26, 27. When Jesus . . . saw his mother, and the disciple whom he
loved, standing by, he saith to his mother, WOMAN,
BEHOLD
THY
SON! Then
saith he to the disciple, BEHOLD
THY
MOTHER!--What forgetfulness of
self, what filial love, and to the "mother" and "son" what parting
words!
from that hour . . . took her to his own home--or,
home with him; for his father Zebedee and his motherSalome were both
alive, and the latter here present
(Mr 15:40).
See on
Mt 13:55.
Now occurred the supernatural darkness, recorded by all the
other Evangelists, but not here. "Now from the sixth hour (twelve
o'clock, noon) there was darkness over all the land unto the ninth
hour"
(Mt 27:45).
No ordinary eclipse of the sun could have occurred at this time, it
being then full moon, and this obscuration lasted about
twelve times the length of any ordinary eclipse. (Compare
Ex 10:21, 23).
Beyond doubt, the divine intention of the portent was to invest this
darkest of all tragedies with a gloom expressive of its real character.
"And about the ninth hour Jesus cried, ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI . . . My God, My God, why hast
Thou forsaken Me?"
(Mt 27:46).
As the darkness commenced at the sixth hour, the second of the Jewish
hours of prayer, so it continued till the ninth hour, the hour of
the evening sacrifice, increasing probably in depth, and
reaching its deepest gloom at the moment of this mysterious cry,
when the flame of the one great "Evening Sacrifice" was burning
fiercest. The words were made to His hand. They are the opening words
of a Psalm
(Ps 22:1)
full of the last "sufferings of Christ and the following glories"
(1Pe 1:11).
"FATHER," was the cry in the first prayer which He
uttered on the cross, for matters had not then come to the worst.
"Father" was the cry of His last prayer, for matters had then passed
their worst. But at this crisis of His sufferings, "Father" does not
issue from His lips, for the light of a Father's countenance was then
mysteriously eclipsed. He falls back, however, on a title expressive of
His official relation, which, though lower and more distant in
itself, yet when grasped in pure and naked faith was mighty in its
claims, and rich in psalmodic associations. And what deep earnestness
is conveyed by the redoubling of this title! But as for the cry itself,
it will never be fully comprehended. An absolute desertion is not
indeed to be thought of; but a total eclipse of the felt sense
of God's presence it certainly expresses. It expre'sses
surprise, as under the experience of something not only never
before known, but inexplicable on the footing which had till
then subsisted between Him and God. It is a question which the lost
cannot utter. They are forsaken, but they know why. Jesus is
forsaken, but does not know and demands to know why. It is thus
the cry of conscious innocence, but of innocence unavailing to
draw down, at that moment, the least token of approval from the unseen
Judge--innocence whose only recognition at that moment lay in the thick
surrounding gloom which but reflected the horror of great darkness that
invested His own spirit. There was indeed a cause for it, and He
knew it too--the "why" must not be pressed so far as to exclude this.
He must taste this bitterest of the wages of sin "who did no
sin"
(1Pe 2:22).
But that is not the point now. In Him there was no cause at all
(Joh 14:30)
and He takes refuge in the glorious fact. When no ray from above
shines in upon Him, He strikes a light out of His own breast. If God
will not own Him, He shall own Himself. On the rock of His unsullied
allegiance to Heaven He will stand, till the light of Heaven returns to
His spirit. And it is near to come. While He is yet speaking, the
fierceness of the flame is beginning to abate. One incident and insult
more, and the experience of one other predicted element of suffering,
and the victory is His. The incident, and the insult springing out of
it, is the misunderstanding of the cry, for we can hardly suppose that
it was anything else. "Some of them that stood there, when they heard
that, said, This man calleth for Elias"
(Mt 27:47).
JFB.
Picture Study Bible