CENTURION’S DECLARATION
And when the centurion,
which stood over against him,
saw that he so cried out,
and gave up the ghost, he said,
Truly this man was the Son of God.
Mark 15:39
This centurion
had watched as Jesus was nailed naked and beaten beyond recognition to the
cross. He had stood close by as part of his job was to verify when the
condemned had expired. He had witnessed Jesus forgiving those who thus abused
Him and assuring the believing thief he would join Him in paradise. Then the
soldier heard Jesus cry out, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit” (Luke
23:46) and die. This man had not been one of Jesus’s disciples, nor was he a
Jew who recognized Him as Messiah. He was a Roman who did not even believe in
Israel’s God. What prompted the declaration he exclaimed as Jesus breathed His
last? He had seen no miracles except the darkness for three hours in the middle
of the day (Matthew 27:45) which a person might be able to explain away.
However, He had seen grace in action as Jesus forgave all who persecuted Him.
He had seen the kindness of the Lord as He spoke with the thief who expressed
belief. He saw Jesus’s love and compassion toward all and especially expressed
in designating John to take care of His mother. He had witnessed a person who
in the direst of pain cared more about others than Himself. He had seen the
Lord’s confidence that His Spirit was in God’s hands. Therefore, though he had probably never heard
Jesus preach or witnessed with his own eyes His miraculous healing power, he
could see that Jesus was completely different than any man he had seen
crucified. Tradition says this man later professed Christianity and became a
martyr but there is no concrete proof of that. But at least in that moment, He
was touched by the Spirit of God to declare truth. What do you see when you
gaze upon the cross? Do you see an unfortunate man who was crucified despite
His innocence? Or do you see the Son of God willingly sacrificing His own life
to save yours?
Father, may we
reflect upon Jesus dying on the cross and see the attributes of God in His
demeanor and His words. May we always remember that He endured those things
willingly on our behalf. He was not martyred but was the voluntary Lamb of God
dying for those He loves.
No comments:
Post a Comment