Why The YMCA Is More Christian Now Than Ever

The YMCA now makes room for every kind of Christian in every kind of role – this is a significant reality that was not easily achieved, it used to be resisted! Delving into our rich legacy reveals much that is encouraging about the enduring and maturing vitality of Christianity in the YMCA. What we do with it, that’s up to us.

As a Christian Emphasis Director with the YMCA, my work includes paying attention to how the “C” is doing in our name, and how it builds “healthy spirit, mind and body for all.”

One assumption for the need of a position like mine is that the “C” is anemic, timid, or unhealthy, and thus in need of strengthening, of building up.

In my experience, though, a case can be made for how vigorous and influential the “C” in the Y is, and a position like mine can add vitality to it, emphasizing the way it fuels our inclusion and equity, our aim to love, serve and care for all.

There is an interesting dynamic with the “C” in the Y these days – it is obviously a significant factor in almost every element of our organization, yet there is only occasional official acknowledgment of it, little public discussion or endorsement of the “Christian principles” in our mission or the “loyalty to Jesus Christ” in our Constitution.

Why is that? And is that okay?

Which is better: that we do the work or talk about how we do the work?

In reading a number of articles and books about the history of the YMCA, one in particular is connecting a lot of dots for me on the arc of the Christian origins of the Y, how it got started and how it played out for the first hundred years; my assumption is that it’s still affecting how we experience it now.

I’m currently drawing conclusions from this document, written by Martti Muukkonen, Ecumenism of the Laity: Continuity and Change in the Mission View of the World’s Alliance of Young Men’s Christian Associations, 1855-1955.

Something that would help any Y leader who is concerned about the role of Christianity in the organization: take Christianity more seriously as a complex, dynamic, multi-faceted reality.

My concern is that too many Y leaders look at Christianity too narrowly – either through their own sectarian tradition and experiences (positive or negative) or through what they hear about it via popular culture, media and gossip (human nature and algorithms maximize negative features).

Obviously there are many Christians that give the religion a bad name, that represent Christ in abhorrent ways, and are toxic to their community.

And there are Christians who are beautiful people, agents of healing and reconciliation, building bridges of understanding and solidarity.

As Alexander Solzhenitsyn remarks when it comes to be reviled by the evil in the world:

If only it were all so simple! If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from teh rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?”

Alexander Sozhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago

The YMCA was birthed by a dozen British Protestant Christian young men who wanted to do something about the evil that was wrecking the spirits of their co-laborers in the drapery factories; they also wanted to do something about the wickedness within their own hearts.

George Williams and his Anglo-Saxon friends formed prayer groups as a way to build solidarity, spiritual vitality, religious humility, mature character, and professional excellence; they sought to overcome evil with good, by God’s grace and a personal loyalty to Jesus Christ.

For many different reasons, their efforts spread rapidly, and between their first official declaration in 1844 of the Young Men’s Christian Association to their 1855 World Alliance meeting where they adopted the Paris Basis to guide their burgeoning global movement, prayer and trust in Christ, fellowship and evangelism, mutual aid and social transformation were their means and ends.

Taken from Muukkonen’s excellently researched and thorough documentation, the following is a brief synopsis of the expansion of the “C” in the Y – from that embodied by George Williams to that of a worldwide, multi-million member institution.

In 1855 there were already three different kinds of Christian emphasis amongst Protestant Evangelical leaders of the Y: British, West Europe (Germany/Swiss/France), and United States. With all that they had similar, it was there differences which shaped how the Y was able to survive, adapt and flourish.

The British Christian way of the Y was similar to the USA Metropolitan associations – highly centralized with many branches, led by Christian businessmen.

The USA way of the Y included the tension of many small non-Metro associations that shaped the national conversation and strategy – fierce independence towards operations and membership activities led by non-clergy Christian businessmen.

The Western Europe way of the Y was closely tied to churches; youth work was often an extension of nationalized congregations and clergy held many of the leadership positions.

In producing the Paris Basis, different preferences and perspectives emerged which would have to be addressed over the course of the next hundred years, and to which we must also deal with in our generation (2021).

For example, while the British and US Y’s were not led by clergy or closely tied to churches like in Germany, the US Christians were unwilling to take a stand on racism and also wanted stricter standards on what kind of Christians they would permit to join the Y.

