I began reading this on Palm Sunday, and thought I would finish by Easter. While I didn't finish that quickly, it turns out that it doesn't matter when you read this book, because "Good Friday cannot be confined to Holy Week. Every day of the year is a good day to think more deeply about Good Friday, for Good Friday is the drama of the love by which our every day is sustained." [from the preface].
This would be a beautiful book to read every single year leading up to Easter, but it would also be wonderful to read any time of the year, even a few pages a day as a morning devotional.
So many wonderful quotes; here are a few favorites:
In the sacrifice of the cross, all is endured and all is redeemed. For all that ever was wrong, is wrong, and will be wrong, the price has been paid. Beyond our capacity to understand or explain, justice has been done, and justice was done by love, because the justice of God is love, and that is because God is love. At the foot of the cross, faith discerns, through our tears, that nothing is left unattended, nothing unknown, nothing unloved, nothing unredeemed. Atonement. The Great Thing, the thing that had to be done or else nothing else could be done, has been done. [pg. 225].
The cross is not merely the bad news before the good news of the resurrection. Come Easter Sunday, we do not put the suffering and death behind us as though it were no more than the nightmarish prelude to the joy of victory. No, the cross remains the path of discipleship for those who follow the risen Lord. It is not as though there are two paths, one the way of the cross and the other the way of resurrection victory. Rather, the resurrection means that the way of the cross *is* the way of victory. [pg. 159]
...to the whole bedraggled company of humankind he had abandoned heaven to join, he says, "Come. Everything is ready now. In your fears and your laughter, in your friendships and farewells, in your loves and losses, in what you have been able to do and in what you know you will never get done, come, follow me. We are going home to the waiting Father." [pg. 260]