Day 159, Luke 23 
The Sanhedrins' charge
against Jesus was blasphemy. They found God guilty of claiming to be divine.
But their powers were limited by the occupying Roman government, which did not
allow them the right of capital punishment. Needing to persuade governor Pilate
that Jesus was worthy of death, they accused Him of treason. Pilate tried
to pass the responsibility to Herod Antipas, murderer of John the Baptist, but
to no avail. Now consider this: eventually all those people---the Sanhedrin,
Pilate, Herod, the soldiers who mocked Him, and the crowd who cried for His
crucifixion---would all be judged before Jesus' throne.
How is it that
the people who cried, "Hosanna!" on Palm Sunday were crying, "Crucify Him!" on
Good Friday? We shouldn't conclude that they were the same crowds. Those who
called for Jesus' crucifixion were primarily the chief priests and religious
leaders according to 23:13. Wanting to avoid a Jewish riot during Passover in
Jerusalem, Pilate acquiesced to their request even after declaring Christ's
innocence three times.
During Passover,
Jews from many nations converged on Jerusalem to celebrate the feast. Simon of
Cyrene, who had journeyed as many as 800 miles from Libya, became
involved with a Passover Lamb on a grander scale than he ever imagined---as he
carried Jesus' cross. Some commentators suggest that Simon later became a
Christian. Mark's Gospel identifies him as "the father of Alexander and Rufus"
(Mark 15:21), two men whom Mark assumed his readers would know. And Paul once
sent greetings to a Christian named Rufus in Rome (Rom. 16:13), and so perhaps
Simon and his sons did become followers of Christ. What an honor it would have
been to have helped Jesus carry His cross!
While anyone else
who found themselves in similar circumstances would have been consumed with
their own troubles, Jesus amazingly was more concerned for the weeping women
along His route to Golgatha than He was for Himself. Their sympathy for Him
would not prevent the holocaust that would ultimately befall Jerusalem within
forty years. Jesus' quotation from Hosea (23:30) reveals that He also had the
earth's final judgment in mind, something that was only foreshadowed by
Jerusalem's destruction in AD 70. God takes no delight in the death of the
wicked (Ezek. 33:11), which is one reason He forestalls His judgment. Jesus'
amazing love shines so brightly in today's reading as it is contrasted with the
cruelty of the mocking religious leaders and Roman soldiers.
The repentant
thief who hung beside Jesus is a beautiful example of a person who was saved by
grace through faith, but through a living faith made evident by works. What were those works? First, he
openly confessed that he was a sinner, which is the first step toward salvation
(23:40-41). Second, he stated his belief that Jesus was innocent and unworthy
of death, defending Him before the other thief (23:40-41). Third, without shame
he looked to Jesus as the source of salvation and, before a hostile crowd,
publicly asked Him for it. His faith was genuine, and Jesus responded to it
with an affirmation: "Today you shall be with Me in Paradise" (23:43).
I wonder, however, how
Jesus would have responded if that thief had whispered, "Pssst....Jesus! Keep
looking straight ahead. Act like we're not talking right now. Hey, I want to
tell You that I accept You into my life right now. I've heard that if I do
that, things will begin to get better in my life. Now that I've accepted You,
I'm expecting my situation to change!"
Jesus hung on the
cross for six hours. It was during the second three hours that "darkness fell
over the whole land" (23:44). When astronomers attempt to establish the exact
date of Jesus' crucifixion by means of past solar eclipses, they run into one
problem. That is, Jesus was obviously crucified during the Passover, which
always occurs at the time of a full moon, which makes a solar eclipse an
impossibility. The darkness that day was a special supernatural sign from God.
The Son of God, clothed in flesh, was dying for the sins of the world, the most
significant day in all of history.
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