The
First Word: "Father, forgive them, for they don’t
know what they are doing." (Luke 23:34)
Reflection
It makes sense that the first word of
Jesus from the cross is a word of forgiveness. That's
the point of the cross, after all. Jesus is dying so
that we might be forgiven for our sins, so that we might
be reconciled to God for eternity.
But the forgiveness of God through Christ doesn't come
only to those who don't know what they are doing when
they sin. In the mercy of God, we receive his forgiveness
even when we do what we know to be wrong. God chooses
to wipe away our sins, not because we have some convenient
excuse, and not because we have tried hard to make up
for them, but because he is a God of amazing grace, with
mercies that are new every morning.
As we read the words, "Father, forgive them," may
we understand that we too are forgiven through Christ.
As John writes in his first letter, "But if we confess
our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us
our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness" (1
John 1:9). Because Christ died on the cross for us, we
are cleansed from all wickedness, from every last sin.
We are united with God the Father as his beloved children.
We are free to approach his throne of grace with our
needs and concerns. God "has removed our sins as
far from us as the east is from the west" (Ps 103:13).
What great news!
Questions for Reflection
Do you really believe God has forgiven
your sins? Do you take time on a regular basis to confess
your sins so that you might enjoy the freedom of forgiveness?
Do you need to experience God's forgiveness in a fresh
way today?
Prayer
Gracious Lord Jesus, it's easy for me
to speak of your forgiveness, even to ask for it and
to thank you for it. But do I really believe I'm forgiven?
Do I experience the freedom that comes from the assurance
that you have cleansed me from my sins? Or do I live
as if I'm "semi-forgiven"? Even though I've
put my faith in you and confessed my sins, do I live
as sin still has power over me? Do I try to prove myself
to you, as if I might be able to earn more forgiveness?
Dear Lord, though I believe at one level that you have
forgiven me, this amazing truth needs to penetrate my
heart in new ways. Help me to know with fresh conviction
that I am fully and finally forgiven, not because of
anything I have done, but because of what you have done
for me.
May I live today as a forgiven person, opening my heart
to you, choosing not to sin because the power of sin
has been broken by your salvation.
All praise be to you, Lord Jesus, for your matchless
forgiveness! Amen.
The
Second Word:
"I assure you, today you will be with me in paradise." (Luke
23:43)
Reflection
As Jesus hung on the cross, he was mocked
by the leaders and the soldiers. One of the criminals
being crucified with him added his own measure of scorn.
But the other crucified criminal sensed that Jesus was
being treated unjustly. After speaking up for Jesus,
he cried out, "Jesus, remember me when you come
into your kingdom" (v. 42).
Jesus responded to this criminal, "I assure you,
today you will be with me in paradise" (v. 43).
The word paradise, from the Greek word paradeisos,
which meant "garden," was used in the Greek
Old Testament as a word for the Garden of Eden. In Judaism
of the time of Jesus it was associated with heaven, and
also with the future when God would restore all things
to the perfection of the Garden. Paradise was sometimes
thought to be the place where righteous people went after
death. This seems to be the way Jesus uses paradise in
this passage.
Thus we have encountered one of the most astounding and
encouraging verses in all of Scripture. Jesus promised
that the criminal would be with him in paradise. Yet
the text of Luke gives us no reason to believe this man
had been a follower of Jesus, or even a believer in him
in any well-developed sense. He might have felt sorry
for his sins, but he did not obviously repent. Rather,
the criminal's cry to be remembered seems more like a
desperate, last-gasp effort.
Though we should make every effort to have right theology,
and though we should live our lives each day as disciples
of Jesus, in the end, our relationship with him comes
down to simple trust. "Jesus, remember me," we
cry. And Jesus, embodying the mercy of God, says to us, "You
will be with me in paradise." We are welcome there
not because we have right theology, and not because we
are living rightly, but because God is merciful and we
have put our trust in Jesus.
Questions for Reflection
Have you staked your life on Jesus? Have
you put your ultimate trust in him? Do you know that,
when your time comes, you will be with him in paradise?
