Calvary
[This chapter is based on Matt. 27:31-53; Mark 15:20-38;
Luke 23:26-46; John 19:16-30.]
"And when they were come to the place, which is called Calvary,
there they crucified Him."
"That He might sanctify the people with His own blood," Christ
"suffered without the gate." Heb. 13:12. For transgression of the
law of God, Adam and Eve were banished from Eden. Christ, our substitute,
was to suffer without the boundaries of Jerusalem. He died outside the gate,
where felons and murderers were executed. Full of significance are the
words, "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a
curse for us." Gal. 3:13.
A vast multitude followed Jesus from the judgment hall to Calvary. The
news of His condemnation had spread throughout Jerusalem, and people of all
classes and all ranks flocked toward the place of crucifixion. The priests
and rulers had been bound by a promise not to molest Christ's followers if
He Himself were delivered to them, and the disciples and believers from the
city and the surrounding region joined the throng that followed the Saviour.
As Jesus passed the gate of Pilate's court, the cross which had been
prepared for Barabbas was laid upon His bruised and bleeding shoulders. Two
companions of Barabbas were to suffer death at the same time with Jesus, and
upon them also crosses were placed. The Saviour's burden was too heavy for Him in His weak and suffering condition. Since the
Passover supper with His disciples, He had taken neither food nor drink. He
had agonized in the garden of Gethsemane in conflict with satanic agencies.
He had endured the anguish of the betrayal, and had seen His disciples
forsake Him and flee. He had been taken to Annas, then to Caiaphas, and then
to Pilate. From Pilate He had been sent to Herod, then sent again to Pilate.
From insult to renewed insult, from mockery to mockery, twice tortured by
the scourge,--all that night there had been scene after scene of a character
to try the soul of man to the uttermost. Christ had not failed. He had
spoken no word but that tended to glorify God. All through the disgraceful
farce of a trial He had borne Himself with firmness and dignity. But when
after the second scourging the cross was laid upon Him, human nature could
bear no more. He fell fainting beneath the burden.
The crowd that followed the Saviour saw His weak and staggering steps,
but they manifested no compassion. They taunted and reviled Him because He
could not carry the heavy cross. Again the burden was laid upon Him, and
again He fell fainting to the ground. His persecutors saw that it was
impossible for Him to carry His burden farther. They were puzzled to find
anyone who would bear the humiliating load. The Jews themselves could not do
this, because the defilement would prevent them from keeping the Passover.
None even of the mob that followed Him would stoop to bear the cross.
At this time a stranger, Simon a Cyrenian, coming in from the country,
meets the throng. He hears the taunts and ribaldry of the crowd; he hears
the words contemptuously repeated, Make way for the King of the Jews! He
stops in astonishment at the scene; and as he expresses his compassion, they
seize him and place the cross upon his shoulders.
Simon had heard of Jesus. His sons were believers in the Saviour, but he
himself was not a disciple. The bearing of the cross to Calvary was a
blessing to Simon, and he was ever after grateful for this providence. It
led him to take upon himself the cross of Christ from choice, and ever
cheerfully stand beneath its burden.
Not a few women are in the crowd that follow the Uncondemned to His cruel
death. Their attention is fixed upon Jesus. Some of them have seen Him
before. Some have carried to Him their sick and suffering ones. Some have
themselves been healed. The story of the scenes that have taken place is
related. They wonder at the hatred of the crowd toward Him for whom their
own hearts are melting and ready to break.
And notwithstanding the action of the maddened throng, and the angry
words of the priests and rulers, these women give expression to their
sympathy. As Jesus falls fainting beneath the cross, they break forth into
mournful wailing.
This was the only thing that attracted Christ's attention. Although full
of suffering, while bearing the sins of the world, He was not indifferent to
the expression of grief. He looked upon these women with tender compassion.
They were not believers in Him; He knew that they were not lamenting Him as
one sent from God, but were moved by feelings of human pity. He did not
despise their sympathy, but it awakened in His heart a deeper sympathy for
them. "Daughters of Jerusalem," He said, "weep not for Me,
but weep for yourselves, and for your children." From the scene before
Him, Christ looked forward to the time of Jerusalem's destruction. In that
terrible scene, many of those who were now weeping for Him were to perish
with their children.
