Wager Mage
Photo: Alesia Kozik
Luke 23:45b-46: And the curtain of the temple was torn in two. Then Jesus, calling out with a loud voice, said, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit!" And having said this he breathed his last.
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Read More »Every time I speak with my family members, the last words I say are “I love you.” If something were to happen to me, I want my last words spoken as a husband, father, or grandfather to be that of love. These words are intentional, not perfunctory. Words spoken to others matter, and last or final words seem to carry even greater weight. It has the sense of a last will and testament, though stated in the context of love, not a contract. This is true in the Scriptures as well. Both Jacob (Gen. 47:29-49:33) and David (1 Chron. 28:1-29:20) delivered parting messages to encourage followers to remember the promises of God and to be faithful to God. Jesus did the same in his farewell discourse given to his disciples in the Upper Room on the way to the Mount of Olives, on the way to the cross (Jn. 13:31-16:33 [or 17:26]). What preceded this was Jesus washing his disciples feet, an acted parable conveying truth in word and deed, and the statement of his betrayal (Jn. 13:1-30). The Scriptures also contain the actual final words of Jesus uttered from the cross. They are not spoken in the form of a farewell address, and they are scattered in seven different places in the Gospel accounts: three in Luke, one in Matthew and Mark, and three in John. Murray J. Harris, The Seven Sayings of Jesus on the Cross: Their Circumstances and Meaning (Eugene, Oregon: Cascade, 2016), xiv, notes, “these seven pre-death sayings do not form a unity but address seven very different situations. They are not remotely like any other final words ever recorded as being spoken by a leader. They are exceptionally brief and poignant; they are not intimate words of farewell spoken to all his disciples; and they are uttered in the midst of prolonged death throes.”
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Read More »In the final four sayings, Jesus turns his focus to himself, as he increasingly experiences the weight of bearing the sin of humanity and the holiness/justice/wrath of his Father. In the fourth saying, Jesus address his spiritual anguish, of his sense of being forsaken (Matt. 27:45-46; Mk. 15:33-34; cf. Ps. 22:1). In the fifth, he expresses his physical anguish in that he was thirsty (Jn. 19:28; cf. Ps. 69:21). In the sixth utterance, although it conveys the sense of Jesus’ life being over, “It is finished,” and it is, this is Jesus’ cry of victory (Jn. 19:30a; cf. Ps. 22:31). In the seventh and final saying of Jesus on the cross, he addresses in familial love his Father, and he also entrusts himself fully in humble submission to him and his will, being the fulfillment of the prayer prayed in Gethsemane for his will to be done (Lk. 23:45b-46; cf. Ps. 31:5). (It is vital to remember that God the Father and God the Son are not against one another in the death of Jesus Christ on the cross. The inseperable operations of the Trintiy are affirmed. Fred Sanders describes it in this way: "According to common Christian confession, the external operations of the Trinity are 'indivisible' or 'inseparable.' This follows from the principle that who God is in himself (ad intra) determines the shape of God’s free actions outside of himself (ad extra). Because the Father, the Son, and the Spirit are one simple God, their actions outside of themselves are indivisible operations. The three persons do not merely 'cooperate' in their external works, as if each person contributed his distinctive part to a larger operational whole. All of God’s external works—from creation to consummation—are works of the three divine persons enacting one divine power, ordered by one divine wisdom, expressing one divine goodness, and manifesting one divine glory.")
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Read More »As Christians living after the death, burial, resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ, we cannot remember the crucifixion apart from the resurrection. Although we remember and focus on each of Jesus’ experiences during the passion week, and we attempt not to move too quickly through them, we cannot just focus on the parts apart from the whole. We learn a great deal about Jesus by focusing on his last sayings which were made while on the cross. But in the life of the church, Good Friday would not be referred to in that way without the resurrection. As Jesus noted, "Truly, truly, I say to you, you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice. You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into joy" (Jn. 16:20). Good Friday would be marked by weeping and lament, while the world rejoiced. We linger on this day for a moment, sensing the gravity of what Jesus did in his death on the cross on our behalf. But we then move quickly, as those first disciples ran to the tomb (Lk. 24:12; Jn. 20:2), to the resurrection, which was Jesus’ vindication (Rom. 1:4) and our justification (Rom. 4:25). Our sorrow turns to joy because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. So we must hear Jesus’ last words from the cross before submitting himself to his Father, and his first words spoken to his disciples. They are connected. It only makes sense that the last words of Jesus, “It is finished,” which reflect the completion of the earthly work Christ came to accomplish, are followed immediately after the resurrection with “Peace be with you.” The death-burial-resurrection of Jesus Christ is the ground by which sin, our defiance and rebellion against God, is addressed (Gen. 2:16-17) and his wrath is propitiated (Rom. 3:21-26). Faith is the means by which this completed, finished work of Christ is received in our lives. That is, if we truly understand Jesus’ final words from the cross, we then ought to expect that Jesus’ first words to the disciples would be “Peace be with you.” These two historical statements are rich with theological truth, and essential for our new life in Christ. The peace pronounced and accomplished by Jesus in the New Testament is the fulfillment of the shalom promised in the Old Testament. G. R. Beasley-Murray, a New Testament scholar, captures the essence of this truth in the following statement: It is well known that that was (and still is) the everyday greeting of Jews in Palestine – ‘Shalom to you!’ But this was no ordinary day. . . . Never had that ‘common word’ been so filled with meaning as when Jesus uttered it on Easter evening. All that the prophets had poured into shalom as the epitome of the blessings of the kingdom of God had essentially been realized in the redemptive deeds of the incarnate Son of God, ‘lifted up” for the salvation of the world. “His ‘Shalom!’ on Easter evening is the completion of ‘It is finished’ on the cross, for the peace of reconciliation and life from God is now imparted. ‘Shalom!’ accordingly is supremely the Easter greeting. Not surprisingly it is included, along with ‘grace,’ in the greeting of every epistle of Paul in the NT. Dear brothers and sisters, It is finished . . . Peace be with you!
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