Jump Start # 4063
Matthew 27:40 “and saying, “You who are going to destroy the temple and rebuild it in three days, save Yourself! If You are the Son of God, come down from the cross.”
I was thinking about the cross today. It’s a good thought to have during the week. Don’t put those thoughts in a box that is labeled “Sunday Only.” Thinking about our Lord, His sacrifice and the promises that come with that can sure lift the soul and remind one why we do what we do.
Our verse today quotes the words of the scoffing unbelievers that surrounded the cross. Jesus didn’t go through the doorway of death in a bed surrounded by loved ones. He burst through that door with words of discouragement and doubt filling the air. Both Matthew and Mark record the challenge, “Come down from the cross.” He could have, but He didn’t.
Earlier, while in the garden with the disciples, as Judas and the guards appear to arrest Him, Jesus said, “Do you think that I cannot appeal to My Father, and He will at once put at My disposal more than twelve legions of angels” (Mt 26:53). He could have, but He didn’t.
Twelve legions of angels…nails popping out of the cross and Jesus jumping down in front of the Jewish elite. What a different story that would have been. Sending angels and popping nails out of the cross would have been just what Jesus needed to be safe. But He wasn’t thinking about Himself. He was the sacrifice for us. He went through all of this for us. And, unlike a lamb sacrifice, Jesus could have stopped it, changed it, and saved Himself. He could have, but He didn’t. He kept the purpose and the mission in the forefront. That was more important than His safety and wellbeing.
Could have, but didn’t. That’s something we ought to think about.
First, I could have said something in reply to a snide remark that someone made. I could have, but I didn’t. I didn’t because all that would have done is made the other person upset. All it would have done would be to defend myself. Keeping the purpose of the Lord in the forefront, I could have, but I didn’t.
Second, I could have repeated some negative things I heard about someone. The news was juicy and ripe. A little gossip can’t do much harm, we tell ourselves. Keeping the purpose of the Lord in the forefront, I could have, but I didn’t.
Third, I could have charged a brother the going price for helping him out. Time is money, as they say. He asked for a favor and I could have expected, even demanded full payment. Keeping the purpose of the Lord in the forefront, I could have, but I didn’t.
Oh, the things we could have done, but we don’t. We don’t because the nature of the kingdom is far greater than ourselves. If our Lord could have resisted an easy exit door away from the torture and pain He endured, you and I can resist the feeling of getting even, getting back, and setting the score right. Pushing ourselves out of the picture for the kingdom of the Lord is important. This illustrates the denying self principle that is part of discipleship. If we cannot do that, then we are always thinking about how we feel, what is right for us and what we want. In the role of Jesus, we would have called for the angels and popped the nails out of the cross and all humanity would be doomed because of that.
Could have, but didn’t is a principle that we need to understand and practice. Many of the bumps we encounter within our fellowship are caused because someone could have and they did. Rather than thinking about the purpose and the kingdom, they only thought about themselves. They didn’t think about how thrusting their way and their feelings to the forefront would hurt the congregation. Denying self is something that some have never learned. There are those who want to be the bride in every wedding and the corpse in every funeral.
Come down from the cross, is what the mockers said. They never realized how easily Jesus could have done just that. They thought the nails held Jesus on. It didn’t. It was His love and His understanding of the purpose of the sacrifice that kept Him there.
Could have, but didn’t. Sure is something to chew on for today.
Roger