The German Y was more open to non-Christians joining their organization, but since it was clergy led, only Christians would be in leadership roles; because the British Y was not tied to the church in the same way, similar to the US, they had a more difficult time figuring out how to let non-Christians join. Eventually, the global expectation became: open membership, Christian leadership.

But even this became a challenge as the Y rapidly spread across the world, taking root in diverse cultures, while still seeking to maintain a spirit of unity, per the prayer of Jesus in John 17:21.

First, the Y had to figure out how to strengthen their interdenominational relationships amongst the great variety of Protestants, the Paris Basis carefully words what they could agree on both passionately and strategically.

Over the years, then, this experiment then opened up inter-confessional relationships between Protestants and Orthodox Christians, and then eventually Catholics – the Paris Basis being a strong enough document to build bridges of solidarity.

When the Y began to flourish in majority non-Christian countries like Turkey, Bolshevik and Soviet Russia, the Middle East, and elsewhere, the inter-faith dialogue became crucial – and again the Paris Basis was mature enough to support it.

So by 1955, what kind of Christianity was embodied by the YMCA – how had it changed since the days of George Williams?

It wasn’t just British Protestant Evangelical – it was also German and Nordic Lutheran, Swiss and French Reformed, American Methodist and Presbyterian, Greek and Russian Orthodox, Mexican and Chilean Catholic, Chinese Buddhism, Indian Hinduism, Palestinian Islam, Turkish Secularism, and eventually Russian Soviet Communism.

And even with the United States – with the opening up of membership to women, to blacks, to working-class immigrants, to Jews, etc, the Christian experiences of minorities and the oppressed became increasingly important to the work of the Y.

With the preference for open membership and Christian leadership, there was still quite a bit of variety on what kind of Chrisitans and what kind of leadership was encouraged, allowed, trained, and highlighted in the Y.

For example, through the Paris Basis, the Cleveland World’s Conference of 1931 noted there were three kinds of tendencies regarding Christians and active membership in the Y.

Muukkonen describes it like this:

First, there were those associations that were firm in keeping the membership idea of the Paris Basis. Second, some associations distinguished the requirements of membership and those participating in services. Third, there were associations, which had focused primarily on the services without paying attention to religious issues.

The same report also identifies two kinds of associations and calls them dogmatic and purposive. The dogmatic associations emphasize the words in the Paris Basis: “young men who, regarding Jesus Christ as their God and Saviour, according to the Holy Scriptures.” The purposive associations, instead, underline the words: “The Young Men’s Christian Associations seek to unite those young men who…desire to be His disciples in their doctrine and life, and to associate their efforts for the extension of His Kingdom amongst young men.” Then the report criticises the former in that they do not reach the youth that do not come from Christian families and have a Christian world-view. The purposive associations face the criticism that they dilute Christianity to character building, and regard “Jesus Christ as the Great Model of Youth” only, and that in these associations “Christianity has ceased to be a living force.”

The Cleveland World’s Conference emphasized both the status of the Paris Basis as the basis for affiliation with the World’s Alliance, and the autonomy of the local associations. In spite of the autonomy, the conference recognised the ‘danger’ of the trend that the YMCA was becoming a service agency with clients instead of a movement with members.

Martti Muukkonen, Ecumenism of the Laity, pages 230-231

This is the state of the YMCA in 1931; it seems to still be the case 90+ years later.

It’s somewhat ironic that at the Cleveland World’s Conference the Portland Basis was overturned, which had restricted YMCA membership in the USA to only those of approved Evangelical faith – but the damage was done.

According to Muukkonen, the magentism of the Y had attracted enough non-Evangelical/associate members, and through serving them created a clientele model. “Their needs created the emphasis on professional leadership, which, in turn, required financial support from this clientele, which, in turn required more services for their money, etc.”

The Y was stuck; if they stayed with the Portland Basis and a dogmatic view of the Paris Basis, they would actually diminish their outreach to non-Christians while simultaneously offering them more professionalized services.

By ending the Portland Basis they flattened out the membership; however, whether dogmatic or purposive in their posture towards the Paris Basis, there was still missing that original Revivalistic flame that converted members to become disciples of Jesus and regard Him as their God and Saviour.

The Y attracted men who were already converted, or those that wanted to be served by the converted but not actually convert.

