Skip to content
Good FridayMissional~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

The State Executed an Innocent Man: Good Friday and the Violence of Empire

Isaiah 53:3-6John 19:28-30

The cross as state violence against the innocent, prophetic solidarity with the crucified peoples of today, and the cost of confronting empire

Missional-Theological

The mission of God in the world

Tradition vocabulary:state violencecrucified peoplessolidaritypropheticempireliberationsystemic injusticemartyrs

Good Friday Is a Story About State Violence

Let us not spiritualize what happened on Good Friday to the point of erasing what actually happened. What actually happened is this: an innocent man was arrested by religious authorities collaborating with an occupying military power. He was given a sham trial. He was tortured. And he was executed by the state's preferred method of public terror. Isaiah saw it: "He was oppressed and afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb to the slaughter." The language is deliberate: oppressed. The word in Hebrew is nagas — it is the same word used for the taskmaster's oppression of the enslaved in Egypt. Jesus was not just killed. He was oppressed. He was subjected to the machinery of systemic violence. The cross was not a religious symbol in the first century. It was a political weapon. Rome crucified people along major highways as a message: this is what happens to those who challenge the empire. The cross was state terrorism. And God chose to die on one. This changes how we read the cross. It is not only a transaction between God and humanity. It is a confrontation between God and the powers. When God enters the world as a poor, colonized, brown-skinned man and is executed by the empire, God is making a statement about which side He is on. He is on the side of the crucified.
Isaiah 53:7Isaiah 53:8Colossians 2:15

The Crucified Peoples

Ignacio Ellacuria, the Jesuit theologian murdered by the Salvadoran military in 1989, wrote about "the crucified peoples" — entire populations subjected to systemic violence, poverty, and oppression. He argued that the crucified Christ is present today in every community that bears the marks of crucifixion: innocent suffering, state violence, economic exploitation. Good Friday is not ancient history. It is happening now. And the God who hung on the cross stands in solidarity with every person being crucified by the systems of this world.

Source: Ignacio Ellacuria, S.J. (1930-1989) / Concept of "crucified peoples"

The Cross Reveals Whose Side God Is On

"He was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities." The progressive and liberation traditions read this not only as substitutionary but as solidary. God did not merely pay a debt. God entered the condition of the oppressed. God became a victim of the very systems that crush the poor. Jon Sobrino writes: "The cross is not primarily something that Jesus does for us. It is something that happens to Jesus because of us — because of the world's sin, the world's violence, the world's refusal to practice justice." The cross is the logical consequence of what happens when a prophet of justice confronts an empire built on injustice. Jesus was not crucified for being too spiritual. He was crucified for being too disruptive. He overturned the tables of the money changers. He declared good news to the poor. He healed on the Sabbath in defiance of religious gatekeeping. He announced a Kingdom in which the last are first and the first are last. That kind of message gets you killed — in the first century and in every century since. Good Friday reveals that the God of the Bible is not neutral. The cross is God's identification with the victims of violence, injustice, and systemic oppression. "The punishment that brought us peace was on him" — and in bearing that punishment, God declared solidarity with every person who has ever been punished unjustly.
Isaiah 53:5Luke 4:18-19Matthew 21:12-13

The Cost of Confronting Empire

"It is finished." These words have been the last words of countless prophets, activists, and martyrs who confronted unjust systems and paid the price. Oscar Romero, shot while celebrating the Eucharist. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, hanged for resisting the Third Reich. Martin Luther King Jr., assassinated for demanding justice. Dorothy Stang, murdered for defending the Amazon. In each case, the pattern of Good Friday repeated: the prophet speaks truth, the empire strikes back, the body is broken. But here is what the empire never understands: the cross does not end the movement. It amplifies it. The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church. Good Friday is the day the empire thought it won. Easter is the day it discovered it lost. "By his wounds we are healed." The healing that comes through the cross is not just individual reconciliation with God — it is the healing of the systems that crucify. The cross exposes violence. It unmasks the powers. It reveals the true face of empire. And in that exposure, it begins the process of dismantling. So tonight, we do not merely remember what happened to Jesus. We remember what is happening to the crucified peoples of today. We stand in solidarity with every person being crushed by the systems of this world. And we trust that the God who was crucified by empire is the same God who rises to judge it. The cross is not the end. It is the cost of confronting evil. And the God who paid that cost is alive — and He is still confronting.
John 19:30Isaiah 53:5Revelation 21:4

Applications

  • 1Name the crucified peoples of today. Immigrants. Refugees. The incarcerated. The homeless. Where is the cross being carried right now?
  • 2Examine your own complicity. Good Friday is not just about "them." The Reproaches ask: what have WE done? Where are we silent when we should speak?
  • 3Support one organization working to dismantle a system of crucifixion — poverty, mass incarceration, environmental destruction. Let Good Friday move you to action.
  • 4Read Isaiah 53 alongside today's headlines. The text is not ancient. It is happening now.

Prayer Suggestions

  • God of the crucified, You entered the condition of the oppressed. You know state violence from the inside. You bear the marks of the nails. Stand in solidarity with every person being crucified today.
  • Forgive our complicity. Forgive our silence. Forgive the systems we participate in that crucify the innocent. Break our hearts and move our hands.
  • For every prophet who confronted empire and paid the price — Romero, Bonhoeffer, King, Stang, and the thousands whose names we do not know — we give thanks. Their blood, like Yours, speaks.
  • The cross is not the end. The cross is the cost. And the God who paid it is alive. Give us courage to confront what crucifies. In Jesus' name. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Selma (2014)

In Selma, the marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge are beaten by state troopers — state violence against people demanding justice. The images are cruciform: bodies broken, blood shed, innocence assaulted by power. But the marchers got up. They marched again. And the nation changed. Good Friday is the original Selma: the empire strikes the prophet, the body breaks, the blood flows. But the story does not end on the bridge. It does not end on the cross. It ends with resurrection — and the empire on the wrong side of history.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

The cross was not a religious symbol. It was state terrorism. God chose to die on one. That is a statement about whose side God is on.

Pastoral

God entered the condition of the oppressed. Whatever cross you are carrying — unjustly, systemically, personally — God has carried it first.

Edgy

Jesus was not crucified for being too spiritual. He was crucified for being too disruptive. Good Friday is what happens when a prophet of justice confronts an empire built on injustice.

More Titles

The State Executed an Innocent ManGod and the Crucified PeoplesThe Cross Reveals Whose Side God Is OnThe Cost of Confronting EmpireGood Friday Is Still Happening
Try our Title Generator

Frequently Asked Questions

How does liberation theology read the cross?

Liberation theology reads the cross as God's solidarity with the crucified peoples of the world. Jesus was an innocent man executed by state violence — and God's identification with that victim declares that God stands on the side of the oppressed. The cross is not only a transaction for sin but a confrontation with the powers and systems that crucify the innocent.

What are "the crucified peoples"?

A concept from Ignacio Ellacuria, S.J., "the crucified peoples" refers to entire communities subjected to systemic violence, poverty, and oppression. Liberation theology sees the crucified Christ present in these communities today. Good Friday is not only a past event but an ongoing reality wherever innocent people are crucified by unjust systems.