Good Friday, also known as "Holy
Friday," is the Friday immediately preceding Easter Sunday.
It is celebrated traditionally as the day on which Jesus was crucified. If you
are interested in a study of the issue, please see our article that discusses
the various views on which day
Jesus was crucified. Assuming that Jesus was crucified and died on a
Friday, should Christians remember Jesus' death by celebrating Good Friday?
The Bible
does not instruct Christians to remember Christ¡¯s death by honoring a certain
day. The Bible does give us freedom in these matters, however. Romans 14:5 tells us, ¡°One man considers one day more sacred than
another; another man considers every day alike. Each one should be fully
convinced in his own mind.¡± Rather than remembering Christ's death on a certain
day, once a year, the Bible instructs us to remember Christ¡¯s death by
observing the Lord¡¯s Supper. First Corinthians 11:24-26 declares, ¡°...do this in remembrance of me...for whenever you
eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until he
comes.¡±
Why is
Good Friday referred to as ¡°good¡±? What the Jewish authorities and Romans did
to Jesus was definitely not good. However, the results of Christ¡¯s death are
very good! Romans 5:8,
¡°But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners,
Christ died for us.¡±First Peter 3:18 tells us, ¡°For Christ died for sins once for all, the
righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the
body but made alive by the Spirit.¡±
Many
Christian churches celebrate Good Friday with a subdued service, usually in the
evening, in which Christ¡¯s death is remembered with solemn hymns, prayers of thanksgiving,
a message centered on Christ¡¯s suffering for our sakes, and observance of the
Lord¡¯s Supper. Whether or not Christians choose to ¡°celebrate¡± Good Friday, the
events of that day should be ever on our minds because the death of Christ on
the cross—along with His bodily resurrection—is
the paramount event of the Christian faith.
|