Prayer
Dear Lord Jesus, how I wonder at your
grace and mercy! When we cry out to you, you hear us.
When we ask you to remember us when you come into your
kingdom, you offer the promise of paradise. Your mercy,
dear Lord, exceeds anything we might imagine. It embraces
us, encourages us, heals us.
O Lord, though my situation is so different from the
criminal who cried out to you, I am nevertheless quite
like him. Today I live, trusting you and you alone. My
life, but now and in the world to come, is in your hands.
And so I pray:
Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom! Jesus,
remember me today as I seek to live within your kingdom!
Amen.
The
Third Word: “Dear woman, here is your son.” (John
19:26)
Reflection
As Jesus was dying, his mother was among
those who had remained with him. Most of the male disciples
had fled, with the exception of one whom the Fourth Gospel
calls "the disciple he loved." We can't be
exactly sure of the identity of this beloved disciple,
though many interpreters believe he is John, who is also
the one behind the writing of this Gospel.
No matter who the beloved disciple was, it's clear that
Jesus was forging a relationship between this disciple
and his mother, one in which the disciple would take
care of Mary financially and in other ways. Jesus wanted
to make sure she would be in good hands after his death.
The presence of Mary at the cross adds both humanity
and horror to the scene. We are reminded that Jesus was
a real human being, a man who had once been a boy who
had once been carried in the womb of his mother. Even
as he was dying on the cross as the Savior of the world,
Jesus was also a son, a role he didn't neglect in his
last moments.
When we think of the crucifixion of Jesus from the perspective
of his mother, our horror increases dramatically. The
death of a child is one of the most painful of all parental
experiences. To watch one's beloved child experience
the extreme torture of crucifixion must have been unimaginably
terrible. We're reminded of the prophecy of Simeon shortly
after Jesus' birth, when he said to Mary: "And a
sword will pierce your very soul" (Luke 2:35).
This scene helps us not to glorify or spiritualize the
crucifixion of Jesus. He was a real man, true flesh and
blood, a son of a mother, dying with unbearable agony.
His suffering was altogether real, and he took it on
for you and for me.
Questions for Reflection
What does Mary's presence at the cross
evoke in you? Why do you think was it necessary for Jesus
to suffer physical pain as he died?
Prayer
Lord Jesus, the presence of your mother
at the cross engages my heart. You are no longer only
the Savior dying for the sins of the world. You are also
a fully human man, a son with a mother.
O Lord, how can I begin to thank you for what you suffered?
My words fall short. My thoughts seem superficial and
vague. Nevertheless, I offer my sincere gratitude for
your suffering. Thank you for bearing my sin on the cross.
I give you my praise, my love, my heart . . . all that
I am, because you have given me all that you are.
All praise be to you, Lord Jesus, fully God and fully
human, Savior of the world . . . my Savior! Amen.
The
Fourth Word: “My God, my God, why have you abandoned
me?” (Mark 15:34)
Reflection
As Jesus was dying on the cross, he echoed
the beginning of Psalm 22, which reads:
My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?
Why are you so far away when I groan for help?
Every day I call to you, my God, but you do not answer.
Every night you hear my voice, but I find no
relief. (vv. 1-2)
In the words of the psalmist Jesus found a way to express
the cry of his heart: Why had God abandoned him? Why
did his Father turn his back on Jesus in his moment of
greatest agony?
This side of heaven, we will never fully know what Jesus
was experiencing in this moment. Was he asking this question
because, in the mystery of his incarnational suffering,
he didn't know why God had abandoned him? Or was his
cry not so much a question as an expression of profound
agony? Or was it both?
What we do know is that Jesus entered into the Hell of
separation from God. The Father abandoned him because
Jesus took upon himself the penalty for our sins. In
that excruciating moment, he experienced something far
more horrible than physical pain. The beloved Son of
God knew what it was like to be rejected by the Father.
As we read in 2 Corinthians 5:21, "God made him
who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might
become the righteousness of God" (NIV).
