Refer Luke 22:39-46
“Then He withdrew from them…and knelt down and prayed.
Saying, Father, if You are willing, remove this cup from Me; yet not My will,
but [always] Yours be done…and being in agony [of mind], He prayed [all the]
more earnestly and intently, and His sweat became like great clots of blood
dropping down upon the ground.” – Luke 22: 41, 42, 44
Our Lord Jesus Christ, in His humanity, agonized with the
reality He was about to face on the cross at Calvary. When He considered what
lay ahead, Jesus knelt down in prayer asking that the cup be removed.
What was this cup to which Jesus referred?
It is the same cup spoken of in Psalm 75:8,
“in the hand of the Lord there is a cup of His wrath”,
It is the same cup spoken of in Isaiah 51:17,
“the cup of [the Lord’s] wrath”,
It is the same cup spoken of in Jeremiah 25:15,
“this cup of the wine of wrath”,
and It is the same cup spoken of in Revelation 14:10,
“the cup of His anger”.
Jesus was struggling with the thought of drinking the cup
that contained all the unbridled anger that God reserved for sinful mankind.
Jesus’ intention did not lie in disobedience to the purpose for which He came but was merely an enquiry as to an alternative.
Being a substitute for sinfulness when one is sinless,
understandably, could not be easy to reconcile in one’s mind but Jesus was, by
no means, about to shirk His task. He had accepted His role as substitute from
the very beginning and was prepared to do the will of His Father.
There was absolutely no doubt that He would drink, for He
said to Peter in John 18:11,
“Shall I not drink the cup the Father has given Me?”
Jesus Christ took our place on that cross, drinking the cup of God’s anger down to the last awful dreg so that we would never have to.
Jesus paid the debt that we could never pay ourselves.
Jesus understood that it was about something bigger than His
human self; He understood that God’s plan was the best plan and, strengthened
in spirit by an angel from heaven (Luke 22:43), Jesus could now pray more
earnestly, confident in the will of His loving Father. God had planned every
detail of Jesus’ life.
Beloved, when we are in agony, anguish, struggling in our
minds, we must remember the agony Jesus Christ faced on our behalf knowing
that, like Him, God has planned every detail of our lives. With this in mind,
let us look, beyond the agony, at the beauty of the Garden. Let us pray,
confident that though we may not be delivered from suffering we surely will be
strengthened through it.
Amen †
Shelley Johnson “The Agony at Gethsemane” © 2013 revisited
April 17, 2025
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