The One Taking the Nails--April 3, 2026
"Therefore God exalted him even more highly and gave him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father." (Philippians 2:9-11)
Jesus is what God looks like with a human face.
That's the crux of this whole passage we've been looking at over these last several days, reflecting on the words many of us heard back on Sunday. Jesus shows us fully what God is like--and not just in the moments of miraculous power, but in the moments of utter weakness and suffering love. This is the truly scandalous--but utterly essential--claim of Christianity. We don't simply believe that Jesus shows us what God is like when he's walking on water or turning water into wine; Jesus reveals God most clearly when he is bleeding and dying on a cross.
That's really the gist underneath Paul's claim here that Jesus is given "the name that is above every name," and that "every knee" will bend and "every tongue" confess this name. See, Paul isn't just waxing eloquent here--he's quoting from Isaiah 45:21-23, where the God of Israel, YHWH, declares that there is no other God and no other savior, and then that "to me every knee shall bow, every tongue shall swear." Paul is deliberately claiming for Jesus the status that only belongs to the God of Israel, the God of all creation. And he has just made the point in the immediately preceding verses that this Jesus emptied himself and laid down his life on a cross. The point is clear: it is God who went to that cross. It is God who goes all the way into death for our sake. It is God whose life is laid down in order to redeem the world. If you want to know what God is like, in other words, you find it most clearly and truly in the Crucified One, dying at the hands of the politically powerful and respectable religious people rather than killing them. This is why Jesus is exalted and why his name is "above every name." Jesus has been showing us the face of God all along. To say that Jesus is "exalted" isn't so much to say that God "rewarded" Jesus for doing a hard thing like dying and that resurrection is a sort of return on his investment, but rather that Jesus has been showing us all along that it was God who took the beatings, God who was mocked by the crowds and the soldiers, and God who bore the nails. It was God, even, who cried out, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
We who know this story know that come Sunday, death will not have gotten the last word and the tomb will be empty. But to be clear, it's not that Easter Sunday takes away or erases Good Friday--rather, the resurrection reveals that the cross is the place where God's victory already happened. It is as Lesslie Newbigin put it: "The resurrection is not the reversal of a defeat but the proclamation of a victory. The King reigns from the tree. The reign of God has indeed come upon us, and its sign is not a golden throne but a wooden cross." To say that Jesus is exalted and given the name above every name is not to say that the cross is cancelled out but that it was God all along who was on it. And that means, further, that any attempts to equate God with shows of brute force, of domination, of imperial coercion, and of inflicting violence on others are blasphemous. God is the One being crucified, never the one doing the crucifying. God is the One taking the nails, never the one holding the hammer.
That is vital for us to be clear about, because we are easily tempted to make just that mistake. We are often tempted to point to the powerful and say, "This is what is God is like!" We are easily misled into conflating God with kings, emperors, potentates, and presidents, and to assume their high offices are evidence that they have been bestowed with divine favor. Paul's point in his letter to the Philippians is the opposite--that it was always the Crucified One in whom God was fully present. It was never Caesar, no matter how much he told people he was divine.
Whatever else we take from the story of Jesus' Passion on this day, that much is clear. The story of Good Friday is the story of the lengths God has been willing to go for our sake, because God didn't send someone else to do the suffering. In Jesus, it has been God who died our death and who bore the worst we could do. That is why Jesus' name is above all others. That is why he is the One we confess to be Lord.
All hail the one true and living God--the One nailed between thieves for the sake of the world.
All praise to you, Lord, for the depths of love that went to a cross for us all.






