Scripture Reading: Matthew 27:1-56 (NRSVUE)
It is only in Matthew's account that we see the price of Jesus' betrayal named as thirty pieces of silver. This references the prophecy from Zechariah 11:4-14. Within this text, the prophet is insulted by the wage they pay him (30 shekels of silver) which is the price you would pay for a slave from Exodus 21:32. Zechariah sarcastically calls it a "lordly price", and he throws it into the treasury of the house of the Lord. Notice that treasury could also be translated as potter's house.
We see Judas returning his wages in a similar fashion. The religious leaders buy the potter's field as a place to bury foreigners which is another tie to the Zechariah text.
Within the prophet's passage, we see God break the staffs named Favor and Unity.
When Jesus dies, we see the curtain in the Temple - separating the world from the holiest presence of God - torn in two. As the early church moves forward, we see that God's favor falls upon Jesus and that anyone - even a foreigner or Gentile - may put on Christ and find this favor. One could say that the staff of favor was broken by the cross. Any kind of Unity of Judea would have been seen as smashed within the destruction of the Temple forty years after Jesus.
The Gnostic Gospel of Judas presents Judas as a faithful disciple who betrays Jesus at his own insistence. Gnostics were believers in a strict separation of the earthly and the spiritual. The earthly was seen as evil while the spiritual was seen as divine. Gnostics didn't mix the two. And so, Judas is seen as a hero by setting up the death of Jesus which frees him from this (supposedly) evil sphere and allows him to return to the spiritual.
Some Gnostic theologies went on to say that Jesus was never here in an earthly body in the first place and only seemed to be present. According to them, his suffering wasn't real because he wasn't really here physically.
These theological expressions were branded heretical by the early church, and this is partly why we proclaim in the Apostles' Creed, "he suffered under Pontius Pilate."
We can see in Matthew's writing that Jesus does actually suffer and die. His suffering is physical, but it is also spiritual in that he feels forsaken by God. One could say that God experienced the lows of human experience physically and spiritually through the person of Jesus of Nazareth. Of course, Jesus also experiences the betrayal of his disciple which would have been a relational low.As we experience Good Friday, we may bring our own sense of loss or suffering. In Matthew's Gospel, we remember that early in the account, Jesus is named Emmanuel which means, "God is with us." God's solidarity with us during our painful times is expressed in the cross.
We also remember that Simon of Cyrene carries the cross for Jesus. This would have been difficult for Peter because he may have felt that it should have been Simon Peter carrying it.
How might we express our thankfulness to Jesus by carrying his cross today?
Prayer for the day:
By your wounded feet: teach us steadfastness and perseverance.
By your wounded and insulted head: teach us patience, clarity and self-mastery.
By your wounded heart: teach us love, teach us love, teach us love, O Master and Saviour.
Amen.
Prayer by Daphne Fraser, Church of England, 20th Century
Photo by Michal Kosmulski via Flickr.com. Used under the Creative Commons license.






