Now that I have completed my Lenten project, I wanted to create a file of the text only, that you are welcome to copy and share, as long as you attribute them to this page and credit me.
Kirkepiscatoid's Stations of the Cross--A Journey into the Passion of the World as illustrated by the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ
Opening Prayers:
Leader:  ✠In the name of God the  Father, Jesus the Son, and the Holy Spirit, our sustainer and redeemer,
People:  Amen.
Leader:   Lord, have mercy.
People:  Christ, have mercy.
Leader:  Lord, have mercy.
Leader and People:
Our Father, who art in Heaven,
Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come,
Thy will be done,
on earth as it is in Heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread,
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against  us.
And lead us not into  temptation,
but deliver us  from evil.
Leader:   Pour your grace upon our hearts, O Lord, that the cross and passion of  our Lord Jesus Christ strengthen us in all goodness and mercy.
People:  Save us from the time of trial, O Lord, and bring us to the  glory and resurrection of your blessed Son.  Amen.
The First Station:  Jesus  is condemned to death
Leader:   O holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People:  You stood in judgment without blemish as you were handed your  fate.
In the early light of morning, the chief priests and  scribes conferred in the waning darkness to bring about your death.    You were bound, led away, and delivered to Pilate. As the sun rose  higher in the sky, your blamelessness was revealed to the point Pilate  could find no fault with you.  When interrogated, you gave no answer.   But the people clamored for darkness.  They cried, "Give us Barabbas.   Give us Barabbas and crucify this man."  The voice of Pilate's wife  whispered in his ear, "Have nothing to do with this man."  As a riot  began to build, Pilate took water and washed his hands.  "I am innocent  of this man's blood," he declared.  "See to it yourselves," and he  handed Jesus over to be crucified.
Leader:  God did not spare the life of his own Son;
People:  But handed Him to the mob for crucifixion.
Leader:  Let us pray.
(a brief period of silence is observed.)
Holy  and immortal God,
Your own Son was stripped, mocked, scourged and  beaten
Before dying on the cross.
Grant that in your eternal mercy
That  in his enduring humiliation and pain
We seek justice and peace in  this world
When none seems to be had.
In the name of Jesus Christ  we pray.
People:  Amen.
Holy  God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Second Station:  Jesus Takes up his Cross
Leader:  O holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore you;
People:  You carried the instrument of your death  through the crowded streets.
Jesus left the place called  "The Pavement," carrying his cross up to the hill of Golgotha, known as  "The Skull," as if God's Son were a common criminal.  He was  oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he did not open his mouth; like a  lamb that is led to the slaughter, and like a sheep that before its  shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth. By a perversion of  justice he was taken away. Who could have imagined this?  Yet the Father  allowed his own son to be crushed with pain, spat upon, mocked.
Leader:  The Lord laid upon him the  iniquity of the world;
People:   For sins the people of the world committed in thought, word, and deed;  things done, and things left undone.
Leader:  Let us pray.
(a brief period of silence is observed.)
Lord God, author of the  universe;
your beloved Son carried a cross hewn of the wood of our  iniquities;
grant us strength and courage to take up our crosses and  follow him,
although the way is narrow, and the journey arduous.
We  ask this in the name of your Son,
who lives and reigns in your  heavenly kingdom.
People:   Amen.
Holy God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy  Immortal One,
Have mercy on us.
The Third Station:  Jesus Falls a First Time
Leader:  O  holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People:  You stumbled  and fell while the unmoving crowd looked on, and soldiers jeered.
Although  Jesus, Son of the Living God, had the power to summon angels and  archangels and all the company of Heaven to deliver him, instead he  consented to one of the emptiest moments in humanity--a condemned man  walking to his death, carrying his cross.  As he lay face down in the  dust, the weight of the cross upon his weakening body, its rough wood  splintering into his flesh, instead of holy adoration he heard mockery  and scorn.
Come, let us bow down and bend the knee,
and kneel  before the Lord our maker.
