One of the joys of having traveled to various
parts of the globe is to observe and learn from different Christian traditions.
To see the varying cultural expressions of Christian faith enriches my own
understanding of Christ’s transforming work in my life as I see it through the
prism of a new culture. There are remarkably different emphases given to
various parts of Holy Week. A few simple, but important areas of emphasis
follow.
At the time of this writing, it is Thursday of Holy Week, Maundy (Commandment) Thursday. I had never even heard that
term until the late 1980s. I grew up in a Southern Baptist Church and
everything was focused on Good Friday and Easter Sunday. It was a joy to
welcome a new point of emphasis during Holy Week as we celebrated with the
remarkably rich scriptures which occurred on Thursday of that week in Jesus’
life. We found new significance for communion as we celebrated with the
apostles and saints across the ages. We spent more time in quiet contemplation,
in reflection, in confession and in repentance. After this experience, each
Maundy Thursday rings with Jesus’ words, “ A new commandment I give to
you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you,
that you also love one another. By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you
have love for one another.” John 13:34-35 My sporting friends who
embrace Maundy Thursday find its benefit as they build deeper relationships
with their coaching colleagues, with their players, and among their teammates.
In the Western Church, the
normal focus of Holy Week is Good Friday.
The atonement for sin is the major emphasis. We heartily sing, “The Old Rugged
Cross” and other cross themed hymns and focus on Jesus’ sacrificial death in our
place. The ministry with which I serve gives us Good Friday as a paid holiday.
For that I am thankful. The university where I serve the sporting community is
very secularized, but when I stand in a conspicuous place on campus on Good
Friday with a twelve foot tall cross, hand out nails with a card attached, or
simply read scripture and pray, it is received well because it’s Good Friday.
The Christian sporting community that emphasizes Good Friday will focus on the
grace of God in Jesus as experienced when their sin is exposed by the passions
of sport. We find the mercy of God sufficient as we remember that Jesus has
covered our sin and shame, and has restored us to right relationship with our
Heavenly Father.
I was in my late thirties and
reading Phillip Yancey’s book, The Jesus I Never Knew, before I had any
grasp of how other cultures viewed Jesus. Further study revealed the fact that
the Eastern Church, Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, and others, places more
emphasis on the resurrection, Easter
Sunday, than on Good Friday. For them, the emphasis is on Jesus having
risen from the dead, His victory over sin and death. The obvious implication is
that we are in Christ and therefore free from the power of sin. Rather than
simply living in a cycle of sin, confession, repentance, returning to sin, and
repeating the cycle. The Eastern Church emphasizes victory over sin through
Jesus’ power over sin because of the resurrection. My sporting friends who
embrace Easter Sunday find that they live in sport with joy, freedom, and
shameless enjoyment of their lives.
Regardless of your faith
tradition, please embrace the beauty, the pain, the passion, the silence, and
the glorious victory of Holy Week. Please also welcome the sportspeople you
serve into your experience of Jesus’ love, grace, and mercy. This weekend is
the perfect time.
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