The Seven Last Words of Jesus on the Cross - YouTube

Channel: Messages of Christ

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Bruised and bleeding, the Savior’s final hours were spent crucified on a cross.
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Although racked with excruciating pain, he made seven significant statements
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as the last words of his mortal ministry.
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As we look more closely at these final statements,
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Christ shows us how he is a healing, human, and divine Savior to each of us.
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Though in desperate need of comfort himself, Jesus Christ’s first three statements
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show his compassion and desire to heal others.
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The first statement was spoken as the soldiers crucified him.
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The Savior said, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.”
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Amazingly, the Savior generously pleaded for mercy
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for those who were in the very act of crucifying him.
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He is showing by example what he taught during the Sermon on the Mount
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that we should love our enemies
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and “pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you.”
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Christ is teaching us how we should be willing to extend forgiveness and mercy,
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even when it is not merited, asked for, or acknowledged.
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The Savior’s second statement also displays tender compassion for others even while he himself suffers.
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As Christ hung between two thieves, one of them taunted him by saying,
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“If thou be Christ, save thyself and us.”
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But the other man rebuked him, by saying that they both were getting what they deserved.
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At this point, this penitent thief then pleads with the Savior,
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“Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom.”
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These words, spoken by a convicted criminal,
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are the final recorded words addressed to the Savior before his death.
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His plea captures a special intimacy
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as he is the only person recorded in the Gospels as asking Christ to remember him.
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Others might easily see this thief as worthless or beyond redemption.
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Yet, in his response to the man hanging beside him,
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Jesus shows us what he truly thinks of the human race.
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The Savior makes the second statement by saying,
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“Verily I say unto thee, Today shalt thou be with me in paradise.”
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Can you imagine the reunion when Jesus and this man see each other after they have died?
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Christ would personally minister to him and teach him that very day.
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According to Luke, Jesus began his public ministry at a synagogue in Nazareth stating that he would
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“proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound;”
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How appropriate that he ends his mortal ministry by proclaiming freedom
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to one who is physically bound on a cross and spiritually bound by sin.
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Like this thief who hung beside Christ,
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we too can be freed from our own bondage and sins because of a healing and merciful Savior.
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When Jesus saw his mother Mary and the disciple whom Christ loved watching him as he suffered
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on the cross, he said the third statement.
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First to Mary, “Woman, behold thy son!”
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Then, directing his words to the beloved disciple (often assumed to be John),
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“Behold thy mother!”
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Even in his greatest agony, the Savior focuses on the needs of his mother.
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He is showing by example how to obey the commandment he gave to “Honour thy father and thy mother.”
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In John, the first miracle Christ performed
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was at the request of his mother by turning water into wine.
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Here, again, Christ lovingly attends to her needs even in his moment of greatest need.
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He inspires us to look outward, even when we are suffering.
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The Savior demonstrated his healing power by forgiving the soldiers,
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comforting the thief and honoring his mother.
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Just as Jesus met them where they were, he will also meet us where we are—
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even those who make serious mistakes.
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No one is beyond the reach of the Savior’s healing love.
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In the next two statements we are reminded that though his Father was our Immortal God,
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Jesus was born of a mortal woman.
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In agony on the cross, he shows us his humanity through his suffering.
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As Christ experiences the effects of shock due to the loss of blood,
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with parched and shriveled lips, he cries out his fourth statement, “I thirst!”
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During his ministry, Christ said to the Samaritan woman at the well, “But whosoever drinketh
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of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him
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shall be in him a well of water springing up into everlasting life.”
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What a powerful testament that he truly bears all of our pains as our Savior.
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Christ thirsted so that we can drink the cool, refreshing, water
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that he himself so desperately needed.
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As the Living Water, he strengthens us in our own challenges.
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As the time of his death approached, Jesus “cried with a loud voice, ... ”
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“My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?”
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making his fifth statement.
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In his moment of greatest distress,
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Christ is left to bear the full brunt of the sins of the world without the accompanying help of his Father.
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During his ministry, he told those who loved him,
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“I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you.”
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Even in his final painful hours,
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he has sought to forgive, comfort, and honor those around him.
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And now he is the one in need of comfort,
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for even his Father has left him to suffer these pains alone.
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In this statement, we more fully see a human Savior who is suffering.
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In our pain, we can connect with Christ, for he knows how to heal our pain perfectly.
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As the end of the Savior’s life nears,
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we become acquainted with his divinity in his final two statements.
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Despite intense suffering, as the Son of God,
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he retains power over all things and completes his atoning sacrifice.
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In great agony, Christ makes his sixth statement, “It is finished.”
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Earlier in his ministry, Jesus taught that his purpose was to
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"obey the will of the one who sent me and to finish the work he gave me to do.”
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In spite of earth and hell combining against him, thirsty, forsaken, and in agonizing pain,
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Christ has indeed completed the work his Father had sent him to accomplish.
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We can be confident that even when our lives spin out of control,
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Christ is completely in control. He is always at the helm.
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Finally, moments before Jesus ended his mortal ministry on earth, he cried,
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“Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.”
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Perhaps the keyword in this seventh and final statement is I—
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indicating the Savior’s personal agency— he willingly gave up his life.
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Note also the Savior intimately addresses God as “Father.”
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In the Gospel of Luke, Christ’s first recorded words at a young age of just twelve years
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are when he asks Mary and Joseph
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“Did you not know that I must be about My Father’s business?”
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—and now Mary’s witness provides the heart-wrenching answer.
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He had finished the work his Father sent him to do.
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Christ gave himself completely to God. Do we do the same?
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Are we willing to allow our will to be completely swallowed up in the will of the Father?
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Reflecting on these seven statements Jesus said from the cross,
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we see Christ as a healing Savior who extends mercy and comfort even in his own agony.
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We see Christ as a human Savior who can relate to our anguish and our suffering.
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He is a divine Savior, able to help us in every circumstance because he is all-powerful.
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In these seven simple yet poignant statements made in Christ’s final moments when he suffered the most,
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we see that Jesus Christ is the Messiah who has come to save us all.