The print version of the Good Friday message given in the Gettysburg United Methodist church. The Bible verses used are Mark 15:1-42.
Jesus is arrested. He is accused. He is
flogged. He is mocked. He is beaten. He is spat
upon.
Finally, Jesus is led out to Golgotha. The place of
the skull. He is nailed to a cross. The mockery continues.
And finally, Jesus dies.
There are all kinds of things a person could emphasize in
regard to this story. But as I was reading it again this week, something
struck me. I’d known it, of course, but I’d never really thought about
it. What struck me was that, while all this was going on, while all these
things were happening to Jesus, Jesus said nearly nothing. He simply
accepted what was happening to him.
Eight words are all that are attributed to Jesus. The
first four are when Pilate asks Jesus if he’s the king of the Jews. Jesus
responds, “You have said so.” The last four are while Jesus is hanging on
the cross. Jesus says, “Eloi, eloi, lama, sabachthani.” We’re told
that means, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
And that’s it. Jesus says no more. And a little
while later, we’re told, “Jesus breathed his last.”
There were so many things he could have said. He
could have defended himself. He could have thrown the accusations right
back at his accusers, the chief priests and the teachers of the law and the
rest. He could have justified the things he had done. He could have
shown how false the accusations against him were.
He could have done that, but he did not. He stayed
silent. Jesus allowed himself to be killed without even trying to mount a
defense for himself. And he could have easily defended himself, because
there really was no basis for the charges against him.
So why didn’t he? Why did Jesus not say
anything? Why did he not even try to defend himself from these baseless
charges?
Because Jesus knew he was following the will of God the
Father. Jesus knew this was why he had been sent to earth. Jesus
was in fact, the Savior. He was sent here to save us from the
consequences of our sins. And the way he was to do that was to accept
those consequences himself. You and I are the ones who deserve
death. But Jesus died in our place, so we can have eternal life.
Jesus could have avoided this at any number of times, in
any number of ways. He could, of course, have simply not started his
ministry in the first place. He could have recognized the authority and
status of the religious leaders, the Pharisees and others, and subordinated
himself to them. He could have just not gone to Jerusalem at all,
avoiding the issue. He could have raised an army and defeated his
enemies. And, of course, he could have used his divine power to destroy
all opposition and establish himself as the ultimate authority on earth.
Jesus could have done any of those things. He
could’ve done other things, too. But he did not do any of them.
Jesus was obedient to God the Father.
It had to be tempting. After all, Jesus did not want
to go through all this. Who would?
In John Twelve, shortly after Jesus’ triumphant entry into
Jerusalem on that first Palm Sunday, Jesus acknowledges how hard this is for
him. He tells the disciples, “My soul is troubled.” Jesus knew how
hard it was going to be to go through this. But he goes on to say, “What
shall I say? ‘Father, save me from this hour?’ No, it was for this
very reason I came to this hour.”
In Matthew Twenty-six, we’re
told about Jesus going to Gethsemane. He goes off by himself and
prays. He prays that, if there’s any other way for God the Father to give
salvation to human beings, for God to use that other way instead. He
prays that three times. But each time, after he prays that, he says, “May
your will be done.”
Jesus knew how hard this was
going to be. He did not want to do it. But he knew that what he
wanted was not important. What was important was what God the Father
wanted. What was important was that God’s will be done. He knew
that it was God’s will that he be killed on a cross. He knew he could not
bring salvation and eternal life to humans if he did not go through with God’s
will. And so he did. Jesus followed the will of God the Father,
regardless of the consequences. Even when the consequence was death on a
cross.
So how about
you? And how about me? Are we able to do what Jesus did? Are
we willing to follow the will of God, regardless of what the consequences of
that might be?
That’s not an easy question to
answer. It’s not easy for a few reasons. One of the biggest of
those reasons, though, is that, so much of the time, we don’t even think about
it. We don’t spend much time even thinking about what God’s will for our life
is, much less whether we’re following God’s will. And if we don’t even
think about what God’s will for our life is, we cannot possibly say whether
we’d follow it to the point of death.
Now, I may be painting with too
broad a brush here. Maybe you do think about what God’s will for your
life is. Maybe you’re consciously following it. I hope so.
That’s awesome if you are.
But I think a lot of us don’t
really think about it that much. We just kind of do what we do, you
know? We go about our lives, day after day after day. We get up, we
work at our jobs, we go home. Maybe we go to a basketball game or
something. Then we go back home and go to bed.
And I’m not saying that’s
sinful or anything. But is it really the way God wants us to live?
Is that really God’s will for our lives?
Maybe it is. Maybe you
are perfectly following God’s will for your life. But maybe not.
And the thing is, if we never think about what God’s will for our lives is, how
will we know?
It’s important that we
know. Jesus knew, and it sustained him through all the hard things he had
to do. It sustained him even through his death on a cross. We need
to know, too, if we’re going to withstand all the things life can throw at us.
How can we know?
Well, I think the first thing we should do is pray. And you’re thinking,
well, typical pastor response. Pray. That’s his answer to
everything.
Well, not quite
everything. I mean, it’s not the answer to what’s two plus two. But
it is the answer to a lot of things. Or, more accurately, it’s the start
of the answer to a lot of things. Praying is not the only thing we should
do. But it is, quite often, the first thing we should do.
Pray. Ask God what His
will for your life is. Ask God if you’re following it right now.
Maybe you are. But ask.
If the answer is yes, then
fine. But ask again at some point, because God’s will for our life may
change as we go through life. I don’t mean that God changes His
mind. But as we grow, as we develop, as we gain new skills, as we become
better able to handle things, God can use us in different ways. It
happened to me. I think it was always God’s will that I eventually become
a pastor. But it was not God’s will that I become a pastor right out of
college, because I could not have done a good job of it then. God had to
lead me through some intermediate steps, so I could get to the point where I
could be a pastor.
But on the other hand, the
answer may be no, that you’re not following God’s will for your life. If
it is, ask God what you need to change. Ask God what it is that God wants
you to do. And then, ask God for the courage to do it. Because it
can be scary to ask God what His will is for your life. God may lead you
in a direction you never thought of.
Now, God won’t lead us to do
something we’re not capable of doing. God was not going to lead me to
play basketball for the Boston Celtics. But God has led me to do some
things I never would have thought I could do. Because if it’s God’s will
that we do something, God will make sure we have the ability to do it, with
God’s help.
It can be scary to ask God
what His will is for our lives. But the rewards are incredible.
Because there is no greater feeling in the world than knowing that you are
where God wants you to be and that you are doing what God wants you to
do. The feeling of God’s presence in your life, when that happens, is the
most awesome feeling in the world.
It’s that feeling that
sustained Jesus through his last day of life on earth. He was going
through terrible torture. But he was able to endure it because he knew he
was where God wanted him to be and he knew we was doing what God wanted him to
do. And he felt the reward that comes from that.
That feeling will sustain us,
too. So ask God what His will is for your life. And follow
it. It may be hard. It may be very hard. But when we’re
following God’s will, we can handle it. And the reward will be
incredible, on earth and in heaven.
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