Yes,
the Simons, the Veronicas, the weeping women are all still present in the face
of executions today. But at the same time, we continue to see people today who
echo the call of the crowd, like those bolded words in the misal. The phrasing
has changed, but the spirit feels hauntingly familiar:
“They should
get the death penalty.”
“We’re seeking the death penalty.”
“We will pursue the death penalty.”
We
hear our political leaders say it. We hear our justice department say it. We
hear it in courtrooms. And sometimes we hear it around our own dinner tables.
I
often hear, “We’re just following the law.” But the story of Jesus reminds me
how easy it is to pass responsibility. Religious leaders appealed to Pilate.
Pilate appealed to the crowd. Each person had a role. Each person could say, “It
wasn’t really me.”
And
yet, it was all of them. And in ways I think we would rather not admit, it is
all of us too.
So the
question lingers for me: Who will we be? Will we be part of the crowd, swept up
in fear or anger or even ignorance, crying out for death? Or will we step onto
the road; shouldering weight, offering mercy, daring to weep?
In
2015, Pope Francis invited us into this contemplation during the Way of the
Cross on Good Friday. He said, “We gaze at you, Jesus, as you are nailed to the
cross, [...] And our conscience is troubled.”
He
says, “We anxiously ask: When will the death penalty, still practiced in many
states, be abolished? [...] When will every form of torture and the violent
killing of innocent persons come to an end? Your Gospel is the surest defense
of the human person, of every human being.”
On
this Good Friday, as we gaze at Jesus nailed to the cross, our conscience
should be troubled. Because now we know what we once did not. We know what it
means to join the crowd, to speak those bolded words aloud, "Crucify
him."
There
is an invitation in this discomfort: not simply to remember the story or
blindly speak the words, but to recognize our place within it.
With
open eyes and awakened hearts, we ask: Who will you be this Good
Friday?







