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John
19:30 Commentary |
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John 19:30
Therefore
when
Jesus had
received the
sour
wine, He
said, "It
is
finished!"
And He
bowed His
head and
gave up His
spirit. (NASB:
Lockman) |
|
Greek:
hote
oun
elaben
to oxos
[o]
Iesous
eipen,
Tetelestai;
kai
klinas
ten
kephalen
paredoken
to
pneuma.
Amplified: When Jesus had received the sour wine,
He said,
It is finished!
And He bowed His head and gave up His spirit.
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
BBE: So when Jesus had taken the wine he said, "All
is done". And
with his head bent he gave up his spirit.
CEV: After Jesus drank the wine, he said, "Everything
is done!" He
bowed his head and died.
ESV: When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, “It
is finished,”
and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
KJV: When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said,
It is
finished: and he bowed his head, and gave up the ghost.
NET: So when he had received the sour wine, Jesus said, "It
is completed,"
and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.
NJB: After Jesus had taken the wine he said, ‘It
is fulfilled';
and bowing his head he gave up his spirit.
Wuest: Then when Jesus received the sour wine He said,
It has been finished
and stands complete.
And having bowed His head, He delivered up the spirit. (Eerdmans)
Young's Literal: when, therefore, Jesus received the
vinegar, he said, 'It hath been finished;' and having bowed the head,
gave up the spirit.
Latin Vulgate: cum ergo accepisset Iesus acetum dixit
consummatum est
(It is
consummated!)
et inclinato capite tradidit spiritum |
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THEREFORE WHEN JESUS HAD
RECEIVED THE SOUR WINE, HE SAID "IT
IS FINISHED!": hote oun elaben (3SAAI) to oxos (o)
Iesous eipen (3SAAI): tetelestai (3SRPI):
(Jn 19:28, 4:34 17:4 Ge 3:15 Ps 22:15 Isa 53:10,12 Da 9:24,26 Zec 13:7
Mt 3:15 Ro 3:25 10:4 1Co 5:7 Col 2:14-17 Heb 9:11, 12, 13,14,22-28 Heb
10:1-14 12:2)
Hark! the Voice of Love and Mercy
(Play Hymn)
Hark! the voice of love and mercy
Sounds aloud from Calvary;
See, it rends the rocks asunder,
Shakes the earth, and veils the sky:
“It is finished!” “It is finished!”
“It is finished!” Hear the dying Savior cry;
Hear the dying Savior cry.
--Jonathan Evans
Context:
Jn 19:28 After
this, Jesus, knowing (He was conscious, fully aware to the end, cp
refusal of an "anesthetizing" drink Mt 27:34. Jesus was not seeking to
escape but accomplish His Father's will!) that all things had already
been accomplished (teleioo - similar to verb teleo in Jn
19:30 -
perfect tense
= finished at a point in time and still in effect), to
fulfill the Scripture, said, "I
am thirsty." 29 A jar full
of sour wine was standing there; so they put a sponge full of the sour
wine upon a branch of hyssop and brought it up to His mouth.
Comment: Every minute detail
of OT prophecy is fulfilled including (Ps 22:15, Ps 69:3, Ps 69:21, cp
Acts 13:29). McGee says that there are 28 prophecies alone that were
fulfilled while Jesus was hanging on the Cross.
Hyssop (note) was used at the
first Passover and after dipping in the blood of the slain lamb was
applied to the lintel and the two doorposts (Ex 12:22).
Therefore
- A term of conclusion which in this context announces the most
profound conclusion ever uttered "It
is Finished!"
John records
Jesus' declaration of His goal early in His ministry ...
Jesus said to them, "My food is to
do the will of Him who sent Me, and to accomplish
(teleioo) His work. (Jn 4:34)
(Compare Jn 5:36 "But the testimony
which I have is greater than the testimony of John; for the works
which the Father has given Me to accomplish [teleioo]—the very works
that I do—testify about Me, that the Father has sent Me. [See also Jn
10:25, 37, 38, 14:10, 11, Acts 2:22])
In His high
priestly prayer just prior to Calvary Jesus declared...
I glorified Thee on the earth,
having accomplished (teleioo = brought to an end, to the goal) the
work which Thou hast given Me to do. (Jn 17:4)
Jesus'
declaration "It is
finished" is the
postscript which sums up the progression from John 4:34 to John 17:4.
Andrew Murray comments...
With that word (It is finished) to
the Father He laid down His life. With that word He was strengthened,
after the terrible agony on the cross, in the knowledge that all was
now fulfilled. And with that word He uttered the truth of the gospel
of our redemption, that all that was needed for man's salvation had
been accomplished on the cross. This disposition should characterize
every follower of Christ. The mind that was in Him must be in us (Php
2:5-note)
-- it must be our meat, the strength of our life,
TO DO THE WILL OF GOD IN ALL
THINGS,
AND TO FINISH HIS WORK.
There may be small things about
which we are not conscientious, and so we bring harm to ourselves and
to God's work. Or we draw back before some great thing which demands
too much sacrifice. In every case we may find strength to perform our
duty in Christ's word "It
is finished." His
finished work secured the victory over every foe. By faith (2Co 5:7)
we may appropriate that dying word of Christ on the cross, and find
the power for daily living and dying (1Co 15:31) in the fellowship of
the crucified Christ (Gal 2:20-note).
Child of God, study the inexhaustible treasure contained in this word:
"It is finished."
Faith in what Christ accomplished on the cross will enable you to
manifest in daily life the spirit of the cross. (The
Secret of the Cross)
A T Robertson...
Jesus took the vinegar (a stimulant), though he had refused the
drugged vinegar. It is finished (tetelestai). Same for as in John
19:28. A cry of victory in the hour of defeat like nenikēka in John
16:33. Jesus knew the relation of his death to redemption for us (Mark
10:45; Matthew 20:28; Matthew 26:28).
JESUS' SEVEN
LAST SAYINGS
Regarding "It
is finished", most agree that this was the 6th of Jesus' seven
last words on the Cross -
BEFORE THE
DARKNESS...
(1) Luke 23:34 But Jesus was
saying, “Father, forgive
them; for they do not know what they are doing.”
And they cast lots, dividing up His garments among themselves.
(2) Luke 23:43 And He said to him, “Truly
I say to you, today you shall be with Me in Paradise.”
(3) John 19:26-27 When Jesus therefore saw His mother, and the
disciple whom He loved standing nearby, He said to His mother, “Woman,
behold, your son!”27
Then He said to the disciple, “Behold,
your mother!” And from
that hour the disciple took her into his own household.
DURING THE
DARKNESS...
(4) Mt 27:46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud
voice, saying, “ELI, ELI,
LAMA SABACHTHANI?” that is, “MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAST THOU FORSAKEN
ME?”
Mark 15:34 And at the ninth hour
Jesus cried out with a loud voice, “ELOI,
ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI?” which is translated, “MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY
HAST THOU FORSAKEN ME?”
AFTER THE DARKNESS...
(5) John 19:28 After this, Jesus,
knowing that all things had already been accomplished, in order that
the Scripture might be fulfilled, said, “I
am thirsty.”
(6) John 19:30 When Jesus therefore had received the sour wine, He
said, “It is finished!”
And He bowed His head, and gave up His spirit.
(7) Luke 23:46 And Jesus, crying out with a loud voice, said, “Father,
INTO THY HANDS I COMMIT MY SPIRIT.”
And having said this, He breathed His last.
Ray Stedman...
Finally, John records the last word
from the cross (Ed: As noted above, not all agree these were the very
last words, instead choosing Lk 23:46 as the final surrender of His
life to His Father.), a word of triumph and achievement.
When Jesus had received the vinegar, he said, "It
is Finished"; and he
bowed his head and gave up his spirit. {John 19:30 RSV}
This word, "It is finished," is one word in the Greek. According to
the other accounts, Jesus "cried with a loud voice, 'It is finished,'"
{cf, Mark 15:37, Luke 23:46}. There is relief in that word. The agony
is over, the terrible ordeal is finished. But there is pride in this
word as well. The race is run, the work is completed, the enemy is
defeated. In those mysterious three hours when the sun hid its face
and a strange darkness covered the whole land, Jesus cried out those
terrible cries, "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" {Matt
27:46}. It was then he was involved in a fearful grapple with the
power of evil. But now it is over. The way to the heart of God is
achieved. The writer of Hebrews describes this in these words,
"Therefore, brethren, since we have confidence to enter the sanctuary
by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way which he opened for
us, through the curtain, that is through his flesh," {Heb 10:19-20
RSV}. This is all completed now. When the work was over, when the
foundations of redemption were fully laid our Lord cried with a loud
voice, "It is finished." (He
Endured the Cross)
Warren Wiersbe...
"It is finished!" is one word in
the Greek text—tetelestai. The word was a common one and was used by
merchants to mean "The price is all paid!" Shepherds and priests used
it when they found a perfect sheep, ready for sacrifice; and Christ
died as the perfect lamb of God. Servants, when their work was
completed, would use this word when reporting to their masters.
Christ, the obedient Servant, had finished the work the Father gave
Him to do. Christ willingly and deliberately gave up His life; He laid
down His life for His friends.
(Wiersbe,
W. W. Wiersbe's Expository Outlines on the New Testament. Wheaton,
Ill.: Victor Books)
John Wesley...
It is finished - My suffering: the
purchase of man's redemption.
It is finished
(5055)
(tetelestai) is a
single Greek verb
teleo (see word study).
and means that something is brought to an end, is fully accomplished, has
achieved its destined goal or is brought to perfection. Indeed, all of
these senses apply to Jesus' death on the Cross, but one sense of
tetelestai presents a powerful picture of Jesus' finished work on the
Cross, the grand work of redemption about which He Himself had
"prophesied"...
For even the Son of Man did not come to
be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many. (Mark
10:45)
Glory Ever Be to Jesus
(Play Hymn)
Glory ever be to Jesus,
God’s own well belovèd Son;
By His grace He hath redeemed us,
“It is finished,” all is done.
Refrain
Saved by grace through faith in Jesus,
Saved by His own precious blood,
May we in His love abiding,
Follow on to know the Lord.
--Fanny Crosby
A W Pink
wrote that...
The ancient Greeks boasted of being
able to say much in little—to 'give a sea of matter in a drop of
language'—(this) was regarded as the perfection of oratory. (Ed:
How appropriate then for the perfection of Christ's work on the
Cross!)
William Kelly...
The Creator but man lifted up from
the earth could say, in dying for sin to God's glory, "It is
finished." The work, the infinite work, was done for the putting away
of sin by His sacrifice. Thereon hangs not only the blessing of every
soul that is to be justified by faith, but of new heavens and new
earth wherein dwells righteousness. "It is finished," tetelestai:
one word! yet what word ever contained so much? (John
18 - 21.)
John MacArthur
writes that It is Finished...
was a shout of triumph; the
proclamation of a victor. The work of redemption that the Father had given
Him was accomplished: sin was atoned for (He 9:12-note;
He 10:12-note),
and Satan was defeated and rendered powerless (He 2:14-note;
cf. 1Pe 1:18, 19-note,
1Pe 1:20-note;
1Jn 3:8). Every requirement of God's righteous law had been satisfied;
God's holy wrath against sin had been appeased (Ro 3:25-note;
He 2:17-note;
1Jn 2:2; 4:10); every prophecy had been fulfilled. Christ's completion of
the work of redemption means that nothing needs to be nor can be added to
it. Salvation is not a joint effort of God and man, but is entirely a work
of God's grace, appropriated solely by faith (Eph. 2:8, 9-note).
His mission accomplished, the time had come for Christ to surrender His
life. (MacArthur New Testament Commentary – John 12-21)
Andrew Murray writes that...
every day that our confidence grows
fuller in Christ's finished work must see our heart more entirely
yielding itself like Him, a whole burnt offering in the service of God and
His love (The
Secret of the Cross) Tetelestai
was used in several ways in Jesus' day. A servant would use tetelestai
when reporting to his or her master, “I have completed the work assigned
to me” (cp Jesus words on His "work" in Jn 4:34,17:4) Jesus had brought to
completion all the Father had desired for Him to accomplish as the God
Man. When a priest examined an animal sacrifice and found it faultless, it
was described as tetelestai. Jesus, of course, is the perfect Lamb
of God, without spot or blemish (1Pe 1:18, 19-note).
When an artist completed a picture, or a writer a manuscript, they might
say, “It is finished!” The death of Jesus on the cross “completes
the picture” that God had been painting of "redemption" which God had
painted from eternity past (cp 2Ti 1:9NIV-note,
Ep 3:11-note,
Titus 1:2-note,
1Peter 1:20-note).
Hallelujah! What a Savior
(Play Hymn)
Lifted up was He to die,
"It is finished," was His cry;
Now in heaven exalted high:
Hallelujah, what a Savior!
--Bliss
Perhaps the meaning
that Jesus had foremost in His mind when He uttered the word tetelestai
was related to its secular use in the context of payment of debts. When
someone had a debt in ancient times and it was paid off, they would write
"tetelestai" on the certificate signifying "Paid in Full".
When He gave Himself on the cross, Jesus fully met the righteous demands
of a holy law; He paid our debt in full. None of the Old Testament
sacrifices could take away sins. Their blood only covered sin. But the
Lamb of God shed His blood, (for the redemption of the transgressions that
were committed under the first covenant, Heb 9:15-note) and that blood (and
only that blood) can take away the sins of the world (Jn 1:29; He 9:24-note,
He 9:25, 26-note,
He 9:27, 28-note).
Go to Dark Gethsemane
(Play Hymn)
Calvary’s mournful mountain
climb; there, adoring at His feet,
Mark that miracle of time, God’s own sacrifice complete.
“It is finished!” hear Him cry; learn of Jesus Christ to die.
--James Montgomery
There is another
sense in which tetelestai was used in the ancient world. When a Roman
citizen was convicted of a crime, the law of that day slammed him in
prison. They prepared a "Certificate of Debt" that listed all the crimes
he was convicted of on it, and nailed it to his cell door for all to see.
It remained nailed there so all would be assured that he served his full
sentence, and "paid in full" the penalty ("debt owed") for his
crimes. When Jesus shouted "Tetelestai" from the cross, it was a
very familiar phrase to those within the sound of His voice. It was the
same word that would be stamped across the Certificate of Debt after a
criminal completed his prison term. It would literally mean "Paid in Full"
for all your crimes. Then the criminal was given the certificate. He would
be able to produce it to show that his crimes were "paid in full." He
could never become a victim of "double jeopardy" (paying for the same
crime twice - cp the result in Ro 8:1-note
= No Condemnation and Ro 8:39-note
= No Separation). This is a beautiful picture of what Christ did on the Cross,
Paul recording (quoting the original version of the NLT) that...
(God the Father) canceled the record
(Greek verb
exaleipho = wiped it away, completely obliterating the evidence) that
contained the charges against us. He took it and destroyed it by nailing
it to Christ's cross. (Col 2:14-note)
Finally, there is one other truth about
tetelestai that is notable - it is in the
perfect tense,
a tense which is identifies a past completed action (or event) with
continuing effects or results. In context the perfect tense clearly speaks
of the past, historical reality of the Crucifixion of Christ, and the fact
that His death on the Cross has permanent effects which ultimately will
last throughout eternity! All that truth with one Greek tense! Beloved our
Kinsman-Redeemer's ransom payment is sufficient for this life and the life
to come! Let us live in the power of the Cross (1Co 1:18 where "being
saved" is in the
present tense
indicating that believers are continually being saved every day of their
life (also implying that in one sense we need His saving power to live the
"victorious Christian life" day by day, even moment by moment! cp Mt
26:41, Gal 5:16-note,
Gal 5:17-note).