I can write these words. I can say, truly, that the Father
abandoned the Son for our sake, for the salvation of
the world. But can I really grasp the mystery and the
majesty of this truth? Hardly. As Martin Luther once
said, "God forsaking God. Who can understand it?" Yet
even my miniscule grasp of this reality calls me to confession,
to humility, to worship, to adoration.
Questions for Reflection
Have you taken time to consider that Jesus was abandoned
by the Father so that you might not be? What does this "word" from
the cross mean to you?
Prayer
O Lord Jesus, though I will never fully
grasp the wonder and horror of your abandonment by the
Father, every time I read this "word," I am
overwhelmed with gratitude. How can I ever thank you
for what you suffered for me? What can I do but to offer
myself to you in gratitude and praise? Thank you, dear
Lord, for what you suffered. Thank you for taking my
place. Thank you for being forsaken by the Father so
that I might never be.
When I survey the wondrous cross,
On which the Prince of glory died,
My richest gain I count but loss,
And pour contempt on all my pride.
Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast,
Save in the death of Christ my God;
All the vain things that charm me most,
I sacrifice them to his blood.
See, from his head, his hands, his feet,
Sorrow and love flow mingled down;
Did e’er such love and sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown.
Were the whole realm of nature mine,
That were a present far too small;
Love so amazing, so divine,
Demands my soul, my life, my all.
"When I Survey the Wondrous Cross" by Isaac
Watts (1707)
The
Fifth Word: “I am thirsty.” (John 19:28)
Reflection
No doubt Jesus experienced extreme thirst
while being crucified. He would have lost a substantial
quantity of bodily fluid, both blood and sweat, through
what he had endured even prior to crucifixion. Thus his
statement, "I am thirsty" was, on the most
obvious level, a request for something to drink. In response
the soldiers gave Jesus "sour wine" (v. 29),
a cheap beverage common among lower class people in the
time of Jesus.
John notes that Jesus said "I am thirsty," not
only as a statement of physical reality, but also in
order to fulfill the Scripture. Though there is no specific
reference in the text of the Gospel, it's likely that
John was thinking of Psalm 69, which includes this passage:
Their insults have broken my heart,
and I am in despair.
If only one person would show some pity;
if only one would turn and comfort me.
But instead, they give me poison for food;
they offer me sour wine for my thirst.
(vv.
20-21)
As he suffered, Jesus embodied the pain of the people
of Israel, that which had been captured in the Psalms.
Jesus was suffering for the sin of Israel, even as he
was taking upon himself the sin of the world.
As I reflect on Jesus' statement, "I am thirsty," I
keep thinking of my own thirst. It's nothing like that
of Jesus. Rather, I am thirsty for him. My soul yearns
for the living water that Jesus supplies (John 4:10;
7:38-39). I rejoice in the fact that he suffered physical
thirst on the cross – and so much more – so
that my thirst for the water of life might be quenched.
Questions for Reflection
How do you respond to Jesus' statement "I
am thirsty"? What does this statement suggest to
you about Jesus? About yourself?
Prayer
O Lord, once again I thank you for what
you suffered on the cross. Besides extraordinary pain,
you also experienced extreme thirst. All of this was
part and parcel of your taking on our humanity so that
you might take away our sin.
Dear Lord, in your words "I am thirsty" I hear
the cry of my own heart. I too am thirsty, Lord, not
for physical drink. I don't need sour wine. Rather, I
need the new wine of your kingdom to flood my soul. I
need to be refreshed by your living water. I yearn for
your Spirit to fill me once again.
I am thirsty, Lord, for you. Amen.
The
Sixth Word: “It is finished!” (John 19:30)
Reflection
I never saw a more difficult film to watch than Mel
Gibson's The Passion of the Christ. For most
of that movie I wanted to avert my eyes. It was horrible
to watch even a cinematic version of a crucifixion. And
it was beyond comprehension to think that this actually
happened to somebody, and not just anybody, but my Lord
and Savior. I had studied the crucifixion before, and
knew in my head what Jesus experienced. But seeing a
visual presentation of his suffering was almost more
than I could bear. When The Passion of the Christ was
over, I felt palpable relief. Thank goodness it was finished.