From the fall of Jerusalem the thoughts of Jesus passed to a wider
judgment. In the destruction of the impenitent city He saw a symbol of the
final destruction to come upon the world. He said, "Then shall they
begin to say to the mountains, Fall on us; and to the hills, Cover us. For
if they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the
dry?" By the green tree, Jesus represented Himself, the innocent
Redeemer. God suffered His wrath against transgression to fall on His
beloved Son. Jesus was to be crucified for the sins of men. What suffering,
then, would the sinner bear who continued in sin? All the impenitent and
unbelieving would know a sorrow and misery that language would fail to
express.
Of the multitude that followed the Saviour to Calvary, many had attended
Him with joyful hosannas and the waving of palm branches as He rode
triumphantly into Jerusalem. But not a few who had then shouted His praise,
because it was popular to do so, now swelled the cry of "Crucify Him,
crucify Him." When Christ rode into Jerusalem, the hopes of the
disciples had been raised to the highest pitch. They had pressed close about
their Master, feeling that it was a high honor to be connected with Him. Now
in His humiliation they followed Him at a distance. They were filled with
grief, and bowed down with disappointed hopes. How were the words of Jesus
verified: "All ye shall be offended because of Me this night: for it is
written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be
scattered abroad." Matt. 26:31.
Arriving at the place of execution, the prisoners were bound to the
instruments of torture. The two thieves wrestled in the hands of those who
placed them on the cross; but Jesus made no resistance. The mother of Jesus,
supported by John the beloved disciple, had followed the steps of her Son to
Calvary. She had seen Him fainting under the burden of the cross, and had
longed to place a supporting hand beneath His wounded head, and to bathe
that brow which had once been pillowed upon her bosom. But she was not
permitted this mournful privilege. With the disciples she still cherished
the hope that Jesus would manifest His power, and deliver Himself from His
enemies. Again her heart would sink as she recalled the words in which He
had foretold the very scenes that were then taking place. As the thieves
were bound to the cross, she looked on with agonizing suspense. Would He who
had given life to the dead suffer Himself to be crucified? Would the Son of
God suffer Himself to be thus cruelly slain? Must she give up her faith that
Jesus was the Messiah? Must she witness His shame and sorrow, without even
the privilege of ministering to Him in His distress? She saw His hands
stretched upon the cross; the hammer and the nails were brought, and as the
spikes were driven through the tender flesh, the heart-stricken disciples
bore away from the cruel scene the fainting form of the mother of Jesus.
The Saviour made no murmur of complaint. His face remained calm and
serene, but great drops of sweat stood upon His brow. There was no pitying
hand to wipe the death dew from His face, nor words of sympathy and
unchanging fidelity to stay His human heart. While the soldiers were doing
their fearful work, Jesus prayed for His enemies, "Father, forgive
them; for they know not what they do." His mind passed from His own
suffering to the sin of His persecutors, and the terrible retribution that
would be theirs. No curses were called down upon the soldiers who were
handling Him so roughly. No vengeance was invoked upon the priests and
rulers, who were gloating over the accomplishment of their purpose. Christ
pitied them in their ignorance and guilt. He breathed only a plea for their
forgiveness,--"for they know not what they do."
Had they known that they were putting to torture One who had come to save
the sinful race from eternal ruin, they would have been seized with remorse
and horror. But their ignorance did not remove their guilt; for it was their
privilege to know and accept Jesus as their Saviour. Some of them would yet see their sin, and repent, and be
converted. Some by their impenitence would make it an impossibility for the
prayer of Christ to be answered for them. Yet, just the same, God's purpose
was reaching its fulfillment. Jesus was earning the right to become the
advocate of men in the Father's presence.
That prayer of Christ for His enemies embraced the world. It took in
every sinner that had lived or should live, from the beginning of the world
to the end of time. Upon all rests the guilt of crucifying the Son of God.
To all, forgiveness is freely offered. "Whosoever will" may have
peace with God, and inherit eternal life.
As soon as Jesus was nailed to the cross, it was lifted by strong men,
and with great violence thrust into the place prepared for it. This caused
the most intense agony to the Son of God. Pilate then wrote an inscription
in Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, and placed it upon the cross, above the head of
Jesus. It read, "Jesus of Nazareth the King of the Jews." This
inscription irritated the Jews. In Pilate's court they had cried,
"Crucify Him." "We have no king but Caesar." John 19:15.