We have been saved [justification]. We are being saved [sanctification],
We will be saved [glorification] - see discussion of
Three Tenses of Salvation)
Frank Boreham
writes that tetelestai
was a farmer’s word. When, into his herd, there was born an animal so
beautiful and shapely that it seemed absolutely destitute of faults
and defects, the farmer gazed upon the creature with proud, delighted
eyes. ‘Tetelestai!’ he said, ‘tetelestai!’
Alexander
Maclaren...
John’s last contribution to our
knowledge of our Lord’s words on the Cross is that triumphant ‘It is
finished,’ wherein there spoke, not only the common dying
consciousness of life being ended, but the certitude, which He alone
of all who have died, or will die, had the right to feel and utter,
that every task was completed, that all God’s will was accomplished,
all Messiah’s work done, all prophecy fulfilled (Acts 13:29),
redemption secured, God and man reconciled. He looked back over all
His life and saw no failure, no falling below the demands of the
occasion, nothing that could have been bettered, nothing that should
not have been there. He looked upwards, and even at that moment He
heard in His soul the voice of the Father saying, ‘This is My beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased!’
Christ’s work is finished. It needs no supplement. It can never be
repeated or imitated while the world lasts, and will not lose its
power through the ages. Let us trust to it as complete for all our
needs, and not seek to strengthen ‘the sure foundation’ which it has
laid by any shifting, uncertain additions of our own. But we may
remember, too, that while Christ’s work is, in one aspect, finished,
when He bowed His head, and by His own will ‘gave up the ghost,’ in
another aspect His work is not finished, nor will be, until the whole
benefits of His incarnation and death are diffused through, and
appropriated by, the world. He is working to-day, and long ages have
yet to pass, in all probability, before the voice of Him that sitteth
on the throne shall say ‘It is done!’ (Read the full sermon
An Eyewitness's Account of the
Crucifixion - John 19:17-30)
J C Ryle
on "It is Finished"...
It is surely not too much to say,
that of all the seven famous sayings of Christ on the cross, none is
more remarkable than this, which John alone has recorded.
The precise meaning of this wondrous expression, "It is finished," is
a point which the Holy Spirit has not thought good to reveal to us.
There is a depth about it, we must all instinctively feel, which man
has probably no line to fathom. Yet there is perhaps no irreverence in
conjecturing the thoughts that were in our Lord's mind, when the word
was spoken. The finishing of all the known and unknown sufferings
which He came to endure, as our Substitute--the finishing of the
ceremonial law, which He came to wind up and fulfill, as the true
Sacrifice for sin--the finishing of the many prophecies, which He came
to accomplish--the finishing of the great work of man's redemption,
which was now close at hand--all this, we need not doubt, our Lord had
in view when He said, "It is finished." There may have been more
behind, for anything we know. But in handling the language of such a
Being as our Savior, on such an occasion, and at so mysterious a
crisis of His history, it is well to be cautious. "The place whereon
we stand is holy ground."
One comfortable thought, at all events, stands out most clearly on the
face of this famous expression. We rest our souls on a "finished
work," if we rest them on the work of Jesus Christ the Lord. We need
not fear that either sin, or Satan, or law shall condemn us at the
last day. We may lean back on the thought, that we have a Savior who
has done all, paid all, accomplished all, performed all that is
necessary for our salvation. We may take up the challenge of the
Apostle, "Who is he that condemns? It is Christ who died--yes, rather
that is risen again; who is even at the right hand of God; who also
makes intercession for us." (Ro 8:34-note
When we look at our own works, we may well be ashamed of their
imperfections. But when we look at the finished work of Christ, we may
feel peace. We "are complete in Him," if we believe. (Col 2:10-note)
F F Bruce
comments on the significance of "It
is Finished"...
All scripture that was due to be
accomplished in His passion had now been accomplished; the entire
purpose for which the Father had sent the Son into the world was now
assured of fulfillment, and since that purpose included the salvation
of the world and the procuring of eternal life for all believers (John
13:14, 15, 16, 17), salvation and eternal life were henceforth freely
available.
Adam Clarke...
As if he had said: "I have executed
the great designs of the Almighty—I have satisfied the demands of his
justice—I have accomplished all that was written in the prophets, and
suffered the utmost malice of my enemies; and now the way to the holy
of holies is made manifest through my blood." An awful, yet a glorious
finish. Through this tragic death God is reconciled to man (Ed:
God is the "Initiator"!), and the kingdom of heaven opened to every
believing soul. "Shout heaven and earth, this SUM of good to MAN!"
Wycliffe
Bible Commentary...
Emphasis here is not on the ending
of the sufferings but on the completion of the mission of redemption.
A C Gaebelein...
"It
is Finished." In the
Greek it is but one word, "tetelestai." Never before and never after
was ever spoken one word which contains and means so much. It is the
shout of the mighty Victor. And who can measure the depths of this one
word! (Commentary
on JOHN - by A C Gaebelein)
Leon Morris
comments
This is not the moan of the
defeated, nor the sigh of patient resignation. It is the triumphant
recognition that He has now fully accomplished the work He came to do.
S Lewis
Johnson has succinctly said that Christ’s resurrection....
"...is God’s ‘Amen’ to
Christ’s ‘It is Finished.’
Looking at the cross we see justification completed; looking at the
open tomb we see it accepted.”
Scofield...
"It is finished" was the
shout of victory. See Jn 4:34; 17:4; Ro 10:4; Gal 3:13; Heb 10:5, 6,
7, 8, 9, 10.
William
Harris...commenting on the completeness of the Cross observes
It really has been completed,
hasn’t it? Everything for which John has been preparing us in this
Gospel has now been accomplished by our Lord. John 1 declares that
Jesus is the eternal Son of God, who called the world into being (Jn
1:1, 2, 3). He is the One sent to earth by the Father, in order to
reveal Him to men (Jn 6:46, 14:9). He is the One who “came unto His
own place and to His own people,” and yet those who were “His own”—the
Jews—rejected Him (Jn 1:11). He was “lifted up” so that He could draw
all men unto Himself (Jn 3:13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18). He came to do His
Father’s will (Jn 4:34) and has now completed it. He came to declare
His Father’s Word, and He has proclaimed it (Jn 8:26, 27, 28, 38;
12:49, 50; Jn 14:10). He came to glorify the Father, and on the Cross,
He has done that (Jn 12:23, 28, 41; Jn 13:32; Jn 17:1, Jn 17:4). It
truly is finished; His task has been completed. (Exegetical
Commentary on John 19)
Explore the
Bible...
This language confirms what Jesus
had declared earlier concerning the nature of His death—“The good
shepherd lays down his life for the sheep” (Jn 10:11). (Explore
the Bible)
S Lewis
Johnson...
It's possible to understand the
subject as the prophecies (Acts 13:29). The finally reached their
culmination in the death of our Lord. There is a sense, of course, in
which that is involved. Others have suggested that it is the passion,
that is his sufferings of the atoning death. And of course, that too
is included. Many commentators feel, I rather tend to think that more
truth lies with them, that the absence of a definite subject forces
the reader to call up all of the aspects of our Lord's work that is
now brought to an end. And there are many suggestions that perhaps
that is what our Lord has in mind. In other words, the whole of the
atoning work, in so far as it has to do with prophecy and so far as it
has to do with his sufferings, it has been finished, consumatum est
the Latin text reads. It is consummated...
That (Ed: Because "It is
finished") is why it is so important in our concept of eternal
salvation to be sure that we understand the nature of the finished
work of the Lord Jesus Christ. He has accomplished the saving work by
which he has made it possible for men to receive the forgiveness of
sins. And the only requirement is to receive the benefits as a free gift.
That's faith. That's man's responsibility, and it is a responsibility
to believe. But when we believe we discover in the word of God that
the capacity to respond is itself also a gift of God. And our
salvation is of the Lord.
For example, when we believe that we are saved by grace but we have to
keep working in order to stay saved we are in effect saying Jesus did
not do it all. He did sufficient to get us started but we must also
add our works thereafter in order to stay saved. We are actually
taking away from the glory of our Lord to teach that a man may lose
his salvation after he has been saved. That is why we are so adamant
about the fact that the Scriptures teach that salvation is of the
Lord. He says, "It is finished," or literally, "It has been finished."
No repetition of it can be allowed at all...
J. Hudson Taylor (Biography) had
a very interesting early experience. He was from a Christian home. His
mother prayed for him constantly. She prayed that he might come to
salvation. For a long time he resisted and finally one day someone put
in his hand a little tract and in that tract was the expression, "It
is finished." It troubled him a great deal. He didn't understand
exactly what that meant. In fact, he went up into a hay loft and there
with the tract he mediated upon it. "It is finished," and
finally out of that experience came his conviction of his own
salvation. And he puts it this way,
Then there dawned upon me the
joyous conviction that since the whole work was finished and the whole
debt was paid upon the cross there was nothing for me to do but to
fall upon my knees, accept the Savior and praise him forevermore.
That's what it is to be saved, to
realize that Christ has paid it all.
Upon a life I did not live, upon a
death I did not die, another's life, another's death, I stake my whole
eternity.
And Hudson Taylor rested himself
for time and eternity upon the merits of the blood of Christ and God
used him to the salvation of many thousands of people. (The
Messiah Dying)
Alan Carr
on It is Finished...
I believe that these are the
greatest words Jesus Christ ever spoke and I would like to tell you
why this morning.
For years, liberals and unbelievers have declared that this cry of
Jesus from the cross is a cry of defeat. They say that it is the word
of a man who has lost everything. However, they are a million miles
from the truth of the matter. This English phrase is from a word that
is very expressive and filled with meaning. In fact, it is a word that
was used in many areas of society. Some of which were:
1. A Servant's Word - Used
when a task had been completed.
2. A Priest's Word - Used when a sacrificial animal was found
to be worthy.
3. A Farmer's Word - Used when a perfect specimen had been born
into the flock.
4. An Artist's Word - Used when the final touches had been
applied to a masterpiece.
5. A Merchant's Word - Used when a deal had been struck and all
the haggling had ended. Its usage meant that both parties were
satisfied.
Therefore, it is plain to see that
this word is not the cry of a defeated man, but it is instead, the
shout of a victor! This is the exultant cry of one who has just won a
great victory. We need to understand that when Jesus Christ said these
three little words, He was telling the world that something great had
been accomplished. In fact, there were three great matters that were
forever settled the day Jesus died on the Cross. (Click
to Read the rest of Pastor Carr's discussion of why these are the
greatest words ever spoken)
John Butler
sums up "It is finished"...
• It speaks of suffering.
...Christ's sufferings on earth for sin were finished. "What tongue or
pen can describe the sufferings of the Savior?" (Pink).
• It speaks of salvation.
...on the cross. Salvation requires that there be a blood sacrifice
for the sinners. The Old Testament had many sacrifices, but they never
completed the job...(He 10:11, 12-note,
He 11:14-note).
Calvary was the sacrifice that finished all sacrifices for sin which
made salvation possible.
• It speaks of success.
...of the success over Satan. Satan had opposed Christ going to the
cross and dying in the way heaven had planned. Satan had tried
numerous times to stop Calvary's plan. But he failed and Christ
conquered victoriously as "It is finished" signified.
• It speaks of service.
...Christ had completed His service, He completed the work assigned to
Him (Ed: cp Jn 4:34, Jn 5:36, Jn 17:4). It is not how many
projects we start that count but how many we finish. Many say "I quit"
instead of "It is finished." (Wordsearch
- Analytical Bible Expositor - John or
Logos version)
Spurgeon
comments...
Incarnate love has fulfilled its
self-imposed task. Jesus, as the substitute for sinners, was condemned
to die, and he died that he might finish the work of our redemption.
“It is
Finished.’
Hear the dying Saviour cry.”
Your sins have sustained their
death-blow, the robe of your righteousness has received its last
thread. It is done, complete, perfect. It needs no addition; it can
never suffer any diminution.
Oh, Christian, do lay hold of this
precious thought. I may not be able to state it except in weak terms,
but let not my weakness prevent your apprehending its glory and its
preciousness. This thought is enough to make a man leap, though his
legs were chained with irons, and to make him sing, though his mouth
were gagged. We are perfectly accepted in Christ, and our
justification is not partial. It does not go to a limited extent, but
goes the whole way. Our unrighteousness is covered. From condemnation
we are entirely and irrevocably free.
Consummatum est.
“The work is done, redemption is
accomplished; the salvation of my people is for ever secured.”
He had endured the utmost of
appointed grief and had made full vindication to divine justice. Then,
and not until then, He gave up the ghost.
Christ longed for the cross because
He looked for it as the goal of all His exertions. He could never say,
“It is finished” (John 19:30), on His throne, but on His cross He
did cry it. He preferred the sufferings of Calvary to the honors of
the multitude who crowded round about Him, for bless and heal them as
He might, still His work was undone. “I long for My sufferings,
because they will be the completion of My great work of grace.” It is
the end that brings the honor; it is the victory that crowns the
warrior rather than the battle. And so Christ longed for this, His
death, that He might see the completion of His labor.
Does the divine law require, in
order for us to be accepted, perfect submission to the will of the
Lord? He has rendered it. Does it ask for complete obedience to its
precepts? He has presented the same. Does the fulfilled will of the
Lord call for abject suffering, a sweat of blood, pangs unknown, and
death itself? Christ has presented it all, whatever that “all” may
be. When God created, His Word carried forth all His will. Likewise,
when God redeemed, His blessed and incarnate Word accomplished all His
will.
Our Salvation Is Complete -
In truth, we have plenty of reason for resting. We can sit at Jesus’
feet because our salvation is complete. He said, “It is finished”
(John 19:30), and He knew that He had wrought it all. The ransom
price has been paid for your soul. Not one drop has been withheld of
the blood that is your purchase. The robe of righteousness (Isa.
61:10) is woven from top to bottom; there is not one thread for you
to add. It is written, “Ye are complete in him” (Col. 2:10-note).
However frail we are, we are still “perfect in Christ Jesus” (Col.
1:28-note),
and in spite of all our sin we are still “accepted in the beloved”
(Eph. 1:6-note).
He bore on the tree the sentence
for me,
And now both the Surety and sinner are free.
In the heavenly Lamb thrice happy I am;
And my heart doth rejoice at the sound of His name.
A W Pink...
It is Finished—a
single word in the original. It was the briefest and yet the fullest
of His seven cross-utterances. Eternity will be needed to make
manifest all that it contains. All things had been done which the law
of God required; all things established which prophecy predicted; all
things brought to pass which the types foreshadowed; all things
accomplished which the Father had given Him to do; all things
performed which were needed for our redemption. Nothing was left
wanting. The costly ransom was given, the great conflict had been
endured, sin’s wages had been paid, Divine justice satisfied. True,
there was the committal of His spirit into the hands of the Father,
which immediately followed His word here; there was His resurrection,
ascension, and session on high, but these are the fruit and reward of
that work which He completed. Nothing more remained for Him to do;
nothing more awaited its fulfillment; His work on earth was
consummated.
It is Finished—This
was not the despairing cry of a helpless martyr. It was not an
expression of satisfaction that the end of His sufferings was now
reached.
It was not the last gasp of a
worn-out life.
No, it was the declaration on the
part of the Divine Redeemer that all for which He came from heaven to
earth to do, was now done; that all which was needful to reveal the
glorious character of God had now been accomplished; that everything
necessary for the putting away of the sins of His people, providing
for them a perfect standing before God, securing for them an eternal
inheritance and fitting them for it, had all been done.
It is Finished—The
root Greek word here, "teleo," is variously translated in the New
Testament. A reference to some of its alternative renditions in other
passages will enable us the better to discern the fullness and
finality of the term here used by the Savior. In Mt 11:1 "teleo" is
translated as follows,
When Jesus had made an end of
commanding His twelve disciples.
In Mt 17:24 it is rendered,
They that received tribute money
came to Peter, and said, Doth not your Master pay tribute.
In Lk 2:39 it is translated,
And when they had performed all
things according to the law of the Lord.
