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Psalm 22 is a transcript as if
there were a stenographer present at Calvary who could take down
more than any stenographer could take down. A stenographer can
only take down the words that someone might speak audibly. But
this stenographer took down the thoughts that Jesus had, his
prayer.
The first words were spoken
audibly—people heard them, and no doubt someone went to Mary and
said, “Mary, I’m sorry to tell you this, but I heard your son
express the thought that God had forsaken Him.”
Can you imagine how Mary thought,
“that my son has come to this—that my son, that I thought was
the Messiah has finally confessed that the whole thing was a
monstrous fraud and he is nobody, that God has turned His back
on Him.” No doubt that was a sword that was plunged through her
heart.
Yes, the first verse was spoken
audibly, “My God, why hast thou forsaken me? why art thou so far
from helping me.” The Hebrew word here is a word that describes
an animal that is caught in a trap and is crying in distress,
"and from the words of my roaring?" He felt that God was far
from Him. That is how we sinners feel.
Maybe you have felt that way?
Maybe—I shouldn’t say that—I know you have because you are
human. If you are a son or daughter of Adam, you are bound to
have felt that way. The papacy’s idea is to put Christ as far
away from us as possible. This alienation from God, this feeling
that He is far away from us, that He really doesn’t care about
me—that’s how Jesus felt.
Verse 2—
“O my God, I cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not; and in
the night season, and am not silent.”
Probably what happened was that as
the sun was darkened, about noon, that this cry of dereliction
came after it, in the darkness, that He thought that it was
night. He didn’t have a watch, probably thought that the sun had
set—the sun was gone, darkness, night. So, in that deep
distress, he begins in verse three to build his bridge across
this chasm that sin has caused.
It is dark as pitch in the darkest
black of midnight that is possible. There is no one to help him,
no one to offer a word of comfort of any kind. The Father is
silent. Paul tells us that the Father was right there, “God was
in Christ reconciling the world to himself.” [2 Corinthians
5:19]. The father suffered with the son but the Father
could not communicate with him. The rules would not permit it.
The son felt like he was billions of miles away. Look, and see
what he does. This is magnificent if you can see this. This is
the atonement.
Verse 3—
“But thou art holy, O thou that inhabitest the praises of
Israel.” God believes in democracy. He refuses to exercise his
authority as King unless his people elect him. And so, the first
thought that Jesus has is that God is enthroned. His throne is
not an arbitrary thing that he has won by might and mane, but
his throne is to be established upon the praises of his people.
Verse 4—
“Our fathers trusted in thee: they trusted, and thou didst
deliver them.” This is a complaint really—“they cried unto thee,
and were delivered: they trusted in thee, and were not
confounded.” “But” you won’t listen to me, “I am a worm, and no
man.”
This worm theology bothers a lot of
ministers. We have in the hymn book one of the loveliest hymns
ever written, but they refuse to say it. It goes like this:
Alas and did my Saviour
bleed?
And did my Sovereign die?
Would he devote that sacred head
For such a worm as I?
“I’m not a worm! I’m not going to
sing that hymn! It’s a terrible hymn!” But I think it’s a
beautiful hymn.
Was it for crimes that I
have done,
He groaned upon the tree?
Amazing pity! Grace unknown!
And love beyond degree.
Well might the sun in
darkness hide
And shut his glories in,
When Christ the mighty maker died
For man the creatures sin.
Thus might I hide my
blushing face,
While His dear cross appears,
Dissolve my heart in thankfulness,
And melt mine eyes to tears
That is pure agape. Isaac
Watts had the idea. Nothing about going to heaven. Nothing about
wearing stars in my crown. Nothing like that. He concludes:
But drops of grief can
ne’er repay,
This debt of love I owe;
Dear Lord I give myself to thee,
’Tis all that I can do.
And yet these dear brethren condemn
that purest gospel hymn, because the poet dared to quote a word
of Jesus Christ that they hate. And I say, if the Lord Jesus
could say of himself as he hangs on the cross, “I am a worm!”
Why can’t I sing that hymn?
The editors of some hymn books have
even taken it out. The hymn is there praise the Lord, but
they’ve taken out the word. You can check it for yourself.
“And I’m despised of the people,”
he says.
Verse 7—
“All they that see me laugh me to scorn”—that’s kind of hard to
endure. Opposition is easy, scorn and ridicule is difficult.
“They shoot out the lip, they shake the head”—if you want to
have a thrill, get a good recording of Handel’s Messiah and
listen to that long recitative of the tenor who sings these
words, and just let it roll into your heart.
