Today Read: Psalm 22, Matthew 27:46
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (vs. 22:1a)
About three in the afternoon Jesus cried out in a loud
voice, “Eli, Eli,[a] lema sabachthani?” (Which
means “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (vs. 46)
Words
of Devotion
In many ways this is the
most amazing of all the psalms. In it we have a picture of the crucifixion and
resurrection of the Lord Jesus painted by the psalmist David one thousand years
before Jesus Christ was born. It constitutes one of the most amazing
predictions of all time.
At least nine specific
events or aspects of the crucifixion are described here in minute detail. All
of them were fulfilled during the six hours in which Jesus hung upon the cross.
Moreover, the latter part of the psalm clearly depicts the resurrection of
Jesus from the dead. The probability that the predictions of these nine events
would be fulfilled by chance in one person, on one afternoon is inconceivably
small. The chance that all this could occur by accident is beyond any realm of
possibility our minds could imagine. Yet all was fulfilled as predicted in this
amazing psalm.
It is common knowledge
that on November 22, 1963, President John Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas,
Texas, while riding down a Dallas street in a car. Suppose there had been in existence
a document that predicted this event, and we knew it had been written in AD
963. That was about the time of the height of the Byzantine Empire, when most
of the Western world was ruled from Constantinople, much of Europe was only
sparsely inhabited by barbarian tribes, and America was not yet discovered.
Suppose that a document
had been prepared in that ancient day that predicted that a time would come
when a man of great prominence, head of a great nation, would be riding down a
street of a large city in a metal chariot not drawn by horses and would
suddenly and violently die as a little piece of metal hurled from a weapon made
of wood and iron penetrated his brain. This weapon would be aimed at him from
the window of a tall building, and his death would have worldwide effect and
cause worldwide mourning.
You can imagine with what
awe such a document would be viewed today. Such a prediction would be similar
to what we have in Psalm 22. That hypothetical prediction would have been made
even before the invention of the automobile or firearms and five hundred years
before the discovery of America. It would be regarded as fantastically
accurate. Yet we have that very sort of thing in this psalm.
The psalm has two major
divisions. The first twenty-one verses recount for us the torments of an
unknown sufferer who is entirely alone and is crying out to God in His agony.
Many scholars assert that these first twenty-one verses represent the thoughts
that went through the mind of the Savior as He hung upon the cross and suffered
there.
Then from verse twenty-two
to the end the sufferer is no longer alone but is in the midst of a large
company and is praising God and shouting in victory. It ends with His claiming
the worship of the entire world.
Today: Remember when Jesus became sin for
you, He endured unthinkable separation from the Father fulfilling amazing
prophecy. What implication does that have for you today?
Pray: Lord Jesus, it is unfathomable to me what
You endured on the cross. Thank You for Your willingness to suffer and die. I
worship you as my Savior and Lord. Amen
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