Wenceslaus Hollar, Jesus on the Mount of Olives, Print, NGO Image, National Gallery of Art, Public Domain
When
He arrived at the place, He said to them, “Pray that you may not enter
into temptation.” And He withdrew from them about a stone’s throw, and
He knelt down and began to pray, saying, “Father, if You are willing,
remove this cup from Me; yet not My will, but Yours be done.” Now an
angel from heaven appeared to Him, strengthening Him. And being in agony
He was praying very fervently; and His sweat became like drops of
blood, falling down upon the ground.
(Luke 22:40-44, NASB)
(Luke 22:40-44, NASB)
The
Garden located on the side hill of Mount of Olives called Gethsemane
derives its name from the Hebrew word for “Olive Press.” How remarkable
that this garden so named was the place Jesus favored in His coming to
His Father for times of prayer and fellowship.
The
Son continually sought blessing, direction and relationship with His
Heavenly Father in all matters assuring that He might be in constant and
complete unity with His Father’s will. On all the occasions up until
this point, the Son had never had any difficulty with the Father’s will
but now massive amounts of untold heaviness were pressing in and on the
body and spirit of the Son. It was a time of extreme and unbearable
crushing in this place of “The Pressing.”
The
Son staggers under the weight of the judgment about to come upon Him.
Although He never wavers in His submission to His Father … yet He does
plead for a possible release from the course of destiny now before Him.
Some people explain the hesitation on the part of the Son as coming from
the tremendous pain, torture and suffering that was about to come upon
the Savior because of our sin and the sin of the world.
These
are significant pressures but quite possible the massive heartache and
agony that was crushing the Savior, came from knowing He would bear the
weight of the sin of the world and the knowledge of the abandonment that
was to happen when the Father accepted the Son's freely laying down His
life on the cross as He bore the sin of the world through His death.
While in the realm of His deity, Christ could not die ... He did die in
the flesh. Yet, somehow in the deepest of all mysteries, as Christ both
in fulfilling the prophecies of David (Psalm 22) and as He cried out to
His Father for abandoning Him on the Cross (Mark 15:34) because of the
sin of the world that He was bearing, He would experience in the flesh a
sense of separation from His Father while somehow still abiding as
divine in the unfathomable unity and love that the Father, Son and Holy
Spirit had continuously lived in without beginning or end.
The
abandonment of the Father of Jesus in the flesh was required for the
redeeming of all people for all time. It a great and indescribable love
the Father has for us that even while we are hopelessly lost in our
sins, He loves us (Romans 5:8). It was an incredible love that demanded
our Heavenly Father accept the death of His beloved Son and allow the
crushing weight of the sin of the world to be imputed to Him to save a
world of sinners. It was an incredible love our Savior had for us to lay
down His life and to submit to this unfathomable crushing for our sins.
We cannot imagine or comprehend the crushing that took place in the
Garden of Gethsemane to our blessed Savior but we can be ever so
thankful for the forgiveness and freedom it gives us. What was pressed
out in the place of “The Crushing” were the first steps of our Savior in
willingly walking towards the giving of His life on the cross and the
amazing gift of our salvation. Thanks, be to God!
But
he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our
iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his
wounds we are healed. (Isaiah 53:5, NIV)
Suggested Reading … Luke 22; Isaiah 53
Revised and Republished Devotion which was Originally Published - April 2, 2015
No comments:
Post a Comment