The last seven words (statements, actually) of Jesus as He
hung on Golgotha's cross are among the most encouraging of all Scripture. Here
is the fourth of the seven:
The Other Side
of the Door
My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me? (Matthew 27:46)
As
our home Bible study wound to a close, a young mother ran out to her car for a
package she’d forgotten. She left her two-year-old daughter with half a dozen
adults in the living room. But when Berea saw Mommy leave, her face froze with
panic. She ran as quickly as her little legs could carry her and stretched in
vain for the doorknob. Her screams brimmed with terror, as if she believed
Mommy would never to return from the other side of the door.
One of the other women lifted Berea into her arms and tried to calm her. But it was no use. The toddler wanted no one but Mommy. And mommy was gone.
A few moments later, Berea’s mother returned. When she opened the door she lifted Berea into her arms, rubbed her back and spoke tenderly into her ear. The child quickly quieted down. Mommy had returned.
One of the other women lifted Berea into her arms and tried to calm her. But it was no use. The toddler wanted no one but Mommy. And mommy was gone.
A few moments later, Berea’s mother returned. When she opened the door she lifted Berea into her arms, rubbed her back and spoke tenderly into her ear. The child quickly quieted down. Mommy had returned.
Some
theorize Jesus cried out, My God, My God,
why have your forsaken Me?, only to draw attention to Psalm 22 in which the
psalmist prophesied of Christ’s crucifixion nearly a thousand years before it
happened (see Psalm 22:11-18). When Jesus quoted the first line of the psalm,
they say, it was to demonstrate His fulfillment of that prophecy.
I
think there was a far more significant reason for His outcry.
St.
Luke tells us that while Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane, imploring
the Father to take the cup He was about to drink from His hands, Jesus’ sweat ‘became
like great drops of blood falling down on the ground” (Luke 22:44) . Bloody
sweat is a rare, but well-documented physical phenomena called hematidrosis. It is known to occur in
some people suffering extreme stress. Jesus dreaded the crucifixion not only because
of the physical pain He’d suffer, but He also knew what it would mean when He
took upon Himself the sins of the world. The prophet Isaiah is only one of many
Old Testament prophets to speak about the results of sin: But your iniquities have made a separation between
you and your God, and your sins have hidden His face from you so that He does not hear (Isaiah 59:2).
Separation. From God.
The Holy Spirit says this about Jesus: “Though He was in the form of God . . . .
[He] emptied Himself, taking
the form of a slave, being born in human likeness” (Phil 2:6-7). And so, being fully God and
fully Man, Jesus experienced all the frailty of humanity – hunger, thirst,
pain, cold, heat . . . . And now He was about to experience in our place what He in His deity could
never experience.
Separation
from the Father.
St.
Paul wrote to the church at Corinth: [The
Father] made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the
righteousness of God in Him (2 Corinthians 5:21). And in his letter to the church at Galatia, he
added: Christ redeemed
us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us (Galatians 3:13).
As
the most holy Lord Jesus hung between heaven and earth, He did not simply take
our collective sins on Himself, but actually became Sin – became Sin –
so you and I who are ‘in Christ,” you and I who trust Him as our redeemer, our
reconciler, our savior, could become the very righteousness of God.
Oh!
Think of it!
Jesus, who knew the incomprehensible intimacy of the Triune
Godhead, for the first time in
eternity was separated from His Father. For that one moment – oh, but for the
eternal God that moment must have seemed forever – for that one moment the
Father turned away from Him who had become Sin.
No wonder He cried out, My
God, My God. Why have You forsaken Me!, for in some mysterious and
inexplicable way known only to the Holy Trinity, Jesus was suddenly on the
other side of the door. Suddenly separated from His Father. Suddenly alone.
That
is the fathomless horror our sin caused Him. And that is also the unquestionable evidence of the matchless love the
Son has for the sinner –you and me – so we
would not have to live forever separated from God, on the other side of the eternal
door.
Thank you. Oh! Thank you, Jesus.
Father of
mercy, like the prodigal son I return to You and say: "I have sinned
against you and am no longer worthy to be called your son." Christ Jesus,
Savior of the world, I pray with the repentant thief to whom You promised
Paradise: "Lord, remember me in Your kingdom." Holy Spirit, fountain
of love, I call on You with trust: "Purify my heart, and help me to walk
as a child of light. —Author unknown
3 comments:
Absolutely beautiful, Rich. I am so glad you write these posts because they enrich my understanding of Scripture significantly.
Christ taught that to doubt were sin;
so for Christ to think that God his Father had forsaken him; would be to doubt him;
but I say rather brethren it were those at the foot of the cross of whom he'd been just crucified; cried he for unto My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me, seeing the condemnation to come upon them.
Hello, Wilford. Thank you for commenting. First, I am not sure Jesus taught doubt is sin. What scripture references lead you to believe that?
As for your second comment, I could certainly be wrong, but based on my understanding of Jesus’ sacrifice and atonement for our sins, during which He became the ‘propitiation” (as John called it in his first epistle) – which means "The turning away of wrath by an offering.” In relation to the doctrine of salvation, “Propitiation means placating or satisfying the wrath of God by the atoning sacrifice of Christ." [Charles C. Ryrie (1999-01-11). Basic Theology: A Popular Systematic Guide to Understanding Biblical Truth]
If Jesus (as I believe Scripture teaches) BECAME sin (as St. Paul states in that passage in 2 Corinthians), then it is not unreasonable to believe the Father actually turned His back on His Son.
As I said, I could be wrong, but that’s how I understand the scripture.
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