For he is our God,
and we are the  people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand.
Oh, that today you  would hearken to his voice!
Leader:   God did not lift his Son from the dirty cobblestone street;
People:  But left him in the loneliness of human suffering.
Leader:  Let us pray.
(a brief period of silence is observed.)
Almighty  God,
When we lie fallen in the midst of our own humiliation and  doubt,
Remind us that you sent your own Son ahead of us
as a  suffering servant to us all,
so that we may also rise in your glory.
When  we feel alone and afraid
and our human frailties overtake us,
Place  our hand upon the Cross of Christ,
So that we know he has been here  before us
as we endure our weakest moments.
Strengthen us in the  hope of the Resurrection of your Son,
and sustain us with your Holy  Spirit.
People:  Amen.
Holy  God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Fourth Station:  Jesus Meets his  Afflicted Mother
Leader:   O  holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People:  Your blessed Mother wept at the sight of your pain.
As  your mother saw your bruised, bloody and scourged body, she thought of  an angel that spoke to her over three decades ago.  "Greetings, favored  one!"  the angel had told her.  What favor was there in this?  How could  the crowds who cheered triumphantly upon her son's entry into Jerusalem  now mock him?  Her son had fulfilled the angel's words--he had lifted  up the lowly, and he had filled the hungry with the hope of good  things--love and trust in our eternal Maker.
"O Adonai!"  she  must have cried.  "Come to the help of your servant Israel!  Where is  the promise--the promise you gave to Abraham and our fathers?  Where is  the promise you made to me, that my son would reign over the house of  Jacob, and where is his kingdom that has no end?  All I see is my  beloved son, who suffers unspeakably.  Why have you deserted him, O  Lord, and why have you deserted me?  My son will either die on the cross  that he carries or die on the streets like a beaten stray dog.  I beg  you to come to the aid of my Son, my Lord, my rock, and my Redeemer."
Leader:   Not only did the whips and  spears pierce your Son
People:   But each mark upon him wounded his  mother's soul.
Leader:   Let us pray.
(a brief period of  silence is observed.)
Eternal God of power and might;
We  so often think of you as "our Father."
But you are both Father and  Mother.
As we think about how the Blessed Mother of Jesus
longed  to cradle her hurting son in her arms,
and spare him his fate,
teach  us in our most desperate moments
to be unafraid to cling to you
like  a fearful child clinging to a mother's bosom.
May we always feel  your nurturing love, O Lord,
even when the world seems turned upside  down.
People:  Amen.
Holy   God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Fifth Station: The Cross is Laid on  Simon of Cyrene
Leader:    O  holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People: A stranger unwillingly came to your aid and his life was  changed.
Simon of Cyrene was merely a bystander in that  rough crowd.  As Jesus struggled, the soldiers knew he would need aid  carrying his cross.  Their eyes scanned the crowd.  Simon's eyes looked  downward.  "Please don't choose me," he thought.  "I have nothing to do  with this.  I merely came in from the country for Passover.  Please,  Lord.  Not me."  But perhaps it was his unwilling posture that caught  their eye, and they dragged him out to carry Jesus' cross.
As his  eyes met those of Jesus, Simon could suddenly see the pain of a broken  world in Christ's countenance.  From the center of his battered face,  unquenchable eyes shone.  From that moment, Simon unquestionably carried  Jesus' cross.
Leader:    Simon of Cyrene had no cross of his own to take up
People:   So instead he willingly bore the cross of another.
Leader:   Let us pray.
(a brief period of  silence is observed.)
Holy  God,
You come to us when we do not want you to appear.
You ask us  to carry the crosses of others
When we do not desire to even carry  our own.
Grant us the courage to carry those crosses
even when we  would rather someone else do it.
Grant us the ability to see the  privilege in being chosen to serve others.
Fill our hardened hearts
with  the ability to serve our God,
even when we are feeling unwilling and  unworthy to serve you.
People:  Amen.
