Summary: For Good Friday: sometimes we no longer see things because we are too close to them. The disciples saw the cross "at a distance", but the centurion saw it through his callousness, cynicism, and skepticism, and affirmed, "Certainly".

Sometimes when you are too close to something you cannot

see it. Or at least you cannot recognize what it is. You can

be so close that you do not know what you are looking at.

You need somebody else to give you a fresh perspective.

My wife and I buy grocery items when they are on sale,

whether or not we need them at the time. We just store

them until we do need them, confident that we have saved

money. But of course you don’t save money if things go out

of date, so it’s important to store them in date order. It’s my

task to look for those “sell-by” dates and organize the

shelves. But now do you think I can see those dates? Do

you think I can read those little squiggles and codes that are

stamped on the packages? Not on your life! I stare and I

squint and I look at every possible angle on every possible

surface, and see nothing! I give up and put it down on the

shelf, and my wife comes along and says, “There it is, right in

front of you.” What was the problem? I was so close I didn’t

know what I was looking at. I needed somebody with a fresh

perspective. I needed to back off and let someone else see

it with new eyes.

Much of life, in fact, is like that. We cannot see what is going

on in our relationships because we are too close. We cannot

understand when our marriages are going bad because

we’ve spent ten or twenty or thirty years enmeshed in the

same behavior. We can’t figure out what’s going on with our

children, because we have so much tied up in those kids.

We don’t understand why the supervisor on the job is

dissatisfied, because we are too filled up with our own stuff.

We are less than happy about our relationship to God,

because we’ve been in church since Day One, and we’re too

close to know our own hearts. So we go to a counselor to

get a fresh perspective. When you are too close to

something, you just can’t see it any more. You need the

insights of others who don’t come with excess baggage.

At the cross many human dramas play themselves out.

There are the enemies of Jesus, not content with His death,

but who are cheerleaders for cruelty, “He saved others; he

cannot save himself.” There are the common soldiers, just

doing their dirty jobs, dealing with this grim business by

tacking up a mocking sign, “Iesus Nazarenus, Rex

Iudeorum”, “Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews.” Some

came to scoff, and some to do their jobs; and some came to

die – two thieves, common criminals – one of them

screaming off his searing pain with hostility, the other finding

a wonderful peace. Many human dramas play themselves

out at the cross.

But none are more compelling than the roles played out by

the friends of Jesus, who were too close to see what was

happening; and by the centurion who brought a fresh

perspective and saw the scene with new eyes.

At the final moment, when all is said and the deed is done; at

the crucial moment, when He breathed His last, and all

nature groaned with Him – when the silence fell like a storm

– when the eyes adjusted to the darkness – when the crowds

who had come for spectacle scurried home, afraid – when it

came down to it, there were two responses, two reactions.

The centurion, the officer, who spoke the most honest words

of the day, “Certainly this man was innocent” (or

righteous, or a son of God – the gospels differ slightly on

what he said). “Certainly this man was innocent and

righteous”. Certainly. He had come to know for himself

about this Jesus.

The centurion is one response. And the friends of Jesus are

the other – “All his acquaintances, including the women

who had followed him from Galilee, stood at a distance,

watching these things.” At a distance. I wonder: does

that mean that those who had been with Jesus could not now

grasp what was happening, because they had been so

close? But the centurion, with a fresh perspective, is able to

see it?

Some of us have been around Christ and the things of Christ

for a very long time. We were carried to church when we

were too young to have any grasp of what it was all about.

We have read the Bible, we have prayed, we have listened

to sermons – in case anyone is counting, this one is number

690 for me at Takoma! – we have listened to and preached

sermons, we have sung hymns, we have done it all. And for

us the cross may be old hat. For us it may be all too familiar.

We don’t feel any more. We don’t let it get to us any more.

We are able, like Jesus’ friends from Galilee, to stand around

at a distance and let it all wash over us. It’s Good Friday,

one more time, ho hum, we know the story. Maybe we are

altogether too close and we do not see any more what there

is to see at the cross.