In Lk 18:31 it is rendered,
All things that are written by the
prophets concerning the Son of man shall be accomplished.
Putting these together we learn the
scope of Christ’s sixth cross-utterance.
It is Finished
He cried—it is "made an end of," it is "paid," it is "performed,"
it is "accomplished."
What was "made an end of"?—our
sins, our guilt!
What was "paid"?—the price
of our redemption!
What was "performed"?—the
utmost requirements of God’s law.
What was "accomplished"?—the
work which the Father had given Him to do!
What was "finished"?—the
making of atonement! (John
19:25-42 Christ Laying Down His Life)
Albert Barnes...
It is finished. The sufferings and
agonies in redeeming man are over. The work long contemplated, long
promised, long expected by prophets and saints, is done. The toils in
the ministry, the persecutions and mockeries, and the pangs of the
garden and the cross, are ended, and man is redeemed. What a wonderful
declaration was this! How full of consolation to man! And how should
this dying declaration of the Saviour reach every heart and affect
every soul! Notes on the New Testament Explanatory and Practical.
Rob Salvato...
What does Jesus mean when He says,
`It is finished'?"
1) It means that the work of
redemption was done.
2) All things had been done which the law of God required;
3) All things fulfilled which prophecy predicted;
4) All things brought to pass which the types foretold;
5) All things accomplished which the Father had given Jesus to do;
6) All things performed that were necessary for redemption.
Everything was done, nothing was
left. COMPLETE. The ransom was paid, the conflict was endured,
the wages of sin were paid, and divine justice was satisfied. There
was nothing more to do, so He died to rise again. Like when a Painter
signs his name. Masterpiece that cannot be added to! Mona Lisa. Not
going to get my markers out – Ruin it. Marvel at – Enjoy – don’t ruin
the work of Christ (Sermon
Notes)
Paul Apple on John 19:30...
Final Departure Under God’s
Sovereign Control
1. Final Act of His Humanity
- “When Jesus therefore had received the sour wine,”
2. Final Completion of His
Earthly Mission of Atonement - “He said, ‘It is finished!’”
3. Final Act of Sacrificial
Spiritual Worship - “And He bowed His head, and gave up His
spirit.” (John)
Grover Gunn asks...
Was His atoning work sufficient and
effective? Was He able to pay for every sin He bore? He had cried out
upon the cross, “It is finished! It is paid in full!” Was it indeed?
Yes, indeed it was! For if there had been one sin which Jesus had
taken upon Himself and for which He had not fully paid, for which He
had not made an adequate atonement, that sin would have held Him in
the grave. But He is risen! He suffered a human penalty for human sin
through His human nature, and His divine nature, distinct but
mysteriously united to His humanity in the oneness of His person, ...
His divine nature gave those human sufferings an infinite worth which
cannot be exhausted. Atonement was paid in full, and He is risen! (Ref)
><>><>><>
F B Meyer's devotional on
John 19:30...
Comparing the Gospels, we discover
that these words were said “with a loud voice.” (Mt Lk 23:46)
It was the shout of a conqueror, who has fought through a long and
terrible day, but greets victory as evening closes in .
Finished, the long line of
sacrificial rite. — From the gates of Eden the blood of sacrifice
had begun to flow,
augmented
by the confluent streams of the years. From that moment, however, not
another drop need be shed. The types were finished now that the
Antitype had been realized.
Finished, his fulfilment of
prophecy. — How contradictory some had seemed! Ancient of Days,
yet a babe; the Mighty God, yet marred of visage, and led to the
slaughter; Son of Man, yet scion of David’s stock; ruling in the midst
of enemies, yet a bruised and broken Sufferer. But all of
them,
even to the last pathetic intimation of his dying thirst, fulfilled.
Finished, his mortal life. —
Never again to be weary, hungered, tempted, buffeted, or to bear the
contradiction of sinners.
Never
again to sweat the bloody sweat, or bear the accumulated faults of
men. Nevermore to die.
Finished, a world’s redemption. — He had wrought out and
brought in a perfect salvation. The world, so far as God could make it
so, was already reconciled. Sin was put away.
Finished, the perfect obedience.
— He alone of all born of woman was able to say that there was nothing
which the Father had asked that He bad not given; nothing that the
Father had imposed that He
had not gladly borne. He had
finished the work given Him to do.
Leonard Ravenhill said of
John 19:30
The Greatest Words Ever Uttered - By
the Greatest Man That Ever Lived.... In these three words I see the
consummation of all the Old Testament truth and the germination of all New
Testament truth.
The
evangelist Alexander Wooten was approached by a young man who asked,
What must I do to be saved?
Wooten replied
It’s too late!
The young man became alarmed asking.
Do you mean that it’s too late for
me to be saved? Is there nothing I can do?”
Wooten replied
Too late! It’s already been done!
The only thing you can do is believe.
It Is Finished!
(Play Hymn)
Nothing, either great or small—
Nothing, sinner, no;
Jesus died and paid it all,
Long, long ago.
Refrain
“It is finished!” yes, indeed,
Finished, ev’ry jot;
Sinner, this is all you need,
Tell me, is it not?
--Ira Sankey
Rich Cathers offers the
following lesson related to Jesus' cry "It is Finished"...
Stop punishing yourself. Sometimes we
struggle with guilt, having a hard time accepting that our debt must be
already paid. We punish ourselves because we think we must deserve some
kind of punishment. It's especially tough when it's concerning a sin that
we repeat over and over and over again. When Jesus died on the cross, how
many of your sins were still in the future? Did Jesus pay for all of your
sins, or just part of them? Did He just pay for sins #1-136? But not for
#137? You may say to me, "But I've sinned enough for two people!" Do you
somehow think that Jesus can't pay for the both of you? He died an
infinite death, paying for an infinite amount of sin! That's enough to
even include you!
When we continue to punish ourselves over our sins, or we feel like we
just can't accept Jesus' forgiveness because we don't deserve it, we are
kind of kicking Him in the face. It's like we are saying to Him, "No, You
did not pay enough to cover this one particular sin!" He paid at one time,
enough for all of us. (Heb 10:12KJV)
Illustration- Martin Luther was one who struggled with his sins.
Before his break with the Catholic church he went to confession every day
and was so guilt-ridden by his sins he would almost have gone every hour.
On most nights Luther slept well, but he even felt guilty about that,
thinking, ''Here am I, sinful as I am, having a good night's sleep.'' So
he would confess that. One day the older priest to whom Luther went for
confession said to him, "Martin, either find a new sin and commit it, or
quit coming to see me!" (John
19:28-30 Notes)
Perhaps we need to quit hanging on
to our guilt,
and let Jesus cleanse us.
><>><>><>
PAID IN FULL (Colossians 2:14) - The newspaper article reported that a
Utah businessman had filed for bankruptcy and declared his debts to be
$613 billion. It seemed ridiculous! What's more, the man claimed assets of
only $7,310. In other words, if all debts were honored, his creditors
would receive about one-millionth of a cent on the dollar. There was no
way he could begin to pay his debts.
Sometimes I feel that's how I stand with God. Why should I even try to pay
the debt of love that I owe Him? The situation seems hopeless. When I
consider His demand of perfect righteousness, I feel totally bankrupt and
helpless.
But then I remember that my debt has been taken care of. Jesus the Son of
God shed His precious blood to pay the infinite price for my countless
sins. Now I'm free to pursue a relationship with God that is motivated by
gratitude and energized by the power of the Holy Spirit.
This is what Colossians 2 is all about (cp Jn 19:30). The law of God has
declared us spiritually bankrupt. But our great debt has been completely
removed. It has been paid in full by Jesus Christ on the cross of Calvary.
We are free. The only thing we owe now is an eternal debt of thanks and
praise to our wonderful Lord. — Mart De Haan
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
But drops of grief can ne'er repay
The debt of love I owe:
Here, Lord, I give myself away,
'Tis all that I can do! --Watts
Some think that they have everything
When riches come their way,
But that they're poor will be revealed
On God's accounting day.
-- Henry G. Bosch
Our salvation is free
because Christ paid an enormous price.
Take a Moment to worship
Jesus
as you ponder the preciousness of blood
Play Red Mountain Music's beautiful rendition of
There is a Fountain Filled
with Blood
Red Mt Music (their
works are superbly God Glorifying)
><>><>><>
DONE! So many of our hopes and
dreams remain unfulfilled. Composer Franz Schubert departed this world
leaving behind his "Unfinished Symphony." Similarly, prolific author
Charles Dickens was unable to fully develop the plot of his novel The
Mystery of Edwin Drood.
We too undoubtedly have
aspirations that we will be unable to fulfill. But what a blessing to know
that the work of our redemption was totally and perfectly accomplished by
Jesus on the cross.
The last words of Jesus, "It is finished," are actually a single
word in the original language (John 19:30). But that word holds oceans of
meaning. What Jesus gasped was "Completed!" or "Ended!" That cry from the
cross announced that not only had His suffering come to an end but also
His redemptive work was eternally accomplished. All that He had come to
achieve in His human life was finished. Done!
We can do nothing to add to His sacrifice. Christ's self-giving death was
all-sufficient. We stretch out the empty hand of faith, and God in grace
puts into it the gift of eternal life.
Have you stretched out your hand of faith to receive this gift? — Vernon
C. Grounds
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
"It is finished," Jesus cried,
Then on Calvary's cross He died;
Christ the Lord atonement made,
And sin's debt was fully paid.
—Hess
Christ's sacrifice was what God
desired
and what our sin required.
><>><>><>
HE IS ENOUGH - Sometimes we are
overwhelmed by life. The crushing waves of disappointment, endless debt,
debilitating illness, or trouble with people can cause hopelessness,
depression, or despair. It happened to Jesus’ disciples. And it has
happened to me.
Three statements by the Lord beginning with the words “It is . . .” offer
us comfort, reassurance, and hope that Jesus is enough. The first is in
Matthew 4 and is repeated three times: “It is written” (vv.4,7,10). In
responding to the three temptations of Satan, Jesus gave us proof enough
that the Word of God is true and overcomes the most powerful forms of
temptation and pressure.
The second statement, “It is I” (Matt. 14:27), was spoken when Jesus told
His terrified disciples that He Himself was presence enough to stop the
howling storm and calm the raging seas.
Jesus spoke the third “It is” from the cross: “It is finished!”
(John 19:30). He assured us that His death was provision enough to pay the
debt for our sins and set us free.
Whatever our circumstances, Jesus is present with His love, compassion,
and grace. He is proof, presence, and provision enough to carry us safely
through. — David C. Egner
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
When trials overwhelm our souls
And tempt us to despair,
We need to reach out to the Lord
And trust His tender care. —Sper
God’s love does not keep us from trials;
it helps us get through them.
><>><>><>
FINISHED! - Outside Madrid
stands an ancient monastery where the kings of Spain have been buried. The
architect designed an elongated arch so flat that the reigning monarch
insisted it could not hold the structure above it.
Against the architect's protest, the king ordered that a column be placed
underneath the arch as a safety precaution. After the king died, the
architect revealed that he had deliberately made the column a quarter of
an inch too short--and the arch had never sagged!
Nothing need be, or can be, added to the finished work of Christ on
Calvary to sustain the weight of the world's salvation. Our Savior's cry
from the cross, "It is finished!" (Jn. 19:30), is a translation of a
single Greek word which more literally could be rendered as "Ended!"
"Completed!" or "Accomplished!"
That one word tells of the greatest miracle our Lord performed, the work
of redeeming a lost world. Because our redemption was perfectly finished,
it is impossible for us to add even one submicroscopic work of our own to
what was already done on the cross.
With utter assurance, then, we can rest our eternal hope on that one
all-important word, "Finished!" — Vernon C. Grounds
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Once for all, O sinner, receive it!
Once for all, O brother, believe it!
Cling to the cross, the burden will fall.
Christ has redeemed us once for all. --Bliss
We are saved not by what we do
but by what Christ has done.
><>><>><>
ADDING TO A MASTERPIECE - Could
you improve on a masterpiece? Imagine that you are walking through the
Louvre museum in Paris. As you approach the Mona Lisa by Leonardo da
Vinci, would you think about taking a palette and brushes and touching up
the painting? Maybe put some more color in her cheeks? Perhaps change her
nose a little?
"That's ridiculous!" you say. For nearly 500 years the Mona Lisa has been
considered one of the greatest artistic works of all time. How absurd to
think we could add anything to this masterpiece!
Yet that's what many people try to do with Christ's masterpiece—salvation.
They think they must improve on it with some work of their own. But that
masterpiece was completed when Jesus said, "It is finished," while hanging
on the cross (John 19:30). Then He proved that His work of redemption was
done when He rose from the dead.
When you hear that Jesus paid the price for your sin and that you don't
have to do anything to merit God's grace, do you think it's too good to be
true? Do you think there's something you must do to earn it?
You can't add anything! Receive God's gift of salvation. Jesus paid it
all. The masterpiece is complete. — Dave Branon
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
Christ's work for my salvation is
complete!
No work of mine can add to what He's done;
I bow to worship at the Master's feet,
And honor God the Father's only Son. —Hess
Salvation is a gift to be received—not a goal to be achieved.
><>><>><>
Spurgeon commenting on Jn 19:30
said...
There is nothing for God to do. “It is
finished.” There is nothing for you to do. “It is finished.” Christ need
not bleed. “It is finished.” You need not weep. “It is finished.” God the
Holy Spirit need not delay because of your unworthiness, nor need you
delay because of your helplessness. “It is finished.” Every stumbling
block is rolled out of the road; every gate is opened. The bars of brass
are broken, the gates of iron are burst asunder. “It is finished.” Come
and welcome; come and welcome!
The general religion of mankind is
“Do,” but the religion of a true Christian is “Done.” “It is finished,” is
the believer’s conquering word.
What “it” was it that was finished? I
will not attempt to expound it. It is the biggest “it” that ever was.
Turn it over and you will see that it will grow, and grow, and grow, and
grow, till it fills the whole earth: “It is finished.”
><>><>><>
Octavius Winslow devotional...
"When Jesus therefore had received the
vinegar, he said, It is finished; and he bowed his head, and gave up the
spirit." John 19:30
A jar of sour wine was sitting there, so they soaked a sponge in it, put
it on a hyssop branch, and held it up to his lips. When Jesus had tasted
it, he said, "It is finished!" Then he bowed his head and gave up his
spirit. John 19:29, 30
Believer in Jesus! remember, all your confidence, all your hope, all your
comfort flows from the finished work of your Savior. See that you
unwittingly add nothing to the perfection of this work. You may be
betrayed into this sin and this folly by looking within yourself, rather
than to the person of Jesus; by attaching an importance too great to
repentance and faith, and your own doings and strivings, rather than
ceasing from your own works altogether, and resting for your peace, and
joy, and hope; simply, entirely, and exclusively in the work of Jesus.
Remember, that whatever we unintentionally add to the finished work of
Christ mars the perfection and obscures the beauty of that work. "If you
lift up your tool upon it, you have polluted it."
We have nothing to do, but in our moral pollution and nakedness to plunge
beneath the fountain, and wrap ourselves within the robe of that Savior's
blood and righteousness, who, when He expired on the tree, so completed
our redemption, as to leave us nothing to do but to believe and be saved.
"It is finished!" Oh words pregnant of the deepest meaning! Oh words rich
in the richest consolation! Salvation is finished! Look away from your
fluctuating frames, and fitful feelings, and changing clouds, to "Jesus
only." Look away from sins and guilt, from emptiness and poverty, to
"Jesus only." "It is finished!" Let devils hear it, and tremble! Let
sinners hear it, and believe! Let saints hear it, and rejoice! All is
finished!
"Then, Lord, I flee to You, just as I am! I have stayed away from You too
long, and am 'yet instead of getting better, I grew worse.' Too
exclusively have I looked at my unworthiness, too absorbed have I been
with my impoverishment, too bitterly have I mourned having nothing to pay.
