the LORD m
Father, forgive them, for they do not know what
they do."
Gospel of Luke 23:34
Jesus of Nazareth is looking
down from the cross just after he was crucified between two criminals. He sees
the soldiers who have mocked, scourged, and tortured him, and who have just
nailed him to the cross. He probably remembers those who have sentenced him -
Caiaphas and the high priests of the Sanhedrin. Pilate realized it was out of
envy that they handed him over (Matthew 27:18, Mark 15:10). But is Jesus not
also thinking of his Apostles and companions who have deserted him, to Peter
who has denied him three times, to the fickle crowd, who only days before
praised him on his entrance to Jerusalem, and then days later chose him over
Barabbas to be crucified?
Is he also thinking of us, who daily forget him in our lives and left him in
our life
Does he react angrily? No! At the height of his physical suffering, his love
prevails and He asks His Father to forgive! Could there ever be greater irony?
Jesus asks his Father to forgive, but it is by His very Sacrifice on the Cross
that mankind is able to be forgiven!
Right up to his final hours on earth, Jesus preaches forgiveness. He teaches
forgiveness in the Lord's prayer: "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive
those who trespass against us" (Matthew 6:12). When asked by Peter, how
many times should we forgive someone, Jesus answers seventy times seven
(Matthew 18:21-22). At the Last Supper, Jesus explains his crucifixion to his
Apostles when he tells them to drink of the cup: "Drink of it, all of you;
for this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the
forgiveness of sins" (Matthew 26:27-28). He forgives the paralytic at
Capernaum (Mark 2:5), and the adulteress caught in the act and about to be
stoned (John 8:1-11). And even following his Resurrection, his first act is to
commission his disciples to forgive: "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you
forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they
are retained" (John 20:22-23).
THE SECOND WORD
"Truly, I say to you, today you will be with
me in Paradise."
Gospel of Luke 23:43
Now it is not just the
religious leaders or the soldiers that mock Jesus, but even one of the
criminals, a downward progression of mockery. But the criminal on the right
speaks up for Jesus, explaining the two criminals are receiving their just due,
whereas "this man has done nothing wrong." Then, turning to Jesus, he
asks, "Jesus, remember me when you come in your kingdom" (Luke
23:42). What wonderful faith this repentant sinner has in Jesus - far more than
the doubting Thomas, one of his own Apostles. Ignoring his own suffering, Jesus
responds with love and mercy in His second word.
The second word again is about forgiveness, this time directed to a sinner.
Just as the first word, this Biblical expression is found only in the Gospel of
Luke. Jesus shows his Divinity by opening heaven for a repentant sinner - such
generosity to a man that only asked to be remembered!
This expression offers us hope for salvation, for if we turn our hearts and
prayers to Him and accept his forgiveness, we will also be with Jesus Christ at
the end of our lives.
THE THIRD WORD
"Jesus said to his mother: "Woman, this is your son."
Then he said to the disciple: "This is your mother."
Gospel of John 19:26-27
Jesus and Mary are together
again, at the beginning of his ministry in Cana and now at the end of his
public ministry at the foot of the Cross. John is the only Evangelist to record
Mary at the Cross. The Lord refers to his mother as woman at the Wedding
Feast of Cana (John 2:1-11) and in this passage, recalling the woman in
Genesis 3:15, the first Messianic prophecy of the Redeemer, and anticipating
the woman clothed with the sun in Revelation 12.
What sorrow must fill Mary's heart, to see her Son mocked, tortured, and
crucified. Once again, a sword pierces Mary's soul: we are reminded of the
prediction of Simeon at the Temple (Luke 2:35). There are four at the foot of
the cross, Mary his Mother, John, the disciple whom he loved, Mary of Cleopas,
his mother's sister, and Mary Magdalene. He addresses his third word to Mary
and John, the only eye-witness of the Gospel writers.
But again Jesus rises above the occasion, and his concerns are for the ones
that love him. The good son that He is, Jesus is concerned about taking care of
his mother. In fact, this passage offers proof that Jesus was the only child of
Mary, because if he did have brothers or sisters, they would have provided for
her. But Jesus looks to John to care for her.
St. Joseph is noticeably absent. The historic paintings, such as Tondodoni
by Michelangelo and The Holy Family by Raphael, suggest Joseph was a
considerably older man. St. Joseph had probably died by the time of the crucifixion,
or else he would have been the one to take care of Mary. Early Christian
traditions and the second-century apocryphal Protoevangelium of James held that
Joseph was a widower, and his children by his former wife were the
"brothers and sisters of Jesus."
Another striking phrase indicating Jesus of Nazareth was an only child is Mark
6:3, referring to Jesus: "Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary, and
the brother of James and Joses and Judas and Simon, and are not his sisters
here with us?" Now if James, Joses and Judas and Simon were also natural
sons of Mary, Jesus would not have been called the "son of Mary," but
rather "one of the sons of Mary."
THE FOURTH WORD
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken
me?"
Matthew 27:46 and Mark 15:34
This was the only
expression of Jesus in the Gospels of Matthew and Mark. Both Gospels related
that it was in the ninth hour, after 3 hours of darkness, that Jesus cried out
this fourth word. The ninth hour was three o'clock in Judea. After the fourth
Word, Mark related with a horrible sense of finality, "And Jesus uttered a
loud cry, and breathed his last" (Mark 15:37).
One is struck by the anguished tone of this expression in contrast to the first
three words of Jesus. This cry is from the painful heart of the human Jesus who
must feel deserted by His Father and the Holy Spirit, not to mention his
earthly companions the Apostles. As if to emphasize his loneliness, Mark even
has his loved ones "looking from afar," not close to him as in the
Gospel of John. Jesus feels separated from his Father. He is now all alone, and
he must face death by himself.
But is not this exactly what happens to all of us when we die? We too are all
alone at the time of death! Jesus completely lives the human experience as we
do, and by doing so, frees us from the clutches of sin.
His fourth Word is the opening line of Psalm 22, and thus his cry from the
Cross recalls the cry of Israel, and of all innocent persons who suffer. Psalm
22 of David makes a striking prophecy of the crucifixion of the Messiah at a
time when crucifixion was not known to exist: "They have pierced my hands
and my feet, they have numbered all my bones" (22:16-17). The Psalm
continues: "They divide my garments among them, and for my vesture they
cast lots" (22:18).
There can not be a more dreadful moment in the history of man as this moment.
Jesus who came to save us is crucified, and He realizes the horror of what is
happening and what He now is enduring. He is about to be engulfed in the raging
sea of sin. Evil triumphs, as Jesus admits: "But this is your hour"
(Luke 22:53). But it is only for a moment. The burden of all the sins of
humanity for a moment overwhelm the humanity of our Savior.
y shepherd i shall not want
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