The Last Words from the Cross. William Powell Tuck

The Last Words from the Cross - William Powell Tuck


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their buildings. But can a church be an authentic Church and not focus on the cross? Jürgen Moltmann asserts that “As far as I am concerned, the Christian church and Christian theology become relevant to the problems of the modern world only when they reveal the ‘hard core’ of their identity in the crucified Christ…”[2] The Apostle Paul did not hesitate to put the cross at the center of his preaching. In 1 Corinthians 1:18-31 Paul declares that some may see the cross as a “stumbling block” or “foolishness,” but he proclaims it as the “wisdom and power of God.” Fred Craddock thinks that the primary reason that Paul had to preach the cross was “because the cross tells us how God is. God identifies with human suffering; God comes to us and suffers with us and sympathy is extraordinarily powerful.”[3]

      The words of our Lord on the cross have become very memorable. These words of Jesus have been designated as the seven last words. They are, of course, more than individual words. They are really sentences or fragments of sentences. One of these seven words is found in the Gospels of Matthew and Mark. Three of them are found in the Gospel of Luke, and three are recorded in John. No one gospel contains all of them. But, to me, that is a way of authenticating the gospels. Each writer drew on what he remembered or considered most important in those moments or what he had heard from others who shared their experiences.

      CHAPTER 1

      A Prayer of Forgiveness

      LUKE 23:26-34

      Quietness had settled over the room. The family moved closer to the bed of the dying father. They could tell that he was trying to say something, and one of the sons in the family leaned over his father. He put his ear to his father’s mouth and listened. He heard his father say with his last breath: “I love you.” Then his father was gone.

      Many persons have tried to capture the last words of famous, distinguished individuals or loved ones. Persons in their last few moments before they died, if they have had enough consciousness to express themselves, have sometimes spoken of seeing light, a tunnel, the presence of a loved one who had died earlier, or angels. Some have acknowledged fear or a sense of peace. Yes, we have often wanted to know what the last words were which a person said before he or she died. In the Bible, there is a record of only a few individuals whose last words are recorded before they died. These four individuals are Jacob, Moses, Stephen, the first Christian martyr, and Jesus. Our attention here focuses on the last words of Jesus.

      The Journey to the Crucifixion

      Picture in your mind the background setting that led to Jesus’ crucifixion. Jesus had just finished praying in the Garden of Gethsemane. He walked out of the garden and was immediately arrested by the soldiers of the high priest. He went through several mock trials before Pilate, Herod, and the high priest. He suffered the awful scourging where his flesh was literally ripped from his naked back by the whip which contained pieces of bone or iron. In his weakened condition following this scourging, Jesus was forced to bear his cross to the Place of the Skull.

      While he was en route to the place of crucifixion, the crowd of people taunted him along the way and he fell under the weight of the crossbeam. A stranger, Simon of Cyrene, was forced to bear his cross to the place of execution. Mark notes that Simon’s sons are Rufus and Alexander (Mark 15:21). These two men must have been known to the readers and likely had become outstanding Christians. Simon, who had met Jesus by chance on the way to his crucifixion obviously had had his life changed by that encounter. His sons were likely converted later and became such distinguished members of the early church that, when Mark writes about this experience and mentions their names, he thinks that his readers will recognize their names immediately.

      Jesus’ First Word Is a Prayer

      First, what was Jesus doing? What is this first word? Notice that Jesus’ first word from the cross was a prayer. He prayed: “Father, forgive them.” In his moment of suffering he prayed.

      A Life of Prayer

      Prayer was a natural and instinctive thing for Jesus. His whole life had been saturated in prayer. He would arise early in the morning and pray. He prayed sometimes at noon, before meals, before he selected his disciples. Sometimes all


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