Good Friday A’26
3 April 2026
John 18.1-19.42
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church
North Little Rock, Arkansas
The Rev. Carey Stone <+>

We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.
From “Anthem 2” in the liturgy for Good Friday, The Book of Common Prayer p.241

The last words of famous people are often poignant, purposeful, and memorable. Here are just a few examples:
Alfred Hitchcock grappling with his theology said, “One never knows the ending. One has to die to know exactly what happens after death, although Catholics have their hopes.”
Some were like Vince Lombardi whose thoughts turned to loved ones. Just before he drew his last breath he turned to his wife Marie and said, “Happy anniversary. I love you.”
Convicted murderer James W. Rodgers managed to hold on to his sense of humor to the last. When he was put in front of a firing squad in Utah and asked if he had a last request. He replied, “Bring me a bullet-proof vest.”
Some were holding on to faith like the Blues singer Bessie Smith said, “I’m going, but I’m going in the name of the Lord.”
Some were truly ready to leave like the actress Joan Crawford who yelled at her housekeeper, who was praying as Crawford was dying, “Damn it! Don’t you dare ask God to help me!”
My personal favorite was from Apple Computer founder, Steve Jobs, “Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow.”
The most famous last words of all have to be the seven last words of Jesus from the cross on good Friday. These words reveal the priorities of the Savior of the World and show us how to die well and to focus on the ultimate concerns of human life.

The First Word
    “Father forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.”
Jesus first priority wasn’t another sermon, another teaching, the performance of another miracle, or figuring out how to produce more, acquire more, or spend more. It wasn’t about attaining a job promotion, or earning the adulation of the crowds who were gathered. It wasn’t regret over not having a ‘final fling’ with Mary Magdalene. No, his first priority and primary concern when dying was for his enemies. He prayed to God for the forgiveness of the very ones that were nailing him to the cross, for Pilate the politician caught in the middle between justice or keeping his place in office, for the religious folk who scapegoated him as a heretical enemy to their faith, for the pagans, epicureans, and friends of Barabbas, for the whole cast of the tragic drama before us he prayed: Father, forgive them, they don’t know what they are doing.” Jesus didn’t want to die holding a bitter grudge but instead he let go, he let it go, he let them go.

The Second Word
    “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.”
Between two thieves indicted, convicted, and sentenced to death Jesus the sinless One is hung on the cross. One thief hopes Jesus still has a trick or two up his sleeve to get him out of this mess, but soon realizes he’s out of luck and joins the crowd in taunting Jesus. But there was another thief whom tradition calls Dismas whose name means “sunset” who saw beneath the surface to the Savior and his only hope for the next life. “Jesus remember me when you come into your kingdom.” He makes Dismas a promise today you will be with me in paradise. Jesus reveals that the cross is his throne where he has power to pardon the most hardened criminal. Echoes of the third chapter of John:
For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved (3.17).

The Third Word
    “Woman, behold thy son…and then he said to John, “Behold thy mother.”
Jesus at the time of his death made his earthly family a priority. Jesus had a human mother, who by this time in her life was a widow. Jesus was her source of care, protection, and income. Before Jesus could leave, he would need to see to his earthly obligation to his mother. A big part of dying is to see that the living under our care is cared for after we are gone. Jesus gives his mother the respect she rightly deserves as the Mother of God who was in unimaginable distress having her own soul pierced by the death she was witnessing.

The Fourth Word
    “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?”
The sky has grown opaque with darkness, clouds that totally blocked the sun, as if to obscure (if it were possible) God’s eyes from the horrible spectacle of God’s Son who had not committed a single sin but now is becoming sin – taking it all upon himself and drinking the bitter cup that he had asked God to let pass from him while he had prayed in the garden. Have you ever felt the absence of God? Have you ever felt abandoned by God? Jesus has an he gets it when we feel the absence left only with doubts. He endures this for our sake as john the Baptist had rightly said, “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the Sin of the world.” Not just the little sins (the verbs of sin) that we all commit, but by taking away Sin itself the noun of sin – the entire entity and phenomenon. Anything that could ever finally separate us from the Love of God was taken upon, taken into Jesus and destroyed!

The Fifth Word
    “I Thirst”
I have been honored to accompany many folks in their final hours and moments and I can tell you they all got thirsty. Dying is hard work and as the body starts shutting down thirst is one of the last things to go. Jesus’ suffering was real! Christ was no ‘will ‘o the wisp,’ not a ghost, but one who was fully human, as well as Divine. In the end we all will meet the same fate and Jesus hallows these suffering and dying moments by going through the process himself. As Swiss theologian Hans Uhrs Von Balthazar wrote: “Jesus’s love [that] bears our brokenness as his own, moving though still deeper darknesses, and bearing it to the end. At the center of the Christian faith is one who is not alien to tragedy, a savior not complacent in the face of suffering”.

The Sixth Word
    “It is Finished”
Jesus the Divine Son of God had been sent to earth to complete a mission that only He could accomplish; God incarnate coming in human form that touched the whole of human experience and thereby gathering up all of the human experience and redeeming it all from the powers of darkness and death. Redemption bridges the gap, ultimately saving us from final death, curing us from the sense of estrangement from God, our neighbors, and our own selves. We too have been created by God and sent to earth to fulfill our unique calling and mission to the glory of God. May we be able to say those words and find their fulfillment in our lives – it is finished.

The Seventh Word
    “Father, into your hands, I commend my spirit”
Having fulfilled the purpose of his earthly journey and finished his mission. It was time to let go. He could trust in the God who had been with him every step of the way even in those moments where he felt truly abandoned, the faithful and true God would be there for Him at his earthly end. Jesus who had brought heaven to earth, now was fully qualified to take up all things earthly to heaven and to redeem it all!
The seven last words speak of Forgiveness, Promise, Loving Care, Being held safe in our abandonment and doubt, Divine solidarity in human suffering, Redemption of all our offenses, Rest from Earthly Labors and finally – Eternal Life!

Give mercy and grace to the living; pardon and rest to the dead; to your holy Church peace and concord; and to us sinners everlasting life and glory; for with the Father and Holy Spirit you live and reign, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
• From the closing prayer of the Good Friday liturgy, The Book of Common Prayer, p.242