They arise, the kings of the earth; princes plot against the Lord and his Anointed.

Our Lord’s Passion really begins today, with that first blow that Judas dealt him: the treacherous betrayal of him into the hands of the authorities.

As one prays through the Stations of the Cross, one finds so many different ways of responding to Our Lord’s sufferings. Where, I wonder, do we find ourselves?

Are we like Pilate in the first Station, when through weakness he condemned Christ to die on the Cross? All Pilate wanted was for the crowd to go away and leave him alone — he was happy for them to do whatever they wanted, as long as he got a quiet life. For the sake of that quiet life, an innocent man was put to death. It was just unlucky for Pilate that that innocent man happened also to be God. Have we betrayed Our Lord in the same way, by denying him and his power by our sins?

Still yet worse, are we like the priests and the scribes who brought Jesus to Pilate? The priests were responsible for the worship of God in the Temple; they represented the people and offered prayers and sacrifices to make atonement for their sins. They had been waiting for the Messiah for centuries. Now he has come into their midst — God has entered his Temple. Pilate, at least, can be excused as someone who did not understand the significance of the person before him: he was not a Jew, he did not know the prophecies concerning the Messiah. These were God’s own servants; but when God came among them, they took him to be nailed to a Cross.

How could they do such a thing? The answer is very simple: it was for our sins. In a warped way, by betraying their God over to death, the Temple priests bring the oblation that is Christ to the altar of the Cross, where he will offer himself to his Father for the redemption of our sins. Our sins — your sins and mine — caused Christ to die on the Cross. The sins of the human race broke off the relationship of love which God created us to enjoy with him; but it did not end God’s love for us. The Eternal Word took on our fallen nature, knowing that he would not be greeted as the saving Messiah, knowing that he would be put to death on a Cross, but also knowing that by his self-sacrifice, we would be brought back into that loving relationship with him that he desires for us all.

The characters we meet through the Stations of the Cross are not all ‘baddies’, either. This Good Friday we might, I hope, find in ourselves a little of the holy Daughters of Jerusalem, who weep for Our Lord’s sufferings in the eighth Station. In our service of the poor, like our donations to the monthly Oratory Outreach food bank collection, we might find in ourselves a little of St Veronica, who wiped Our Lord’s agonised face with a towel in the hope of relieving at least some little portion of his suffering. When we are put to difficulty or hardship in our efforts to help those we encounter, we can find in ourselves something of St Simon of Cyrene, who rejoiced to suffer under the weight of the Cross in order to help Our Lord on his way.

© 2025 Gilded Orpharion | Storto by The Gilded Orpharion Ensemble.