Upon Your own finished work I now cast myself. Save, Lord, and I shall be
saved!"
Before this stupendous truth, let all creature merit sink, let all human
glory pale, let all man's boasting vanish, and let Jesus be all in all.
Perish, forms and ceremonies; perish, rites and rituals; perish, creeds
and churches; perish, utterly and forever perish, whatever would be a
substitute for the finished work of Jesus, whatever would tend to
neutralize the finished work of Jesus, whatever would obscure with a
cloud, or dim with a vapor; the beauty, the luster, and the glory of the
finished work of Jesus!
It was "Jesus only" in the councils of eternity; it was "Jesus only" in
the everlasting covenant of grace; it was "Jesus only" in the manger of
Bethlehem; it was "Jesus only" in the garden of Gethsemane; it was "Jesus
only" upon the cross of Calvary; it was "Jesus only" in the tomb of
Joseph; it was "Jesus only" who, "when He had by Himself purged our sins,
sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high." And it shall be "Jesus
only"; the joy of our hearts, the object of our glory, the theme of our
song, the Beloved of our adoration, our service, and our praise, through
the endless ages of eternity. Oh, stand fast, in life and in death, by the
finished work of Jesus.
><>><>><>
John Flavel on John 19:30...
Has Christ perfected and completely
finished all His work for us? How sweet a relief is this to against all
the defects and imperfections of all the works which are wrought by us.
There is nothing finished that we do. All our duties are imperfect duties;
they come off lamely and defectively from our hands. O there is much sin
and vanity in the best of our duties. But Jesus Christ has finished all
His work, though we can finish none of ours. And so, even though we are
defective, poor, imperfect creatures in ourselves, yet we are complete in
Christ. His complete obedience being imputed to us, makes us complete, and
without fault before God. (See the full discourse by Flavel on
The Fountain of Life)
AND HE BOWED HIS HEAD AND GAVE
UP HIS SPIRIT: kai klinas (AAPMSN) ten
kephalen paredoken (3SAAI) to pneuma: (Jn 10:11,18 Mt 20:28 27:50 Mk 15:37 Lk 23:46 Php 2:8
Heb 2:14,15
)
Bernard
notes that...
This detail is given only by John,
and suggests that the account depends on the testimony of an
eye-witness. (A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel
according to St. John)
Luke
records the purportedly the very last words of Jesus on the Cross...
And Jesus, crying out with a loud
voice, said, "Father, INTO YOUR HANDS I COMMIT (paratithemi
[word study] = a banking term = deposit as a trust or for
protection or safe keeping! The = to initiate the action and
participate in the carrying out the action. Reflexive sense = "I
myself commit...") MY SPIRIT." Having said this, He breathed His last.
(Lk 23:46)
S Lewis Johnson...comments
that...
when Jesus said, "Father, into
Thy hands I commit My spirit," this is only a milestone in his
uninterrupted life. It is what someone has called, "The hymn of his
continuation." "Father into Thy hands I commit my spirit." The
activity is primary. The dying is secondary. This, after all, is the
one who will say according to the Book of Revelation to the Apostle
John, "Fear not, I'm the first and the last. I am he that liveth and
was dead." (Rev 1:17-note,
Rev 1:18-note)
That is, at a point in time I was dead, yes, but I am alive
forevermore. So, "Father into Thy hands I commit my spirit." I
expect to live through this experience.
When Jesus began his ministry one
of the first things he said, the first recorded utterance is, "I
must be about my Father's business." (Lk 2:49KJV) Well that is
still primary. No wonder the Cross is the converging point of ancient
history and the origin of modern history. Because it has to do with
the foundation upon which all ultimate spiritual life is built.
May God in his marvelous grace illumine our minds to understand what
Christ has done. (AMEN!)
(The
Messiah Dying)
Bowed His head - Same Greek
words (klinas ten kephalen) in a different context in Mt 8:20 (ten
kephalen klino) and Lk 9:58 (ten kephalen klino). No place
to lay His head in life, but finally a resting place for His head on
the Cross! His word was done.
Vine comments this does not
refer to
the helpless dropping of the head
after death, but the deliberate putting of His head into a position of
rest.
Spurgeon...
It is not that he died, and that
then his head fell forward; but while he yet lived, having before
maintained an erect, noble bearing even in the pangs of death, he now,
to show his perfect resignation to his Father’s will bows his head,
and yields up that saved spirit of his which dwelt within his body.
He said,
It is finished - What
“it” was it that was finished? I will not attempt to expound it. It
is the biggest “it” that ever was. Turn it over and you will see
that it will grow, and grow, and grow, and grow, till it fills the
whole earth: “It is finished.”
And he lowered his head, and gave
up the ghost. - He did not give up the ghost, and then bow his head,
because he was dead; but he bowed his head as though in the act of
worship, or as leaning it down upon his Father’s bosom, and then gave
up the ghost.
Thus have we had two gospel
pictures of our dying Lord. May we remember them, and learn the
lessons they are intended to teach.
Bow (2827)(klino)
means literally to slant, slope, incline, bend. It was used
figuratively of the day "declining" (Lk 9:12, 24:29).
Klino is the root of ekklino
(ek = out + klino = to lean) which literally means to lean out and thus to turn aside
or deviate from the right (righteous) way (as in Ro 3:12-note).
The Greek word for bed is kline which is derived from
klino (to recline). Wavering (in He 10:23-note)
is the Greek aklines derived from "a" (when prefixed to
a word a makes it mean the opposite to what it meant
originally) plus klino “to lean towards”.
In the OT (Septuagint),
klino is often used of a prayer to God to "Incline His ear". It
is used figuratively of inclining one's heart (Ps 119:36, 112 - see below for
Spurgeon's exposition) and for God turning the hearts of kings (Pr
21:1).
Thayer's
Greek-English Lexicon...
1. transitive,
a. “to incline, bow”: of one
dying, John 19:30; of the terrified, Luke 24:5.
b. equivalent to “to cause to
fall back”: i.e. to turn to flight, Hebrews 11:34
c. “to recline”: the head, in a
place for repose (AV “lay one’s head”), Mt 8:20; Lk 9:58.
2. intransitive, “to incline
oneself”: of the declining day (AV “wear away, be far spent”), Lk
9:12; 24:29; Jer 6:4
Klino is
used 7x in 7v -
Mt 8:20 the Son of Man has nowhere
to lay His head.
Luke 9:12 And the day began to decline,
Luke 9:58 the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.
Luke 24:5 the women were terrified and bowed their faces to the
ground,
Luke 24:29 the day is now nearly over."
John 19:30 He bowed His head,
Heb 11:34 put foreign armies to flight
Klino - 45x
in the non-apocryphal
Septuagint (LXX)
- Judg 7:5, 6; 9:3; 19:8; 1 Sam 4:2; 14:32; 2 Sam 19:14; 22:10; 1 Kgs
2:28; 2 Kgs 19:16; 20:10; Ezra 7:28; 9:5, 9; Job 38:37; Ps 17:6; 18:9;
21:11; 31:2; 45:10; 46:6; 49:4; 62:3; 71:2; 75:8; 78:1; 86:1; 88:2;
102:2, 11; 104:5; 116:2; 119:36, 112; 144:5; Prov 21:1; Isa 24:20;
33:23; Jer 6:4; 17:22; 34:14; 35:15; 44:5; 48:12; Zech 14:4.
Here are a few
uses of klino in the Septuagint...
Ps 17:6 I have called upon You, for
You will answer me, O God;
Incline (Imperative.
Heb = natah; Lxx = klino) Your ear to me, hear my speech.
Spurgeon: Incline
thine ear unto me, and hear my speech. Stoop out of heaven and put
thine ear to my mouth; give me thine ear all to myself, as men do when
they lean over to catch every word from their friend. The Psalmist
here comes back to his first prayer, and thus sets us an example of
pressing our suit again and again, until we have a full assurance that
we have succeeded.
Ps 18:9 He bowed (Heb =
natah; Lxx = klino) the heavens also, and came down With thick
darkness under His feet.
NET Bible Note: The Hebrew
verb natah can carry the sense "[cause to] bend, bow down." For
example Ge 49:15 pictures Issachar as a donkey that "bends" its
shoulder or back under a burden. Here the LORD causes the sky,
pictured as a dome or vault, to sink down as He descends in the storm.
Spurgeon: He bowed
the heavens also, and came down. He came in haste, and spurned
everything which impeded His rapidity. The thickest gloom concealed
His splendour, and darkness was under His feet; He fought within the
dense vapours, as a warrior in clouds of smoke and dust, and found out
the hearts of His enemies with the sharp falchion of his vengeance.
Darkness is no impediment to God; its densest gloom He makes His tent
and secret pavilion. See how prayer moves earth and heaven, and raises
storms to overthrow in a moment the foes of God's Israel. Things were
bad for David before he prayed, but they were much worse for his foes
so soon as the petition had gone up to heaven. A trustful heart, by
enlisting the divine aid, turns the tables on its enemies.
If I must have an enemy let him
not be a man of prayer, or he will soon get the better of me by
calling in his God into the quarrel.
Psalm 78:1 A Maskil of Asaph.
Listen, O My people, to My instruction;
Incline
(Imperative. Heb = natah; Lxx = klino) your ears to the words of My
mouth. 2 I will open my mouth in a parable; I will utter dark sayings
of old, (Note: A number of the uses of klino in Lxx of the Psalms
refer to a call for God to incline His ear.
The repetition suggests that
this would be a good prayer for modern saints to utter!
And see especially Ps 119:36 below)
Spurgeon: Incline
your ears to the words of my mouth. Give earnest attention, bow your
stiff necks, lean forward to catch every syllable. We are at this day,
as readers of the sacred records, bound to study them deeply,
exploring their meaning, and laboring to practice their teaching. As
the officer of an army commences his drill by calling for "Attention,"
even so every trained soldier of Christ is called upon to give ear to
His words. Men lend their ears to music, how much more then should
they listen to the harmonies of the gospel; they sit enthralled in the
presence of an orator, how much rather should they yield to the
eloquence of Heaven.
Incline your ears. Lay them close
to my lips, that no parcel of this sacred language fall to the ground
by your default. John Trapp.
Psalm 86:1 A Prayer of David.
Incline
(Imperative. Heb = natah; Lxx = klino) Your ear, O LORD, and answer
me; For I am afflicted and needy.
Spurgeon: Bow down thine
ear, O Lord, hear me. In condescension to my littleness,
and in pity to my weakness, "bow down thine ear, O Lord." When our
prayers are lowly by reason of our humility, or feeble by reason of
our sickness, or without wing by reason of our despondency, the Lord
will bow down to them, the infinitely exalted Jehovah will have
respect unto them. Faith, when she has the loftiest name of God on her
tongue, and calls him Jehovah, yet dares to ask from him the most
tender and condescending acts of love. Great as he is he loves his
children to be bold with him.
For I am poor and needy -- doubly a son of poverty, because, first,
poor and without supply for my needs, and next needy, and so full of
wants, though unable to supply them. Our distress is a forcible reason
for our being heard by the Lord God, merciful, and gracious, for
misery is ever the master argument with mercy. Such reasoning as this
would never be adopted by a proud man, and when we hear it repeated in
the public congregation by those great ones of the earth who count the
peasantry to be little better than the earth they tread upon, it
sounds like a mockery of the Most High. Of all despicable sinners
those are the worst who use the language of spiritual poverty while
they think themselves to be rich and increased in goods.
Psalm 119:36
Incline
(Imperative. Heb = natah; Lxx = klino) my heart to Your testimonies
(Hebrew = "turn my heart to your rules.") And not to dishonest gain.
Spurgeon: Incline my
heart unto thy testimonies. Does not this prayer appear to be
superfluous, since it is evident that the Psalmist's heart was set
upon obedience? We are sure that there is never a word to spare in
Scripture. After asking for active virtue it was meet that the man of
God should beg that his heart might be in all that he did. What would
his goings be if his heart did not go? It may be that David felt a
wandering desire, an inordinate leaning of his soul to worldly gain (Ed:
Can we not identify dear
reader? And do we not oft times need to utter this prayer?),
-- possibly it even intruded into his most devout meditations, and at
once he cried out for more grace.
The only way to cure a wrong
leaning
is to have the soul bent in the opposite direction.
Holiness of heart is the cure for
covetousness. What a blessing it is that we may ask the Lord even for
an inclination. Our wills are free, and yet without violating their
liberty, grace can incline us in the right direction. This can
be done by enlightening the understanding as to the excellence of
obedience, by strengthening our habits of virtue, by giving us an
experience of the sweetness of piety, and by many other ways.
If any one duty is irksome to us it
behooves us to offer this prayer with special reference thereto: we
are to love all the Lord's testimonies, and if we fail in any one
point we must pay double attention to it.
The learning of the heart
is the way in which the life will lean:
hence the force of the petition,
"Incline my heart." Happy shall we be when we feel habitually inclined
to all that is good. This is not the way in which a carnal heart ever
leans; all its inclinations are in opposition to the divine
testimonies.
And not to covetousness. This is the inclination of nature, and
grace must put a negative upon it. This vice is as injurious as it is
common; it is as mean as it is miserable. It is idolatry, and so it
dethrones God; it is selfishness, and so it is cruel to all in its
power; it is sordid greed, and so it would sell the Lord himself for
pieces of silver. It is a degrading, grovelling, hardening, deadening
sin, which withers everything around it that is lovely and Christlike.
He who is covetous is of the race of Judas, and will in all
probability turn out to be himself a son of perdition. The crime of
covetousness is common, but very few will confess it; for when a man
heaps up gold in his heart, the dust of it blows into his eyes, and he
cannot see his own fault. Our hearts must have some object of desire,
and the only way to keep out worldly gain is to put in its place the
testimonies of the Lord. If we are inclined or bent one way, we shall
be turned from the other: the negative virtue is most surely attained
by making sure of the positive grace which inevitably produces it.
Psalm 119:112 I have inclined
my heart to perform Your statutes Forever, even to the end. Samekh.
Spurgeon: I have
inclined mine heart to perform Thy statutes alway, even unto the end.
He was not half inclined to virtue, but heartily inclined to it. His
whole heart was bent on practical, persevering godliness. He was
resolved to keep the statutes of the Lord with all his heart,
throughout all his time, without erring or ending. He made it his end
to keep the law unto the end, and that without end. He had by prayer,
and meditation, and resolution made his whole being lean towards God's
commands; or as we should say in other words -- the grace of God had
inclined him to incline his heart in a sanctified direction. Many are
inclined to preach, but the Psalmist was inclined to practise; many
are inclined to perform ceremonies, but he was inclined to perform
statutes; many are inclined to obey occasionally, but David would obey
alway; and, alas, many are inclined for temporary religion, but this
godly man was bound for eternity, he would perform the statutes of his
Lord and King even unto the end. Lord, send us such a heavenly
inclination of heart as this: then shall we show chat thou hast
quickened and taught us. To this end create in us a clean heart, and
daily renew a right spirit within us, for only so shall we incline in
the right direction.
Pr 21:1 The king's heart is like
channels of water in the hand (speaks of power) of the LORD; He
turns (Heb = natah; Lxx = klino) it wherever He wishes.
NET Bible Note: The farmer
channels irrigation ditches where he wants them, where they will do
the most good; so does the LORD with the king. No king is supreme; the
LORD rules.
Bowed His
head and gave up His Spirit - When? When the work the
Father had given Him to accomplish had been accomplished. His life was
not taken from Him, but He made a volitional choice to give it up,
just as He had predicted (notice the repetition) earlier declaring...