They had declared that whoever should acknowledge any other king was a
traitor. Pilate wrote out the sentiment they had expressed. No offense was
mentioned, except that Jesus was the King of the Jews. The inscription was a
virtual acknowledgment of the allegiance of the Jews to the Roman power. It
declared that whoever might claim to be the King of Israel would be judged
by them worthy of death. The priests had overreached themselves. When they
were plotting the death of Christ, Caiaphas had declared it expedient that
one man should die to save the nation. Now their hypocrisy was revealed. In
order to destroy Christ, they had been ready to sacrifice even their
national existence.
The priests saw what they had done, and asked Pilate to change the
inscription. They said, "Write not, The King of the Jews; but that He
said, I am King of the Jews." But Pilate was angry with himself because
of his former weakness, and he thoroughly despised the jealous and artful
priests and rulers. He replied coldly, "What I have written I have
written."
A higher power than Pilate or the Jews had directed the placing of that
inscription above the head of Jesus. In the providence of God it was to
awaken thought, and investigation of the Scriptures. The place where Christ
was crucified was near to the city. Thousands of people from all lands were
then at Jerusalem, and the inscription declaring Jesus of Nazareth the Messiah would come to their notice. It was a living truth,
transcribed by a hand that God had guided.
In the sufferings of Christ upon the cross prophecy was fulfilled.
Centuries before the crucifixion, the Saviour had foretold the treatment He
was to receive. He said, "Dogs have compassed Me: the assembly of the
wicked have enclosed Me: they pierced My hands and My feet. I may tell all
My bones: they look and stare upon Me. They part My garments among them, and
cast lots upon My vesture." Ps. 22:16-18. The prophecy concerning His
garments was carried out without counsel or interference from the friends or
the enemies of the Crucified One. To the soldiers who had placed Him upon
the cross, His clothing was given. Christ heard the men's contention as they
parted the garments among them. His tunic was woven throughout without seam,
and they said, "Let us not rend it, but cast lots for it, whose it
shall be."
In another prophecy the Saviour declared, "Reproach hath broken My
heart; and I am full of heaviness: and I looked for some to take pity, but
there was none; and for comforters, but I found none. They gave Me also gall
for My meat; and in My thirst they gave Me vinegar to drink." Ps.
69:20, 21. To those who suffered death by the cross, it was permitted to
give a stupefying potion, to deaden the sense of pain. This was offered to
Jesus; but when He had tasted it, He refused it. He would receive nothing
that could becloud His mind. His faith must keep fast hold upon God. This
was His only strength. To becloud His senses would give Satan an advantage.
The enemies of Jesus vented their rage upon Him as He hung upon the
cross. Priests, rulers, and scribes joined with the mob in mocking the dying
Saviour. At the baptism and at the transfiguration the voice of God had been
heard proclaiming Christ as His Son. Again, just before Christ's betrayal,
the Father had spoken, witnessing to His divinity. But now the voice from
heaven was silent. No testimony in Christ's favor was heard. Alone He
suffered abuse and mockery from wicked men.
"If Thou be the Son of God," they said, "come down from
the cross." "Let Him save Himself, if He be Christ, the chosen of
God." In the wilderness of temptation Satan had declared, "If Thou
be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread." "If
Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down" from the pinnacle of the
temple. Matt. 4:3, 6. And Satan with his angels, in human form, was present
at the cross. The archfiend and his hosts were co-operating with the priests and
rulers. The teachers of the people had stimulated the ignorant mob to
pronounce judgment against One upon whom many of them had never looked,
until urged to bear testimony against Him. Priests, rulers, Pharisees, and
the hardened rabble were confederated together in a satanic frenzy.
Religious rulers united with Satan and his angels. They were doing his
bidding.
Jesus, suffering and dying, heard every word as the priests declared,
"He saved others; Himself He cannot save. Let Christ the King of Israel
descend now from the cross, that we may see and believe." Christ could
have come down from the cross. But it is because He would not save Himself
that the sinner has hope of pardon and favor with God.
In their mockery of the Saviour, the men who professed to be the
expounders of prophecy were repeating the very words which Inspiration had
foretold they would utter upon this occasion. Yet in their blindness they
did not see that they were fulfilling the prophecy. Those who in derision
uttered the words, "He trusted in God; let Him deliver Him now, if He
will have Him: for He said, I am the Son of God," little thought that
their testimony would sound down the ages. But although spoken in mockery,
these words led men to search the Scriptures as they had never done before.
