Christ's Last Words on the Cross or What's Good about Good Friday
1. Jesus addresses
the Father.
Luke 23:34
Then Jesus said, "Father, forgive them, for they do not
know what they do."
This first saying of Christ on the
cross is traditionally called "The Word of Forgiveness". It is
theologically understood as Christ’s prayer for forgiveness for those who
were crucifying him: the Roman soldiers and all others involved in his torture
and death. By virtue of Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection, forgiveness
is possible, the gates of Heaven are opened, and sin is forever conquered.
2. Jesus speaks to Dismas.
Luke 23:43
And
he said to him, "Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in
paradise."
This saying is called "The Word
of Salvation." In Luke's Gospel, Christ was crucified between two
thieves (Dismas, the good criminal, and Gestas), Dismas
supports Jesus' innocence and asks him to remember him when he comes into his
kingdom. Jesus replies, "Truly, I say to you..."
The punctuation of Christ’s reply
has been the subject of doctrinal differences among Christians. Protestant
Christians typically read this as, "today you will be with me in
Paradise". This understanding presumes direct passage to Heaven. Catholics,
however, interpret it as, "I say to you today," leaving open the
possibility that the statement was made presently, but eternal beatitude would
be experienced later.
3. Jesus entrusts his mother
to the beloved disciple.
John 19:26-27
Jesus
saw his own mother, and the disciple standing near whom he loved, he said to
his mother, "Woman, behold your son." Then he said to the disciple,
"Behold your mother." And from that hour, he took his mother into his
family.
This
statement is called "The Word of Relationship." Jesus entrusts his
mother to the care of "the disciple whom Jesus loved," the
Apostle John. Even in the depths of his misery, Christ cared not for
himself but for the well-being of Mary.
4. Jesus cries out to the
Father.
Matthew 27:46
Around the ninth hour, Jesus shouted in a
loud voice, saying "Eli Eli lama sabachthani?" which is, "My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
Mark 15:34
And at the ninth hour, Jesus shouted in a
loud voice, "Eloi Eloi lama sabachthani?" which is translated,
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
Of the last seven sayings of Christ, it is
the only one that appears in two Gospels. It is a quote from King David in Psalm 22. Some
see it as an abandonment of the Son by the Father. Others understand Christ’s cry
as that of one who was truly human and felt forsaken. Tortured to death by his
foes, deserted by his friends, Jesus may have felt deserted by God.
5. Jesus is thirsty.
John 19:28
He said, "I thirst."
This is called
"The Word of Distress" and is contrasted with Jesus’ encounter with
the Samaritan Woman at the Well in John.
The
Gospel of John says Jesus was offered a drink of sour wine. A sponge dipped in
wine on a hyssop branch was held it to Jesus' lips. Hyssop branches figured
significantly in the Old Testament and in the Book of Hebrews.
This statement of
Jesus fulfills the prophecy given in Psalm 9:21 (cf. Psalm 22:15),
thus the quotation from John's Gospel "to fulfill the scriptures."
6. “It is finished.”
John 19:30
Jesus said, Tetelestai, meaning "It is finished."
This statement is called "The Word of
Triumph," and is interpreted by some as the announcement of the end of Jesus’
earthly life in anticipation of his Resurrection.
Under this
interpretation, these words are a cry of victory, not resignation. Jesus had
completed his divine mission. Salvation was now possible. Christ had assumed
our brokenness and taken our place. He had offered himself fully to
God as a sacrifice on behalf of humanity.
Jesus
refused the initial drink of vinegar, gall and myrrh (Matthew
27:34 and Mark 15:23) offered to alleviate his suffering. But here, several
hours later, we see Jesus fulfilling the messianic
prophecy found in Psalm 69:21.
Catholic theologian Scott Hahn offers
this interpretation:
"They put a sponge full of the
sour wine on hyssop and held it to his mouth. When Jesus had received the sour
wine he said the words that are spoken of in the fourth cup consummation,
"It is finished." What is the ‘it’ referring to? That grammatical
question began really bothering me at some point. I asked several people and
their response was usually, "Well, it means the work of redemption that
Christ was working on." All right, that's true, I agree it does refer to
that, but in context. An exegete, a trained interpreter of the word is supposed
to find the contextual meaning, not just import a meaning from a theology
textbook. What is Jesus speaking of when he says, "It is finished?" I
mean, our redemption is not completed once he - he's not yet raised. Paul says,
"He was raised for our justification."
So what is the ‘it’ talking about?
He said, 'It is finished', and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit, his
breath. The ‘it,’ of course you realize by now, is the Passover sacrifice.
Because who is Jesus Christ? He is the sacrifice of Egypt, the firstborn son.
Remember, the Egyptians involuntarily had to offer up their firstborn sons as
atonement for their own sins and wickedness. Christ dies for Egypt and the
world. Plus, he is the Passover lamb, the unblemished lamb, without broken
bones who offers himself up for the life of the world. This fits with John's
gospel, because as soon as Jesus was introduced in chapter 1 of the fourth
gospel by John the Baptist, what did John say? He said, "Behold the lamb
of God who takes away the sins of the world." And here is the lamb, headed
for the altar of the cross, dying as a righteous firstborn and as an
unblemished lamb. I believe that it's best to say in light of scripture that
the sacrifice of Christ did not begin with the first spike, it didn't begin
when the cross was sunk into the ground. It began in the upper room.
7. “Father, into your
hands I commit my spirit.”
Luke 23:46
And speaking in a loud voice, Jesus said,
"Father, into your hands I commit my spirit."
From Psalm 31:5,
this saying is an announcement, not a request. It’s traditionally called
"The Word of Reunion" and is understood as the proclamation of Jesus returning
to the Father in Heaven.
In this final utterance, we see Christ’s
complete trust in the Father. Jesus encountered death in the same way he lived his
life, offering up his earthly existence as a perfect sacrifice and placing
himself completely in God's hands.
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