But the centurion: consider him. He had every reason not to

arrive at this conclusion about the one on the cross. There

was every reason for him not to conclude that Jesus of

Nazareth was innocent or righteous or a child of God.

This centurion might have been callous, for example. He

must surely have participated in many executions. The

sound of hammer blows and the cry of anguished prisoners

must have fallen on deaf ears by now; you cannot do this

kind of work and actually pay attention, or you will go mad.

And so we might reasonably assume that any successful

officer in Rome’s army would be callous, unfeeling, cold,

without compassion.

Just as we who live in this community might easily become

callous to defend ourselves against the unending cries of

those in need. Just as members of this congregation might

easily become cold to protect our wallets against people who

come back, over and over again, asking for more and never

seeming to get themselves together. We could understand

this officer if he had become callous and unfeeling. It

happens to us too.

Or this centurion might easily have become cynical. If he

had spent much time in the province of Judea, he had seen

all kinds of scams and had witnessed all sorts of political

games. He had seen the various petty kings of Herod’s line

jockeying for position and favor. He had watched governors

come and go, depending on who caught the emperor’s

attentions. He had watched the Temple priests and the

distinguished gentlemen of the Sanhedrin working things out

to their own advantage, and he had taken note of the

patrician Sadducee party, very comfortable under Roman

patronage. This centurion, if he were an observant man, had

seen every political deal there was to see, and might have

written this crucifixion off as simply another payday for

somebody. Cynical.

Just as we who live in this city have learned to shrug our

shoulders as we learn of political deals and sweetheart

contracts and friends and relatives on the payrolls. We can

understand why this might be a cynical man. It’s all in the

political game.

And, more than that, this centurion, callous and cynical,

might also have been a skeptical man. A man who might

easily have given up on whatever gods there be. A soldier

who in the trenches had called on some god or another for

help, but had nothing but wounds and scars to show for it. A

Roman who was aware that the religion of his nation had

long since died in everything but for. A political realist who

could see that the only god that mattered was the self-styled

one on the throne in the distant capital city. A smart man,

who had been posted to Palestine long enough to know that

there had been plenty of wild-eyed fellows coming through

claiming to be God’s messiah. Oh, I feel sure that this

centurion, if he had any smarts about him at all, would have

swallowed a healthy dose of skepticism.

Just as we who are the church have learned to be skeptical

when our brothers claim that their prayers have been heard

or when our sisters testify that they have been healed. It’s

good to hear, and it’s inspiring – but a miracle? God doing

something special? We’re not so sure, are we? Even we in

the church are halfway skeptical and doubtful about the

whole thing.

And it is all because we are so close to it we cannot see it

any more. It is all because we have been around the cross

so long it no longer frightens us. We have been around

Christ so long He no longer awes us. We are used to Him,

and so we do not see Him for who He really is.

We need a fresh experience tonight. We need to be at the

cross as though we had never been here before. We need

to taste and smell and hear and touch and see an

experience that is our own. We need to go beyond our

callousness and our cold hearts, and feel the pathos of this

moment, so that we might learn again to feel the plights of

our brothers and sisters. We need to move past our

cynicism and feel the injustice of this moment, so that we

might take on those things that still plague our nation – its

racism, its materialism, its selfishness. And most of all, we

need to deal with our skepticism, we need to rekindle our

faith, we need to open up not only eyes and ears and hands,

but also our hearts, so that we might believe again. So that

we might radically trust this Jesus.

We have been drifting off to a distance. Maybe that is a

good thing. For we have been so close to Christ that we no

longer see Him for who He is. It is time for a fresh

encounter, like that of the callous, cynical, skeptical

centurion, who suddenly saw it all with clarity: “Certainly –

certainly – this man was innocent and righteous, the son of

God.” Step back, look again, feel again. Certainly -- at a

distance, that this man was – and is – and ever shall be –

our redeemer. Certainly.