Wise men heard, searched, pondered, and prayed. There were those who never
rested until, by comparing scripture with scripture, they saw the meaning of
Christ's mission. Never before was there such a general knowledge of Jesus
as when He hung upon the cross. Into the hearts of many who beheld the
crucifixion scene, and who heard Christ's words, the light of truth was
shining.
To Jesus in His agony on the cross there came one gleam of comfort. It
was the prayer of the penitent thief. Both the men who were crucified with
Jesus had at first railed upon Him; and one under his suffering only became
more desperate and defiant. But not so with his companion. This man was not
a hardened criminal; he had been led astray by evil associations, but he was
less guilty than many of those who stood beside the cross reviling the
Saviour. He had seen and heard Jesus, and had been convicted by His
teaching, but he had been turned away from Him by the priests and rulers.
Seeking to stifle conviction, he had plunged deeper and deeper into sin,
until he was arrested, tried as a criminal, and condemned to die on the
cross. In the judgment hall and on the way to Calvary he had been in company
with Jesus. He had heard Pilate declare, "I find no fault in Him."
John 19:4. He had marked His godlike bearing, and His pitying forgiveness of His tormentors. On the
cross he sees the many great religionists shoot out the tongue with scorn,
and ridicule the Lord Jesus. He sees the wagging heads. He hears the
upbraiding speeches taken up by his companion in guilt: "If Thou be
Christ, save Thyself and us." Among the passers-by he hears many
defending Jesus. He hears them repeat His words, and tell of His works. The
conviction comes back to him that this is the Christ. Turning to his fellow
criminal he says, "Dost not thou fear God, seeing thou art in the same
condemnation?" The dying thieves have no longer anything to fear from
man. But upon one of them presses the conviction that there is a God to
fear, a future to cause him to tremble. And now, all sin-polluted as it is,
his life history is about to close. "And we indeed justly," he
moans; "for we receive the due reward of our deeds: but this Man hath
done nothing amiss."
There is no question now. There are no doubts, no reproaches. When
condemned for his crime, the thief had become hopeless and despairing; but
strange, tender thoughts now spring up. He calls to mind all he has heard of
Jesus, how He has healed the sick and pardoned sin. He has heard the words
of those who believed in Jesus and followed Him weeping. He has seen and
read the title above the Saviour's head. He has heard the passers-by repeat
it, some with grieved, quivering lips, others with jesting and mockery. The
Holy Spirit illuminates his mind, and little by little the chain of evidence
is joined together. In Jesus, bruised, mocked, and hanging upon the cross,
he sees the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world. Hope is
mingled with anguish in his voice as the helpless, dying soul casts himself
upon a dying Saviour. "Lord, remember me," he cries, "when
Thou comest into Thy kingdom."
Quickly the answer came. Soft and melodious the tone, full of love,
compassion, and power the words: Verily I say unto thee today, Thou shalt be
with Me in paradise.
For long hours of agony, reviling and mockery have fallen upon the ears
of Jesus. As He hangs upon the cross, there floats up to Him still the sound
of jeers and curses. With longing heart He has listened for some expression
of faith from His disciples. He has heard only the mournful words, "We
trusted that it had been He which should have redeemed Israel." How
grateful then to the Saviour was the utterance of faith and love from the
dying thief! While the leading Jews deny Him, and even the disciples doubt
His divinity, the poor thief, upon the brink of eternity, calls Jesus Lord. Many were ready to call Him Lord
when He wrought miracles, and after He had risen from the grave; but none
acknowledged Him as He hung dying upon the cross save the penitent thief who
was saved at the eleventh hour.
The bystanders caught the words as the thief called Jesus Lord. The tone
of the repentant man arrested their attention. Those who at the foot of the
cross had been quarreling over Christ's garments, and casting lots upon His
vesture, stopped to listen. Their angry tones were hushed. With bated breath
they looked upon Christ, and waited for the response from those dying lips.
