One of the most quoted portions of the crucifixion story is Jesus’ cry, “My God, my God, Why have you forsaken me?” (Matt. 27:46; Mk. 15:34) It’s an understandable lament as you are hanging on a cross, innocent. It’s something we can relate to in seasons where we feel God has abandoned us. But it creates an awkward theology when we start to wonder, Did God really leave Jesus on the cross?
The explanations surrounding what Jesus’ death actually accomplished are many. Experts debate and write books. Pastors spend their Holy Week each year longing to communicate the full weight of Jesus’ work on the cross. But how would Jesus describe it? Do we have any record of that?
Jews in Jesus’ day were expected to memorize large portions of the Torah and Psalms. When a teacher or rabbi would quote a phrase or portion of Scripture, it would often call up the entire passage or story to the listener’s mind. Perhaps Jesus cries these words not to protest His Father’s absence, but to call to mind in those who were listening the rest of the Psalm. This phrase is the first line of Psalm 22. It is a powerful psalm when we read it in its entirety. (For a powerful listening experience, close your eyes and listen as Emily P. Freeman reads it aloud.) Imagine these, as Jesus’ last words. Enter into the story that Jesus was living. Experience the call to worship that He offered to those left standing as He breathed his last breath. Jesus, after all, is Israel’s True Hope and Consolation.
Psalm 22 (A David Psalm)
1 My God! My God,
why have you left me all alone?
Why are you so far from saving me—
so far from my anguished groans?
2 My God, I cry out during the day,
but you don’t answer;
even at nighttime I don’t stop.
3 You are the holy one, enthroned.
You are Israel’s praise.
4 Our ancestors trusted you—
they trusted you and you rescued them;
5 they cried out to you and they were saved;
they trusted you and they weren’t ashamed.
6 But I’m just a worm, less than human;
insulted by one person, despised by another.
7 All who see me make fun of me—
they gape, shaking their heads:
8 “He committed himself to the Lord,
so let God rescue him;
let God deliver him
because God likes him so much.”
9 But you are the one who pulled me from the womb,
placing me safely at my mother’s breasts.
10 I was thrown on you from birth;
you’ve been my God
since I was in my mother’s womb.
11 Please don’t be far from me,
because trouble is near
and there’s no one to help.
12 Many bulls surround me;
mighty bulls from Bashan encircle me.
13 They open their mouths at me
like a lion ripping and roaring!
14 I’m poured out like water.
All my bones have fallen apart.
My heart is like wax;
it melts inside me.
15 My strength is dried up
like a piece of broken pottery.
My tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth;
you’ve set me down in the dirt of death.
16 Dogs surround me;
a pack of evil people circle me like a lion—
oh, my poor hands and feet!
17 I can count all my bones!
Meanwhile, they just stare at me, watching me.
18 They divvy up my garments among themselves;
they cast lots for my clothes.
19 But you, Lord! Don’t be far away!
You are my strength!
Come quick and help me!
20 Deliver me from the sword.
Deliver my life from the power of the dog.
21 Save me from the mouth of the lion.
From the horns of the wild oxen
you have answered me!
22 I will declare your name to my brothers and sisters;
I will praise you in the very center of the congregation!
23 All of you who revere the Lord—praise him!
All of you who are Jacob’s descendants—honor him!
All of you who are all Israel’s offspring—
stand in awe of him!
24 Because he didn’t despise or detest
the suffering of the one who suffered—
he didn’t hide his face from me.
No, he listened when I cried out to him for help.
25 I offer praise in the great congregation
because of you;
I will fulfill my promises
in the presence of those who honor God.
26 Let all those who are suffering eat and be full!
Let all who seek the Lord praise him!
I pray your hearts live forever!
27 Every part of the earth
will remember and come back to the Lord;
every family among all the nations will worship you.
28 Because the right to rule belongs to the Lord,
he rules all nations.
29 Indeed, all the earth’s powerful
will worship him;
all who are descending to the dust
will kneel before him;
my being also lives for him.
30 Future descendants will serve him;
generations to come will be told about my Lord.
31 They will proclaim God’s righteousness
to those not yet born,
telling them what God has done.
This is the word of the Lord; Thanks be to God.