Poured Out

I am poured out like water and all my bones are out of joint. My heart is like wax it is melted in the midst of my bowels. Psalm 22:14 KJV

When we are singing “It is well with my soul” we should always remember the price of what we are singing about. As a teenager I always loved the Christmas presents I got from my stepmother. She bought me beautiful expensive clothes, but she always left the price tag on! She didn’t mind spending the money, but she wanted to be sure that I treated her gifts other special care!

In the garden Jesus said that His soul was sorrowful unto death. He agonized in prayer in order to accept the suffering of the cross. He asked if there were any other way and then sweat ran down His face like great drops of blood. Just hours after

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He had finished praying, Jesus was nailed to the cross. The Bible tells us that He was poured out like water. Last, the spear pierced His side and the last drop of the lifeblood of Jesus flowed down to the ground. What a price He paid for us!  Maybe like me you will go to church this Good Friday and receive communion. Jesus said that each time we receive the bread and drink from the cup we are to remember His death until He comes. Jesus is not angry that our sin drove Him to the cross rather in love He chose a way of  leaving the price tag attached so we would know the price of His gift.

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He Took The Cup

 Likewise He also took the cup after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is shed for you Luke 22:20

 

 

As the disciples gathered at the table they thought they had come with their master to share a traditional Passover meal. Everything was put in place just as it had been since the days of Moses. There was the unleavened bread, the bitter herbs and the four cups reminding then of God’s deliverance from Egypt. But as they sat at the table Jesus began a series of revelations familiar to us but shocking to the disciples.

Jesus began the supper telling them that He already knew that one of them was a traitor. This would have been like sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner and having the head of the household calmly say, “Praise God, I am thankful for this meal but I know one of you is a murderer!” Can you imagine the faces of James, John Matthew and Peter? Then as they sat in shock Jesus took the first cup called  “Kiddush” signifying salvation. As Jesus took that cup He told His disciples to divide it among themselves because He would not drink it again until He drank it in the Kingdom of God. The disciples didn’t understand what He meant but they sensed that something momentous was about to happen.

Then as they sat at the table Jesus took the bread and when he had given thanks he told them, “This is My body which is given for you; do this in remembrance of Me.”  The unleavened bread  reminded them that they were to flee in haste from Egypt but now  Jesus tells them it is His body given for them.  That teaching of the blood and body of Jesus was exactly what had caused many of the early disciples to turn away when Jesus had told them the day after the feeding of the 5,000. Now in stunning fashion Jesus repeats with even greater emphasis that this was not just a passing teaching but was central to being a believer. We must share in His body given for us! It is not an option! Last of all after they had eaten came the fourth “cup – the cup of praise (Hallel)”. This cup represented the flight of the children of Israel through the Red Sea, but now Jesus tells them it is His blood – the blood of a new covenant between God and man. Maybe the disciples were beginning to understand what Jesus was doing because we are told that after that astonishing Passover was finished they had a time of joyful praise.

And when they had sung a hymn, they went out to the Mount of Olives.  Mark 14:26

Jesus had not drunk from the cups at supper but on the Mount of Olives in a garden called Gethsemane He had a different cup to drink. The first cups He blessed and gave to His disciples and to us. When we receive our cup we must remember that He was given a cup which He prayed in agony not to have to drink. But on this Maundy Thursday as we look back at that night we can thank God that He took His cup filled with pain and bitterness and drank all it so that ours could be a cup filled with joy, salvation and eternal life!

 

 

In the presence of my enemies

Psalm 23:5 You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies

For I received from the Lord what  I also delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night he was betrayed took bread. 

1 Corinthians 11:23

As Jesus approached the table that His disciples had prepared they little imagined what they would share together that night. What we sometimes call the last supper could also be called the first. It was the first time Jesus would share the bread as a reminder of His body given for us. It was the first cup of the New Covenant purchased with His own blood. That night they had set the table but Jesus had prepared in His plans that first link in the chain of grace which we still celebrate today. Why is it that God chooses on the night of betrayal and in the presence of enemies to prepare our greatest blessings and to give His greatest gifts?