As He spoke the words of promise, the dark cloud that seemed to enshroud
the cross was pierced by a bright and living light. To the penitent thief
came the perfect peace of acceptance with God. Christ in His humiliation was
glorified. He who in all other eyes appeared to be conquered was a
Conqueror. He was acknowledged as the Sin Bearer. Men may exercise power
over His human body. They may pierce the holy temples with the crown of
thorns. They may strip from Him His raiment, and quarrel over its division.
But they cannot rob Him of His power to forgive sins. In dying He bears
testimony to His own divinity and to the glory of the Father. His ear is not
heavy that it cannot hear, neither His arm shortened that it cannot save. It
is His royal right to save unto the uttermost all who come unto God by Him.
I say unto thee today, Thou shalt be with Me in Paradise. Christ did not
promise that the thief should be with Him in Paradise that day. He Himself
did not go that day to Paradise. He slept in the tomb, and on the morning of
the resurrection He said, "I am not yet ascended to My Father."
John 20:17. But on the day of the crucifixion, the day of apparent defeat
and darkness, the promise was given. "Today" while dying upon the
cross as a malefactor, Christ assures the poor sinner, Thou shalt be with Me
in Paradise.
The thieves crucified with Jesus were placed "on either side one,
and Jesus in the midst." This was done by the direction of the priests
and rulers. Christ's position between the thieves was to indicate that He
was the greatest criminal of the three. Thus was fulfilled the scripture,
"He was numbered with the transgressors." Isa. 53:12. But the full
meaning of their act the priests did not see. As Jesus, crucified with the
thieves, was placed "in the midst," so His cross was placed in the
midst of a world lying in sin. And the words of pardon spoken to the
penitent thief kindled a light that will shine to the earth's remotest
bounds.
With amazement the angels beheld the infinite love of Jesus, who,
suffering the most intense agony of mind and body, thought only of others,
and encouraged the penitent soul to believe. In His humiliation He as a
prophet had addressed the daughters of Jerusalem; as priest and advocate He
had pleaded with the Father to forgive His murderers; as a loving Saviour He
had forgiven the sins of the penitent thief.
As the eyes of Jesus wandered over the multitude about Him, one figure
arrested His attention. At the foot of the cross stood His mother, supported
by the disciple John. She could not endure to remain away from her Son; and
John, knowing that the end was near, had brought her again to the cross. In
His dying hour, Christ remembered His mother. Looking into her
grief-stricken face and then upon John, He said to her, "Woman, behold
thy son!" then to John, "Behold thy mother!" John understood
Christ's words, and accepted the trust. He at once took Mary to his home,
and from that hour cared for her tenderly. O pitiful, loving Saviour; amid
all His physical pain and mental anguish, He had a thoughtful care for His
mother! He had no money with which to provide for her comfort; but He was
enshrined in the heart of John, and He gave His mother to him as a precious
legacy. Thus He provided for her that which she most needed,--the tender
sympathy of one who loved her because she loved Jesus. And in receiving her
as a sacred trust, John was receiving a great blessing. She was a constant
reminder of his beloved Master.
The perfect example of Christ's filial love shines forth with undimmed
luster from the mist of ages. For nearly thirty years Jesus by His daily
toil had helped bear the burdens of the home. And now, even in His last
agony, He remembers to provide for His sorrowing, widowed mother. The same
spirit will be seen in every disciple of our Lord. Those who follow Christ
will feel that it is a part of their religion to respect and provide for
their parents. From the heart where His love is cherished, father and mother
will never fail of receiving thoughtful care and tender sympathy.
And now the Lord of glory was dying, a ransom for the race. In yielding
up His precious life, Christ was not upheld by triumphant joy. All was
oppressive gloom. It was not the dread of death that weighed upon Him. It
was not the pain and ignominy of the cross that caused His inexpressible
agony. Christ was the prince of sufferers; but His suffering was from a
sense of the malignity of sin, a knowledge that through familiarity with evil, man had become blinded to its enormity.
Christ saw how deep is the hold of sin upon the human heart, how few would
be willing to break from its power. He knew that without help from God,
humanity must perish, and He saw multitudes perishing within reach of
abundant help.
Upon Christ as our substitute and surety was laid the iniquity of us all.