Holy    God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Sixth Station: Veronica Wipes the Face  of Jesus
Leader:     O  holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People: A woman from the crowd gave you comfort while throngs could  not.
We call her "Veronica," but in reality we don't know  whether this woman is one woman or many.  She is very likely an iconic  figure because the story does not appear in manuscripts until the Middle  Ages.  Perhaps she represents all of us.  While the world stood still,  while people in the crowd were frozen and helpless, she stepped forward  and offered the simplest of hospitality to Jesus--her veil, using it as a  sweat rag.  Legend has it that the outline of Jesus' holy face remained  on her veil; the "vera icon," hence we named this woman Veronica.   Whether this story is fact or legend, it is a reminder that when we have  touched the face of Jesus, it will leave an indelible mark on our  souls.
What a comfort Veronica's simple act must have been to  Christ.  How many times do we offer what we see as "simple hospitality,"  feeling it is "not enough," but to the recipient of this hospitality,  it is a profound moment?  As broken and in pain that Jesus must have  felt, this simple act, representing other similar acts lost to the  ravages of time, surely opened his heart to love.  We are reminded by a  single story of a woman offering her head covering to wipe Jesus' face,  that in that crowd, someone--or several "someones"--nurtured him in his  few remaining hours on earth.
Leader:  Veronica had nothing to offer Jesus but the veil upon her head;
People:   But how a simple square of cloth must have comforted him.
Leader:   Let us pray.
(a brief period of  silence is observed.)
O  Lord God, King of the Universe,
Let the legend of your Son's image  remaining on Veronica's veil
indelibly mark our own souls with the  power of His face.
Create Veronica in each of us,
people who are  unafraid to offer unvarnished hospitality,
people who fearlessly  share our food, our clothing, our homes, and our lives.
We pray that  in our simple acts of sharing all that we have with others,
We will  see Your countenance in the faces of others,
and others will see it  in our faces, as well.
People:  Amen.
Holy     God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Seventh Station: Jesus Falls a Second  Time
Leader:     O   holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People: Even with Simon assisting you in your burden you weakened and  fell again.
Although the burden of carrying his cross had  been lifted from him, Jesus surely continued to weaken as he traveled  the road to Golgotha.  The sun rose higher in the sky and the  temperature climbed.  He was dehydrated and weak from loss of blood and  body fluids.  The crowds surely grew, and the way became narrower and  narrower from the throngs of curious onlookers.  The desire to stop--to  rest--to simply lie down and not get up--must have been overpowering.
Once  fallen, it is hard to imagine any shred of desire to want to rise  again.  The detail of soldiers assigned to accompany him very likely  feared he would die before reaching his crucifixion site, and they also  very likely feared punishment for themselves if he died before sentence  was carried out.  In many renditions of the Stations, Jesus is shown  being cruelly whipped by one of his tormentors, often with a closed hand  and with the butt of the whip wielded like a club.  By this time they  were probably beating him as much out of their own fear that they would  be unable to fulfill the sentence as carried out, rather than beating  him out of spite or to punish.  Hurting others as a consequence of our  own fear is as old as humankind itself.
Leader: As Jesus stumbled and fell again,
People: His tormentors  began feeling themselves falling from the weight of their fears.
Leader:    Let us pray.
(a brief period of   silence is observed.)
Heavenly  Father,
The physical falling of Jesus on the road to Golgotha
is a  reminder of many falls that will happen today.
Someone in the world  is falling from starvation and hunger.
Someone is falling from  domestic abuse.
Someone is falling from a random act of violence.
Someone  is falling because of their color, ethnicity, or sexual orientation.
But  it doesn't end there.
The hands that touch them will not help them  up, nor dust them off;
they will beat them further, because of fear.
Be  with these people on this day, Lord
and speak to the hearts of both  the tormented and the tormentor.
People:  Amen.
