The Fourth Word
My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” Matthew 27:46
When we wish to identify a particular part of the Bible we refer to a specific chapter and verse. That wasn’t the case at the time of Jesus. Instead, the identification of Old Testament scripture was made by reciting the opening line of the material to be recalled. A Jew looking on at the crucifixion or reading about it later in one of the Gospels would know that “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?” was the first line of what we now know as Psalm 22.
Psalms 22 describes Jesus
In effect, Jesus was reciting this Psalm and teaching that this Psalm applied to him. He was the fulfillment of its prophecy. He was telling Jews of the time that he was the Messiah and he is telling us that he is the King of Kings foretold in Psalm 22. You be the judge as to whether the following excerpts from Psalm 22 describe the crucifixion and Jesus:
My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? 6 But I am a worm, and no man; ***** 14 I am poured out like water, 16 Yea, dogs are round about me; ***** |
[Verses 23-31 tell us that this pain and agony will be followed by triumph] 23 You who fear the Lord, praise him! ***** 27 All the ends of the earth shall remember 29 Yea, to him shall all the proud of the earth bow down; |
Psalms 22: Tragedy to triumph
Psalm 22 begins with a cry of desperation but the closing verses 30 and 31 ends with triumph: “Posterity shall serve him; men shall tell of the Lord to the coming generation, and proclaim his deliverance to a people yet unborn, that he has wrought it” Psalm 22 begins in tragedy and ends with a description of the triumphant Lord.
But that’s not all.
Consequence of sin is separation from God
Jesus’ suffering had to be complete; he had to suffer in body, mind, and spirit. Once again Bishop Sheen leads us (The Life of Christ, page 400):
“Sin has physical effects, and these He bore by having His hands and feet pierced; sin has mental effects which He poured forth in the Garden of Gethsemane; sin also has spiritual effects such as a sense of abandonment, separation from God, loneliness. This particular moment He willed to take upon Himself that principal effect of sin which was abandonment.”
“Man rejected God; so now He willed to feel that rejection. Man turned away from God; now He, Who was God united personally with a human nature, willed to feel in that human nature that awful wrench as if He Himself were guilty. . . . As He entered upon the extreme penalty of sin, which is separation from God, it was fitting that His eyes be filled with darkness and His soul with loneliness.
*****
“Christ’s cry was of abandonment which He felt standing in a sinner’s place, but it was not of despair. The soul that despairs never cries to God.”
Christ called out to God because he was the Son of Man with a human nature and he represented humanity before God and assumed all human sins. Since sin is separation from God and is willed by man, all humanity cries through Christ saying, “My God, My God why hast thou forsaken me?” He represented us in death, torment and the atonement of sin, and so he suffered God’s entire wrath, including the consequences of sin, which is separation from God. This Jesus willed upon Himself for our sakes.
A warning about hell?
I wonder if the relentless and excruciating pain Jesus endured on the cross is a warning about hell. The consequence of sin is separation from God, and Jesus willed upon himself this total separation and suffered intense agony as a result. If we choose to ignore God why would we expect anything but eternal separation from him? An existence without God can only be described as fierce agony. This would be hell, and I wonder if this was one of the lessons Christ was teaching as he hung from the cross crying, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?!”
Don’t know – just a thought for your consideration.
Some websites and references
- Seven Last Words of Jesus from the Cross
- Matthew 27:46
- Psalms 22
- Life of Christ, “Ch 49 – The Seven Words from the Cross”
Last modified September 28, 2019