I am the good shepherd, and I know
My own and My own know Me, even as the Father knows Me and I know the
Father; and I lay down My life for the sheep. I have other
sheep (Gentiles), which are not of this fold; I must bring them also,
and they will hear My voice; and they will become one flock with one
shepherd (Allusion to the birth of the church in Acts 2, Ep 2:14, 15,
16). For this reason the Father loves Me, because I lay down My
life so that I may take it again. No one has taken it
away from Me, but I lay it down on My own initiative. I
have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it
up again. This commandment I received from My Father. (Jn 10:14,
15, 16, 17, 18)
Gave up His spirit - The
synoptic gospels say...
And Jesus cried out again with a
loud voice, and yielded up His spirit. (Mt 27:50)
And Jesus uttered a loud cry, and
breathed His last. (Mk 15:37)
And Jesus, crying out with a loud
voice, said, “Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit.” Having
said this, He breathed His last. (Lk 23:46)
Warren Wiersbe emphasizes
the point that...
His death was voluntary: He
willingly dismissed His spirit (John 19:30; and Jn 10:17, 18). He
"gave Himself" (Gal 2:20). He offered Himself as a ransom (Mk 10:45),
as a sacrifice to God (Ep 5:2), and as a propitiation for sin (1Jn
2:2). In Lk 9:31, His death is called a "decease," which in the Greek
is "exodus," suggesting the Passover lamb and the deliverance from
bondage. It will take eternity to reveal all that happened when
Jesus Christ died on the cross.
(Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary. 1989. Victor
or
Logos)
Henry Morris
has an interesting comment on "bowed his head" observing that
The first of the eighty times Jesus
called Himself "the Son of man" was when He said,
The Son of man has no where to
lay (klino) his head (Mt 8:20).
In the Old Testament (but see also
Lk 24:5), the term "bow the head" is equivalent to "worship,"
that is, to "bow down to the will of God" (see Ge 22:5). During His
earthly ministry, we never read of Jesus worshipping God, though He
taught others to do so. He had nowhere to "bow[ed] his head," to
"worship." He had come to do the will of God and to finish His work
and that was still unfinished until He went to the cross. But now the
work was accomplished; He had perfectly finished the will of God so at
last He could "bow(ed) his head;" He finally had a place to worship
the Father.
(Morris,
Henry: Defenders Study Bible. World Publishing)
William MacDonald...
That He gave up His spirit
emphasizes the fact that His death was voluntary. He determined the
time of His death. In full control of His faculties, He dismissed His
spirit—an act no mere man could accomplish.
Gave up (Delivered,
committed, entrusted, handed over)
(3860)(paradidomi
from para = alongside,
beside, to the side of, over to + didomi = to give) conveys
the basic meaning of to give over from one's hand to someone or
something, especially to give over to the power of another.
Constable notes that
normally
victims of crucifixion
experienced
the gradual ebbing away of life, and then their heads would slump
forward. All the evangelists presented Jesus as laying down His life
of His own accord. (John)
Paul uses paradidomi in
describing Jesus' sacrificial death in his place...
Galatians 2:20 (note)
"I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live,
but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I
live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me, and delivered (paradidomi
in the
active
voice
= His choice) Himself up (into the power of the Romans) for me. (Compare
Ro 4:25-note,
Ro 8:32-note,
Eph 5:2-note,
Ep 5:25-note)
William
Harris has a somewhat unusual interpretation commenting that
Gave up His spirit...
suggests also the giving of the
Holy Spirit [cf. Jn 7:39], although it
does not take place at
this very moment. The reference is proleptic, looking ahead to Jn
20:22, which in turn looks ahead to Pentecost. (Exegetical
Commentary on John 19) (For a more expanded explanation of
this view see R A Culpepper's note below)
Ray Stedman...
Then, as John records, "He
dismissed his spirit." Jesus once said that it was not required that
he die. "I have power to lay down my life and I have power to take it
again" {John 10:18 RSV}, he declared. Paul tells us he "became
obedient unto death," {Phil 2:8}. That could never be said
of any of us as we have no choice in the matter. When our time
comes we have to die. But Jesus did not. He became obedient unto death
and surrendered his spirit, "dismissed it," and fell into death. (He
Endured the Cross)
A W Pink...
And he bowed his head, and gave
up the spirit The order of these two actions strikingly evidences
the Savior’s uniqueness: with us the spirit departs, and then the head
is bowed; with Him it was the opposite! So, too, each of these actions
manifested His Deity. First, He "bowed his head"; the plain intimation
is that, up to this point, His head had been held erect. It was no
impotent sufferer who hung there in a swoon. Had that been the case,
His head had lolled helplessly on His chest, and He would have had no
occasion to "bow" it. Weigh well the verb here: it is not that His
head "fell forward," but He consciously, calmly, reverently, bowed His
head. How sublime was His carriage even on the "tree!" What superb
composure did He evidence! Was it not His majestic bearing on the
cross that, among other things, caused the centurion to cry,
"Truly this was the Son of God"
(Matthew 27:54)!
And gave up (delivered up) the
spirit - None else ever did this or died thus. How remarkably do
these words exemplify His own declaration in Jn 10:17, 18:
I lay down my life, that I might
take it again. No man takes it from me, but I lay it down of myself. I
have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again!
The uniqueness of Christ’s action
here may also be seen by comparing His words with those of Stephen’s.
As the first Christian martyr was dying, he prayed,
Lord Jesus receive my spirit (Acts
7:59).
In sharp contrast from Stephen,
Christ "gave up the spirit"; Stephen’s was taken from him, not so the
Savior’s. (John
19:25-42 Christ Laying Down His Life)
R A Culpepper
(in Faith and Mission, Spring, 1988 -
The Death Of Jesus: An Exegesis
of Jn 19:28-37 [$
but this gives access to 1000's of conservative journal articles
online]) explains John's
words "gave up His spirit" this way...
After Jesus had tasted the vinegar,
he said, "It is finished." Then he "gave up his spirit" (Jn
19:30). This may well be a simple statement regarding how Jesus died,
but some interpreters see in the reference to "handing over" the
spirit the suggestion that Jesus' death was essential for the
fulfillment of his promise to send the Holy Spirit to his followers.
That is more than John 19:30 affirms, but the Gospel of John often
implies more than it says.
Remember that in the passage in John 7, the evangelist explained that
"the Spirit had not yet been given, because Jesus was not yet
glorified" (Jn 7:39). Only through his death could Jesus bring the
final revelation of the Father and thereby redeem his own for full
fellowship with God through the abiding presence of the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit had descended on Jesus at his baptism, fulfilling the
promise to John the Baptist: "The man on whom you see the Spirit come
down and remain is he who will baptize with the Holy Spirit" (Jn
1:33NIV). Others, like Nicodemus, would be able to enter the kingdom
of God only if they too were born of "water and the Spirit" (Jn 3:3),
for "the Spirit gives birth to spirit" (Jn 3:6). "'God gives the
Spirit without limit" (Jn 3:34), and as with the wind "you cannot tell
where it comes from or where it is going" (Jn 3:8). Who would guess
that the Spirit would lead Jesus to the cross? Nevertheless, because
God is Spirit, God seeks true worshipers who will "worship in spirit
and truth" (Jn 4:23, 24).
Jesus' words are "spirit and life" (Jn 6:63), and the Spirit gives
life. But the Spirit could only be given when Jesus had been glorified
(Jn 7:39). Those who denied that Jesus' death had any saving
significance failed to see that his death was a vital part of his
revelatory and redemptive mission. The ultimate irony of the gospel is
that the giving of life came only through the apparent triumph of
death.
Jesus' death released the power of the Spirit in a new way. The world
would neither see him nor know him, but the Spirit lives in Jesus'
disciples (14:17). The Holy Spirit is experienced as a Comforter or a
Counselor who teaches us and reminds us of all that Jesus said (Jn
14:26). The Spirit testifies about Jesus (15:26) and guides us into
all truth (Jn 16:13). God communicates with us by means of the Spirit,
for he speaks "only what he hears" (Jn 16:13, 15).
When the risen Lord appeared to the disciples, his first act was to
comfort them with the words "Peace be with you"; consecrate them by
the giving of the Holy Spirit; and commission them: "So send I you"
(Jn 20:21, 22). The conferring of the Spirit--one might even say the
"Johannine Pentecost"--is reminiscent of the creation of man and
woman.
"Then the Lord God formed man of
dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of
life; and he became a living being" (Ge. 2:7).
"And when he had said this, he breathed on them, and said to them,
receive the Holy Spirit" (Jn 20:22).
God had formed a new creature with
life "from above," eternal life. The mission of the Logos was
complete. Through His death on the Cross Jesus had been glorified. He
had revealed the suffering Father, the Giver of all life. The Logos
had effected a new creation (Ed: Do not misunderstand -
He is not speaking of Jesus but of men who partake of the New Covenant
and become "new creations" in Christ - see 2Co 5:17-note
Jesus was not a created being as taught by some cults - see Col 1:15-Discussion).
The last breath, whispering behind the Word, blowing where God willed,
marked a new beginning. And even greater things lay ahead. The
response to such a gift can only be renewed commitment:
Breath on me,
Breath of God,
Fill me with life anew,
That I may love what Thou dost love,
And do what Thou wouldst do.
|
|
Matthew Henry's
Unabridged Commentary on John 19:30...
1. What he said, and we may suppose
him to say it with triumph and exultation, Tetelestai- It is finished,
a comprehensive word, and a comfortable one.
(1.) It is finished, that is, the malice and enmity of his persecutors
had now done their worst; when he had received that last indignity in
the vinegar they gave him, he said, "This is the last; I am now going
out of their reach, where the wicked cease from troubling."
(2.) It is finished, that is, the counsel and commandment of his
Father concerning his sufferings were now fulfilled; it was a
determinate counsel, and he took care to see every iota and tittle of
it exactly answered, Acts 2:23. He had said, when he entered upon his
sufferings, Father, thy will be done; and now he saith with pleasure,
It is done. It was his meat and drink to finish his work (Jn 4:34),
and the meat and drink refreshed him, when they gave him gall and
vinegar.
(3.) It is finished, that is, all the types and prophecies of the Old
Testament, which pointed at the sufferings of the Messiah, were
accomplished and answered. He speaks as if, now that they had given
him the vinegar, he could not bethink himself of any word in the Old
Testament that was to be fulfilled between him and his death but it
had its accomplishment; such as, his being sold for thirty pieces of
silver, his hands and feet being pierced, his garments divided, etc.;
and now that this is done. It is finished.
(4.) It is finished, that
is, the ceremonial law is abolished, and a period put to the
obligation of it. The substance is now come, and all the shadows are
done away. Just now the veil is rent, the wall of partition is taken
down, even the law of commandments contained in ordinances, Ep 2:14, 15. The Mosaic economy is dissolved, to
make way for a better hope.
(5.) It is finished, that is, sin is finished, and an end made of
transgression, by the bringing in of an everlasting righteousness. It
seems to refer to Daniel 9:24. The Lamb of God was sacrificed to take
away the sin of the world, and it is done, Hebrews 9:26.
(6.) It is finished, that is, his sufferings were now finished, both
those of his soul and those of his body. The storm is over, the worst
is past; all his pains and agonies are at an end, and he is just going
to paradise, entering upon the joy set before him. Let all that suffer
for Christ, and with Christ, comfort themselves with this, that yet a
little while and they also shall say, It is finished.
(7.) It is finished, that is, his life was now finished, he was just
ready to breathe his last, and now he is no more in this world, Jn 17:11. This is like that of blessed Paul (2Ti 4:7), I have
finished my course, my race is run, my glass is out, mene, mene-numbered
and finished. This we must all come to shortly.
(8.) It is finished, that is, the work of man's redemption and
salvation is now completed, at least the hardest part of the
undertaking is over; a full satisfaction is made to the justice of
God, a fatal blow given to the power of Satan, a fountain of grace
opened that shall ever flow, a foundation of peace and happiness laid
that shall never fail. Christ had now gone through with his work, and
finished it, Jn 17:4. For, as for God, his work is perfect; when I
begin, saith he, I will also make an end. And, as in the purchase, so
in the application of the redemption, he that has begun a good work
will perform it; the mystery of God shall be finished.
2. What he did: He bowed his head, and gave up the ghost. He was
voluntary in dying; for he was not only the sacrifice, but the priest
and the offerer; and the animus offerentis-the mind of the offerer,
was all in all in the sacrifice. Christ showed his will in his
sufferings, by which will we are sanctified.
(1.) He gave up the ghost. His life was not forcibly extorted from
him, but freely resigned. He had said, Father, into thy hands I commit
my spirit, thereby expressing the intention of this act. I give up
myself as a ransom for many; and, accordingly, he did give up his
spirit, paid down the price of pardon and life at his Father's hands.
Father, glorify thy name.
(2.) He bowed his head. Those that were crucified, in dying stretched
up their heads to gasp for breath, and did not drop their heads till
they had breathed their last; but Christ, to show himself active in
dying, bowed his head first, composing himself, as it were, to fall
asleep. God had laid upon him the iniquity of us all, putting it upon
the head of this great sacrifice; and some think that by this bowing
of his head he would intimate his sense of the weight upon him. See
Ps. 38:4; Ps 40:12. The bowing of his head shows his submission to
his Father's will, and his obedience to death. He accommodated himself
to his dying work, as Jacob, who gathered up his feet into the bed,
and then yielded up the ghost. - Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole
Bible. |
|
Charles Simeon
(See
fascinating Dr John Piper's biography of this great saint)
Sermon...
CHRIST’S WORK FINISHED
John 19:30. It
is finished.
By Charles Simeon
THESE, with the exception of the
words with which our blessed Lord commended his spirit into his
Father’s hands, were the last words which he spake, previous to his
dissolution. In the original, they are comprehended in one word (tetelestai):
and since the foundation of the world there never was a single word
uttered, in which such diversified and important matter was contained.
Every word indeed that proceeded from our Saviour’s lips deserves the
most attentive consideration: but this eclipses all. To do justice to
it, is beyond the ability of men or angels: its height, and depth, and
length, and breadth, are absolutely unsearchable. But that its import
may be somewhat more clearly seen, we propose to shew,
I. The truths contained in it—
Our blessed Lord not having expressly stated what he alluded to as
finished, we are left to gather his meaning from a general view of
that work which he came to accomplish. We understand then, that when
he uttered this word, the following things were finished:
1. The fulfilment of prophecy—
[Prophecy was of two kinds, one consisting of typical institutions,
the other of positive declarations. Now both these kinds of prophecy
received their accomplishment in the death of Christ.
The brazen serpent, the daily
sacrifice, the burning of the flesh of the sin-offerings without the
camp, with various other ordinances, shadowed forth the death of
Christ by crucifixion without the walls of Jerusalem; and at that
moment, when our Lord was about to resign his spirit, were all
fulfilled: for he was then “suffering without the gate;” (Heb.
13:11, 12) and was “lifted up, that all who believed in him might be
healed” (John 3:14, 15) of their wounds; and was “the Lamb of God
taking away the sin of the world.” (John 1:29)
The declarations of the prophets were so numerous and minute, that a
history of our Lord might be compiled from them, fuller, in many
respects, than is contained in any one of the Evangelists. The person
that betrayed him, the manner in which his trial should be conducted,
the sufferings he should undergo previous to the final execution of
his sentence, the death to which he should be doomed, the persons in
whose company he should suffer, the manner in which his clothes should
be disposed of, the very taunts with which he should be insulted in
his dying hour, were all fulfilled as exactly, as if the agents in
this bloody tragedy had designed to accomplish the predictions
concerning him. There remained only one single prophecy to be
fulfilled: and who would have conceived that ever that should be
fulfilled? It was customary for the friends of the persons who were
executed to give them “wine mingled with myrrh,” in order to blunt the
edge of their sufferings: and the friends of our Lord had offered him
such a potion; but he would not drink of it, because he would do
nothing that should have a tendency to diminish his sufferings (Mark
15:23): but when, in his last moments, he said, “I thirst,” the cruel
soldiers, wishing only to mock him, and augment his anguish (Luke
23:36), dipped a spunge in vinegar, and gave him that to drink; and
thus fulfilled that prophecy of David, “In my thirst they gave me
vinegar to drink (Ps. 69:21). This done, no other prophecy remained
to be fulfilled; and therefore our Lord instantly said, “It is
finished.”]
