'It is finished' by Marcie Walker, Black Coffee with White Friends [Holy Week Vigil 2022]

Jesus gave us a litany of last words, known as the Seven Last Words of Christ. The deathbed words of the Suffering Servant provide a framework for Holy Week. Each day between now and Resurrection Sunday, seven friends will share their own stories to help us retrieve lament and to keep vigil with Jesus. Their stories have helped form my understanding of cruciform suffering and I believe they could also encourage you too.

Each short story will be paired with an image, a Scripture passage, and a prayer. This year I’ve curated a series of contemporary icons from Ukrainian iconographers. As we hold space for each other’s stories, we take shelter under the outstretched arms of Christ for every story of suffering around the world. In order to lean toward the suffering in Ukraine, one of our storytellers is giving us the opportunity to send help to two organizations on the ground in Ukraine and neighboring friendly countries, and to receive a special thank you gift from Michelle Van Loon in return.

Would you read Marcie’s story with an open heart for any words Christ might be speaking to you?

Crucifixion, Arsen Bereza (b. 1989, Lviv, Ukraine) - Source

 
Heaven and Earth were finished, down to the very last detail.

When Jesus received the sour wine, He said, “It is finished!” And, He bowed His head and voluntarily gave up His spirit.
— Genesis 2:1 & John 19:30
 

It is finished

By Marcie Walker, Black Coffee with White Friends

When my mother was sentenced to serve 8-25 years in prison on the charge of involuntary manslaughter, we all said, “This is it,” which in our hearts translated to, “So, this is how it all ends.” She was nearly 60 and all of us, her children, were grown but still asking ourselves,”What kind of woman is this? Troubles ride on the wind and land at her feet.” 

I can’t remember a time when my mother wasn’t a deeply disturbed woman. I can remember throughout my childhood more of her absences due to her extended stays in various mental care facilities than I can remember her presence at birthdays and school meetings, recitals and assemblies. 

Every time I read scriptures that capture the disciples constant state of perplexed wonder, questioning if Jesus was indeed who He claimed He was, I am entirely sympathetic to their longing to simply know once and for all: Are you the One who was sent? 

This is exactly how it felt to be my mother’s daughter. Who was this mother? Like Thomas, so many times I wanted to straight up explain to her, “Woman, we have no idea where you’re going. How do you expect us to know the road?” (John 14:5)

Reading ancient and sacred things often leaves us feeling a bit too highly of our own intellect. We wonder, “How could they not know that Jesus was obviously The Messiah? He walked on water!!! He changed the water to wine!” We forget that we can only be so cocksure because each of these doubting disciples left us their stories. 

Besides, don’t we see miracles every day and still struggle to believe? We carry time machines in our pockets and have cups of coffee while suspended in the sky—but we scoff at the very idea of a God who can see us, hear us, and is very much a part of all of us. 

I had a black mother who gave birth to five perfectly healthy babies and lived to tell the tale. Given the disproportionately high maternal mortality rate of black American women that still plagues us today, I am nothing short of a miracle. My daughter is a miracle. Therefore, it shouldn’t be hard at all to believe that Jesus of Nazareth died on a cross given the extraordinarily high rate of crucifixions in His day. However, when I read that He cried out from the cross, “It is finished,” do I believe Him? Is this it? Is this how it all ends? What kind of man is this? 

John, the one Jesus loved, tells us: In the beginning, before all time, was the Word, Christ. And the Word was with God, and the Word was God Himself. He was continually existing in the beginning, co-eternally with God. All things were made and came into existence through Him. Without Him nothing made came into being. In Him was life and the power to bestow life, and the life was the Light of all. This Light shines on in the darkness, and the darkness did not understand it. So it could not overpower it, or change it, or swallow it whole. It could not put the Light out. 

For six days, God spoke the Word and the Spirit moved:

And there was Light. 

Then there was Sky…

then Dry Land, 

then Sun, Moon and Stars, 

then Fish and Flight,

and then Beasts and People.

