In company with His disciples, the Saviour
slowly made His way to the garden of Gethsemane. The Passover moon, broad and
full, shone from a cloudless sky. The city of pilgrims' tents was hushed into
silence.
Jesus had been earnestly conversing with His
disciples and instructing them; but as He neared Gethsemane, He became
strangely silent. He had often visited this spot for meditation and prayer;
but never with a heart so full of sorrow as upon this night of His last agony.
Throughout His life on earth He had walked in the light of God's presence.
When in conflict with men who were inspired by the very spirit of Satan, He
could say, "He that sent Me is with Me: the Father hath not left Me
alone; for I do always those things that please Him." John 8:29. But now
He seemed to be shut out from the light of God's sustaining presence. Now He
was numbered with the transgressors. The guilt of fallen humanity He must
bear. Upon Him who knew no sin must be laid the iniquity of us all. So
dreadful does sin appear to Him, so great is the weight of guilt which He must
bear, that He is tempted to fear it will shut Him out forever from His
Father's love. Feeling how terrible is the wrath of God against transgression,
He exclaims, "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death."
As they approached the garden, the disciples
had marked the change that came over their Master. Never before had they seen
Him so utterly
Page 686
sad and silent. As He proceeded, this strange
sadness deepened; yet they dared not question Him as to the cause. His form
swayed as if He were about to fall. Upon reaching the garden, the disciples
looked anxiously for His usual place of retirement, that their Master might
rest. Every step that He now took was with laboured effort. He groaned aloud,
as if suffering under the pressure of a terrible burden. Twice His companions
supported Him, or He would have fallen to the earth.
Near the entrance to the garden, Jesus left all
but three of the disciples, bidding them pray for themselves and for Him. With
Peter, James, and John, He entered its secluded recesses. These three
disciples were Christ's closest companions. They had beheld His glory on the
mount of transfiguration; they had seen Moses and Elijah talking with Him;
they had heard the voice from heaven; now in His great struggle, Christ
desired their presence near Him. Often they had passed the night with Him in
this retreat. On these occasions, after a season of watching and prayer, they
would sleep undisturbed at a little distance from their Master, until He awoke
them in the morning to go forth anew to labour. But now He desired them to
spend the night with Him in prayer. Yet He could not bear that even they
should witness the agony He was to endure.
"Tarry ye here," He said, "and
watch with Me."
He went a little distance from them--not so far
but that they could both see and hear Him--and fell prostrate upon the ground.
He felt that by sin He was being separated from His Father. The gulf was so
broad, so black, so deep, that His spirit shuddered before it. This agony He
must not exert His divine power to escape. As man He must suffer the
consequences of man's sin. As man He must endure the wrath of God against
transgression.
Christ was now standing in a different attitude
from that in which He had ever stood before. His suffering can best be
described in the words of the prophet, "Awake, O sword, against My
shepherd, and against the man that is My fellow, saith the Lord of
hosts." Zech. 13:7. As the substitute and surety for sinful man, Christ
was suffering under divine justice. He saw what justice meant. Hitherto He had
been as an intercessor for others; now He longed to have an intercessor for
Himself.
As Christ felt His unity with the Father broken
up, He feared that in His human nature He would be unable to endure the coming
conflict with the powers of darkness. In the wilderness of temptation the
destiny of the human race had been at stake. Christ was then conqueror. Now
Page 687
the tempter had come for the last fearful
struggle. For this he had been preparing during the three years of Christ's
ministry. Everything was at stake with him. If he failed here, his hope of
mastery was lost; the kingdoms of the world would finally become Christ's; he
himself would be overthrown and cast out. But if Christ could be overcome, the
earth would become Satan's kingdom, and the human race would be forever in his
power. With the issues of the conflict before Him, Christ's soul was filled
with dread of separation from God. Satan told Him that if He became the surety
for a sinful world, the separation would be eternal. He would be identified
with Satan's kingdom, and would nevermore be one with God.
