THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"The Last of the Vinegar"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) March 12, 2006; No. 3297 |
Dear radio friends,
Today we begin a
spiritual journey. By faith we seek to
go to the cross of Calvary and there behold Him, God’s very Son, who suffered
and died upon
We begin today in
Mark 15:35-37. There we read these
words: “And some of them that stood by,
when they heart it, said, Behold, he calleth
Elias. And one ran and filled a sponge
full of vinegar, and put it on a reed, and gave him to drink, saying, Let alone; let us see whether Elias will come to take him
down. And Jesus cried with a loud voice,
and gave up the ghost.” Our message
today will be entitled: The Last of the
Vinegar.
But we want to
begin by asking a simple question: Why
did Jesus die on the cross? Anyone who
is acquainted with the Bible knows that its theme is: Jesus of Nazareth was crucified. We who are the recipients of the precious
Reformed and biblical faith know that the death of the Savior was the one
central point in the counsel of almighty God.
That, from all eternity in the mind of God, He had willed to give His
Son to die upon a cross. So we say that
the cross is the center of time and eternity.
All leads to it, all sense is determined by
it. For instance, we read these words of
the apostle Peter on the day of Pentecost in Acts 2:23: “Him [that is, Jesus] being delivered by the
determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked
hands have crucified and slain.” He was
delivered by God’s determinate counsel.
God determined this to be done in His eternal thoughts and counsel. Jesus was not taken there in an inescapable,
tragic chain of events, but He was brought there deliberately by the almighty
God Himself. The cross is the center of
God’s eternal plan.
But the question is
this: Why? Why did Jesus die on that cross? That is no little question. That is nothing to trifle with. Did Jesus die on the cross merely to
influence us to live sacrificially for others?
Did Jesus die on the cross to inspire us to do something for Him or
something for the downtrodden? Did Jesus
die on the cross to produce the emotions that people have when, perhaps, they
leave the popular film “The Passion of the Christ”? Is that why He died? Did Christ die on the cross to show the
necessity of some deterrent against sin, to say that God could possibly do this
to you, too? He could make you suffer
likewise if you do not believe in Him?
Is that why He died on the cross?
To
all of those, a resounding “No!”
What is the answer of the Bible?
This: the Son of God, in our
human flesh, died on the cross to pay the penalty for the sin of God’s elect,
for the sins of those whom the Father had given to Him (John 10) in a gracious
decision of eternal election. He died in
order to pay what we could not, the penalty for our sin, and to make us what we
could never make ourselves to be, namely, right with the holy and perfect
God. Why did He die on the cross? He died to save our souls from the debt and
from the power of sin so that He might present us before the throne of God
without spot or wrinkle (Eph. 5).
Do you know the
answer to the question: Why did Jesus
die on the cross? Do you know the answer
this way, that you say: “He died for me. He went to the cross to pay for my sin and to
deliver me from my sin so that now I might live forever before His face”? Listen to these words from II Corinthians
5:14, 15: “For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died
for all, then were all dead: and that he
died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves,
but unto him which died for them, and rose again.” He died for us, for our sins, that we might
now live unto Him.
The verses that I
read from Mark 15 bring us to the final moments of the cross of
Jesus was nailed to
the cross at 9:00 on Friday morning. For
the first three hours, until noon, there was light, and His enemies sat before
the cross to deride and mock Him. At
12:00 noon, a thick darkness descended upon the earth. And for three hours it hung. There was total silence until at last those
three hours were concluded with the cry that Jesus uttered from the cross: “My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?” He has descended
into hell. That is, the hell of
suffering that God’s people deserved was, during those three hours, poured into
His own Son’s soul.
Now we come (in
Mark 15:35ff.) to the last five or ten minutes of the cross, after God has
brought back the light, and the darkness of our death and hell has been
swallowed by the heart of Jesus. Now the
Scriptures will tell us how He died and will assure us that, before He died, He
gave signs that He had removed our sin and our guilt and had earned for us the
Father’s hand of love.
In His last moments
on the cross, then, Jesus is saying, “I left nothing undone. I fulfilled all my
Father’s will. I endured all. I left not so much as a speck of guilt or sin
unpunished upon you. I endured it all.” That is seen when He drank the vinegar.
Notice with me,
first of all, that the final act of mockery and derision is cast upon Him. When He cried out, “My God, My God, why hast
Thou forsaken Me?” those at the cross said, “Behold,
He calls for Elijah.” He cried out,
literally, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?” God, as I said, had brought back light to
So this is what
happened. In the darkness the mouths of
His enemies were shut. But now, as the
light returns and as Christ has just pierced the silence with the cry, “Eli,
Eli, lama sabachthani?” they hear those words and
make His cry out to be a cry for Elijah to come and to help Him. The Lord’s words were clear. Jesus cried with a loud voice: “Eli,” which means “My God.” But the unbelieving Jews take the first
syllable “El,” and make a taunt out of it.
They taunt Him and say, “Oh, He must be crying for Elijah to be
resurrected and to come and to help Him.”
Their blasphemous swagger has come back with the light of the day and
they take the most sacred cry that the earth has ever heard and twist it into
scorn. The most sacred cry was, “My God,
My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?” And they say, “Oh, He’s calling for Elijah to
help Him out of this mess. We told Him,”
they say, “to cry to God and see if God would deliver Him. We told Him to deliver Himself and then we
would believe Him. Now He’s calling for
Elijah. So,” they say, “let us see
whether Elijah will come to take him down.”
