The week of July 15
The Hour of Darkness
Jesus had faced the powers
of darkness head-on before, in the wilderness temptations, with the demoniacs
and when Peter was trying to prevent Jesus from dying an untimely death. Now
the Prince of Darkness and the Prince of Light would have a final conflict
surrounding Jesus’ death.
Pp 367-9 Having spent the week in the foothills
of Jerusalem and commuting to the Temple template each day, Jesus mentally
prepared for Passover, and to give His life as a Passover for sins. In the same
unique way the disciples found the foal of a donkey for Palm Sunday, they were
instructed to find an upper room, a little secluded place to celebrate
Passover.
As the twelve were
surrounding Him in that room, Jesus began washing His disciples feet. A servant
should be doing this and no one stepped forward to offer this cleansing
courtesy. Peter protested and then realized Jesus was serious and that He was
symbolically cleansing the disciples. Jesus knew where He had come from and
where He was going; His washing of feet was a loving-to-the-end gesture to His
own people. He used it as a lesson to the disciples: Do to each other what I
have just demonstrated. How may we wash people’s feet in our day? Also, Jesus
tipped His hand to identify the betrayer. Judas dipped bread at the same time
as Jesus. Then Judas left to betray Him.
Pp 369-71 Jesus portrayed the first Lord’s Table
by eating bread and drinking the cup with His men, demonstrating His
intentional death for them. What difference does it make knowing that the
Lord’s Supper took place in the midst of a meal? He provided security to them
by telling He was preparing a place for them. Jesus was the Way to the Father,
the Truth of the Father, and the Life of the Father. He was the visible
expression of the invisible Father.
Relationship between the
Father, Son, Spirit and the followers were described in John 13-17. Jesus had a
bitter-sweet time, allaying their sorrow and giving last words for future hope.
What would your last words be like at a time like this? Jesus ended this time
praying for His disciples and for those who would be future disciples. He
wanted them to know the only true God and Jesus, Whom He had sent. And Jesus
wanted future disciples to know God loved us, even as He had loved Jesus (John
17:23). Can you absorb the depth of that statement?
Pp 371-3 Leaving the upper room, Jesus led the
disciples to the Mount of Olives. Jesus again predicted that they would fall
away. Peter was adamant that even if the others did, he would not. Jesus told
Peter he would indeed deny Jesus three times. How demoralizing to Peter.
Peter and the Zebedee
brothers accompanied Jesus and Peter to Gethsemane. They were to pray for Jesus
while He went apart to pray, but the three could not stay awake. This happened
three times. Jesus was strengthened by an angel as He prayed with the intensity
of sweating blood. Alas, they were again asleep. God was indeed answering
Jesus’ prayer: There was no rescue from this situation and He must go on and
die for these followers. They needed saving.
Judas led a gang of guards
to arrest Jesus. When He identified Himself as Jesus of Nazareth, they fell to
the ground. Jesus appealed for them to let the others go but Peter almost was
arrested for cutting off a servant’s ear. Jesus brought things to a close as he
healed the ear. He had again displayed His authority and the disciples ran for
their lives. Jesus did not fight but gave Himself over to the guards.
Pp 374-5 A first trial was held before Caiaphas
the high priest and the Sanhedrin. Only when two false witnesses testified that
Jesus would destroy the temple (surface info as Jesus meant his own body) was
there ‘evidence’ for a capital crime. Jesus claimed His Messiahship, His
Sonship at the Father’s right hand, and the fact that He would return. Enough!
He was judged as blasphemous, beaten and sentenced to death.
Peter fulfilled the Lord’s
prophecy about denying Him three times and ran away. Judas had a remorse that
led to death, throwing the blood money into the temple before he hung himself.
Pp 375-7 The Roman Governor Pontius Pilate was
the next judicial stop. Pilate personally questioned the claim that Jesus was
the King of the Jews. Pilate saw Jesus as not a political threat and tried to
have him released, as customarily happens with a given prisoner. The people
chose Barabbas instead, a known insurrectionist and murderer. Pilate sent Jesus
to Herod, the recognized king and then Jesus was returned to Pilate. He again
tried to release Jesus but only heard a rising chorus of ‘Crucify him’. Jesus
calm answering made Pilate squeamish but Pilate could not be seen as a weak
governor. So he acquiesced to have Jesus crucified.
Pp 378-80 The one to be crucified bore His own
cross. When this became too much (sleepless Jesus had been maligned and beaten
over several unauthorized trials) Simon from Cyrene was drafted to carry the
cross.
While on the cross, Jesus
was taunted and abused. ‘Come down off the cross’ was a challenge given to Him.
Little did they know that He actually could have done so but that was not His
Father’s will. Jesus asked forgiveness for those who were killing Him. Would we
have been so generous?
Jesus was crucified with
common criminals. Both verbally abused Jesus, but one relented and asked Jesus
to remember him. Jesus said he would.
Jesus would ultimately
succumb to asphyxiation. The real cause of His death was the wrath of God
coming down on Him, not for His own sins (He had none) but for the sins of the
world. Jesus cried out: My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?, both an Old
Testament quote and the feeling of abandonment. For the first time ever, the
Father turned His back on the Son, only to salvage mankind. Then Jesus gave up
His Spirit to the Father.
Remarkable events
followed: the thick curtain of the temple tore top to bottom, the earth quaked
and dead people were released alive from tombs. It was a memorable day. But it
seemed like the end of a hopeful era, not the beginning of one.
Oh, what a savior! Jesus could see to the time when others might come to believe in HIM. The curtain was torn, the earth quaked, and dead were raised from their tombs and testified in Jerusalem...and more wonderful was that our Savior overpowered death and rose to live eternally!
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