And what was to be gained by this sacrifice?
How hopeless appeared the guilt and ingratitude of men! In its hardest
features Satan pressed the situation upon the Redeemer: The people who claim
to be above all others in temporal and spiritual advantages have rejected You.
They are seeking to destroy You, the foundation, the centre and seal of the
promises made to them as a peculiar people. One of Your own disciples, who has
listened to Your instruction, and has been among the foremost in church
activities, will betray You. One of Your most zealous followers will deny You.
All will forsake You. Christ's whole being abhorred the thought. That those
whom He had undertaken to save, those whom He loved so much, should unite in
the plots of Satan, this pierced His soul. The conflict was terrible. Its
measure was the guilt of His nation, of His accusers and betrayer, the guilt
of a world lying in wickedness. The sins of men weighed heavily upon Christ,
and the sense of God's wrath against sin was crushing out His life.
Behold Him contemplating the price to be paid
for the human soul. In His agony He clings to the cold ground, as if to
prevent Himself from being drawn farther from God. The chilling dew of night
falls upon His prostrate form, but He heeds it not. From His pale lips comes
the bitter cry, "O My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from
Me." Yet even now He adds, "Nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou
wilt."
The human heart longs for sympathy in
suffering. This longing Christ felt to the very depths of His being. In the
supreme agony of His soul He came to His disciples with a yearning desire to
hear some words of comfort from those whom He had so often blessed and
comforted, and shielded in sorrow and distress. The One who had always had
words of sympathy for them was now suffering superhuman agony, and He longed
to know that they were praying for Him and for themselves.
Page 688
How dark seemed the malignity of sin! Terrible
was the temptation to let the human race bear the consequences of its own
guilt, while He stood innocent before God. If He could only know that His
disciples understood and appreciated this, He would be strengthened.
Rising with painful effort, He staggered to the
place where He had left His companions. But He "findeth them
asleep." Had He found them praying, He would have been relieved. Had they
been seeking refuge in God, that satanic agencies might not prevail over them,
He would have been comforted by their steadfast faith. But they had not heeded
the repeated warning, "Watch and pray." At first they had been much
troubled to see their Master, usually so calm and dignified, wrestling with a
sorrow that was beyond comprehension. They had prayed as they heard the strong
cries of the sufferer. They did not intend to forsake their Lord, but they
seemed paralysed by a stupor which they might have shaken off if they had
continued pleading with God. They did not realise the necessity of
watchfulness and earnest prayer in order to withstand temptation.
Just before He bent His footsteps to the
garden, Jesus had said to the disciples, "All ye shall be offended
because of Me this night." They had given Him the strongest assurance
that they would go with Him to prison and to death. And poor, self-sufficient
Peter had added, "Although all shall be offended, yet will not I."
Mark 14:27, 29. But the
Page 689
disciples trusted to themselves. They did not
look to the mighty Helper as Christ had counselled them to do. Thus when the
Saviour was most in need of their sympathy and prayers, they were found
asleep. Even Peter was sleeping.
And John, the loving disciple who had leaned
upon the breast of Jesus, was asleep. Surely, the love of John for his Master
should have kept him awake. His earnest prayers should have mingled with those
of his loved Saviour in the time of His supreme sorrow. The Redeemer had spent
entire nights praying for His disciples, that their faith might not fail.
Should Jesus now put to James and John the question He had once asked them,
"Are ye able to drink of the cup that I shall drink of, and to be
baptised with the baptism that I am baptised with?" they would not have
ventured to answer, "We are able." Matt. 20:22.
The disciples awakened at the voice of Jesus,
but they hardly knew Him, His face was so changed by anguish. Addressing
Peter, Jesus said, "Simon, sleepest thou? couldest not thou watch one
hour? Watch ye and pray, lest ye enter into temptation. The spirit truly is
ready, but the flesh is weak." The weakness of His disciples awakened the
sympathy of Jesus. He feared that they would not be able to endure the test
which would come upon them in His betrayal and death. He did not reprove them,
but said, "Watch ye and pray, lest ye enter into temptation." Even
in His great agony, He was seeking to excuse their weakness. "The spirit
truly is ready," He said, "but the flesh is weak."
