The Crucifixion
of Jesus
The shadow of the cross that was raised on
Golgotha reaches across the centuries to offer comfort, forgiveness, and hope
to us today. The story is almost unbelievable, for it is hard for us to image
such love. “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son” is the
message of the golden text of the Bible,
John 3:16. Jesus had to love us
beyond measure to give Himself willingly to die for
our sins. And we must complete the story of love by loving Him in return.
Some of the Jewish leaders hated Jesus because
He condemned their sins. They did not want to believe the truth He preached,
as He urged them to repent and
turn
back to God. They became jealous of the great crowds that followed Him and
believed in Him, and finally decided to get rid of Him by having Him killed.
Since the Jews did not have the right to have
a man killed without the approval of the Roman governor, they had to take
Jesus to Pilate. At the trial they had no evidence of wrong-doing by Jesus,
but put enough pressure on Pilate that he finally agreed to have the soldiers
kill Jesus by crucifying Him.
Even with all the pain, Jesus thought of
others rather than Himself. His first words from the cross were, “Father,
forgive them for they know not what they do.” Even though He could have
threatened to punish them eternally when they faced Him in judgment, He did not
do so. He thought of His mother, who stood by the cross weeping, and asked His
beloved friend John to take care of her. On either side of Him there were two
thieves crucified with Him. When one of them expressed faith in Jesus, the
Savior answered, “Today shalt thou be with Me in
paradise.”
As the terrible afternoon wore on and His
pain increased He finally moaned, “I thirst,” and was offered vinegar, which He
would not drink. God blotted out the sun as if to let us know how black the
deed which was being done, and out of that blackness Jesus cried, “My God, My
God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?” His final words
expressed His complete surrender to the will of God as He said, “It is
finished; Father into Thy hands I commend My spirit.”
He then bowed His head and died.
Even the earth could not accept the death of
its Creator and Master without showing grief. There was a great earthquake
which shook the countryside and made all people afraid. The only fear which
we need to have, however, is that of refusing the love He showed in dying
for us. The theme of our lives ought to be, “I’ll live for Him who died for
me, how happy then my soul shall be. I’ll live for Him who died for me, my
Savior and my God.”