(John 19:28)
"Later,
knowing that all was now completed, and so that the Scripture would be
fulfilled, Jesus said, "I am thirsty."
.
Apparently
Jesus asked for something to quench his thirst in order to fulfill Psalm 69:21,
King David’s Psalm of lamentation: "They put gall in my food and gave me
vinegar for my thirst." The bible called this as wine vinegar, a sour wine
that had turned to vinegar. Wine is made from grape juice. In the Roman times
this is identified as posca, a drink popular with soldiers of the Roman army,
made by diluting sour wine vinegar with water to sustain them during their
crucifixion duty. They weren't getting drunk on it, just using it to quench
their own thirst.
.
DEPICTION OF JESUS’ THIRST It is near the end of Jesus' human life. He senses it. He
was crucified on the cross for six hours now and each time he wants to breathe he
must pull himself up. His shoulders are aching and his mouth is parched; he
asks for something to drink to wet his lips.
.
Read
Psalm 22:15. This psalm of David is known as one of the most important Messianic
psalms. Our Lord on the cross repeated the first line and other verses are
quoted or alluded to in the New Testament as to his passion: the spiritual and
physical suffering of Christ. “Nag-uga na ang akong tutunlan sama sa yuta ug
ang akong dila mitapot sa akong alingangag.”
.
Again,
turn to read Lamentations 4:4. In their age of crisis and a turning point of
Israel’s history, their temple was destroyed
and leaders were exiled and they lost their national sovereignty. This was
during the fall of Jerusalem in 6th BC. The lamentations of the
beseiged city was thus: ”the tongue of
the infant clings to the roof of its mouth
for thirst; the young children ask for bread but no one breaks it for
them.”
.
REASON OF JESUS’ THIRST During the crucifixion, Jesus was not in a good attitude.
As his health plummets, his heart and spirit affected him. The Bible calls this
the breakdown of his "spirit." A
man’s spirit communicates beyond its point of beginning. What happened
then externally affected his spirit and worked to deteriorate his physical body.
He endured the underwent great emotional stress from being abandoned by
friends, the thought of humiliation and a cruel death by crucifixion, was without
sleep and breakfast, and weary from walking about 2.5 miles back and forth
between the sites of different trials and got tortured earlier. Proverbs 17:22
says, "A merry heart doeth good to the body; but a broken spirit drieth
the bones." Jesus’ broken spirit, sunk by the burden of afflictions, had such
a direct tendency to ruin his health and waste out his life as grief, anxiety
and fretfulness. All these work to his death.
.
Now
lets read Proverbs 18:14. The incident of Jesus’ at this time has no sufficient
strength to bear up under the unavoidable trials of life; he was wounded by every
body’s sin, and his soul is dying by every man’s iniquity. He had just walked
for some 3-4 hours to a road going to calvary with no sitting or rest. He was
on a depressed mood, had difficulty concentrating, is full of fatigue, he had anxiety
and this caused his excessive thirst. All these produced his desire to live
gone.
.
In
closing, the words of Jesus on the cross reminds us of his tangible physical suffering, of which his extreme
thirst is for us to readily identify to his plea and respond in our own
personal experience by coming to him, worship, love, adore, believe and accept
the Lord as one’s savior. Such thirst, being parched only by us approachIng
him, will conquer all our impiety and bring us the warm feeling of salvation. Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment