|
The Bible
does not directly tell us why Jesus asked this question,
so we can only speculate. The text is apparently a
quotation from the Septuagint version of Psalm 22:1.
While some have argued for it to exclusively refer to the
Messiah, it was probably David speaking at times
figuratively about the persecution that he underwent by
King Saul, during his reign.
During
this persecution David may have naturally felt that he had
been forsaken by God, though his relationship with God had
not actually changed. Keil and Delitzsch explain this: “The
sufferer feels himself rejected of God; the feeling of
divine wrath has completely
enshrouded him; and still he knows himself to
be joined to God in fear and
love; his present condition belies the real
nature of his relationship to
God; and it is just this contradiction that urges
him to the plaintive question,
which comes up from the lowest depths:
Why
hast Thou forsaken me?”
Jesus may well have quoted this text as a response to the
suffering that he was enduring through his execution, but
in knowing that Jesus had long anticipated his own death
we find such a position unfitting.
In the account of Job we recall that Satan
challenged that Job’s grounds for loyalty were not his
desire to be obedient or his love for God, but in what he
received from God. He stated: “Does
Job fear God for nothing? Have You not made a hedge for
him, and for his house, and for all that is his all
around? You have blessed the work of his hands, and his
livestock have increased in the land.” (Job 1:9-10) God
had greatly blessed Job, giving him much material wealth
and physical protection and so Satan argued that it was
only because of what God had given him that Job proved
loyal.
God had
also given something to Jesus, but it was not any material
possession. It was the Holy Spirit. This came upon Jesus
at his baptism. (Mat. 3:16) Jesus spoke of the Holy
Spirit as a “comforter” (Joh. 14:26) and it is not
unreasonable to conclude that this Spirit was also
providing Jesus with comfort during the time of his
torture and execution. Were Jesus to remain in the
comfort of the Holy Spirit throughout his entire execution
could Satan not have come back and said to God: “It is for
nothing that he remained loyal to the point of death? Did
you not continue to comfort him with your Spirit?” Indeed
he could have and from what we see in the account of Job,
most certainly he would have.
For Jesus
to serve as the last Adam (1Cor. 15:45) it would be
reasonable to conclude that he would have to die just as
Adam did, which is without the intervention of God. He
would have to make the choice for himself. Jesus could
have taken himself down from the stauros that he was hung
upon and stopped everything then and there. It was within
his power. He could have chosen the selfish course and
saved himself rather than mankind. He could have
dismissed God’s will. He had to choose, without any
special guidance and comfort from God, for himself. Only
by doing this could the sacrifice be truly pure and free
from accusation on the part of Satan. Only then could it
be as in the Garden of Eden when Adam and Eve were tempted
without special guidance from God.
In light of these points, we
find it to be likely that God removed his Spirit from
Christ, leaving him to endure these things without this
additional comfort. It may have been unexpected. In
agony Jesus may not have been anticipating that this would
occur or perhaps he did not know when it would. Such a
sudden removal would naturally cause his outcry. We are
then taken back to David’s words: “Do
not cast me out from Your presence, and do not take Your
Holy Spirit from me.” (Psa. 51:11) God had apparently
taken his Spirit from Jesus, and thus he “forsook” him.
Delitzsch, F.,
and C. F. Keil. Commentary on the Old Testament,10
vols. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, repr. 1978.)
|