The York Crucifixion is one of the mystery plays performed in the streets of the city of York in the fourteenth century. It brought liturgical narrative out of the church and to the people. Explain, with examples, the various characteristics of the play that make this story relatable to a fourteenth-century street audience (style, language, humor, realism, etc.), and also how it would inspire Christian devotion in the onlookers. What does this play have to communicate to the medieval “everyman” about life, death, and Christian faith?