They say he’s a fool, he’s come to
nothing “He trusted on the LORD that he would deliver him”—Ha
ha! “let him deliver him, seeing he [supposedly] delighted in
him.” Here are the religious leaders of the nation ridiculing
the son of God in his agonies. It hurt. It’s pretty bad! How can
Jesus handle this? He’s not worried about his own salvation,
he’s concerned about his mission. Is he going to fail? Is the
kingdom going to be lost? It is hanging in the balance.
This is a critical hour. If the son of God dies, if his last
breath, if his last utterance is one of dereliction, “My God,
you’ve failed me! I have failed!”—if he dies at that time the
plan of salvation has failed. Somehow, he’s got to die in
triumph. How is he going to do that?
He starts here with verse 9
recalling his past history, which is a good thing to do. “But
thou art he that took me out of the womb: thou didst make me
hope when I was upon my mother’s breasts. I was cast upon thee
from the womb: thou art my God from my mother’s belly.” What
does he mean by that?
You know that he was born in the
stable with the chickens, and cows, and goats. It wasn’t
December 25, and Mary didn’t have all her garments pressed and
laundered at the nearest Laundromat as the pictures show her.
She had just ridden, or walked, 80 miles when she was great with
child. She should have stayed home in Nazareth. Joseph had to go
to Bethlehem and she said, “I don’t want to stay here alone, the
people are laughing at me, I want to go with you.” What woman
who is on the verge of delivering walks or rides on a donkey 80
miles. How can you endure that?
The way Luke tells the story, the
baby came suddenly. She wasn’t prepared. She had no layette.
There she was in a stable, flies everywhere, filthy
surroundings, no antiseptic preparation at all. She told him as
he grew up what had happened, and he remembers that and says,
“Father, when I was born, I was about to die, but you saved me
then.”
Now, verse 11—
“be not far from me for trouble is near; for there is none to
help." Shame on them. Even Peter, James, and John didn’t give
him a drink of water. Not one of them came up and took his
wounded feet in his hands and said, “Lord, we still love you, we
still believe you’re the Messiah.” Not one.
You know, we shouldn’t be proud of
ourselves should we. Those were absolutely the best men in the
world. Not one helped him.
Verse 12—
“Many bulls have compassed me: strong bulls of Bashan have beset
me round." If you have ever been chased by an angry bull you
will appreciate this.
Verse 13—
“They gaped upon me with their mouths, as a ravening and a
roaring lion.” Note the lion. It is circling around the cross
there. A little later on, Christ feels that the lion has him in
its mouth.
Verse 14, 15—
He suffered here what we may call the equivalent of a nervous
breakdown, or, to put this in modern English, he came unglued.
“I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint:
my heart is like wax; it is melted in the midst of my bowels. My
strength is dried up like a potsherd; and my tongue cleaveth to
my jaws; and thou hast brought me into the dust of death,” the
second death. The first death is not the second death.
The first death is merciful. The first death is a sleep.
Since the world began, how many
people have died? The true answer is one. Everyone else has gone
to sleep. Christ is the only man who has ever died true
death—yes, the equivalent of the second death. He was brought
into the dust of that death.
I hope I never have to explain what
the second death is. The horrible sense of complete, total,
self-condemnation, where every cell of your being is on fire
with this awful accusation that you are worthless. You’re no
good, you have failed, you are nothing, you are going to be
thrown out into the darkness forever with the doors of heaven
slammed against you. That’s how he felt.
Verse 16—
“For dogs have compassed me,” not your pretty little poodles, or
whatever, but these wild, filthy dogs. “The assembly of the
wicked have enclosed me: they pierced my hands and my feet." The
Septuagint [LXX] says “they pierced my hands and my feet.” Some
of the modern translations have not used that translation there
but the KJV translators felt that because of what the NT says
that the LXX was correct.
Verse 17—
“I may tell (count) all my bones: they look and stare upon me.”
He was strung up naked. Nobody has ever painted the crucifixion
correctly.
Verse 18—
“They part my garments among them, and cast lots upon my
vesture.”
Verse 19—
A prayer—“Please, O my strength, do something to help me” Please
deliver my soul from this sword. My soul, my mission—the real
me. A human being isn’t so concerned for his physical integrity
as he is for the integrity of his soul, his life work , his
ministry, his personality, whoever he is.
And then the next expression in the
Hebrew is interesting, “my only one from the power of this dog.”