2. The work of Redemption—
[Two things were undertaken by our Lord, and were to be done by him in
order to man’s redemption; the penalties of the law were to be endured
by him, in order that Divine justice might be satisfied for our sins;
and the demands of the law mere to be obeyed by him, in order that
sinners, who could have no righteousness of their own, might be made
righteous in him. Both these things were now completed. Our blessed
Lord had obeyed the law in its fullest extent: not the smallest defect
could be found in him: man could find none; Satan could find none; God
himself could find none: for “he did always the things that pleased
the Father;” and “in him was no sin.” By his obedience, the law, which
we had violated, was “magnified and made honourable:” and “a
righteousness was brought in,” a righteousness which shall be unto all
and upon all them that believe, and which is amply sufficient for the
justification of all who trust in it. Moreover all was now endured
that was necessary to make an atonement for our sins. Did we deserve
shame, and condemnation, and misery? did we deserve to have the face
of God hid from us, and the vials of his wrath poured out upon us, and
to be consigned over to everlasting death? All this he suffered, as
far as was compatible with his nature, and as far as was necessary for
the satisfaction of Divine justice. He was not indeed actually dead;
but the moment was arrived for his surrendering up his life; and
therefore he could properly say, “It is finished.”]
3. The salvation of man—
[All that was necessary for man’s salvation was now effected. Nothing
remained to be done, in order to the perfecting of his work on earth,
or to the forming of a perfect ground for man’s acceptance with God.
It is true, that man must repent: but he need not to repent in order
to make satisfaction for his sins: no repentance of man can add to the
value of Christ’s sacrifice. Men must repent, in order to justify God
in the denunciations of his wrath, and to evince their abhorrence of
their past ways, and to bring their souls to a fit state for the
enjoyment of God’s mercy: but to atone for sin, he needs not to
repent: the offering of the body of Jesus Christ upon the cross is a
sufficient propitiation for the sins of the whole world. It is true
also, that man must obey: but he need not to obey in order to form for
himself a justifying righteousness before God: he can never add to the
perfection of Christ’s righteousness; and any attempt to add to it
will defeat, instead of furthering, his acceptance through it.
Whatever obedience men may render for the honouring of God, and the
adorning of their profession, they must renounce it utterly in point
of dependence, and must look for salvation solely through the
righteousness of Christ (Php 3:9). Nothing remains for man but to
accept the salvation which Christ has purchased: and if he be enabled
in his last hour (like the dying thief) to rely on the blood and
righteousness of the Lord Jesus, he shall as assuredly be saved, as if
he had repented and obeyed a thousand years. We do not say this to
lessen the importance of repentance and obedience (for in their proper
place they are of infinite importance); but only to explain and
vindicate our Lord’s assertion in the text.]
The meaning of our Lord’s declaration being ascertained, let us bring
forth,
II. The truths to be deduced from it—
Selecting such inferences only as are most prominent, we observe,
1. That there is a sure ground of hope for all who feel their need
of mercy—
[“If persons of a desponding frame would state what they could wish
God to do for them, in order to remove their fears; we are well
persuaded, not only that every thing they can desire has been already
done, but that infinitely more has been done for them than they could
even ask or think. Would they have an atonement made for their sins,
even such an atonement as shall perfectly satisfy Divine justice, and
discharge the utmost farthing of their debt? We must say to them, ‘It
is done;’ “It is finished.” Would they have a perfect righteousness
wrought out for them? Would they be invited and commanded by God
himself to clothe themselves with it as a robe, so that not even the
piercing eye of God should be able to behold a spot or blemish in
them? “It is finished.” Would they have the gift of the Holy Spirit
purchased for them, so that they may be assured of almighty aid in all
their difficulties and conflicts! “It is finished.” Let them state
what they will, (provided it be really calculated to inspire
confidence, and suited to the condition of the Church militant,) and
we do not hesitate to say respecting it, “It is finished.” Why then
should any despond, as though their guilt were too great to be
forgiven, or their corruptions too strong to be subdued? Let the
humble and contrite only reflect on this dying declaration of our
Lord, and they can never want encouragement to trust in him.]
2. That they in whom a good work is begun, have reason to hope that
it shall be carried on and perfected to the day of Christ—
[The work of bringing sinners to repentance, and of renewing them
after the Divine image, is committed to Christ. “He is exalted to be a
Prince and a Saviour, to give repentance and remission of sins.” In
him, according to the Father’s appointment, all fulness dwells; and
out of his fulness all his people are to receive the grace that shall
be needful and sufficient for them. Now if in the arduous work which
Christ undertook to do for men, he persisted till he could say, “It is
finished;” why should he not do the same in the work that he has
engaged to accomplish in them? If he stop short in this, it must be
either from a want of power, or a want of inclination, to persist in
it. But it cannot be from want of power; since it is surely an easier
thing to preserve life than to give it; and therefore if he have given
it, he cannot want power to maintain it. Nor can it be from a want of
inclination; for, if he had not been carried on by an irresistible
inclination to save us, he would not have persisted in his former
work; he would have put away the bitter cup from his lips, instead of
drinking it, as he did, to the very dregs. If therefore he drew not
back in the former case, we may be sure he will not in this case: he
will never cease from working effectually in us, till he can say, “It
is finished.” That this deduction is clear and scriptural, we have
very abundant evidence. The prophet declares, that “He who has laid
the foundation of the spiritual temple, will also finish it:” and that
he will bring forth the top-stone thereof with shoutings, crying,
“Grace, grace, unto it.” On this account the Apostle also calls him,
“The Author and Finisher of our faith;” and declares himself
“confident of this very thing, that He who hath begun the good work,
will perform it till the day of Christ.” (Phil. 1:6) Let believers
then “cast their care on Him who careth for them,” and know assuredly,
that “he will keep the feet of his saints, and “perfect that which
concerneth them.”]
3. That those who have obtained mercy have the strongest possible
incentive to maintain good works—
[We have before stated, that Christ has done every thing that was
necessary for man’s salvation; and that nothing remains for man to add
to the finished work of Christ. But we also noticed, that, though man
has nothing to do for the purpose of meriting salvation, or for laying
a foundation of his acceptance with God, yet in other points of view
he has abundant occasion to work; yea, he is commanded to “work out
his salvation with fear and trembling.” We have no other way of
proving the truth of our faith, or the sincerity of our love, than by
bringing forth the fruits of righteousness. Shall this then be thought
a wearisome task by any of us? Shall we wish to intermit our labours,
or to stop short of the highest attainments? Surely not: for if Christ
finished the work assigned him, because of his love to us, we can do
no less than persist in our work, whereby we are to evidence our love
to him. Let us then “go on towards perfection:” let us “forget what is
behind, and press forward towards that which is before:” let us “work
while our day lasts;” that in the evening of our life we may be able
to say with Christ, “Father, I have glorified thee on earth, I have
finished the work which thou hast given me to do.” Then, while
hypocrites and apostates shall take up this expression in reference to
their hopes, of salvation, and say, “My day of grace is finished, and
all possibility of obtaining mercy is finished;” we shall shout in
heaven, “It is finished, it is finished!” “fears, temptations,
conflicts, are all finished!” “I have fought the good fight, I have
finished my course, I have kept the faith;” and nothing now remains to
me but an eternity of uninterrupted happiness and glory.] (Simeon,
C. 1832-63. Horae Homileticae Vol. 14: John XIII to Acts) |
|
PRIVATE MEDITATIONS
AFTER COMMUNION
"It is finished!"
(John 19:30)
"It is
finished!" (John 19:30). I have listened today in thought, at the Holy
Table of Communion, to this victorious cry. Glorious is the
fulfillment of the prophetic words—"He shall see of the travail of His
soul, and shall be satisfied." A FINISHED work—and so finished and
completed, that, in the retrospect, the divine-human lips could say
with complacency, yes proclaim with unhesitating triumph, "I am
satisfied!" Satisfied!—It was the very dignity and divinity of the
majestic Speaker, which gave such singular meaning and emphasis to the
assertion. The higher our aim, the more refined and elevated our views
and attainments—the less are we satisfied with our own ideals. A
little thing will satisfy a little mind. It requires a great thing to
satisfy a great mind. The child is satisfied with a toy or bauble; the
savage with the trinket—the gaudy bead, or piece of painted
glass—while the civilized and educated art, in very proportion to
their culture, fastidious—swift to detect the literary blemish, or the
faulty note in music; or the crude touch of color on the picture—the
flaw in the otherwise breathing marble. What pleases the unlettered
villager will look poor in the eyes of the man of science.
And so, the higher we ascend in the ranks of being. What must it
require to satisfy the mind of an angel—what must it be to satisfy the
mind of God? Him whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom—whose glory
is set above the heavens—whose power is boundless, His wisdom
infinite; His life-time eternity! Oh, what a work that must be, over
which this all-wise and all-perfect Deity, in contemplating it, can
say—'It is enough; I have reached my own divine Ideal. I am
satisfied.' "Father, I have glorified You on the earth, I have
finished the work You gave me to do!" In that moment of all moments,
when His eyes were about to close in the sleep of death—a gleam of
radiance breaks from His eclipsed soul. He could wish no more—the
world's battle is won. With the smile of ineffable love and
satisfaction on His lips, He cried, and cried "with a loud voice," as
if He would wake the echo of all the ages, in order to proclaim the
completion and the completeness of His victory—IT IS FINISHED!
"Satisfied"—"Finished"—blessed pillow for me to repose on in the
retrospect of today! He has done all, and suffered all, and procured
all for me. I see every attribute of the divine nature magnified.
Justice exulting in the sublime vindication. Truth hastening to meet
Mercy and Mercy meeting Righteousness. Let the rich man glory in his
riches—let the strong man glory in his strength—let the wise man glory
in his wisdom—but God forbid that I should glory, but in the cross of
our Lord Jesus Christ!
One other thought occurs in my contemplation of that mystery of
darkness—that superhuman soul-struggle; ending though it did in so
triumphant a victory. Yet vain, surely, is the question that has been
asked, 'Could not less have satisfied? Could not anguish less dreadful
in its accompaniments have sufficed? Could none of the ignominy and
agony of that bitter path and that bitter cross have been dispensed
with?' The analogy of nature would seem to tell that there is no
useless nor unnecessary expenditure of agency even in the smallest of
the works of God. If it be so with the lowlier divine operations, much
more may we conclude that there will be no superfluous or unnecessary
agency demanded in 'the work of works,'—the work of Redemption. From
the first pang of Bethlehem's Babe in the cradle, until the Great
Surety trampled Satan under His bleeding feet on Calvary, all was
necessary. There was not an unnecessary leaf in that chaplet of sorrow
which the Man of Sorrows wore!
I have been testifying today, through these significant memorials, to
the sufferings of Christ; let me connect them with the glory which is
to follow—anticipating that everlasting communion Sabbath, when the
sufferings and the glory shall be sung in one blended strain by the
ransomed. I have heard the sound of the Bridegroom's feet today; I
have listened to His festal summons to the Feast on earth; let me be
so living, and walking, and watching, and working, that the great
final cry and summons to the Festal Hall of heaven may be met with the
glad response—"Lo, this is our God—we have waited for Him!" (PRIVATE
MEDITATIONS AFTER COMMUNION) |
|
J. C. Hare writes...
I. These words, as uttered by our
Saviour on the cross, have a wide and deep meaning. For as His life
was totally unlike that of all other men, so was His death. He did not
live for Himself, or to Himself, nor as one of many; nor did He die
so. He died, as He had lived, wholly for mankind, according to the
determinate counsel and ordinance of God. Therefore, that which He
declared to be finished when He was about to give up the ghost, must
have been the great work for which He came into the world, and which
was wrought by Him and in Him for all mankind. His warfare, the whole
of that warfare which He came to wage for mankind, was accomplished;
the iniquity of mankind was pardoned—or, at least, the gate of pardon
had been set open for penitent faith. As God's work was the work of
creating the world, and His rest was the rest of governing and
guarding and upholding the world which He had created, so our
Saviour's work was that of renewing man's nature, and of laying the
foundations of His Church—of laying down Himself, His own Incarnate
Deity and Divine humanity, to be its chief corner-stone; and His rest
was that of watching over and directing and strengthening and
sanctifying His Church, and all its members.
II. Although the great work which
Christ came to do was finished once for all on this day, it was not
finished as when we finish a work, and leave it to itself and turn to
something else. It was wrought, even as the work of the creation was,
in order that it might be the teeming parent of countless works of the
same kind—the first in an endless chain, that should girdle the earth
and stretch through all ages. While in one sense it was an end, in
another it was a beginning—an end of the warfare and struggle, which
had been desolating the earth hopelessly ever since the Fall, and a
beginning of the peace, in which the victory won on that day was to
receive its everlasting consummation. He conquered sin and Satan for
us, in order that He might conquer them in us; and that we might
conquer them for Him, through His love constraining and His strength
enabling us. (Sermons in Herstmonceux Church, p. 361.)
The Cross, the Victory over
Sin
I. If we look at the world,
without the knowledge of Christ, without the hope of a Saviour and
deliverer, the whole race of man seems to be dashed about helplessly,
in a rushing whirlpool of sin, or to lie like the host of the
Egyptians, at the bottom and on the shore of the sea. The whole
race of man, without Christ, seems to be under a heavy yoke of sin,
against which they can hardly so much as struggle; and, consequently,
to be under a sweeping sentence of condemnation. If one were to look
abroad over the earth, and to behold what is going on wherever men are
gathered together, and what is lurking and brooding in their hearts—if
one were to behold all this, with a knowledge of sin, of its
hatefulness and deadliness, yet without any knowledge of Christ, and
of the redemption which He has wrought from sin, it could hardly seem
but as though Satan had gained a great victory over God, as though he
must have outwitted God or overpowered Him, as though he had stolen
the earth out of God's keeping, and brought it over to the side of
hell.
II. In the death of Christ was
made manifest how God could be holy, could have a holy hatred
of sin, and yet could have compassion upon sinners; how He could be
just, and yet the Justifier of those who believe in Jesus. The Son
of God became the Son of Man, and took our nature upon Him, and
thereby lifted that nature out of its sinful pollutions into the light
of perfect purity, and bore our sins upon the cross. As sin must needs
die, He too, in that He bore our sins, submitted to death; He bore
them for us, and for us He died; He died that we might live, purged
from our sins in His blood. And thus, as in Adam we had all died, even
so in Christ we were all made alive.
III. This, then, is the great
choice which is set before you in this life. Sin would murder you;
Christ would save you. You are not to fear your sins, as though they
were too mighty for you, seeing that Christ has conquered them on your
behalf. But having such a Leader, such a Captain, such a Bulwark and
Tower of Strength, you are to fight against them boldly and
undauntedly. He who died on the Cross to take away your sins, will
strengthen you to fight against sin, and in His strength you shall
overcome it. (J. C. Hare, Sermons in Herstmonceux Church, p.
151)
C. S. Robinson,
Preacher's Monthly, vol. iv., p. 204.
I. The personal suffering of Christ
was finished.
II. The earthly errand was finished.
III. The human biography was finished.
IV. The official conflict was finished.
V. The Gospel message was finished. |
|
The Pulpit Commentary...
THE FINISHED WORK
From the nature
of the case this could not be more than a mere ejaculation; but the
meaning is plain enough to those who wilt put their minds into a state
to perceive it. Suppose you have a friend who is building a house. You
had been present when the foundation was laid, and from time to time
you had watched the progress of the building. At last your friend
breaks in on you some morning with the cry, “It is finished!” You
would know at once what he meant — that the house was finished. And
your friend would presume on your part a real and lively interest in
hearing the news. So too we must know a good deal of what Jesus said
and did during life, or we shall fail in understanding what he said
and did in the hour of death. He who said, “It is finished!” must also
have had seasons in which he could say, “It is begun,” “It is going
on.”
