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Being close enough, but still missing what’s important.
Getting Trakr’s for Christmas
We continue our series on the last seven words of Christ from the cross today.
I said last week that Jesus is without a doubt the most influential person in the history of the world.
So from even a historical point of view, it would be a good use of our time to study his last words.
The last words spoke carry a lot of weight, plain and simple.
The words we are looking at today started something.
They started something I believe is one of the most amazing things about the the life of faith.
In fact you could say that the words we are looking at today are the ones that actually started the church.
Let’s look.
“Behold your mother…Behold your son…”
Don’t just play games in the shadow of the cross
Before we begin talking about the text, let’s remember what has happened.
The night before this happened, Jesus was praying in the forest with his closest disciples Peter, James, and John.
Then, Judas appeared with the temple guards and officials in tow to arrest Jesus.
Jesus was taken back and subjected to 3 different “trials” throughout the night, only to have Pontious Pilate sentence him to death.
He was flogged.
That means beaten with a whip.
Not just any whip, but beaten with a whip made with multiple stands of leather and at the end of each stand would be pieces of bone, stone, or pottery in order to increase the damage to the criminal.
After he was beaten, he had a crown of thorns forced upon his head.
He was beaten, spit upon, mocked and ridiculed.
Now he was stripped naked and nailed to a cross for the whole world to see while the sign above his head read King of the Jews.
right there are his loved ones.
They have been following all along, his mom, his aunt, and a few of his dearest disciples.
They are watching this happen in real time, not hearing about it from a witness.
They see the blood flowing down.
They hear him struggling to breathe.
They are helpless to do anything but pray.
Then they are distracted by some laughter and what sounds like arguing.
They are shocked to see this.
Not only is Jesus being brutally killed, but right their at the foot of the cross they are arguing over his clothes.
These soldiers really don’t care what they think.
They pull out Jesus’s tunic and the aruguing heats up.
They are fighting for the things like dogs over a scrap of meat.
What can they do though....nothing.
Finally, they each have a trophy to call their own.
They each admirre the clothes that once covered the body of my friend.
They begin to put it on, admiring it.
You think to yourself, that they will never be as good as the man who wore them first.
Then you see Jesus moving.
He is pushing himself up to breathe.
Jesus wasn’t being punished.
The Romans wanted to do much more than just punish.
They wanted to shame Jesus.
They wanted to humiliate him just like any other criminal.
The problem was, Jesus wasn’t a criminal.
He had done nothing wrong, yet here he was, beaten, spit upon, mocked, just like any other criminal.
But Jesus endured this punishment, this humiliation and held his honor in tact.
We can only imagine what those who loved him were be feeling.
But what i find most striking is what those who didn’t know him were doing.
The soldiers are closer than anyone at this moment to Jesus, yet they don’t see what is happening.
They don’t or can’t see who he truly is.
It’s a lesson that we should appreciate.
Just being close doesn’t really do much.
Just being close really DOESN’T count.
Vs 23-24
Here they were within feet of the most influential man the world has ever known, the one who is dying to save the whole world, and what are they doing?
Mocking him and claiming his clothes as souvenirs.
But they go even further, that dividing up his belongings to take home.
They cast lots for his tunic, his undershirt, beecause this one was special.
It was too nice for them to just tear apart and each have a piece.
They decided they would roll dice to see who gets to keep it.
Simply gambling for a trophy.
I asked in the Digging Deeper this week for you to consider the areas of your life you felt that you were just hanging out around the cross for a trophy like the soldiers.
Where were you finding meaning in life outside of Jesus?
your kids, your spouse, your work, your church.
All these are good things but if they are all we think of when we are near the cross, we are just playing games like these soldiers.
Instead of trusting the one who could change their destiny, they were playing games.
Instead of honoring the one who was dying for them, they were playing games.
Instead of mourning the death of the one who was paying their penalty, they were playing games.
Instead of living their life for him, they were seeking to gain from his death.
The were close to him, but close doesn’t count.
What’s funny is that the way the writer of The Gospel of John describes this by describing it as casting lots.
Casting lots was a Jewish practice of determining the the will of God.
It was a way of flipping a coin.
If you trusted God to lead no matter the direction, you could cast lots and in effect put yourself in God’s hands.
That’s what it means to cast lots.
These soldiers were not trusting God, no they were playing games.
They were playing games right here under the cross.
But this wasn’t to come as a surprise to anyone for it was exactly how the psalmist described in Psalm 22 which Jesus certainly felt that he was living out…we will talk more about this in future weeks.
John and the others would argue with you at this moment, but God was at work.
God had determined that this was going to happen long before.
God had purposed that his son Jesus would live a sinless life as a man and die the death of a criminal, for us.
It’s a powerful image, Jesus bleeding, dying on the cross.
just a few feet away are a group of soldiers gambling for his clothes and just beyond them, his family and friends are gathered.
Having to watch.
But being close isn’t enough.
No as teh Apostle John would later right.
letters that explained and expounded on this reality.
The reality that Faith was what mattered.
As he recorded Jesus speaking in John 3:16.
“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”
We have to believe who Jesus said he was, God in the flesh.
You have to put your trust in him to have accomplished what he claimed and proved he was doing, reconciling us to God.
No, being close doesn’t count, it is Faith that counts.
and changes our lives.
FAITH is what really counts.
Vs 25
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