Holy      God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Eighth Station: Jesus Meets the Women  of Jerusalem
Leader:      O   holy Christ, we worship you, we adore you;
People: You comforted the women of Jerusalem who wept for you.
As  Jesus continued on his path, some women of Jerusalem approached him,  tears streaming down their faces.  This man treated women differently  than most men.  To so many men in Jerusalem, they were invisible.  They  entered and left the temple almost unnoticed.  They were often ignored  by the priests.  They were not allowed to carry the Torah, nor were they  encouraged to learn to read it.  Their husbands were allowed to divorce  them for some of the most minor of transgressions, yet they were not  allowed to initiate divorce, even if cruelty was involved.  Many women  had fewer rights than slaves.  So these women often lived in fear--fear  of abandonment, fear of rejection, fear of harsh treatment.
But  this man Jesus was different.  He spoke to women, Hebrew and Gentile  alike, with true kindness.  He was unafraid to touch them to heal them,  even if they were unclean.  They had heard of his power in healing the  woman who hemorrhaged.  To see him abused so severely broke their  hearts.  As they cried out to him in both sadness and gratitude, he  tried to comfort them.  "Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me," he  said.  "Weep for yourselves and your children."  Would this world ever  see another man like him?
Leader:   The wailing of these women echoed through the street;
People: While Jesus silently prayed that their lives would change for  the better.
Leader:     Let us pray.
(a brief period of    silence is observed.)
Almighty Creator,
Your Son's  life empowered the women of Jerusalem.
We ask that women today are  likewise empowered.
Open our eyes to see the plight of the widow,
the  divorcee, the abused wife or girlfriend, and the single mother.
Grant  them equal footing in the world's economy
and equity in matters of  law.
Expand our powers of understanding
to aid in the empowerment  of women
in countries where laws allow them to be beaten, mutilated,  and killed
in the name of so-called "honor."
Make us unafraid to  weep for them and their children.
People:  Amen.
Holy       God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Ninth Station: Jesus Falls a Third Time
Leader:     O   holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore you;
People:  The air was thick with hopelessness  and despair as you fell again.
By this time, Jesus was  nearing Golgotha.  A few scattered skulls and bleached, broken bones  dotted the side of the road--all that remained of others crucified  there, people whose families either did not care about their remains or  could not afford to bury or entomb them.  Various birds that feasted  upon carrion perched on some of the bones and in the trees.  As Jesus  still grew physically weaker, the crowds started to diminish a little.   The hubbub of the nosy and the curious was giving way to the reality of  what was about to happen, and the taunts and jeers of the crowd were  receding into a roaring silence.  Perhaps it was the sight of the actual  hill where he would be crucified that weakened Jesus' knees--but for  whatever reason, he fell again.
As he lay in the dust, he could  hear his own heart beating more rapidly in his ears, mixed with the  murmurs of the onlookers...
"I wish he'd just die and spare  himself all this."
"I don't care what he did, this is too much  for anyone to bear.  They've whipped him more than anyone I've ever seen  crucified."
"I wanted to believe in his God, but how can I now,  seeing this?"
Jesus lay there, feeling the dark edges of these  fears stabbing him like knives.  It was only to escape them that he  could manage to rise up from the ground and keep walking.
Leader:  As Jesus neared Golgotha,
People: He could feel the light of his own soul straining against the  darkness.
Leader:     Let us pray.
(a brief period of    silence is observed.)
God of Light and Creation,
stay  near to us when we feel overwhelmed by darkness.
When we are so  overtaken by the cares of the world
that we feel ourselves falling,
put  out your hand to us in the dark.
Let the touch of your hand open our  eyes
to the light on the horizon,
and encourage us to put one  foot in front of the other
and walk to it, no matter how hesitating  our steps.
People:  Amen.
Holy       God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Tenth Station: Jesus is Stripped of His  Garments
Leader:      O   holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore you;
People:  They divided your clothing amongst them by casting lots.
