|
|
 |
| I
Thirst |
|
| Bubba
Garner |
|
Jesus
summed up the purpose of His whole life when He said, “For even the Son
of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a
ransom for many” (Mark 10:45). He spoke those words after James and John
had requested to sit in positions of authority, on His right and on His
left, in His coming kingdom. Jesus’ response was to remind them that the
greatest of all is the servant of all.
No one proved that more
frequently than the Savior. The King of kings was born in a barn. The
Creator of all the earth had no place to lay His head. He who formed
everything in the beginning took on the form of a lowly man from Galilee.
The Master was never too important or too busy to stoop and to serve the
very people He came to save. It’s what made Him the greatest of all.
Even on the cross, Jesus
demonstrated His concern for the needs of others over His own. For the
soldiers who drove nails through His innocent hands and feet, He prayed,
“Father, forgive them.” To the thief who at first hurled insults at
Him but later repented, He promised, “Today, you shall be with Me in
paradise.” To His mother who was losing her firstborn and to John, the
disciple He loved, He gave the comfort of one another’s companionship.
His last hours were spent the same as every other hour of His life: in
selfless service.
The seven sayings from the
cross allow Jesus to tell the story of the crucifixion in His own words.
What message could possibly be meant for us when He “knowing that all
things had already been accomplished, in order that the Scripture might be
fulfilled, said, ‘I am thirsty’” (John 19:28)?
Jesus suffered for real.
He was the “Son of Man,” born of a virgin, yet still born of a woman.
And His cry of thirst is an indication of His humanity. He could not push
a button and magically be deadened to the pain and agony of the cross. He
felt the emotional torment from being reviled and mocked. He felt the
spiritual separation from His Father when He took on the sins of the
world. But He also felt the physical anguish of the crucifixion. His
muscles cramped. His wounds bled. His mouth dried up. For real.
The gospel writers do not
give much detail about the process of crucifixion. Their original audience
was much more familiar with the practice than we are. We have to look at
historical records and medical viewpoints to gain a better understanding
of this ancient method of execution. According to experts, death was often
hastened on a cross by exhaustion, suffocation, or dehydration. It took
Jesus only six hours to die. His sufferings were real. How much are you
really suffering for Him?
Jesus declared His
deity. “I thirst” was said “in order that the Scripture might be
fulfilled” (John 19:28). That does not suggest that Jesus had a
checklist of prophecies in His head that He was trying to mark off before
He died. That would remove the passion and sincerity from them. “That
the Scripture might be fulfilled” is the same description given earlier
in the chapter when the soldiers were dividing and casting lots for His
garments (John 19:24). Surely they weren’t concerned with making sure
Jesus fulfilled all the passages about the Messiah. What these and other
passages prove is that the Son of Man was also the Son of God who came in
perfect accomplishment of prophecy.
The Scripture fulfilled by
Jesus in this instance is most likely taken from one of the Psalms. In
Psalm 22:15, David wrote, “My strength is dried up like a potsherd, and
my tongue cleaves to my jaws.” In another Messianic Psalm, David said
again, “They also gave me gall for my food, and for my thirst they gave
me vinegar to drink” (Psa. 69:21). How could something so specific,
forecasted so long ago, just happen coincidentally? It happened because an
all-knowing, all-powerful God predicted it centuries in advance and an
equally divine Son fulfilled it. Isn’t it time to let Him direct your
affairs?
Jesus remained in
submission. When the guests at the wedding feast in Cana where
thirsty, Jesus turned water into wine. When the multitudes who followed
Him were hungry, He fed more than five thousand of them with five loaves
and two fish. Yet when He fasted for forty days and forty nights in the
wilderness and “then became hungry” (Matt. 4:4), He did not take
matters into His own hands and turn stones to bread. Why not? Because man
does not live by bread alone but by faith in God. Even the Son of Man.
Even the Son of God.
Jesus trusted that His
Father knew He was hungry in the wilderness and would satisfy His
appetite. He did not need to work a miracle on the cross to quench His
thirst, He left matters in the hands of God to provide. When the soldiers
arrested Him in the garden, He did not call twelve legions of angels. When
the angry mob reviled Him, He did not revile in return. When He cried, “I
thirst,” He did not make water pour from the sky. He just kept “entrusting
Himself to Him who judges righteously” (1 Pet. 2:23). You can’t serve
Him until you submit to Him. You can’t find your place until you place
yourself in His trust and care.
Because Jesus endured the
cross, He made it possible that all who hunger and thirst for
righteousness can be filled. And having come to the fountain, we can spend
our lives in humble service to the greatest One of all. There, no act of
kindness goes unnoticed. Not even a cup of cold water.
|
|
Copyright (C)
2008
Southside Church of Christ
All rights reserved.
|
|
|