Dear siblings in Jesus Christ,
As ever, we have so much to pray for…
But this week, I invite you to do something a little odd with me:
Will you pray with me for Jesus, too?
In this week in which we remember
his most agonizing moments,
his trauma, his desolation, his execution as a common criminal,
let’s pray for him, as he prays and works unceasingly for us.
Friends, let us pray.
For those unjustly blamed
across time and space:
for Jesus, accused and sentenced to death
by the powers who feared his revolutionary Kin(g)dom;
for our Jewish neighbors,
wrongly punished across the centuries for Christ’s death
and for many other crimes of which they are innocent;
for members of the Asian American and Pacific Islander community
who have become a hyper-visible target to pin this pandemic on;
for migrants and immigrants who are accused of
stealing jobs and depleting resources
simply for daring to seek a life for themselves and their loved ones;
we pray.
For those unjustly shamed
across time and space:
For Jesus, tortured and taunted by Roman soldiers,
stripped of his friends, his clothing, his life;
For sex workers
whose livelihoods are criminalized
and bodies dehumanized;
For all who have been victim-blamed,
told that harassment, abuse, and even death
are their fault because of who they are, how they act,
or the jobs or beliefs they hold;
we pray.
And for those who go unnamed
across time and space:
for the two men crucified alongside Jesus,
and the countless others who have been
tortured, executed, disappeared
from before the dawn of the Roman Empire
through the current regime the United States;
for all victims of mass shootings,
too many to name, too many to bear;
for the numberless masses of human beings crushed
under the grindstone of “progress,”
the deaths of their cultures and of their bodies justified
in the name of excess wealth for the few;
we pray.
O God who hears the cries
of those unjustly blamed,
those dehumanized and shamed,
those whose names are eradicated from recorded history
and who replies
by becoming one of them,
by entering into ultimate solidarity on a Roman cross,
and by exposing the violence of worldly powers for the evil it is,
Thank you.
Make your Spirit known to us.
Unite and empower us for the work ahead.
Thank you.
Amen.
I wrote this pastoral prayer for Grace Presbyterian in Tuscaloosa, AL, for their 2021 Palm Sunday service occurring not long after the Atlanta Spa Shootings and yet another shooting in Boulder, Colorado.