Christianity Today recently posted a Good Friday reflection titled “Good Friday’s Answers to Wounded Church Members.” The theology in the free portion is real — the Man of Sorrows bearing wounds alongside the wounded is not nothing. But the article is paywalled. And if there is any accountability in it for the people who did the wounding — any language about confessing to the person you hurt, confessing to the church, waiting in the discomfort of having confessed — that part costs money to read.
The wounded get the comfort for free. The reckoning, if it exists at all, is a premium feature.
I want to be careful about intent here. Maybe the accountability is in there, behind the paywall, and the editorial team simply led with what they thought would draw readers in. That happens. Publishing is hard. But regardless of intent, the structure produces something worth examining — because it mirrors a pattern the church has been running for decades. And it raises a question worth sitting with: who, exactly, is likely to pay for a subscription after reading a Good Friday piece about the church’s wounded? Someone who has been hurt and wants more comfort? Or someone who has done the hurting, who feels the weight of it, who reads the free portion and thinks — thank goodness, we weren’t implicated — and then pays to find out if there’s a path back?