
Unshaken Saints Not-So-Good Friday: Easter's Permission to Feel
Mar 29, 2026
They unpack why a sacred day of suffering feels devastating for those who lived it. They trace the Stations of the Cross and the gap between Friday’s grief and Sunday’s victory. They argue for honoring sorrow, show how lament is woven through scripture, and explain why a broken heart can open space for deeper light and honest faith.
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Good Friday Is Salvific But Not Immediately Consoling
- Good Friday is theologically "good" for its salvific results, but experientially it was horrific and unknowable for Jesus and his followers.
- Jared Halverson contrasts soteriological meaning with the raw grief of Friday to argue we must honor the pain before rejoicing in Sunday.
Missing Station Left Me Wanting A Resurrection
- Jared Halverson recounts walking the 14 Stations of the Cross in Puerto Rico and finding the series ends at the tomb with no immediate resurrection station.
- As a 19-year-old missionary he expected a 15th station and felt devastated that the pilgrimage stopped at the closed tomb.
Allow Friday To Do Its Work Before Celebrating
- Don’t rush past Good Friday and sanitize sorrow; let the hard hours perform their necessary work before celebrating resurrection.
- Halverson urges worshippers to pause, inhabit Friday’s grief, and allow it to shape genuine Easter joy.