Until finally, “God looked at all of this creation, and proclaimed that this was good, very good.  On the seventh day, God finished all the work of creation, and so on that day, God rested.” (Genesis 1:31; 2:2). Our kingdom here on earth is made. 

As to the beginning of this kingdom right here and now, Jesus sets into motion His eternal Kingdom in heaven:

First, He comes as the Light of the World.

Then the Sky opens to speak, “This is my Son in whom I am well pleased.”

Then He tames the desert land…

and, His face shines as bright as the sun,

and He multiplies the fish,

Then He rides an ass and a colt into His Kingdom And laments His people. 

Until finally, “It is finished!” And He bows His head, voluntarily surrendering His spirit to rest for three days. 

At my mother’s trial, when the gavel struck, we heard, “It’s finished. Done.” We knew this would be the finality of my mother’s arduous existence. “It’s finished,” we said. “It’s all over.” 

Little did we know that her story was only beginning. From a cell, much the size of a tomb, our mother would earn a GED and an Associate’s Degree and miraculously get remarried and released from prison 8 years later. She would be back home for the births of her first great-grandchildren. More miracles.  

And little did Thomas or any of the disciples know that when all seemed finished, it would only be the beginning of finally understanding just who is this man who calms the storms, walks on water, makes the blind to see, who speaks to demons with authority, who leaves the tomb to meet them along the shores of the Sea of Galilee, and who did so many more things that if they were all written down, each of them, one by one, the whole world would not be big enough to hold such a library of books. (John 21:25)

My Lord and My God, 

You cried, “Telelestai, it is finished! It is complete! It is fulfilled and continues to be fulfilled on earth as it is in heaven!” You are the One who was sent and the One who will come again. 

This I believe. 

Selah. 


Marcie Alvis-Walker is the writer behind Black Coffee with White Friends, a blog that chronicles her experiences as a black woman navigating white-dominant spaces. Through the use of memoir, letters, and devotionals, she hopes to narrate the legacy of our life and times today,mostly for her daughter but also for future generations.

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blackcoffeewithwhitefriends/?hl=en
Blog: blackcoffeewithwhitefriends.com 

Patreon: Mockingbird History Lessons for Adults


The Sixth Word:  It is finished.

Read

Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth.” So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. And God blessed them, and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth.” …And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, a sixth day.  Thus the heavens and the earth were finished…. [Genesis 1:26-28, 31—2:1a].

When Jesus had received the vinegar, he said, “It is finished”; and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit. [John19:30]

Pray

How can we ever find words to express our gratitude to you, dear Lord? You did what we could not do. You defeated our enemy, death by giving yourself to it. You obeyed the father with every single breath until your last breath. Help us live and die with that same devotion and love. We sit today in acknowledging that while death has been ultimately destroyed we still feel its sting. With Marcie, we lament the moments when we thought “Is this it? Is this how it ends?” With Marcie, we wait for every sad ending to be undone. In the meantime…

We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you because by your holy Cross you have redeemed the world. If we have died with him, we shall also live with him; if we endure, we shall also reign with him. We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you because by your holy Cross you have redeemed the world. Amen.

Listen

Listen to Last Words - a playlist for our Holy Week Vigil

Give

For your donation of $25 or more, Michelle Van Loon will send you (or the person of your choice - U.S. addresses only) an autographed copy of her new book, Translating Your Past: Finding Meaning in Family Ancestry, Genetic Clues, and Generational Trauma.

Any funds Michelle raises through this initiative will be divided between these two organizations who are both doing important work right this moment on the ground in the region.

If you would like to donate $25 or more and receive a signed copy of Translating Your Past as a thank you, click here to email Michelle with the name and mailing address of the person to whom you’d like her to send the book. In turn, she’ll send you her PayPal and/or Venmo information so you can send her your donation.

Click through the images below for more details.

Send help to two organizations on the ground in Ukraine and neighboring friendly countries, plus receive a special thank you gift from Michelle Van Loon in return. Get all the details here.