As  they reached Golgotha,  Jesus was offered vinegar mixed with gall, and  he refused it.  Some  sources say that this was offered him to subdue  him, as most people  fought being nailed to the cross with the last  ounces of their  strength.  Other sources of ancient commentary postulate  it was a  poison, designed to help speed his death and avoid the agony  of  death  by crucifixion.  Whatever its purpose, Jesus refused it.
Jesus   had already been stripped of his freedom.  He had been stripped of his   strength.  Now, as the approached the cross where he was to die, they   stripped him of the last thing he possessed on this Earth--his garments.    He was physically exposed, but in refusing the vinegar and gall, he   had refused to be stripped of his  mental state.  He refused to be   stripped of his ability to hear and speak to God.  Even in his weakest,   emptiest, most vulnerable moments, he did not give up his   God-consciousness.
Leader:   Although Jesus' meager garments were taken from him,
People: His tormentors could not separate him from his relationship  with God.
Leader:     Let us pray.
(a brief period of    silence is observed.)
God, you are always present, and  present in all things.
Keep us from stripping things from others that  are dear to them.
Help us to feel your divine love always,
so  that we have no need to strip others
of their dignity, of their hopes  and dreams,
and of their self-worth.
Remind us that others can  strip things from us,
but cannot strip us from your love and your  presence.
Strengthen us to also resist the bitter cups
of vinegar  and gall when they are offered to us,
and instead taste the sweet  nectar of your kingdom on earth.
People:  Amen.
Holy        God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Eleventh Station: Jesus is Nailed to  the Cross
Leader:       O   holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore you;
People:  You stretched out your loving arms upon the hard wood of the  cross.
The soldiers assigned to the crucifixion detail  expected resistance, but Jesus willingly lay his arms upon the cross as  they drove large square nails through the heel of his hand at an angle  through his wrist, and nails through the sides of his feet..  His  willingness unnerved them.  Most criminals fought the cross, but Jesus  did not.  Lashing the condemned's wrists to the cross first was not  unusual, but there was no need.  His arms lay on the cross, limp and  unresisting.
"What manner of man is this?" the executioners  thought.  Was he so weakened he was senseless?  His willingness made the  hollow sounds of the nails being driven seem twice as loud.  His  silence was deafening.  They were so used to criminals protesting their  innocence, like the ones who were placed on Jesus' left and right.  Why  did he not speak out?  To continue to drive the nails became more and  more painful--not just to Jesus, but to those wielding the mallets.   Suddenly, the heinousness, the gruesomeness, of what they were doing hit  home, and they became more and more afraid with each strike of the  mallet.  How many others had they nailed to crosses, and why did this  crucifixion bother them so?  They studied his face.  This was not the  face of a criminal.  This was a face of radiance and light, even though  it was bruised and bleeding.  What had they done?
Leader: The nails entered the wood of  the cross inch by inch,
People:   And each swing of the mallet pierced  the air with the pain of the world.
Leader:    Let us pray.
(a brief period of   silence is observed.)
All-powerful  and all-knowing God,
sometimes we are so sure in our judgments,
we  cannot fathom the possibility that we could be wrong.
Give us sight  that touches the depths of our own souls
to the place we can see  error in ourselves.
Fill us with the courage of true repentance--
the  bravery to turn in another direction,
the valor to admit our wrongs,
and  the heroism to march forward
in the assurance that God forgives us.
People:  Amen.
Holy       God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Twelfth Station: Jesus Dies on  the  Cross
Leader:        O   holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore you;
People:  You displayed perfect obedience to God even unto death.
What  little Jesus said in his last hours spoke volumes.  He cried out to God  in his anguish, much as we have done ourselves when we feel forsaken,  alone, and separated from God.  He called for his mother.  He entreated  the disciple whom he loved to take Mary as his own mother.  He promised a  criminal a home in heaven alongside of him.  But it is also what he did  not speak that the few people with him at the end must have heard.  He  could have asked for God to deliver him, but he did not.  He could have mustered the forces of heaven and  earth to shower plagues and strike down those who opposed him, but  instead the sky simply grew darker, as if it would die itself.  He could  have cursed his accusers and tormentors with the full weight of God's  holy wrath, but instead he forgave those who participated in his  crucifixion.