I. We must
illustrate how JESUS LOOKED FORWARD TO A TIME FOR UTTERING THIS WORD.
Recollect what he said to the disciples by the well: “My meat is to do
the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work.” Recollect also
his word to the Jews after he bad healed the impotent man on the
sabbath day. He speaks there concerning the works which the Father had
given him to finish. Here are specimens of the peculiar and testifying
works of Jesus. Here are declarations by Jesus himself of the uniting
and definite purpose with which his life was bound up. What he talked
of now and then he must have thought of continually. To the
superficial eye, indeed, the life of Jesus did not look as if it had
any definite purpose. How would he have been put down in the
“occupation” column in a census record? Yet the life of Jesus was full
of purpose — purpose never absent, never forgotten. The parable of the
man who went away from home, leaving his money as a trust in the hands
of his servants, is surely a parable out of the very depths of the
Savior's own experience. To him there was given a stewardship of
inestimable value. How the servant with the five talents would look
forward to the surrender and accomplishment of his trust! And just in
this spirit Jesus must have looked forward to the hour when he should
be able to say, “It is finished!”
II. THUS IN THE
INCARNATE LIFE OF JESUS WE HAVE SOMETHING COMPLETE FOR US TO PROFIT
BY. Something complete! The life of Jesus was complete, just as the
life of a seed becomes complete when it has gone through all the cycle
of its changes — germination, budding, blossoming, formation of fruit,
ripening of fruit. The very life of Jesus was a finished work. It was
like a book on the last page of which “Finis “ could be truly written.
Here is the book of a really complete human life. What a difference
between Jesus and many authors and makers of finished things! Many
complete things, things that the world is agreed in calling complete
and precious in their own order, were achieved by very incomplete men.
Read the words of Gibbon the historian, in which he records his
emotions on completing his monumental work. He has succeeded, and yet
in the bottom of his heart he has somehow failed. Thousands are
finishing many things, but never touching the one thing needful. We,
from our life's incompleteness, should look on the completeness of the
life of Jesus, and, while we look, rise into that hope and confidence
which his manifested completeness is meant to give. Here is One who
lived out the life of humanity according to the ideal of him who made
humanity. He never needed to pray,” Forgive me my debts;” for he never
owed a debt he did not pay, never closed a day of life which was not
as full of service as of opportunities of service. And he finished
that we might begin and also (The Pulpit Commentary – Volume 17: John) |
|
"Tetelestai!
It is Finished"
Related Spurgeon Quotes
“IT IS
FINISHED!” hear the dying Savior cry. Your sins have sustained their
death-blow, the robe of your righteousness has received its last
thread; it is done complete, perfect. It needs no addition; it can
never suffer any diminution. Oh, Christian, do lay hold of this
precious thought; I may not be able to state it except in weak terms,
but let not my weakness prevent your apprehending its glory and its
preciousness. It is enough to make a man leap, though his legs were
loaded with irons, and to make him sing though his mouth were gagged,
to think that we are perfectly accepted in Christ, that our
justification is impartial, it does not go to a limited extent, but
goes the whole way. Our unrighteousness is covered; from condemnation
we are entirely and irrevocably free once more. The non-condemnation
is effectual. The royal privilege of justification shall never
miscarry. It shall be brought home to every believer. (Sermon 362)
><>><>><>
Christ has said,
“IT IS FINISHED!” and we must cease to work too, not only with our
hands but with our souls — working no more for life, for that is
given; working no more for justification, for that is concluded; but
today resting in Christ, for “IT IS FINISHED!” and finding peace in
him, for “there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus’ —
leaving all our cares with him, for nothing can separate us from the
love of Christ,” and then giving up our souls to a glorious and
Voracious holy day, which shall be a preparation for the eternal
enjoyment of the perpetual feast of the glorified at the table of God
in heaven. (Sermon 420)
><>><>><>
“IT IS
FINISHED.”—John 19:30. - IN the original Greek of John’s
Gospel, there is only one word for this utterance of our Lord. To
translate it into English, we have to use three words; but when it was
spoken, it was only one,—an ocean of meaning in a drop of language, a
mere drop, for that is all that we can call one word. “IT IS
FINISHED.” Yet it would need all the other words that ever were
spoken, or ever can be spoken, to explain this one word. It is
altogether immeasurable. It is high; I cannot attain to it. It is
deep; I cannot fathom it. “Finished.” I can half imagine the
tone in which our Lord uttered this word, with a holy glorying, a
sense of relief, the bursting out of a heart that had long been shut
up within walls of anguish. “Finished.” It was a Conqueror’s
cry; it was uttered with a loud voice. There is nothing of anguish
about it, there is no wailing in it. It is the cry of One who has
completed a tremendous labour, and is about to die; and ere he utters
his death-prayer, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit,” he
shouts his life’s last hymn in that one word, “Finished.”
(Sermon 2344)
<>><>><>
The Christian is
also saved as to the price that has been paid for him, for this is
done, not in part, but in whole. The substitutionary work that Christ
has offered is not a certain proportion of the work to be done. “IT
IS FINISHED” (John 19:30) was the cry of the Savior before He died,
and so it is complete.
><>><>><>
O my dear souls,
have you seen our Lord stripped for sin amid the tempest of divine
wrath? Have you heard Him cry, “My God, my God, why hast thou
forsaken me” (Matthew 27:46)? If so, you have seen how out of the
old covenant the new was born, like life from between the jaws of
death. Our souls have stood in the midst of the horrible tempest,
half- blinded by the lightning and deafened by the thunder. At last
there has been a rent in the black mantle; a shower of wondrous love
has followed the black tempest; and a voice has been heard, sweeter
than the harps of angels, crying, “IT IS FINISHED” (John 19:30).
><>><>><>
In truth, we
have plenty of reason for resting. We can sit at Jesus’ feet because
our salvation is complete. He said, “IT IS FINISHED” (John
19:30), and He knew that He had wrought it all. The ransom price has
been paid for your soul. Not one drop has been withheld of the blood
that is your purchase. The robe of righteousness (Isa. 61:10) is
woven from top to bottom; there is not one thread for you to add. It
is written, “Ye are complete in him” (Col. 2:10). However frail we
are, we are still “perfect in Christ Jesus” (Col. 1:28), and in
spite of all our sin we are still “accepted in the beloved” (Eph.
1:6). (The Limitless Love of Christ)
><>><>><>
“IT IS
FINISHED” (John 19:30) is the most charming note in all of
Calvary’s music. “It is finished.” The fire has passed upon the
Lamb. He has borne the whole of the wrath that was due to His people.
This is the royal dish of the feast of love. (Power in the Blood)
><>><>><>
There was an
apparent if in this covenant (referring to the OT
prophecy of the New Covenant) at first. That if hinged
upon the question of whether Jesus would obey the law and pay the
ransom, a question that His faithfulness placed beyond doubt. There is
no if in it now. When Jesus bowed His head and said,
“IT IS FINISHED” (John 19:30), there remained no if
in the covenant.
><>><>><>
IT IS
FINISHED - What “it” was
it that was finished? I will not attempt to expound it. It is the
biggest “it” that ever was! Turn it over and you will see that it
will grow, and grow, and grow, and grow, till it fills the whole
earth: “IT IS FINISHED.” "And he bowed his head, and gave up the
ghost." He did not give up the ghost and then bow his head because he
was dead; but he bowed his head as though in the act of worship or as
leaning it down on his Father’s bosom and then gave up the ghost. Thus
have we had two gospel pictures of our dying Lord. May we remember
them and learn the lessons they are intended to teach!
><>><>><>
Just as God
looked on each day’s work and said, “It is good” (Ge 1:4), so, as
He looks upon each part of the work of His dear Son, He can say of it,
“It is good.” The Father joins in the verdict of His Son, that IT
IS FINISHED (John 19:30): all the will of God for the
sanctification of His people is accomplished. Dear Christian, this
work must be applied to us by the Holy Spirit. It is the Holy Spirit
who brings us to know that Jesus Christ has sanctified us, or set us
apart, and made us acceptable with God. It is the Holy Spirit who has
given us the New Testament, and shed a light upon the Old. It is the
Holy Spirit who speaks to us through the ministers of Christ when He
blesses them to help us to our conversion. It is especially the Holy
Spirit who takes away from us all hope of being sanctified before God
by any means of our own, brings us to see our need of cleansing and
reconciliation, and then takes of the things of Christ and reveals
them to us. Not without the going forth of His sacred power are we
made to take the place of separation and dedication, to which the Lord
ordained us from eternity. Thus it is by the will of the Father,
carried out by the Son, and applied by the Holy Spirit, that the
church of God is regarded as sanctified before God, and is acceptable
to Him. I will not dwell any longer on this point, because these great
things are best written of with few words: they are subjects that are
better to be meditated upon by quiet thought than exhibited in
writing. (The Key to Holiness)
><>><>><>
He stands
beneath it (SIN), and bows under it, until the bloody sweat springs
from every pore, and yet He does not yield to its weight in order to
get away from the burden. It presses more heavily; it bows Him to the
dust; it touches His very soul; it makes Him cry in anguish, “My God,
my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” (Matt. 27:46); and yet, at the
last, He lifts Himself up and flings it all away and cries, “IT IS
FINISHED” (John 19:30), and it is gone. There is not a wreck of
it left; no, not an atom of it left. It is all gone at once, and once
for all. He has borne the immeasurable weight and cast it off from His
shoulders forever; and as it lies no more on Him, so also it lies no
more on His people. Sin will never be mentioned against them anymore,
forever. Oh, wondrous deed of Deity! Oh, mighty feat of love
accomplished once for all! The Redeemer never offered Himself to death
before. He never will do it again. (The Key to Holiness)
><>><>><>
Our words fail
and our ideas falter at the thought of the great Substitute, with all
the sins of His people condensed into one black liquid and set before
Him, for Him to drink. Can we think of Him as putting that cup to His
lips, and drinking, drinking, drinking all the wrath, until He had
drained the cup to the bottom and filled Himself with horror? Yet, He
has finished the death-drink and turned the cup upside down, crying,
“IT IS FINISHED” (John 19:30). In one tremendous drink, the
loving Lord has drained destruction dry for all His people, and there
is no dreg nor drop left for any one of them, for now is the will of
God accomplished. (The Key to Holiness)
><>><>><>
You know,
beloved, that the Jew in his ceremonial purification, never had his
conscience free from sin. After one sacrifice, he needed still
another, for these offerings could never make those who came there
perfect. The next day’s sins needed a new lamb, and the next year’s
iniquity needed a new victim for an atonement. “But this man, after
he had offered one sacrifice for sins forever, sat down at the right
hand of God.” (Hebrews 10:12). No more burnt offerings are needed,
no more washing, no more blood, no more atonement, no more sacrifice.
Hear the dying Savior cry “It is finished!” (John 19:30). Your
sins have sustained their death-blow, the robe of your righteousness
has received its last thread. It is done, complete, perfect. It needs
no addition; it can never suffer any diminution. (Strong Faith)
><>><>><>
Jesus Christ
exclaimed, “IT IS FINISHED” (John 19:30). This concerned
Christ’s own labor, but the Holy Spirit cannot say that. The Holy
Spirit still has more to do, and until the consummation of all things,
when the Son Himself becomes subject to the Father, “It is finished”
will not be said by the Holy Spirit. (Holy Spirit Power )
><>><>><>
When Christ said
‘IT IS FINISHED,’ the words had effect on heaven. Before, the saints
had been saved as it were on credit. They had entered heaven, God
having faith in his Son Jesus. Had not Christ finished his work,
surely they must have left their shining spheres, and suffered in
their own persons for their own sins. I might represent heaven, if my
imagination might be allowed a moment, as being ready to totter if
Christ had not finished his work; its stones would have been unloosed;
massive and stupendous though its bastions are, yet had they fallen as
earthly cities reel under the throes of earthquakes. But Christ said,
‘IT IS FINISHED,’ and oath, and covenant, and blood set fast the
dwelling-place of the redeemed, made their mansions safely and
eternally their own, and bade their feet stand immovably upon the
rock. Moreover, that word ‘IT IS FINISHED!’ took effect in the gloomy
caverns and depths of hell. Then Satan bit his iron bands in rage,
howling, ‘I am defeated by the very man whom I thought to overcome; my
hopes are blasted; never shall an elect one come into my prison house,
never a blood-bought one be found in my abode.’ Lost souls mourned
that day, for they said, ‘IT IS FINISHED! and if Christ himself, the
substitute, could not be permitted to go free till he had finished all
his punishment, then we shall never be free.’ It was their double
death-knell, for they said, ‘Alas for us! Justice, which would not
allow the Saviour to escape, will never allow us to be at liberty.
IT IS FINISHED with him, and therefore it shall never be finished for
us.’ (365 Days with Spurgeon Volume 2) |
|
MEDITATION ON
“IT IS FINISHED” (John 19:30-note)
which can also be translated "PAID IN
FULL!" THREE words in English, ONE word in Greek – TETELESTAI!
The GREATEST WORD from the GREATEST MAN on the GREATEST DAY in all
eternity! One word, but no word ever uttered has so changed the
history and destiny of mankind. In Latin tetelestai is rendered with two words “Consummatum est” (It is
consummated!) Jesus spoke 7 times on the Cross (Lk 23:34-note; Jn 19:36-note; Lk
23:42-note; Mt 27:46-note; Jn 19:28,30-note, Lk 23:46-note).
TETELESTAI was Jesus’ next to last word and was followed by “Father,
INTO THY HANDS I COMMIT MY SPIRIT." (Lk 23:46-note).
“IT IS FINISHED!” "Yes, indeed/Finished, ev’ry jot/Sinner, this is all
you need/Tell me, is it not?" (Ira Sankey)
As Spurgeon says
TETELESTAI conveys “an ocean of meaning in a drop of language, a mere
drop. It would need all the other words that ever were spoken, or ever
can be spoken, to explain this one word. It is altogether
immeasurable. It is high; I cannot attain to it. It is deep; I cannot
fathom it. IT IS FINISHED is the most charming note in all of
Calvary’s music. The fire has passed upon the Lamb. He has borne the
whole of the wrath that was due to His people. This is the royal dish
of the feast of love.” J C Ryle wrote that “It is surely not too much
to say, that of all the seven famous sayings of Christ on the cross,
none is more remarkable than TETELESTAI.” A C Gaebelein adds “Never
before and never after was ever spoken ONE WORD which contains and
means so much. It is the shout of the mighty Victor. And who can
measure the depths of this ONE WORD!” A W Pink writes that “Eternity
will be needed to make manifest all that TETELESTAI contains.” Matthew
Henry described TETELESTAI as a "comprehensive word and a comfortable
one." Charles Simeon adds that ‘since the foundation of the world
there never was a single word uttered, in which such diversified and
important matter was contained. Every word indeed that proceeded from
our Saviour’s lips deserves the most attentive consideration: but
TETELESTAI eclipses all. To do justice to it, is beyond the ability of
men or angels: its height, and depth, and length, and breadth, are
absolutely unsearchable."
Clearly to
contemplate TETELESTAI is to come to the realization that “the place
whereon we stand is holy ground.” May the Holy Spirit help us to
comprehend and to handle rightly "this text which is at once so small
and yet so great!"
It has been well
said that Christ’s RESURRECTION is the Father’s “AMEN” to His Son's
declaration “IT IS FINISHED.” Looking at the Cross we see the work of
redemption completed. Looking at the open tomb we see Jesus’ finished
work fully accepted by the Father. The payment required for sin is
death (cf Ge 2:17-note,
Ro 5:12-note,
Ro 6:23-note)
and when Christ said TETELESTAI, He was saying that the sin debt was
“PAID IN FULL!" If you believe that dear reader, His righteousness has
been credited to your account (Ro 4:3-note,
Ro 4:24-note,
Gal 3:6-7-note).
