Sunday, April 1, 2012

Not Only 'Mary had a little lamb'

The four Gospels have some differences, but there is one strong (and maybe strange) similarity: the climax of their story is the cross.  Jesus had clearly told his disciples what is going to happen to him, and yet they are still surprised.

Holy week commemorates the last week of Jesus' earthly life stretching from Palm Sunday through Easter Sunday.  Thursday is often called Holy Thursday or Maundy Thursday.  The word "Maundy" is connected to the  word 'mandate' which was a significant event in the upper room when the disciples ate the last supper with Jesus.  In the Gospel of John, Jesus gives them a new commandment/rule/mandate that they should live by: love.

Good Friday was good for us, but hard for Jesus.  The church services on Good Friday often revolve around the last words of Jesus which he spoke while he was on the cross.  There are seven, but all four Gospels are needed to get the full set of seven.  His phrases were monumental: Father, forgive them... In to your hands I commit my spirit... Today you will be with me in paradise... It is finished.

Yet one phrase is rather disconcerting.  It doesn't completely match what we think about God.  God would never really forsake Jesus, would He?  Since Jesus is God, God never really did forsake Jesus, right?  Why did he say that?  Why would anyone want to write it down?

I believe that the pain Jesus was going through was greater than we can imagine.  It is true that it was physically excruciating, but the sins of all people were placed on him in fulfillment of the atonement for sin done in the Old Testament.  With God being holy, the Father could not embrace the Son whom he loved because of the sin heaped upon him.  Jesus must have felt lonely.

And yet I think there is another significant reason that Jesus spoke these words.  If I said the words, "Mary had a little lamb," you would probably have several ideas in your head.  One idea is Mary having a lamb, but it would probably also be joined with the ideas that this lamb has really white wool and would follow Mary all over the place.  "Mary had a little lamb," is not so much a sentence as much as the first line to a familiar song.  Since it is so common, I can equate that one line with the entire song.

Psalm 22:1
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? 
   Why are you so far from saving me, 
   so far from the words of my groaning?


The entire psalm is being recalled by only saying the first line.  When Jesus said the first words, the rest of Psalm 22 starting flowing through the minds of those faithful Jews who knew this Psalm.  The words of this psalm were strangely similar to what they were witnessing.







I wonder what those people felt when they made the connection between Psalm 22 and what was happening. I imaging the gasp or chill you get from a great suspense or mystery where the clues and answers have been given throughout the entire story, but only at the end are they able to be assembled to make sense.  Can we stand there with the centurion and declare, "Surely, he was the Son of God."?  The story of Jesus is the greatest story every told.

This is how we can be like Jesus.  We are not able to be born of a virgin, walk on water, heal the sick, raise the dead, or endure the sufferings that Jesus went through.  We are able to die, though.  This is why Paul says that "If we have been united with him like this in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection." We can be joined with him on Good Friday, so that we might also celebrate with him on Easter.  Easter is about our resurrection, too!

This is probably why the author of Revelation makes the point that to be connected to The Lamb, we should:

Revelation 2:10b
Be faithful, even to the point of death, and I will give you the crown of life.

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