Let us pause for a
moment of application. Sin is seen for
what it is at the cross of
That is the human heart, that is sin.
If left to ourselves, no matter how shocked, it goes back. God can speak. Perhaps a high school classmate dies. Perhaps some tragic event happens. Perhaps some shocking catastrophe befalls
your community. But the human nature, in
a very short time, goes back to bragging about who scored with whom, about
drugs and drunkenness and parties. Only
grace can change, only grace can give us to sigh and to grieve over how
callous, how awful, is our sin. For, of
ourselves, the flesh can get shocked and be quiet for a little bit, but it soon
returns to its vomit.
The text, though,
is focusing our faith upon Jesus, in the words of triumph,
that He has left nothing undone.
For we read that they offered to Him some vinegar upon a sponge and He
received that vinegar. In Psalm 69:21, a
prophecy of the suffering of Jesus, we find these words: “They gave me also gall for my meat; and in
my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink.”
In order that the Scripture might yet be fulfilled, when they were
crucifying Him they had offered Him vinegar to drink, mingled with gall. We read in Matthew 27:34, “And when he had
tasted thereof, he would not drink.”
That vinegar, when He had first been crucified, was diluted with wine
for the purpose of dulling His senses and His nerve endings. He would not drink it. But now they offer Him straight vinegar in a
sponge upon a rod. And John 19:28
unlocks the passage to our understanding, for we read: “After this, Jesus knowing that all things
were now accomplished, that the scripture might be fulfilled, saith, I thirst.”
When the light had returned and all things were accomplished, Jesus
said, “I thirst,” so that they would offer Him vinegar, so that Psalm 69 might
be fulfilled. And that is what
happened. We read, “One ran and filled a
sponge full of vinegar, and put it on a reed [a pole], and gave him to
drink.” And in John 19 we read that when
Jesus had received the vinegar, He cried, “It is finished.”
Undiluted vinegar
is undrinkable. To offer it to the
parched lips of a dying man is cruelty.
The vinegar was not an act of kindness or consideration. It was sour.
Try to drink vinegar once. It
needs to be diluted. It is like trying
to drink straight lemon concentrate. It
is unbearable. But Jesus received the
vinegar. They offered it to Him upon a
sponge. And He sucked all the vinegar
out of the sponge.
The vinegar is the
representation of the sourness of our sin.
All that makes us miserable and brings our lives into misery so that we
would, if we could, spit it out; all the distasteful, all the spew-out of our
sin — Jesus received it. Not a drop did
He leave behind. With His mouth He
sucked the sponge dry. In that act, He
was saying, “Upon My cross I have left nothing behind. I have left nothing unendured.” It was a sign to us that as the Good Shepherd
He has sought out all our reproach, He has hunted down all the judgment that we
had coming, He left behind no sin unpunished in His suffering. He is not as a conqueror who
left the enemy behind. He did not simply
fight in order that there would be a battle yet again. No. He
endured all the suffering that our sin deserved. He endured it all. He left nothing behind. He drank the last of the vinegar.
So the Scriptures
may proclaim to us in that glorious passage (
The light has
returned to
Let us apply that
in two simple ways.
Jesus has obtained
for us the favor of God. You may today
receive from the hand of God what is very difficult, what is very hard to
take. You might say that this is vinegar
— this is impossible for my flesh to endure, it is impossible to see any good
in this. It may be the loneliness of old
age. It may be the knife of anxiety
piercing your heart. It may be
concerning your child’s spiritual life or lack thereof. It may be some private depression or private
burden. It is something very bitter,
very hard. But God says, “There is no
wrath in that. There is no bitterness
from Me. Jesus
drank that.” God says that now our
trials and sufferings come to us in the love and wisdom of God to profit us and
to perfect us. Upon the basis of the cross
we declare and believe that God is not dealing with His people in judgment, but
He deals with us in Christ. And the
vinegar of the wrath and the curse of our sin is all
gone.
The second simple
application is this. This must motivate
us to godliness. Can you find
entertainment, pleasure, and fun in the bitterness and dregs of sin? Where we go and get drunk and drink in sin,
will we entertain ourselves with the lusts and the perversions of the
television, the magazines? Will we
please ourselves and our flesh in every sin, the very sins for which He was
consumed and died? Shall we try to suck
pleasure out of lust? Shall we try to
hide ourselves with lies? Do you see Him
on the cross, child of God? They offered
Him undiluted vinegar. And He received
it. All the sour, bitter dregs of sin’s
punishment He took upon Himself.
Why? So that we
might go on in sin? God
forbid! That is blasphemy! So that we might drink of the favor of God
and so that we might now live in godliness, thereby expressing our joy and our
thanksgiving for what He has done.
Hear the
gospel. Jesus made it unmistakably clear
that He left behind nothing. No sin, no
wrath, no curse owed to our sin was left behind by Him. But He endured it all. He drank it all. It is all gone. And now we stand in the favor of God as His
children so that we might praise Him and live to Him.
Let us pray.
Father, we thank
Thee for Thy Word. We thank Thee for Him
who died upon