Finally, he cried out, "It is finished," and  breathed his last.
(a period of  silence is kept.)
The air suddenly became electric with  confusion.  Those remaining at the scene were somehow astonished that he  was really dead.  There was no doubt.  His chest no longer moved.  When  he was pierced with a spear, both water and blood flowed, and his body  displayed no reaction.  Those who had believed in him felt foolish,  spurned, abandoned.  Had they believed in nothing real, nothing of  substance?  Was belief in an Almighty simply a cruel joke, a fairy tale  spun to placate the world's fear of death?
Only one spot on  Golgotha remained free of fear and confusion--the spot where a lone  centurion stood, distant and silent.  Up to that moment, he had believed  in many gods--Jupiter and Venus, Pluto, Mars, and Bacchus.  As he  stared at Jesus' lifeless frame, he said to no one in particular, "Truly  this man was God's son."
Leader:  As Jesus died, an eerie darkness silhouetted him,
People:   And the grip of death clutched the hearts of those who  remained.
Leader:     Let us pray.
(a brief period of    silence is observed.)
Almighty God, the bearer of true  Light,
we are no strangers to the razor sharp daggers
of the fear  of our own deaths.
They stab our hearts while we lie upon our beds
in  the middle of the night,
or in the shaking chills of fever and  sickness.
The seven words of our deepest fears cry out,
"Maybe  this life is all there is."
Give us the courage, dear Lord,
to  pierce the marrow of those seven words
with the six courageous words  of the centurion--
"Truly this man was God's son."
People:  Amen.
Holy       God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Thirteenth Station: Jesus is Placed in  the Arms of his Mother
Leader:         O   holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore you;
People:  Your blessed mother wept over your lifeless frame for all of  us.
It must have been Mary's first inclination to  want to hold Jesus as they took him down from the cross.  Some of the  people leaving the scene must have been holding their own children as  they left--babies in arms, toddlers on hips, older children being  steered away by the shoulders or pulled by the hand, asking their  parents questions their parents wondered how to answer. Some were tired  and cranky.  As she held Jesus' still body, his skin starting to cool,  his limbs still floppy and not yet in rigor mortis,  Mary thought of  those days when she held this man in her arms as a babe, or when she did  household chores with him on her hip.  She thought of his never ending  questions as a boy.  So long ago--so long ago, it seemed.
Perhaps  she asked God to take the life within her and give it to  her son to  restore him.  Perhaps she thought of her own pain in birthing  him, and  found that pain to be minuscule compared to the pain she was  feeling  now. 
Mary studied his lifeless hands and face.  She  saw the scars from the childhood bumps and bruises and all the things  she could not protect him from as a mother, even through the gashes and  wounds of his recent beating.  For some reason they stood out more  noticeably to her, when the rest of the world only saw his most recent  wounds.  The holes in his hands were almost unnoticeable to her, but she  gazed lovingly on the birthmark she used to notice bathing him as a  baby.  She only saw the marks of their common  life together--and for some reason, when she closed her eyes, as  unlikely as it seemed, she could still hear the angel Gabriel's words  about her son, and a part of her could still not give up on them.  How,  she thought to herself, could part of her "not give up" when she was  holding her dead son?  She pondered these things in her heart, just as  she did that day when she and Joseph found him in the temple--but she  kept them to herself.
Leader: Mary wept openly, her  lifeless son in her arms,
People:  No human comfort could possibly have  consoled her.
Leader:     Let us pray.
(a brief period of    silence is observed.)
Lord God, our truest parent--
The  wounds the world inflicts upon us are ignored by you--
yet every  hair you placed upon our head is known to you.
You see only our  divine spark, and you love it as a doting mother loves her firstborn.