Again the Son of God was seized with superhuman
agony, and fainting and exhausted, He staggered back to the place of His
former struggle. His suffering was even greater than before. As the agony of
soul came upon Him, "His sweat was as it were great drops of blood
falling down to the ground." The cypress and palm trees were the silent
witnesses of His anguish. From their leafy branches dropped heavy dew upon His
stricken form, as if nature wept over its Author wrestling alone with the
powers of darkness.
A short time before, Jesus had stood like a
mighty cedar, withstanding the storm of opposition that spent its fury upon
Him. Stubborn wills, and hearts filled with malice and subtlety, had striven
in vain to confuse and overpower Him. He stood forth in divine majesty as the
Son of God. Now He was like a reed beaten and bent by the angry storm. He had
approached the consummation of His work a conqueror, having at each step
gained the victory over the powers of darkness. As
Page 690
one already glorified, He had claimed oneness
with God. In unfaltering accents He had poured out His songs of praise. He had
spoken to His disciples in words of courage and tenderness. Now had come the
hour of the power of darkness. Now His voice was heard on the still evening
air, not in tones of triumph, but full of human anguish. The words of the
Saviour were borne to the ears of the drowsy disciples, "O My Father, if
this cup may not pass away from Me, except I drink it, Thy will be done."
The first impulse of the disciples was to go to
Him; but He had bidden them tarry there, watching unto prayer. When Jesus came
to them, He found them still sleeping. Again He had felt a longing for
companionship, for some words from His disciples which would bring relief, and
break the spell of darkness that well-nigh overpowered Him. But their eyes
were heavy; "neither wist they what to answer Him." His presence
aroused them. They saw His face marked with the bloody sweat of agony, and
they were filled with fear. His anguish of mind they could not understand.
"His visage was so marred more than any man, and His form more than the
sons of men." Isa. 52:14.
Turning away, Jesus sought again His retreat,
and fell prostrate, overcome by the horror of a great darkness. The humanity
of the Son of God trembled in that trying hour. He prayed not now for His
disciples that their faith might not fail, but for His own tempted, agonised
soul. The awful moment had come--that moment which was to decide the destiny
of the world. The fate of humanity trembled in the balance. Christ might even
now refuse to drink the cup apportioned to guilty man. It was not yet too
late. He might wipe the bloody sweat from His brow, and leave man to perish in
his iniquity. He might say, Let the transgressor receive the penalty of his
sin, and I will go back to My Father. Will the Son of God drink the bitter cup
of humiliation and agony? Will the innocent suffer the consequences of the
curse of sin, to save the guilty? The words fall tremblingly from the pale
lips of Jesus, "O My Father, if this cup may not pass away from Me,
except I drink it, Thy will be done."
Three times has He uttered that prayer. Three
times has humanity shrunk from the last, crowning sacrifice. But now the
history of the human race comes up before the world's Redeemer. He sees that
the transgressors of the law, if left to themselves, must perish. He sees the
helplessness of man. He sees the power of sin. The woes and lamentations of a
doomed world rise before Him. He beholds its impending
Page 693
fate, and His decision is made. He will save
man at any cost to Himself. He accepts His baptism of blood, that through Him
perishing millions may gain everlasting life. He has left the courts of
heaven, where all is purity, happiness, and glory, to save the one lost sheep,
the one world that has fallen by transgression. And He will not turn from His
mission. He will become the propitiation of a race that has willed to sin. His
prayer now breathes only submission: "If this cup may not pass away from
Me, except I drink it, Thy will be done."