The YMCA now makes room for every kind of Christian in every kind of role – this is a significant reality that was not easily achieved.

Where once Christian women, Christian immigrants, Christian blacks, Christian Hispanics, Christian Asians and others were not permitted to be members or leaders – now they have influence across the whole movement, adding to the diverse “C” that was envisioned in the original Paris Basis.

Inclusion and equity have been Christian conversations within the YMCA since the beginning.

While it has often been a hard-fought struggle, there have always been Christians, albeit often initially the minority, who advocate for full inclusion and equity – first for women in the YMCA, then children and youth, then non-white and working class, immigrants, and those of non-Christian faith, and in our current generation LGBQT+ Christians and those with diversabilities.

It’s worth acknowledging that travel and communication radically affected the ability of the YMCA to organize, lead, and care for their members and community.

It would seem that Christians in the Y are now in an interesting situation: with the internet and advanced communication skills, exclusion and inequity get’s addressed more quickly, vigorously, and insistently than ever before.

Where once minority voices could be silenced, marginalized, discounted easily, such is not the case in the same way anymore.

In the Bible, the word “equity” is the same word for “justice” and “righteousness”; it’s at the root of the experience of “peace” of “shalom” – which is the ground of “unity” – of “theosis” – which is what Jesus prays for in John 17 – that we all may be made one – with each other and God like Jesus is with us and the Father.

For Christians in the Y to still be striving for equity and inclusion – for unity and peace – this is at the heart of the Y, at the heart of Christ and his gospel – the extension of his Kingdom in the world.

With more members globally than any other decade in the existence of the YMCA, there are also more Christians in solidarity with the Y than ever before.

The Y is more diligent than ever regarding Christians striving for inclusion and equity in the Y.

Where once white middle aged Christian Protestant men kept women and blacks out of membership and leadership, now they are CEO’s and Presidents of the movement.

While we have much more work to do to embody the unity of Christ, the prayer of Jesus is alive and well in the Y.

But what about conversions? What about the revival spirit of George Williams in 1844 London? What about calling men and women to become disciples of Christ? What role do missionaries have in the Y today?

Is there any YMCA in the world that would forbid a member to convert to Christianity? Unlikely.

Do Christians in the Y with a calling to missionary work have more complicated cultural dynamics to navigate than in 1855 or 1905 or 1955 or 2005? Maybe.

Does the increased complexity mean that the “C” is weaker or gone in the Y? No.

Do Christians with a yearning for revival in and through the Y have a historical precedence for their desire? Yes? Is it a good desire? Yes. Ought they to follow the leading of the Holy Spirit on it? Yes.

So what is stopping Christians with a call to revival from doing their work? Nothing.

Is Christ still compelling us to love, serve and care for all as his hands, with his heart? Even if our demographic numbers are declining? Always. His loyalty to us never wavers, He is with us to the very end.

May our loyalty never waver either, may our worldwide fellowship continue to flourish in this age, amidst all the violence and war, amidst the ecological disasters and devastating inequities, may the true and reconciling peace of Christ prevail in our spirit, mind, and body, may good overcome evil, may the YMCA endure for the glory of God and our joy.

Our God Is Able: the YMCA, Martin Luther King Jr. and The Strength to Love

“When our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds and our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, let us remember that there is a great benign Power in the universe whose name is God, and he is able to make a way out of no way, and transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows.”

– Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, from his sermon “Our God Is Able”

War. Tyranny. Disease. Famine. Fires. Drought. Hate. Bigotry. Terror. Death. Grief. Sorrow. Hopelessness. Heartache. Despair.

The YMCA continues to love, care and serve all across the world amidst every kind of disaster, tragedy, and conflict. What keeps us going?

This sermon by MLK speaks for many of us as we strive to humbly lead and work as Christians in the Y during the darkest days and longest nights.

May it be a source of strength for you in these times, these struggles, these sorrows, these tears.

(On a very personal note: in 2014 I discovered this sermon by MLK, it became deeply formative to my spirit as I struggled to make sense of the untimely deaths of my brothers years earlier and of my father more recently. And like any Christian leader, struggling to resist the ways of the world, and tend to the condition and health of my own soul. This sermon is still relevant to me….