We owed a debt we could never pay. Jesus paid a debt He did not owe!
Tony Evans says "All the funds necessary to pay for our total
redemption were put up by Jesus Christ on the Cross." Or as Warren
Wiersbe put it “He took my bankruptcy and covered it with His
solvency.” He didn’t just make a down payment and then expect me to
keep up the installments. “But now he has appeared once for all at the
end of the ages to do away with sin by the sacrifice of Himself”
(Hebrews 9:26-note).
His empty tomb and His resurrection are indisputable testimony to the
fact that the Father accepted His Son’s payment for sin on our behalf,
as our Substitute. Thus TETELESTAI is not a cry of defeat of a dying
Man, but a cry of triumph of a Living, Life Giving Redeemer, a divine
proclamation that the WORK OF REDEMPTION had been fully, finally and
forever accomplished (cf Jn 4:34-note,
Jn 17:4-note).
Spurgeon
adds "What a grand utterance (is "Tetelestai")! Now are we safe, for
salvation is complete. The (sin) debt was now, to the last farthing,
all discharged. The atonement and propitiation were made once and for
all and forever, by the one offering made in Jesus’ body on the Tree.
There was the cup; Hell was in it; the Savior drank it—not a sip and
then a pause—not a draught (a single act of drinking) and then a
ceasing. He drained it till there is not a dreg left for any of His
people. The great ten-thronged whip of the Law was worn out upon His
back. There is no lash left with which to smite one for whom Jesus
died. The great cannonade ("continuous heavy gunfire") of God’s
justice has exhausted all its ammunition—there is nothing left to be
hurled against a child of God (Beloved, do you believe these great
benefits are yours in Christ?). Sheathed is thy sword, O Justice!
Silenced is thy thunder, O Law! There remains nothing now of all the
griefs and pains and agonies which chosen sinners ought to have
suffered for their sins, for Christ has endured all for His own
beloved (1Th 1:4-note) and IT IS FINISHED. Christ has paid the debt which
all the torments of eternity could not have paid. Once again—when He
said, “IT IS FINISHED,” Jesus had totally destroyed the power of
Satan, of sin and of death. The Champion accepted the challenge to do
battle for our soul’s redemption against all our foes. He met Sin.
Horrible, terrible, all-but omnipotent Sin nailed Him to the Cross.
But in that deed, Christ nailed Sin also to the tree. There they both
did hang together—Sin and Sin’s Destroyer. Sin destroyed Christ and by
that destruction Christ destroyed Sin."
TETELESTAI
is the perfect tense (see below) of the verb teleo which is derived
from telos (a goal achieved, a consummation, a result attained) and
means to bring something to a successful end to or to its intended or
destined goal. It does not mean just to complete a task but to carry
it out fully, to bring it to the finish or to perfection. It follows
that Jesus’ cry of TETELESTAI is a word of finality. The idea is “It
is finished, it stands finished, and it always will be finished!” His
work of redemption is complete and nothing needs to be or can be added
to it. Sin is atoned for (Heb 9:12-note,
Heb 10:12-note),
Satan is defeated and rendered powerless (Heb 2:14-15-note,
1Jn 3:8), every requirement of the Law has been satisfied and God’s
holy wrath against sin has been satisfied (or propitiated) (Ro 3:25-note,
Heb 2:17-note,
1Jn 2:2, 4:10). Redemption is eternally secured. We are reconciled in
Christ's "fleshly body through death" that we might be presented
before God "holy and blameless and beyond reproach." (Col 1:22-note).
Speaking of Christ's cry of TETELESTAI, Frank Boreham makes the
interesting observation that "This divine self-satisfaction appears
only twice, once in each Testament. When He completed the work of
Creation, He looked upon it and said that it was "very good," (Ge
1:31-note)
when He completed the Work of Redemption, He cried with a loud voice
TETELESTAI! (Jn 19:30) It means (in essence) the same thing."
THE PERFECT
TENSE: TETELESTAI is in the perfect tense which describes a PAST
completed act with PRESENT effect, emphasizing that the past completed
event of Christ's death on the Cross has ongoing, even permanent
effects. Jesus’ sacrifice may have occurred in time and space, but its
results will last for eternity! In other words, when Jesus declared
“IT IS FINISHED”, He was saying that His mission to redeem sinners had
reached its intended goal and that the benefits to the redeemed would
last throughout eternity. Erwin Lutzer adds that "This means that my
sins are on Jesus, not on me. Yes, there is sin within me but not on
me. My sinful nature keeps luring me toward sin, and even in my best
moments my works are tainted with selfish motives. But legally, I am
accepted on the basis of the merit of Jesus. Figuratively speaking, I
have a new set of clothes and a clear record in heaven. The
righteousness of Jesus has been (forever) credited to my account." All
that truth in one Greek tense! Beloved our Redeemer's ransom payment
is sufficient for this life and the life to come! May God enable us by
His Spirit, to live victoriously in light of the truth of this "Word
of the Cross" (especially the great word "tetelestai") which is the
"power of God" to us "who are being saved (daily by the Spirit)" (1Cor
1:18-note).
Observe how the
word TETELESTAI was commonly used in the ancient world:
(1) SERVANTS:
Servant used TETELESTAI when reporting to their master, “I have
COMPLETED (TETELESTAI) the work assigned to me”. In another ancient
secular Greek text we read of the example of a father sending his son
on a mission. The son was not to return until he had performed the
last act of the mission. When he did return from a successful mission,
he used the word TETELESTAI to report to his father that he had
accomplished the goal. As Jesus Himself testified “I have come down
from heaven, not to do My own will, but the will of Him who sent Me.
The Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give
His life a ransom for many. My food is to do the will of Him who sent
Me, and to ACCOMPLISH (teleioo - also derived from telos = goal) His
work. I glorified Thee on the earth, having ACCOMPLISHED (teleioo) the
work which Thou hast given Me to do. (And so He laid) down His life
for His friends." (Jn 6:38-note,
Mk 10:45, Jn 4:34-note,
Jn 17:4-note,
Jn 15:13-note)
(2) PRIESTS:
Priests would examine animals for blemishes before they were
sacrificed. If the lamb was faultless, perfect, and acceptable, the
priest would say, "TETELESTAI!" Jesus is the Lamb of God Who alone was
“without sin” (Heb 4:15-note,
cf Jn 1:29-note,
1Cor 5:7-note).
As Peter testifies we “were not redeemed with perishable things like
silver or gold from your futile way of life inherited from your
forefathers, but with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and
spotless, the blood of Christ.” (1Pe 1:18-19-note)
(3) ARTISTS:
Frank Boreham writes that "When the painter or the sculptor had put
the last finishing touches to the vivid landscape or the marble bust,
he would stand back a few feet to admire his masterpiece, and, seeing
in it nothing that called for correction or improvement, would murmur
fondly, ‘Tetelestai!’ ‘Tetelestai!’" "IT IS FINISHED!” All the Old
Testament “pictures” (types) of Messiah were fulfilled in Christ and
were only a “shadow of what is to come; but the substance (reality)
belongs to Christ.” (Col 2:17-note).
The death of Jesus on the Cross “finished the picture” of redemption,
a masterpiece which had been in the Father's heart “from before the
foundation of the world” (1Pe 1:20-note,
2Ti 1:9-note).
(4) MERCHANTS:
In ancient times when a promissory note was paid, the one holding the
note wrote “TETELESTAI” across it. A deed to property was not in
effect until it was dated and signed, and when this was accomplished,
the clerk wrote “TETELESTAI” across the deed. When someone had a debt
and it was paid off, the creditor would write "TETELESTAI" on the
certificate of debt signifying that it was "PAID IN FULL". Several
years ago, archaeologists digging in Egypt uncovered the "office" of
an ancient "CPA." In this office they found a stack of bills, with the
Greek word "tetelestai" inscribed across each bill - "Paid in full"!
When Christ gave Himself on the Cross, He fulfilled all the righteous
demands of the law and our "sin debt" was PAID IN FULL. The OT
sacrifices covered sin but could never take sin away. Jesus
accomplished what all of the old covenant sacrifices could not do. "In
eternity the Son gave the Father a "promissory note" that He would pay
the price for humanity’s redemption (see Heb 10:5–7-note).
On Calvary the note was PAID IN FULL. TETELESTAI!" (H H Hobbs) As
Spurgeon said "There is no mortgage on the saints." Wayne Grudem adds
that "If Christ had not paid the full penalty, there would still be
condemnation left for us. But since he has paid the full penalty that
is due to us, “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who
are in Christ Jesus” (Ro 8:1-note).
(5) PRISONERS:
When a Roman citizen was convicted of a crime, he was thrown into
prison. A "Certificate of Debt" listing all his crimes was nailed to
his cell door so that anyone passing by could know what he had been
accused of and the penalty assessed. When the prisoner had served his
sentence and was released from bondage, the indictment was taken down
from the door and the judge who had put him in prison would sign the
indictment and write across it the word TETELESTAI. The freed prisoner
was then given this document and if questioned as to why he was out of
jail, he could point to the indictment across which the judge had
written TETELESTAI. He could rest in safety and security because the
word TETELESTAI guaranteed his deliverance and his liberty. The
charges for those crimes could never again be brought against him. He
would never be a victim of "double jeopardy" (having to pay for the
same crime twice). When Jesus cried "TETELESTAI" on the cross, He was
saying that anyone who places his trust in His sacrificial death on
their behalf, receives in essence a "certificate of debt" with the
inscription of "tetelestai", indicating that all their "crimes" (past,
present and future) against God have been PAID FOR IN FULL! In
light of this truth, Paul could write that because our debt was PAID
IN FULL by Jesus, God “has forgiven you all your sins: Christ has
utterly wiped out (Greek = completely obliterated) the condemning
evidence of broken laws and commandments which always hung over our
heads, and has completely annulled it by nailing it over His own head
on the Cross. And then having drawn the sting of all the powers ranged
against us, He exposed them, shattered, empty and defeated, in His
final glorious triumphant act!" (Col 2:14-15 Phillips-note)
Erwin Lutzer adds that "On the cross, the justice of God was fully
satisfied when our heavenly Substitute paid the great price of ransom.
As Spurgeon put it, we can stand with confidence despite the thunder
of the law and the lightening flash of justice, “for we are safe
beneath the cross.” He paid the very last cent of the wages of our
sin."
Beloved, Satan
may accuse us of "high treason" against God (read Rev 12:10-note),
but now and forever "we have an Advocate (paraclete) with the Father,
Jesus Christ the Righteous" (1Jn 2:1-2-note)
Who cries "I object" to every accusation of the Adversary, to which
the Father says "Objection Sustained!" Yes, when we sin, we need to
confess and repent in order to enjoy fellowship with God (1Jn 1:9-note), but our our eternal salvation is never
in doubt or subject to "double jeopardy" because Christ has
once and for all time cried
"TETELESTAI!" Beloved child of God, if you have a sin
regarding which you find it difficult to accept the Father's full
forgiveness, let your mind dwell on the truth of "TETELESTAI," and
then put that sin on God's ledger and write “Paid in Full” next to it!
The truth inherent in the word TETELESTAI should give every
believer great assurance, comfort and peace that all of our sin debt,
past, present and future, is PAID IN FULL and there remains no
sacrifice to be paid! There is nothing we must or even could
contribute to the remission of our debt, except receive the "free gift
of eternal life" by faith (Ro 6:23b-note).
Jesus "having offered one sacrifice for sins for all time, sat down at
the right hand of God." (Heb 10:12-note).
As the hymn writer E M Hall put it "Jesus paid it all, All to Him I
owe; Sin had left a crimson stain, He washed it white as snow."
Andrew Murray
writes that “every day that our confidence grows fuller in Christ's
FINISHED WORK must see our heart more entirely yielding itself like
Him, a whole burnt offering in the service of God and His love.”
Spurgeon
says that “The general religion of mankind is “DO,” but the religion
of a true Christian is “DONE.” IT IS FINISHED is the believer’s
conquering word. INCARNATE LOVE has fulfilled His self-imposed task.
Jesus, as the Substitute for sinners, was condemned to die, and He
died that He might finish the work of our redemption. Your sins have
sustained their death-blow, the robe of your righteousness has
received its last thread (cf 1Cor 1:30-note,
2Cor 5:21-note).
It is done, complete, perfect. It needs no addition; it can NEVER
suffer any diminution. Oh, Christian, do lay hold of this precious
thought. I may not be able to state it except in weak terms, but let
not my weakness prevent your apprehending its glory and its
preciousness. This thought is enough to make a man leap, though his
legs were chained with irons, and to make him sing, though his mouth
were gagged. We are PERFECTLY ACCEPTED in Christ, and our
justification is not partial (cf Ro 5:1-note,
Ro 5:9-note,
Ro 8:30-note).
It does not go to a limited extent, but goes the whole way. Our
unrighteousness is covered. From condemnation we are entirely and
irrevocably free. 'Consummatum est. The work is done, redemption is
accomplished; the salvation of My people is forever secured. Sin will
never be mentioned against them anymore, forever. Oh, wondrous deed of
Deity! Oh, mighty feat of love accomplished once for all!"
J C Ryle
encourages us to REST our souls on the finished work of Christ (Heb
4:10-11-note)
noting that “We need not fear that either sin or Satan or law shall
condemn us at the last day. We may lean back on the thought, that we
have a Savior Who has done all, paid all, accomplished all, performed
all that is necessary for our salvation. We may take up the challenge
of the Apostle, "Who is the one who condemns? (cf Ro 8:1-note)
Christ Jesus is He Who died, yes, rather Who was raised, Who is at the
right hand of God; Who also (continually) intercedes for us." (Ro
8:34-note).
When we look at our own works, we may well feel ashamed of their
imperfections. But when we look at the FINISHED WORK of Christ, we may
feel peace (cf Heb 12:2-note)."
Hallelujah!
Spurgeon
“Christ has said, “IT IS FINISHED!” and we must cease to work too (Ro
4:3-note),
not only with our hands but with our souls—working no more for life,
for that is given; working no more for justification, for that is
concluded; but to-day RESTING in Christ (cp Ro 4:5-6-note,
Mt 11:28-30-note)
for “It is finished!” There is nothing for God to do. “IT IS FINISHED.” There is nothing for you to do. “IT
IS FINISHED.” Christ
need not bleed. “IT IS FINISHED.” You need not weep. “IT IS FINISHED.”
God the Holy Spirit need not delay because of your unworthiness, nor
need you delay because of your helplessness. “IT IS FINISHED.” Every
stumbling block is rolled out of the road; every gate is opened. The
bars of brass are broken, the gates of iron are burst asunder. “IT IS
FINISHED.” Come and welcome; come and welcome!." This is exactly
what the great
missionary Hudson Taylor, founder of China Inland Mission, did
as he meditated on “IT IS FINISHED” writing that “There dawned upon
me the joyous conviction that since the whole work was finished and
the whole debt was paid upon the Cross there was nothing for me to do
but to fall upon my knees, accept the Savior and praise Him
forevermore.” Amen!
The evangelist
Alexander Wooten was approached by a young man who asked, “What
must I DO to be saved?” Wooten replied “It’s too late!” The young man
became alarmed asking “Do you mean that it’s too late for me to be
saved? Is there nothing I can DO?” Wooten replied “Too late! It’s
already been DONE! (IT IS FINISHED!) The only thing you can DO is
BELIEVE.”
It is done.
Tetelestai. Finished!
"Jesus Paid It
All" from Passion 2006...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brVIlXlJRkQ
Lifted up was He to die,
“It is finished,” was His cry;
Now in heaven exalted high;
Hallelujah! what a Saviour.
-Phillip Bliss
Hallelujah, What a Savior - Shelly Moore Band
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2j0rYJI37yg |
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