That must mean the thing that is dearest to a man or a
woman. This indescribable something that represents the sum of
all our hopes and aspirations. Our personal integrity—more than
that—in Jesus’ case, it meant his mission. The dearest thing to
him, the vindication of his father to save a world that is lost
in sin, to establish the government of God. If Jesus fails, Gods
government must fail. God has risked everything He has in
Christ.
I can’t imagine what would have
happened if Jesus had failed. I can’t imagine that God would
have shut himself up in his heaven in failure and disgrace while
Satan shouts and rolls his triumph all through the universe.
Satan could perhaps have involved
the whole universe in rebellion and cast contempt upon God.
“Look," he could have said, “God sent his own son to the planet
earth which was my possession, and this son of God failed. This
thing that I have invented is greater and stronger than God
himself. I have invented this magnificent thing called ‘sin’ and
I have vanquished the son of God. Thus I have vanquished the
Father. Unfair Father, get off of that throne! I belong there!”
That’s what would have happened.
And Jesus knows this. He doesn’t
want this to happen.
Verse 21—
Now the lion has him in his mouth. “Save me from the lions
mouth," and in this horrible darkness, he breaks through the
cloud. In the middle of verse 21 he has built his bridge, by
faith. “You have heard me while I was tossed on the horns of
this wild buffalo.”
We have had missionaries in Africa
who have been gored by the wild buffalo. It is a horrible thing.
They are mean animals. Just imagine yourself caught in a herd of
these angry wild buffalo, and they are just tossing you like you
would toss a ball up in the air. And that is how he felt in his
last extremity.
Then he says, “You have heard me.”
By faith, he triumphs. And so, the rest of it is a hymn of
praise. Here is where you and I come in.
I don’t know what happened. His
heart was probably already ruptured, and in his last moments as
the shadows begin to gather, he’s happy. The last thing—he has
made it. “I will declare thy name unto my brethren: in the midst
of the congregation will I praise thee. Ye that fear the Lord.”
Don’t get discouraged, praise him. “All ye the seed of Jacob,
glorify him; all ye the seed of Israel,” because he is good.
“For he hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the
afflicted; neither hath he hid his face from him; but when he
cried unto him, he heard.” When I cried “My God, why hast thou
forsaken me!— he heard me! And he answered me!”
He’ll answer you too.
Verse 25—
“My praise shall be of thee in the great congregation: I will
pay my vows before them that fear him. The meek shall eat and be
satisfied: they shall praise the Lord that seek him: your heart
shall live for ever. All the ends of the world shall remember
and turn unto the Lord: and all the kindreds of the nations
shall worship before thee. For the kingdom is the Lord’s: and he
is the governor among the nations.”
Verse 30—
“A seed [a generation] shall serve him, it shall be accounted to
the Lord for a generation.” You may wonder what this generation
means. We have argued about that for a hundred and some years.
Maybe we have a key right here to understand it. When the Lord
has a remnant who appreciate what happened on that cross, it
shall be accounted to him for a generation.
Verse 31—
“They shall come, and shall declare his righteousness unto a
people that shall be born." Then you have one word left there in
the Hebrew. The KJV messed it up. I suppose most of the
translations mess it up. That word, ’asah in the
Hebrew—the only way to translate it is to say “It is finished!”,
and he died. That is the atonement. That’s the reconciliation.
The bridge has been built. You can cross it by faith.
And so Paul says in Romans chapter
5— it’s not something that only the theologians can
understand—it’s really very simple, in verse 8, “God commendeth
his agape toward us, in that while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us. Much more then, being now justified by his
blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him.”
Please be careful, because the
modern translations are doing something that John says we must
never do. They are putting words in God’s mouth that he never
said. For example, Today’s English Version takes every
chance it can to louse up what the apostle said, and they insert
here “we should be saved from God’s wrath through him.”
Paul didn’t say God’s wrath. The KJV is right. We shall be saved
from our own wrath. That’s the second death, this sense
of utter self-condemnation—that’s what is going to kill the
wicked at last. Not that God kills them. The wages of sin is
death, the second death. It is sin that goes in to us and brings
up utter self-condemnation. It is that horrible last look at
ourselves that kills us. Paul says we should be saved from that
because Jesus experienced that on the cross and took the sting
out of it.
Verse 11— “And not only so,
but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we
have now received the atonement.” We now have been reconciled to
God through the cross.
If you want to win some souls, you
don’t have to go to some University to learn how to skip all
through your Bible reading a verse here or a phrase there to
show people how bright you are, and how much you know about the
Bible. Just take one little chapter and go verse by verse.
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