GOT THE TEE-SHIRT? : IT IS FINISHED!
Those wanting to print slogans on tee-shirts for the first Good Friday would have been stuck for choice.

The problem for sellers of tee-shirts on the first Good Friday would have been to decide what would be the best-selling slogan to put on them. It was a choice between what the public wanted and what the ruling authorities would allow. There were also 2 slogans which would sum up the day perfectly but which, at the time, would only have been understood by the single person to which each applied, so sales of those would have been practically zero.
In the popularity stakes, some fanatics would have wanted tee-shirt slogans proclaiming ‘FREE BARABBAS’ or even ‘BARABBAS IS INNOCENT’, though that was stretching the truth a little too far. But not even the most die-hard follower of Barabbas would have dared to risk the wrath of the political rulers by showing support in this way for the man who the Romans regarded as a rabble-rousing terrorist. They would quickly have joined him in prison. They could never have expected that, very soon, the Roman governor, Pilate, would offer them the choice of freeing Barabbas or Jesus.
The High Priest and his associates would gladly have produced tee-shirts saying ‘CRUCIFY HIM’, and given them away free, when they took Jesus before Pilate to seek the death penalty on the grounds of treason. Those tee-shirts would have increased the numbers of the ‘rent-a-mob’ they had hastily assembled outside Pilate’s residence and stirred them into co-ordinated vocal demands to pressurise Pilate into seeing things their way.
And when it happened, that agonising death of Jesus on the cross, they could hardly celebrate as they would have wished. Too much enthusiasm would have shown the Romans how easily the Jewish leaders had tricked them into giving them just what they wanted. So both of the slogans which would have found popularity with some groups had their problems.
Perhaps the perfect slogan for this day which ended with the death of the Son of God on the cross was one which could have been bought in shops in Britain a few year’s ago. It read ‘CHAOS, CRISIS, CONFUSION. NOW MY WORK IS FINISHED.’ On that first Good
Friday, such a tee-shirt could only have been worn by one ‘person’ as he watched Jesus hang in pain, dying......and dead.
The devil, Satan, the prince of evil, whatever you wish to call him, at last thought that he had succeeded where he had so dismally failed through Herod’s soldiers at Christ’s birth and in his temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. Now he had manoeuvred Jesus into a corner from which He could not escape with His way of peace and truth and love, and he had also manipulated the High Priest and Pilate, in their desire for control and power, into doing his will. So Christ’s life had ended in pain and shame, in agony and ignominy on a cross. Now there would indeed be chaos, crisis and confusion, just the conditions for Satan to do his worst and for evil to take over the world. With a supercilious smirk, he could say ‘Now my work is finished.’
But the real slogan for Good Friday is not Satan’s satisfied statement, but Christ’s last words from the Cross. He too could say ‘It is finished!’ - not His life, but His work of salvation through the sacrifice of His life in love for you and me. ‘IT IS FINISHED!’ would have been the slogan on Christ’s tee-shirt, a tee-shirt only He could wear. Only He had been there - condemned and crucified though innocent - and only He had done it - taken on Himself the sins of the world to bring us forgiveness - and only He had got that tee-shirt. And the powers of darkness were soon to learn what those words really meant.








