Good Morning All,
Matthew 26:39; “And going a little farther he fell on his face and
prayed, saying, “My Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as you
will.”
What cup? What is Jesus referring to here? This verse
is from when Jesus was in the Garden of Gethsemane on Maundy Thursday. In our verse we have a portion of the prayer
that he prayed and this portion he prayed three times. This is the portion that caused him to sweat
like drops of blood. This was the hard
part of the prayer. The hard part was
“the cup.”
“The cup” referred to here
is the same cup that is referred to in Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and in
Revelations. The cup is tied to the cup
of sour wine that the losing king would drink before he was executed. It
represented the full wrath of the conquering king upon his enemy. Here this cup
is the cup of God’s wrath. It represents
the entire amount of God’s holy and righteous anger at sin. It represents the full and complete
outpouring of God’s judgment for all the sins ever committed and it was all
directed at one man- Jesus. Now Jesus
knew exactly what this constituted and the human nature of him didn’t want to
die. So, he prayed and prayed and
prayed. “Please Father, remove this cup,
if possible, but not my will but your will be done.”
Jesus knew God’s wrath and he
experienced that wrath as he hung on the cross.
As Jesus hung on that cross for all those hours, the full unmitigated
wrath of God poured out upon him. So,
what does the full wrath of God look like?
We may think in terms of volcanoes or earthquakes or great storms. Maybe we think in terms of plagues of frogs
or worms or something like this. Actually,
the full wrath of God can be described in one word and that word is hell. The entire wrath of God is seen in the
abandonment of man by God into hell.
This is why Jesus exclaimed, “My God, My God, why have you forsaken
me?” At that time, the full wrath of God
was upon him, and he was abandoned by God.
The amazing thing is that he did this because of his love for you.
This is a love that we cannot
imagine. Yet, it was love that motivated
him to do this. He died for you, and not
just died but suffered greatly for you, all out of love. So, if he did this for you, out of love, you
can be sure that he will also do all good things for you out of love. Paul asks the question, “If God is for us,
who can be against us?”
“He who did not
spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him
graciously give us all things?” The truth is that God will give you
all good things the most important is life eternal with him. This we can trust and this we can rejoice in.
Father of all good things, through your amazing mercy
you sent Jesus to be forsaken so that we are not. Guide us by your grace to hold onto the
wonderful promise of eternal life and the wondrous blessing of new life. In the name of Jesus our risen Savior, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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