He was counted a transgressor, that He might redeem us from the condemnation
of the law. The guilt of every descendant of Adam was pressing upon His
heart. The wrath of God against sin, the terrible manifestation of His
displeasure because of iniquity, filled the soul of His Son with
consternation. All His life Christ had been publishing to a fallen world the
good news of the Father's mercy and pardoning love. Salvation for the chief
of sinners was His theme. But now with the terrible weight of guilt He
bears, He cannot see the Father's reconciling face. The withdrawal of the
divine countenance from the Saviour in this hour of supreme anguish pierced
His heart with a sorrow that can never be fully understood by man. So great
was this agony that His physical pain was hardly felt.
Satan with his fierce temptations wrung the heart of Jesus. The Saviour
could not see through the portals of the tomb. Hope did not present to Him
His coming forth from the grave a conqueror, or tell Him of the Father's
acceptance of the sacrifice. He feared that sin was so offensive to God that
Their separation was to be eternal. Christ felt the anguish which the sinner
will feel when mercy shall no longer plead for the guilty race. It was the
sense of sin, bringing the Father's wrath upon Him as man's substitute, that
made the cup He drank so bitter, and broke the heart of the Son of God.
With amazement angels witnessed the Saviour's despairing agony. The hosts
of heaven veiled their faces from the fearful sight. Inanimate nature
expressed sympathy with its insulted and dying Author. The sun refused to
look upon the awful scene. Its full, bright rays were illuminating the earth
at midday, when suddenly it seemed to be blotted out. Complete darkness,
like a funeral pall, enveloped the cross. "There was darkness over all
the land unto the ninth hour." There was no eclipse or other natural
cause for this darkness, which was as deep as midnight without moon or
stars. It was a miraculous testimony given by God that the faith of after
generations might be confirmed.
In that thick darkness God's presence was hidden. He makes darkness His
pavilion, and conceals His glory from human eyes. God and His holy angels were beside the cross. The Father was with His Son. Yet
His presence was not revealed. Had His glory flashed forth from the cloud,
every human beholder would have been destroyed. And in that dreadful hour
Christ was not to be comforted with the Father's presence. He trod the wine
press alone, and of the people there was none with Him.
In the thick darkness, God veiled the last human agony of His Son. All
who had seen Christ in His suffering had been convicted of His divinity.
That face, once beheld by humanity, was never forgotten. As the face of Cain
expressed his guilt as a murderer, so the face of Christ revealed innocence,
serenity, benevolence,--the image of God. But His accusers would not give
heed to the signet of heaven. Through long hours of agony Christ had been
gazed upon by the jeering multitude. Now He was mercifully hidden by the
mantle of God.
The silence of the grave seemed to have fallen upon Calvary. A nameless
terror held the throng that was gathered about the cross. The cursing and
reviling ceased in the midst of half-uttered sentences. Men, women, and
children fell prostrate upon the earth. Vivid lightnings occasionally
flashed forth from the cloud, and revealed the cross and the crucified
Redeemer. Priests, rulers, scribes, executioners, and the mob, all thought
that their time of retribution had come. After a while some whispered that
Jesus would now come down from the cross. Some attempted to grope their way
back to the city, beating their breasts and wailing in fear.
At the ninth hour the darkness lifted from the people, but still
enveloped the Saviour. It was a symbol of the agony and horror that weighed
upon His heart. No eye could pierce the gloom that surrounded the cross, and
none could penetrate the deeper gloom that enshrouded the suffering soul of
Christ. The angry lightnings seemed to be hurled at Him as He hung upon the
cross. Then "Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eloi, Eloi, lama
sabachthani?" "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" As
the outer gloom settled about the Saviour, many voices exclaimed: The
vengeance of heaven is upon Him. The bolts of God's wrath are hurled at Him,
because He claimed to be the Son of God. Many who believed on Him heard His
despairing cry. Hope left them. If God had forsaken Jesus, in what could His
followers trust?
When the darkness lifted from the oppressed spirit of Christ, He revived
to a sense of physical suffering, and said, "I thirst." One of the
Roman soldiers, touched with pity as he looked at the parched lips, took
a sponge on a stalk of hyssop, and dipping it in a vessel of vinegar,
offered it to Jesus. But the priests mocked at His agony. When darkness
covered the earth, they had been filled with fear; as their terror abated,
the dread returned that Jesus would yet escape them. His words, "Eloi,
Eloi, lama sabachthani?" they had misinterpreted. With bitter contempt
and scorn they said, "This man calleth for Elias." The last
opportunity to relieve His sufferings they refused. "Let be," they
said, "let us see whether Elias will come to save Him."