Having made the decision, He fell dying to the
ground from which He had partially risen. Where now were His disciples, to
place their hands tenderly beneath the head of their fainting Master, and
bathe that brow, marred indeed more than the sons of men? The Saviour trod the
wine press alone, and of the people there was none with Him.
But God suffered with His Son. Angels beheld
the Saviour's agony. They saw their Lord enclosed by legions of satanic
forces, His nature weighed down with a shuddering, mysterious dread. There was
silence in heaven. No harp was touched. Could mortals have viewed the
amazement of the angelic host as in silent grief they watched the Father
separating His beams of light, love, and glory from His beloved Son, they
would better understand how offensive in His sight is sin.
The worlds unfallen and the heavenly angels had
watched with intense interest as the conflict drew to its close. Satan and his
confederacy of evil, the legions of apostasy, watched intently this great
crisis in the work of redemption. The powers of good and evil waited to see
what answer would come to Christ's thrice-repeated prayer. Angels had longed
to bring relief to the divine sufferer, but this might not be. No way of
escape was found for the Son of God. In this awful crisis, when everything was
at stake, when the mysterious cup trembled in the hand of the sufferer, the
heavens opened, a light shone forth amid the stormy darkness of the crisis
hour, and the mighty angel who stands in God's presence, occupying the
position from which Satan fell, came to the side of Christ. The angel came not
to take the cup from Christ's hand, but to strengthen Him to drink it, with
the assurance of the Father's love. He came to give power to the divine-human
suppliant. He pointed Him to the open heavens, telling Him of the souls that
would be saved as the result of His sufferings. He assured Him that His Father
is greater and more powerful than Satan, that His death would result in the
utter discomfiture of Satan, and that the kingdom of this world would be given
to the saints of the Most High. He told Him that He
Page 694
would see of the travail of His soul, and be
satisfied, for He would see a multitude of the human race saved, eternally
saved.
Christ's agony did not cease, but His
depression and discouragement left Him. The storm had in nowise abated, but He
who was its object was strengthened to meet its fury. He came forth calm and
serene. A heavenly peace rested upon His bloodstained face. He had borne that
which no human being could ever bear; for He had tasted the sufferings of
death for every man.
The sleeping disciples had been suddenly
awakened by the light surrounding the Saviour. They saw the angel bending over
their prostrate Master. They saw him lift the Saviour's head upon his bosom,
and point toward heaven. They heard his voice, like sweetest music, speaking
words of comfort and hope. The disciples recalled the scene upon the mount of
transfiguration. They remembered the glory that in the temple had encircled
Jesus, and the voice of God that spoke from the cloud. Now that same glory was
again revealed, and they had no further fear for their Master. He was under
the care of God; a mighty angel had been sent to protect Him. Again the
disciples in their weariness yield to the strange stupor that overpowers them.
Again Jesus finds them sleeping.
Looking sorrowfully upon them He says,
"Sleep on now, and take your rest: behold, the hour is at hand, and the
Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners."
Even as He spoke these words, He heard the
footsteps of the mob in search of Him, and said, "Rise, let us be going:
behold, he is at hand that doth betray Me."
No traces of His recent agony were visible as
Jesus stepped forth to meet His betrayer. Standing in advance of His disciples
He said, "Whom seek ye?" They answered, "Jesus of
Nazareth." Jesus replied, "I am He." As these words were
spoken, the angel who had lately ministered to Jesus moved between Him and the
mob. A divine light illuminated the Saviour's face, and a dovelike form
overshadowed Him. In the presence of this divine glory, the murderous throng
could not stand for a moment. They staggered back. Priests, elders, soldiers,
and even Judas, fell as dead men to the ground.
The angel withdrew, and the light faded away.
Jesus had opportunity to escape, but He remained, calm and self-possessed. As
one glorified He stood in the midst of that hardened band, now prostrate and
helpless at His feet. The disciples looked on, silent with wonder and awe.