When Jesus said "It is finished," surely he
was expressing relief that his suffering was over. "It
is finished" meant, in part, "This is finally
done!" But the Greek verb translated as "It
is finished" (tetelestai) means more than
just this. Eugene Peterson captures the full sense of
the verb in The Message: "It's done . .
. complete." Jesus had accomplished his mission.
He had announced and inaugurated the kingdom of God.
He had revealed the love and grace of God. And he had
embodied that love and grace by dying for the sin of
the world, thus opening up the way for all to live under
the reign of God.
Because Jesus finished his work of salvation, you and
I don't need to add to it. In fact, we can't. He accomplished
what we never could, taking our sin upon himself and
giving us his life in return. Jesus finished that for
which he had been sent, and we are the beneficiaries
of his unique effort. Because of what he finished, you
and I are never "finished." We have hope for
this life and for the next. We know that nothing can
separate us from God's love. One day what God has begun
in us will also be finished, by his grace. Until that
day, we live in the confidence of Jesus' cry of victory: "It
is finished!"
Questions for Reflection
Do you live as if Jesus finished the work of salvation?
To you have confidence that God will finish that which
he has begun in you?
Prayer
How can I ever find words to express my gratitude to
you, dear Lord Jesus? You did it. You finished that for
which you had been sent, faithful in life, faithful in
death. You accomplished that which no other person could
do, taking the sin of the world upon your sinless shoulders
. . . taking my sin so that I might receive your forgiveness
and new life.
All praise be to you, gracious Lord, for finishing the
work of salvation. All praise be to you, dear Jesus,
for saving me! Alleluia! Amen.
The
Seventh Word: “Father, I entrust my spirit into
your hands!” (Luke 24:46)
Reflection
Two of the last seven "words" of
Jesus were quotations from the Psalms. Earlier Jesus
had Psalm 22, "My God, my God, why have you abandoned
me?" to express his anguish. Later he borrowed from
Psalm 31, which comes to us from Luke as "Father,
I entrust my spirit into your hands."
On an obvious level, Jesus was putting his post mortem
future in the hands of his Heavenly Father. It was as
if he was saying, "Whatever happens to me after
I die is your responsibility, Father."
But when we look carefully at the Psalm Jesus quoted,
we see more than what at first meets our eyes. Psalm
31 begins with a cry for divine help:
O LORD, I have come to you for protection;
don’t let me be disgraced.
Save me, for you do what is
right. (v. 1)
But then it mixes asking for God's deliverance
with a confession of God's strength and faithfulness:
I entrust my spirit into your hand.
Rescue me, LORD, for you are
a faithful God. (v. 5)
By the end, Psalm 31 offers praise of God's
salvation:
Praise the LORD,
for he has shown me the wonders
of his unfailing love.
He kept me safe when my city
was under attack. (v. 21)
By quoting a portion of Psalm 31, therefore,
Jesus not only entrusted his future to his Father, but
also implied that he would be delivered and exonerated.
No, God would not deliver him from death by crucifixion.
But beyond this horrific death lay something marvelous. "I
entrust my spirit into your hands" points back to
the familiar suffering of David in Psalm 31, and forward
to the resurrection.
Questions for Reflection
Have you put your life and, indeed, your
life beyond this life, in God's hands? How do you experience
God's salvation through Christ in your life today?
Prayer
Gracious Lord, even as you once entrusted
your spirit into the hands of the Father, so I give my
life to you. I trust you, and you alone to be my Savior.
I submit to your sovereignty over my life, and seek to
live for your glory alone. Here I am, Lord, available
to you, both now and in the future.
How good it is to know, dear Lord, that the cross was
not the end for you. As you entrusted your spirit into
the Father's hands, you did so in anticipation of what
was to come. So we reflect upon your death, not in despair,
but in hope. With Good Friday behind us, Easter Sunday
is on the horizon. Amen. |