John 19:5 So Jesus came out, wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe. Pilate said to them, "Behold the man!"
If there be one place where our Lord Jesus most fully becomes the joy
and comfort of His people, it is where He plunged deepest into the
depths of woe. Come, gracious souls, and behold the Man in the garden of
Gethsemane; behold His heart so brimming with love that He cannot hold
it in—so full of sorrow that it must find expression. Behold the bloody
sweat as it distills from every pore of His body and falls upon the
ground. Behold the Man as they drive the nails into His hands and feet.
Look up, repenting sinners, and see the sorrowful image of your
suffering Lord. Consider Him as the ruby drops stand on the thorn-crown
and adorn with priceless gems the diadem of the King of Misery. Behold
the Man when all His bones are out of joint, and He is poured out like
water and brought into the dust of death; God has forsaken Him, and hell
surrounds Him.
Look and see, was there ever sorrow like His sorrow that is done unto
Him? All passersby pause and look upon this spectacle of grief, a wonder
to men and angels, an unparalleled phenomenon. Behold the Emperor of
Woe who had no equal or rival in His agonies! Gaze upon Him, you
mourners, for if there is no consolation in a crucified Christ there is
no joy in earth or heaven. If in the ransom price of His blood there is
no hope, there is no joy in the harps of heaven, and the right hand of
God shall know no pleasures forevermore.
We need only sit more continually at the cross to be less troubled with our doubts and woes. We need only see His sorrows, and our sorrows
we shall be ashamed to mention; we need only to gaze into His wounds
and heal our own. If we would live properly, it must be by the
contemplation of His death; if we would rise to dignity, it must be by
considering His humiliation and His sorrow.
From Morning & Evening revised and edited by Alistair Begg copyright © 2003
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