As I continually reflect on the writings of those who also strive to follow in the ways of Christ Jesus, and suffered more than me, and still chose to trust and serve the Lord, they are an inspiration to me to keep going, in faith, hope and love, by the strength of the Spirit.)

“Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling.”

New Testament, Letter from Jude, verse 24

At the center of the Christian faith is the conviction that in the universe there is a God of power who is able to do exceedingly abundant things in nature and in history. This conviction is stressed over and over in the Old and the New Testaments.

Theologically, this affirmation is expressed in the doctrine of the omnipotence of God. The God whom we worship is not a weak and incompetent God. He is able to beat back gigantic waves of opposition and to bring low prodigious mountains of evil. 

The ringing testimony of the Christian faith is that God is able.

The devotees of the new man-centered religion point to the spectacular advances of modern science as justification for their faith.

But alas! something has shaken the faith of those who have made the laboratory “the new cathedral of men’s hopes.”

The instruments which yesterday were worshipped today contain cosmic death, threatening to plunge all of us into the abyss of annihilation.

Man is not able to save himself or the world.

Unless he is guided by God’s spirit, his new-found scientific power will become a devastating Frankenstein monster that will bring to ashes his earthly life.

At times other forces cause us to question the ableness of God.

The stark and colossal reality of evil in the world – what Keats calls “the giant agony of the world”; ruthless floods and tornadoes that wipe away people as though they were weeds in an open field; ills like insanity plaguing some individuals from birth and reducing their days to tragic cycles of meaninglessness; the madness of war and the barbarity of man’s inhumanity to man – why, we ask, do these things occur if God is able to prevent them?

This problem, namely, the problem of evil, has always plagued the mind of man.

I would limit my response to an assertion that much of the evil which we experience is caused by man’s folly and ignorance and also by the misuse of his freedom.

Beyond this, I can say only that there is and always will be a penumbra of mystery surrounding God.

What appears at the moment to be evil may have a purpose that our infinite minds are incapable of comprehending. So in spite of the presence of evil and the doubts that lurk in our minds, we shall wish not to surrender the conviction that God is able.

Let us notice that God is able to subdue all the powers of evil.

In affirming that God is able to conquer evil we admit the reality of evil.

Christianity has never dismissed evil as illusory, or an error of the mortal mind. It reckons with evil as a force that has objective reality.

But Christianity contends that evil contains the seeds of its own destruction.

History is the story of evil forces that advance with seemingly irresistible power only to be crushed by the battering rams of the forces of justice.

There is a law in the moral world – a silent, invisible imperative, akin to the always in the physical world – which reminds us that life will work only in a certain way.

In our own nation another unjust and evil system, known as segregation, for nearly one hundred years inflicted the Negro with a sense of inferiority, deprived him of his personhood, and denied him his birthright of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Segregation has been the Negroe’s burden and America’s shame.

But as on the world scale, so in our nation, the wind of change began to blow. One event has followed another to bring a gradual end to the system of segregation.

Today we know with certainty that segregation is dead. The only question remaining is how costly will be the funeral.

These great changes are not mere political and sociological shifts. They represent the passing of systems that were born in injustice, nurtured in inequality, and reared in exploitation.

They represent the inevitable decay of any system based on principles that are not in harmony with the moral laws of the universe.

When in future generations men look back upon these turbulent, tension packed days through which we are passing, they will see God working through history for the salvation of man.

They will know that God was working through those men who had the vision to perceive that no nation could survive half slave and half free.

God is able to conquer the evils of history. His control is never usurped.

If at times we despair because of the relatively slow progress being made in ending racial discrimination and if we become disappointed because of the undue cautiousness of the federal government, let us gain new heart in the fact that God is able.

In our sometimes difficult and often lonesome walk up freedom’s road, we do not walk alone. God walks with us. 

He has placed within the very structure of this universe certain absolute moral laws. We can neither defy nor break them.

If we disobey them, they will break us. The forces of evil may temporarily conquer truth, but truth will ultimately conquer its conqueror. Our God is able.

Let us notice, finally, that God is able to give us interior resources to confront the trials and difficulties of life.

Each of us faces circumstances in life which compel us to carry heavy burdens of sorrow.

Adversity assails us with hurricane force. Glowing sunrises are transformed into darkest nights. Our highest hopes are blasted and our noblest dreams are shattered.

Christianity has never overlooked these experiences. They come inevitably.