Page 695
But quickly the scene changed. The mob started
up. The Roman soldiers, the priests and Judas, gathered about Christ. They
seemed ashamed of their weakness, and fearful that He would yet escape. Again
the question was asked by the Redeemer, "Whom seek ye?" They had had
evidence that He who stood before them was the Son of God, but they would not
be convinced. To the question, "Whom seek ye?" again they answered,
"Jesus of Nazareth." The Saviour then said, "I have told you
that I am He: if therefore ye seek Me, let these go their way"--pointing
to the disciples. He knew how weak was their faith, and He sought to shield
them from temptation and trial. For them He was ready to sacrifice Himself.
Judas the betrayer did not forget the part he
was to act. When the mob entered the garden, he had led the way, closely
followed by the high priest. To the pursuers of Jesus he had given a sign,
saying, "Whomsoever I shall kiss, that same is He: hold Him fast."
Matt. 26:48. Now he pretends to have no part with them. Coming close to
Page 696
Jesus, he takes His hand as a familiar friend.
With the words, "Hail, Master," he kisses Him repeatedly, and
appears to weep as if in sympathy with Him in His peril.
Jesus said to him, "Friend, wherefore art
thou come?" His voice trembled with sorrow as He added, "Judas,
betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss?" This appeal should have
aroused the conscience of the betrayer, and touched his stubborn heart; but
honour, fidelity, and human tenderness had forsaken him. He stood bold and
defiant, showing no disposition to relent. He had given himself up to Satan,
and he had no power to resist him. Jesus did not refuse the traitor's kiss.
The mob grew bold as they saw Judas touch the
person of Him who had so recently been glorified before their eyes. They now
laid hold of Jesus, and proceeded to bind those precious hands that had ever
been employed in doing good.
The disciples had thought that their Master
would not suffer Himself to be taken. For the same power that had caused the
mob to fall as dead men could keep them helpless, until Jesus and His
companions should escape. They were disappointed and indignant as they saw the
cords brought forward to bind the hands of Him whom they loved. Peter in his
anger rashly drew his sword and tried to defend his Master, but he only cut
off an ear of the high priest's servant. When Jesus saw what was done, He
released His hands, though held firmly by the Roman soldiers, and saying,
"Suffer ye thus far," He touched the wounded ear, and it was
instantly made whole. He then said to Peter, "Put up again thy sword into
his place: for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword.
Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to My Father, and He shall presently give
Me more than twelve legions of angels?"--a legion in place of each one of
the disciples. Oh, why, the disciples thought, does He not save Himself and
us? Answering their unspoken thought, He added, "But how then shall the
scriptures be fulfilled, that thus it must be?" "The cup which My
Father hath given Me, shall I not drink it?"
The official dignity of the Jewish leaders had
not prevented them from joining in the pursuit of Jesus. His arrest was too
important a matter to be trusted to subordinates; the wily priests and elders
had joined the temple police and the rabble in following Judas to Gethsemane.
What a company for those dignitaries to unite with--a mob that was eager for
excitement, and armed with all kinds of implements, as if in pursuit of a wild
beast!
Page 697
Turning to the priests and elders, Christ fixed
upon them His searching glance. The words He spoke they would never forget as
long as life should last. They were as the sharp arrows of the Almighty. With
dignity He said: You come out against Me with swords and staves as you would
against a thief or a robber. Day by day I sat teaching in the temple. You had
every opportunity of laying hands upon Me, and you did nothing. The night is
better suited to your work. "This is your hour, and the power of
darkness."
The disciples were terrified as they saw Jesus
permit Himself to be taken and bound. They were offended that He should suffer
this humiliation to Himself and them. They could not understand His conduct,
and they blamed Him for submitting to the mob. In their indignation and fear,
Peter proposed that they save themselves. Following this suggestion,
"they all forsook Him, and fled." But Christ had foretold this
desertion, "Behold," He had said, "the hour cometh, yea, is now
come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave Me
alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with Me." John
16:32.
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