What Is "Good" About Good Friday?
Good Friday is the day Christians remember the crucifixion and death of Jesus Christ, celebrated on the Friday before Easter Sunday. It's one of the most significant days in the Christian faith, and arguably in all of human history.
But if Jesus suffered and died on Good Friday, why do we call it good?
That's the question worth sitting with, and it has a better answer than you might expect.
Why Is Good Friday Called "Good"?
The short answer: "Good" most likely meant "holy." In Old English, the word "good" was sometimes used to describe days set apart for religious observance, the same way we'd use the word "holy" today.
The Oxford English Dictionary defines "good" in this context as "a day or season observed as holy by the church." Senior Editor Fiona MacPherson notes that this use of "good" was traditional for sacred days on the Christian calendar. That same pattern shows up across other languages: The Catholic Encyclopedia notes Good Friday is called "Holy Friday" in Romance languages and "the Holy and Great Friday" in the Greek Liturgy.
A second theory: the name may have come from "God's Friday," with "good" being a gradual spoken corruption of "God" over centuries. However, most language experts today consider this unlikely — the Oxford English Dictionary and leading linguists point to the "holy" explanation as the most credible origin, according to Slate. Either way, the earliest written record of the phrase "Good Friday," spelled guode Friday, dates to an Old English text from 1290, according to BBC's Magazine Monitor.
Whichever origin story is correct, one thing is clear: Good Friday is one of the most significant days in human history. It changed the course of humanity and of our world.
What Is Good Friday, Exactly?
Good Friday is the Friday before Easter Sunday. It's the day Christians observe Jesus Christ's crucifixion, including His arrest, trial, suffering, and death on the cross.
Some churches hold dedicated Good Friday services with Scripture readings, prayer, and a time of quiet reflection. Others fold it into their broader Easter weekend. Traditions vary by denomination, but the focus is the same: remembering what Jesus did on the cross and why it matters.
What Happened on Good Friday?
On Good Friday, Jesus was arrested, tried, mocked, beaten, and crucified. He died on the cross and was buried, setting the stage for the resurrection that Christians celebrate on Easter Sunday.
For His followers at the time, it was devastating. They didn't yet understand what His death would accomplish. But looking back, Christians see Good Friday as the moment everything changed.
For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. — Romans 6:23
Jesus' death on the cross paid the penalty for human sin, opening the door for every person to come to God, enter into a real relationship with Him, and be transformed by His love.
Without Good Friday, there is no Easter. Without the crucifixion, there is no resurrection. His death made His victory possible.
Why Do Christians Observe Good Friday?
Christians observe Good Friday because the crucifixion is the center of their faith. Jesus didn't just die. He died for something. His death was a sacrifice that made a way for humanity to be reconciled to God.
That's why, even on a day that looks like defeat, Christians call it good. Not because suffering is good. But because of what that suffering accomplished, for every person who has ever lived.
Where Does Good Friday Come From Historically?
The observance of Good Friday has roots in the Jewish celebration of Passover. Passover commemorates God's deliverance of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt, specifically the final plague in which the firstborn sons of Egypt died, while Jewish families who applied lamb's blood to their doorposts were "passed over" and spared.
Christians see Jesus as the fulfillment of that image. He is called the Lamb of God, the final sacrifice that frees people from the bondage of sin. According to Britannica, Christian tradition holds that Jesus' crucifixion took place during the week of Passover itself, and early Christ-followers recognized the deep parallel between the Passover lamb and Jesus' death on the cross. This is widely considered one of the key reasons the observance of Good Friday took root in the early church.
By the 4th century, the Roman Catholic Church formally designated Good Friday as a day of fasting to mark the crucifixion, cementing its place in the Christian calendar ever since.
So What's Actually "Good" About Good Friday?
Not the suffering. Not the death. What's good is what came from it.
Jesus endured more pain than any person has ever faced, and he did it willingly, out of love for humanity. His death broke the power of sin. His resurrection three days later broke the power of death. Together, they made a way for every person to have hope, forgiveness, and a future.
Good Friday isn't good despite what happened. It's good because of what it made possible.
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