The spotless Son of God hung upon the cross, His flesh lacerated with
stripes; those hands so often reached out in blessing, nailed to the wooden
bars; those feet so tireless on ministries of love, spiked to the tree; that
royal head pierced by the crown of thorns; those quivering lips shaped to
the cry of woe. And all that He endured--the blood drops that flowed from
His head, His hands, His feet, the agony that racked His frame, and the
unutterable anguish that filled His soul at the hiding of His Father's
face--speaks to each child of humanity, declaring, It is for thee that the
Son of God consents to bear this burden of guilt; for thee He spoils the
domain of death, and opens the gates of Paradise. He who stilled the angry
waves and walked the foam-capped billows, who made devils tremble and
disease flee, who opened blind eyes and called forth the dead to
life,--offers Himself upon the cross as a sacrifice, and this from love to
thee. He, the Sin Bearer, endures the wrath of divine justice, and for thy sake
becomes sin itself.
In silence the beholders watched for the end of the fearful scene. The
sun shone forth; but the cross was still enveloped in darkness. Priests and
rulers looked toward Jerusalem; and lo, the dense cloud had settled over the
city and the plains of Judea. The Sun of Righteousness, the Light of the
world, was withdrawing His beams from the once favored city of Jerusalem.
The fierce lightnings of God's wrath were directed against the fated city.
Suddenly the gloom lifted from the cross, and in clear, trumpetlike
tones, that seemed to resound throughout creation, Jesus cried, "It is
finished." "Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit." A
light encircled the cross, and the face of the Saviour shone with a glory
like the sun. He then bowed His head upon His breast, and died.
Amid the awful darkness, apparently forsaken of God, Christ had drained
the last dregs in the cup of human woe. In those dreadful hours He had
relied upon the evidence of His Father's acceptance heretofore given Him. He
was acquainted with the character of His Father; He understood His justice,
His mercy, and His great love. By faith He rested in Him whom it had ever
been His joy to obey. And as in submission He committed Himself to God, the
sense of the loss of His Father's favor was withdrawn. By faith, Christ was
victor.
Never before had the earth witnessed such a scene. The multitude stood
paralyzed, and with bated breath gazed upon the Saviour. Again darkness
settled upon the earth, and a hoarse rumbling, like heavy thunder, was
heard. There was a violent earthquake. The people were shaken together in
heaps. The wildest confusion and consternation ensued. In the surrounding
mountains, rocks were rent asunder, and went crashing down into the plains.
Sepulchers were broken open, and the dead were cast out of their tombs.
Creation seemed to be shivering to atoms. Priests, rulers, soldiers,
executioners, and people, mute with terror, lay prostrate upon the ground.
When the loud cry, "It is finished," came from the lips of
Christ, the priests were officiating in the temple. It was the hour of the
evening sacrifice. The lamb representing Christ had been brought to be
slain. Clothed in his significant and beautiful dress, the priest stood with
lifted knife, as did Abraham when he was about to slay his son. With intense
interest the people were looking on. But the earth trembles and quakes; for
the Lord Himself draws near. With a rending noise the inner veil of the
temple is torn from top to bottom by an unseen hand, throwing open to the
gaze of the multitude a place once filled with the presence of God. In this
place the Shekinah had dwelt. Here God had manifested His glory above the
mercy seat. No one but the high priest ever lifted the veil separating this
apartment from the rest of the temple. He entered in once a year to make an
atonement for the sins of the people. But lo, this veil is rent in twain.
The most holy place of the earthly sanctuary is no longer sacred.
All is terror and confusion. The priest is about to slay the victim; but
the knife drops from his nerveless hand, and the lamb escapes. Type has met
antitype in the death of God's Son. The great sacrifice has been made. The
way into the holiest is laid open. A new and living way is prepared for all.
No longer need sinful, sorrowing humanity await the coming of the high
priest. Henceforth the Saviour was to officiate as priest and advocate in
the heaven of heavens. It was as if a living voice had spoken to the
worshipers: There is now an end to all sacrifices and offerings for sin. The
Son of God is come according to His word, "Lo, I come (in the volume of
the Book it is written of Me,) to do Thy will, O God." "By His own
blood" He entereth "in once into the holy place, having obtained
eternal redemption for us." Heb. 10:7; 9:12.