Like the rhythmic alternation in the natural order, life has the glittering sunlight of its summers and the piercing chill of its winters.

Days of unutterable joy are followed by days of overwhelming sorrow. Life brings periods of flooding and periods of drought.

Admitting the weighty problems and staggering disappointments, Christianity affirms that God is able to give us the power to meet them.

He is able to give us the inner equilibrium to stand tall amid the trials and burdens of life.

He is able to provide inner peace amid the outer storms.

The inner stability of the man of faith is Christ’s chief legacy to his disciples.

He offers neither material resources nor a magical formula that exempts us from suffering and persecution, but he brings an imperishable gift: “Peace I leave with you.”

This is the peace that passeth all understanding.

At times we may feel that we do not need God, but on the day when the storms of disappointment rage, the winds of disaster blow, and the tidal waves of grief beat against our lives, if we do not have a deep and patient faith our emotional lives will be ripped to shreds.

There is so much frustration in the world because we have relied on gods rather than God.

We have genuflected before the god of science only to find that it has given us the atomic bomb, producing fears and anxieties that science can never mitigate.

We have worshipped the god of pleasure only to discover that thrills play out and sensations are short-lived.

We have bowed before the god of money only to learn that there are such things as love and friendship that money cannot buy and that in a world of possible depressions, stock market crashes, and bad business investments, money is a rather uncertain deity.

These transitory gods are not able to save us or bring happiness to the human heart.

Only God is able.

It is faith in him that we must rediscover.

With this faith we can transform bleak and desolate valleys into sunlit paths of joy and bring new light into the dark caverns of pessimism.

Is someone here moving toward the twilight of life and fearful of that which we call death? Why be afraid? God is able.

Is someone here on the brink of despair because of the death of a loved one, the breaking of a marriage, or the waywardness of a child? Why despair? God is able to give you the power to endure that which cannot be changed.

Come what may, God is able.

Let this affirmation be our ringing cry.

It will give us courage to face the uncertainties of the future.

It will give our feet new strength as we continue our forward stride toward the city of freedom.

When our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds and our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, let us remember that there is a great benign Power in the universe whose name is God, and he is able to make a way out of no way, and transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows.

[selections taken from pages 107-114, Strength to Love; MLK was part of the Y as a young boy, and is still a dynamic influence upon the YMCA as a preacher and Civil Rights leader]

Why Do We Call It Good Friday?

Why call it Good Friday when it is a day of grief, of sorrow, of suffering, a day of affliction and transgressions, a day of iniquities and wounds?

Ultimately: Today is God’s Friday. And on His Friday, God turned a Bad Day into a Good day.

But why?

Why is today called Good Friday?

Many years ago my then six year old son said, “Shouldn’t it be called Sad Friday?”

His twin brother suggested that it be called Bad Friday, since Jesus was killed on a cross.

Indeed it was a bad day for God.

His One and Only Son was unjustly condemned, slandered, betrayed, abandoned, tortured, mocked and murdered.

It was a sad day for God; it was a sad Friday for Jesus.

Why call it Good Friday when it is a day of grief, of sorrow, of suffering, a day of affliction and transgressions, a day of iniquities and wounds?

Why call it Good Friday when God’s Son is humbled and crucified for preaching the Good News of God’s Kingdom?

If anything, it should be called God’s Friday.

On it God’s Son was killed by God’s people; they had killed another of God’s Prophets as they had done in centuries past, another of God’s Servants rejected.

On this Day it was God’s Kingdom that was resisted, God’s good News of Deliverance and Salvation of Peace and Righteousness rejected.

God the Father sent His Son to be the New King of Israel; to fulfill that ancient promise to Abraham: “I will bless you, I will make you a blessing, through you I will bless the world.

Instead, the children of Abraham, Isaac and Israel killed their promised king.

It was a bad Friday for God the Father! Why call it Good Friday when it’s a day marked by violence, rebellion, and defiance? If nothing else, call it God’s Friday, just not Good Friday.

The earliest Christians called today Holy Friday.

Holy carries with it the meaning of set apart, unlike all else; for obvious reasons, today is holy, unlike all other Fridays in all of history.

Today also became known as Great Friday.

Third Station of the Cross, Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem

A tradition developed in early Christianity when every Friday became a Holy Feast Day in remembrance of Christ’s crucifixion.

