Today, we ride in silence. Good Friday is the day the Church stops pretending. No alleluias. No shortcuts to the resurrection. Only the long, heavy road to the cross.
Jeepney hermeneutics teaches us that faith is never a private journey. Today, as you and I climb into the jeepney of Good Friday, we discover it is already full—full of the crucified of our time. We sit beside: families in Gaza who have lost everything, children who no longer have parents, parents who no longer have children, civilians trapped between bombs and blockades, communities grieving mass death with nowhere left to flee. Good Friday does not allow us to look away. It forces us to sit with those who bleed.
Many among us in Roman Catholic countries imagine the Stations of the Cross as distant history. But jeepney hermeneutics insists: the Way of the Cross is happening now. Jesus falls under the weight of the cross as families fall under collapsing buildings in Iran and Lebanon. Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem as mothers in Gaza wail in anguish over the bodies of their children. Jesus is stripped as entire neighborhoods are stripped of shelter, safety, and dignity. Jesus cries out, “My God, my God why have you forsaken me?” as peoples and communities cry out under the horrors of siege and displacement.
Good Friday is not a reenactment. It is recognition.
Empire always crucifies. Always has. Always will. The cross was not an accident. It was a tool of empire—a public warning, a political message, a method of control. Empire always crucifies. Always has. Always will. It crucifies through smart bombs labeled as “defense,” armed blockades justified as “security,” religious narratives that dehumanize entire peoples, benevolent policies that treat civilian deaths as acceptable losses.
The cross is not a symbol of private piety. It is a public indictment of systems that kill the innocent. And so today, inside a jeepney, as we remember the crucifixion of Jesus, we remember all who are crucified by the machinery of modern empire.
On Good Friday, God does not look away. God does not spiritualize suffering. God does not offer easy answers. God enters the wound. The crucified Christ is not distant from Gaza. He is buried under the rubble. He is carried in the arms of grieving Iranian parents. He is the young girls pulled from bombed children's schools. He is the family escaping toward a border that will not open. Good Friday tells us: God is found where most of the Christian world refuses to look.
The God we follow is not in the White House nor in Malacanang. The God we follow is not a God of palaces, but the God of the bleeding and the wounded. The God of the displaced and disenfranchised. The God of the crucified.
And never, ever forget: the God of the crucified is the God who rises.
Amen.
*art by Zee-m Tiempo
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