocket. He had no arm.

    "So," said the Ragman. "Give me your jacket, and I'll give you mine." Such quiet authority in his voice!

    The one-armed man took off his jacket. So did the Ragman - and I trembled at what I saw: for the Ragman's arm stayed in its sleeve, and when the other put it on he had two good arms, thick as tree limbs; but the Ragman had only one. "Go to work," he said.

    After that he found a drunk, lying unconscious beneath an army blanket, and old man, hunched, wizened, and sick. He took that blanket and wrapped it round himself, but for the drunk he left new clothes.

    And now I had to run to keep up with the Ragman. Though he was weeping uncontrollably, and bleeding freely at the forehead, pulling his cart with one arm, stumbling for drunkenness, falling again and again, exhausted, old, and sick, yet he went with terrible speed. On spider's legs he skittered through the alleys of the City, this mile and the next, until he came to its limits, and then he rushed beyond.

    I wept to see the change in this man. I hurt to see his sorrow. And yet I needed to see where he was going in such haste, perhaps to know what drove him so.

    The little old Ragman - he came to a landfill. He came to the garbage pits. And then I wanted to help him in what he did, but I hung back, hiding.

    He climbed a hill. With tormented labor he cleared a little space on that hill. Then he sighed. He lay down. He pillowed his head on a handkerchief and a jacket. He covered his bones with an army blanket. And he died.

    Oh, how I cried to witness that death!I slumped in a junked car and wailed and mourned as one who has no hope - because I had come to love the Ragman. Every other face had faded in the wonder of this man, and I cherished him; but he died. I sobbed myself to sleep.

    I did not know - how could I know? That I slept through Friday night and Saturday and its night, too.

    But then, on Sunday morning, I was wakened by a violence. Light - pure, hard, demanding light - slammed against my sour face,and I blinked, and I looked, and I saw the last and the first wonder of all. There was the Ragman, folding the blanket most carefully, a scar on his forehead, but alive! And, besides that, healthy! There was no sign of sorrow nor of age, and all the rags that he had gathered shined for cleanliness.

    Well, then I lowered my head and trembling for all that I had seen, I myself walked up to the Ragman. I told him my name with shame, for I was a sorry figure next to him.

    Then I took off all my clothes in that place, and I said to him with dear yearning in my voice: "Dress me."

    He dressed me. My Lord, he put new rags on me, and I am a wonder beside him.

    The Ragman, the Ragman, THE CHRIST

    Ragman by Walter Wangerin, Jr. from "Ragman and Other Cries of Faith"

    bebu

  • ozziepost
    ozziepost

    Amazing Grace this Easter

    Two hundred years ago the British Parliament passed laws that brought an end of the transatlantic slave trade. This trade in human flesh is a dark stain on human history.

    Some time ago I read a collection of letters written by the 18th century Christian, John Newton, the writer of the well-known song ‘Amazing Grace’. He was for many years a slave trader himself, so his letters described in vivid and authentic detail the sufferings of the slaves and the appalling nature of the trade.

    I was horrified at his description of the inhumanity and cruelty of the traders; I was outraged that they treated other people – men, women and children just like you and me, - as though they were commodities to be bought and sold.

    We humans are all, no matter what our origin or the colour of our skin, bearers of the image and likeness of God. We are therefore of great worth and we all deserve to be treated with the dignity belonging to our God-given humanity.

    In later years after he left the trade because he realised both its frightful nature and his own sin - and his need for God’s forgiveness - Newton joined with other Christians, such as William Wilberforce, to fight to bring an end to the slave trade. Yet he always thanked God that he forgave him even though he knew he did not deserve God’s amazing love and grace.

    Listen to his words of his song:
    “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound,
    That saved a wretch like me,
    I once was lost but now am found,
    Was blind, but now, I see.

    T’was grace that taught my heart to fear.
    And grace, my fears relieved.
    How precious did that grace appear
    the hour I first believed.”

    This Easter we remember the doing away of another slavery in the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ, God’s Son, our Saviour, who died to free us from our sin and to bring us to new life of reconciliation with God and the promise of eternal life with Him.

    The New Testament describes our human sin as a slavery to sin, and it says that Jesus’ death frees us from that slavery. None of us like to be told that we are sinful people, but we are well aware that we, each one of us, fail in our own life to live up to God’s standards for life and relationships.

    One more sign of human sinfulness is that though the slave trade was ended in 1807, in our own time, the 21st century, there is still a slave trade. Human trafficking of men, women and children to be economic slaves or sex slaves, or child soldiers exists today. People are still treated as objects and possessions to be bought and sold. This is also a scar on humanity. We must support those who fight against it.

    But at the same time each of us needs to appreciate the grace, love and forgiveness of God for sinners through the death of Jesus, just as John Newton did.

    May we all know and experience God’s forgiving grace this Easter time.

    http://your.sydneyanglicans.net/

  • Sad emo
    Sad emo
    Btw Does anyone know why we can only eat fish on good friday :) I thought it was like sacraficing the lamb and such or like blood being shed im not sure. Its been a tradition in my family and im like allergic to fish so for me it was just veg boring :)

    I think you're on the right lines there kimoko. I wonder if, back in the times of no refrigeration, meat would have to be slaughtered on the same day as it was eaten, hence a ban on slaughter on Friday's = no meat anyway? Also traditionally, meat was usually associated with feasting and celebration (as if anyone except the rich could afford it back then anyway lol) and you were supposed to be all solemn and miserable!

    Christians here will be trooping up the local big hill at about 6am tomorrow morning to watch the 'son rise' - the mixture kinda worries me a little

  • kimoko
    kimoko

    Haha I was offered to do that when a church in my area go at 6 i was like no erm it ok!

    And last year i rebelled and got a tatoo on Good Friday crumpet lol

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