This day today became known as Great Friday, a distinction from all the other Holy Feast Days.

Holy Friday. Great Friday. Those are some apt and ancient names for today.

Maybe we should reclaim those early titles for today – instead of calling it Good Friday, call it Holy Friday, or Great Friday. But Good Friday?

Here’s how St. Paul describes the significance of that great and holy day:

Who, being in the form of God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped.
Rather, he made himself nothing,
By taking the form of a servant
Being made in human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a human being,
He humbled himself
By becoming obedient to death
Even death on a cross.

Letter to the Church of Philippi

You could say that God’s heart was hammered onto a hardwood tree that day; a day of humiliation and rejection, a morning of deathly brokenness, of shattered bleeding love.

Ninth Station of the Cross, Via Dolorosa, Jerusalem

God suffered on this Friday. God in the flesh was staked to a rough-hewn pole amidst criminals.

On this Friday God the Son who came to serve and save was ripped to shreds. His life and blood pouring out onto the stones on this Friday.

God gave a vision of this many centuries earlier to a prophet who was also rejected and tortured and destroyed in a tree (according to legend). [It is told that on his final day, Isaiah was stuffed into a hollow tree and then sawn in half.]

Isaiah was a servant that suffered. He was the servant of a God who suffered. He was given words to remember about another servant to come who would suffer:

Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering. 
Yet we considered him punished by God, 
stricken by him and afflicted.
He was oppressed and afflicted, 
yet he did not open his mouth.
He was led like a lamb to the slaughter, 
and as a sheep before its shearers are silent, 
so he did not open his mouth.
By oppression and judgment he was taken away, 
yet who of his generation protested?
He was assigned a grave with the wicked, 
and with the rich in his death.
Though he had done no violence, 
nor was any deceit found in his mouth.

This makes for a Sad Friday. As my son Levi said, “It should be called Bad Friday.” Or at least, instead of Good Friday, God’s Friday.

In German, the day is known as Gottes Freitag. For a nation that predates ours, they carry the tradition of calling today God’s Friday.

But it also seems that some in Germany long ago referred to today as Gute Freitag.

Gute carries with it the meaning of Benevolence, Charity, Kindness, Goodness. 

And so it seems the tradition of suggests calling today Goodness Friday or Sacrificial Kindness Friday.

Ultimately: Today is God’s Friday. And on His Friday, God turned a Bad Day into a Good day.

As we read the sorrowful story in the Gospel According to Luke, amidst the words of grief and paragraphs of pain, there is a simple, stunning line from God’s Son that transforms God’s Friday into a Good Friday:

Two other men, both criminals, were also led out with them to be executed. When they came to the place of The Skull, they were crucified him there, along with the criminals – one on his right, the other on his left. And Jesus whispered amidst his tears groans: Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.

He’s not supposed to be there, between two brigands. 

Jesus was a good man. He brought good news. He was good news. He healed the sick, fed the hungry, befriended the poor, lifted up the lame, set sinners free, generously gave away faith, hope, and love. 

It can’t be a good day when God’s good Son is unjustly put to death. But even amidst the torture and agony and pain, God’s Good Son lets his body:

Be pierced for our transgressions,
Be crushed for our iniquities.
He bore the sin of many and made intercession for the transgressors.

Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing. 

This is the Father’s Friday. For those that believe, trust, accept, want it, today can be a God’s Goodness Friday.

How would someone know that you believed that today is a Good Friday? 

How would someone know that you trusted in the Father’s Forgiveness? 

How would someone know that you believed that on Good Friday the Father laid on his Son the iniquity of us all? 

How would someone know you want today to be a Good Friday?

They would know it when they hear you whisper those same words of Jesus on the cross amidst your own sorrow and suffering. “Father, forgive them, they do not know what they are doing.”

When you are afflicted and crushed, we’ll know you believe God’s Friday is a Good Friday when you whisper the words of God’s Son. 

Why is today called Good Friday?

Because one by one, Christians quietly choose to respond with God’s good forgiveness when we are sinned against – like what our Father in Heaven did for us on that day long ago.

It’s always been God’s Friday.

Through our response to the Father’s forgiveness, our lives, our words, our forgiving just as God forgave us – this will become the best answer to the annual question: Why is today called Good Friday?

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