Even  when we are spiritually dead to the world,
you do not give up on us.
You  gave a piece of your own being to us in the form of Jesus,
and  allowed the world to put a piece of yourself to death.
Teach us to  see others
with eyes that see the divine spark in them,
and ignore  the gashes and bruises the world places upon them.
People:  Amen.
Holy        God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
The Fourteenth Station: Jesus is Laid in  the Tomb
Leader:         O   holy Christ, we  worship you, we adore  you;
People:  You were laid to rest in a borrowed tomb.
As  evening fell, those who remained looked around at the ground at  Golgotha, and the littered bones and skulls haunted them.  Surely this  could not be Jesus' fate.  The scattered bones and rotting human  carcasses represented at most, the wicked, and, at least, the unloved.   Jesus--even the fallen Jesus--represented neither.
Meanwhile,  Joseph of Arimathea had already gone to Pilate and asked for the body.   When a detail of soldiers came to get Jesus' body, some must have been  fearful.  Major criminals were sometimes rendered into pieces and  distributed throughout the Roman Empire as a warning, or paraded as  trophies.  But Joseph of Arimathea assured those remaining with Jesus'  body that he intended to give Jesus everything the Chevra Kadisha--the  Jewish burial society--provided the community, as well as a tomb--his  own personal tomb, newly constructed in a rock.
Jesus' body was  prepared in the traditional Jewish way--ritually washed and prepared in  burial linens--and placed in the tomb.  As Mary silently watched the  rock that was the door of the tomb rolled over the entrance, an old, old  feeling crept over her.  "No," she thought to herself.  "This can't  be."  Something leaped inside her--the same thing that leaped when she  knew she was pregnant with Jesus--a feeling of impending joy.  The  harder she denied the feeling, the stronger it was.  Suddenly she  realized that somehow, in some way--this story was not over.  But who  could she possibly tell?  Who would believe her?  Her heart grieved  terribly that her son was dead, and seemingly all he represented was  dead, too.  What was to become of the disciples?  They all seemed so  lost, so confused, so stunned.  Perhaps more would be taken, and treated  as Jesus was.  Uncertainty seemed as thick as the blackness of night  that was settling in.  But as she walked away from the tomb, she  thought, "This is not all there is."
Leader: The noise of the stone rolling over the tomb  pierced the sky,
People:  But did not still the noise of something  yet to come.
Leader:      Let us pray.
(a brief period  of    silence is observed.)
Almighty God, designer of all  things,
Abide with us in all the uncertainties of our life.
Remind  us that death is not the end, it is a beginning,
whether it is  physical death or the death of things in our lives
we thought were  certainties, or assumed.
Give us the courage to grieve for them  without shame.
Yet at the same time, open us to the possibilities
of  what lies beyond death, in both the resurrections
within our lives,  as well as that glorious resurrection
beyond our earthy faults and  brokenness,  into the realm
of angels, archangels, and all the  company of Heaven.
People:  Amen.
Holy         God,
Holy and Mighty,
Holy immortal one,
Have mercy on us.
Concluding prayers:
Leader:  Lord Jesus Christ, you  stretched your arms upon the hard wood of the cross in a gesture of love  for all of us;
People:  Empower us to willingly stretch our arms to  the world in love, in your name.
Leader:  We thank you, Lord God  Almighty, for the gift of your Son, Jesus Christ, who had the courage to  endure pain, suffering, and death in order to raise us to eternal joys.
We thank you for your desire that we escape the dominion of sin  and death and reside with you in that heavenly country.
We thank  you for your mercy in the redemption of the world by our Lord Jesus  Christ.
As we leave behind these fourteen vignettes depicting the  final hours of our Savior, grant us the knowledge to take these lessons  beyond the church door and the world.  We ask these things in the name  our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy  Spirit, forever and ever,
People:   Amen.
Leader:  This concludes our Stations  of the Cross.  Let us go in peace to love and serve the Lord.
People:  Thanks be to God.