Remember those lies we were told as kids? Babies are delivered by storks (we know
better now). Santa Claus flies around
the world in a sleigh delivering toys to good kids on Christmas Eve (everyone
knows Santa uses a teleporter like on Star Trek to get the job done). But perhaps the most hurtful to us now as
adults was the lie that when Jesus was dying on the cross, God turned his back
on Him. You know the story. Jesus was suffering and cried out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
(Matthew 27:46) I was taught, and the lie continues to be
told, that at that very moment, Jesus took on Himself the sins of the world so
our Perfect God (who can’t look on sin) had to turn His face away.
How does that sit with you?
If you understand what the Bible teaches, we are ALL sinful and deserve
to be rejected by God. (Romans 3:23) How does it make you feel that every day when
you mess up, or miss the mark, or even intentionally do something that you know
displeases God, that He can’t stand to look at you? Here’s the truth that I’ll explain in a
moment – you are the object of God’s affection; you are the apple of His eye;
you are precious to Him – you rotten, sinful, defective thing. You are loved deeply by the Creator God of
the universe because He made you to be His.
You are FORGIVEN by the Creator God of the universe because Jesus bore
the penalty for your mess-ups and unkindness and selfishness and hypocrisy and…well,
you get the idea.
So what about Jesus being forsaken by God? When you hear, “I pledge allegiance…” or “For
God so loved the world…”, don’t you immediately know what follows? When Jesus spoke the words, “…why have you forsaken me?” on the
cross, He wasn’t complaining, He was PROCLAIMING! You see, the words were written by old King
David about 1,000 years before Jesus repeated them. You can find the whole story in Psalm 22 in
the Bible. David was struggling with
feeling rejected by God, but by the end of the Psalm, David acknowledged “He (God) has not despised me…nor has He
hidden His face from me, but when I cried to Him, He heard.” (Psalm
22:24) David got it right. No matter how we feel, God always knows what’s
going on. You are never abandoned. Never alone.
So why did Jesus say those words? Well, no doubt He was feeling pretty bad – He
had been abandoned by most of his disciples and had suffered unspeakable pain
for the sins of every person who would ever be born – including you and
me. But when the self-righteous
religious leaders of the day who were standing around watching Jesus suffer and
gloating that they had finally silenced Him, when they heard those words, they
were shaken to their toes. They
recognized the words because they had them memorized, “My God, my God…”, and they understood what came after. “Those
who see me ridicule me…They pierced My hands and My feet…They divide my
garments among them and for my clothing they cast lots…” Those things didn’t happen to David who
wrote them, but the Holy Spirit led David to write of things that were still to
come. From one king to the One King.
So why does all that matter to us? Psalm 22:27-31 goes on to say:
All the ends of the
world shall remember and turn to the Lord, and all the families of the
nations shall worship before You.
For the kingdom is the Lord’s, and He rules over the nations…All those who go down to the dust shall bow before Him…A posterity (His heirs) shall serve Him. It will be recounted of the Lord to the next generation. They will come and declare His righteousness to a people who will be born, that He has done this.
For the kingdom is the Lord’s, and He rules over the nations…All those who go down to the dust shall bow before Him…A posterity (His heirs) shall serve Him. It will be recounted of the Lord to the next generation. They will come and declare His righteousness to a people who will be born, that He has done this.
That’s us. Heirs of
Christ serving and declaring His righteousness to the next generation. Keep your chin up and realize it’s OK to get
frustrated with your circumstance and complain that you feel abandoned. Just don’t ever believe it. And that’s no lie.
Jacob
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