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Father Forgive Them Series
Contributed by David Swensen on Mar 5, 2002 (message contributor)
Summary: Why are Christ’s last words on forgiveness so crucial for us today? Learn more about forgiveness in today’s message.
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INTRODUCTION
“On the day that Karl Marx died, his housekeeper
came to him and said, ‘Tell me your last words, and
I’ll write them down.’ Marx replied, ‘Go on, get
out! Last words are for fools who haven’t said
enough!’” He was wrong as last words can be very
revealing and important. P.T. Barnum said, as he
was dying, “What were today’s receipts?”
When the noted philosopher and infidel Voltaire
was upon his deathbed, he said, “I am abandoned by
God and man!” The emperor Napoleon uttered these
words, “What an abyss between my deep misery
and the eternal Kingdom of Christ.” And the famous
preacher Charles Spurgeon said, “Jesus died for
me.” Sir Thomas Scott. Former Lord Chancellor of
England, was facing his own imminent death when
he declared, “Unto this moment I thought there was
neither a God nor a hell. Now I know and feel that
there are both and I am doomed to perdition.”
In the Lenten study which we begin today, we will
be considering Christ’s last words. They are referred
to as His seven last words. “These words are very
important, not only because of the person who
spoke them but also because of the place where they
were spoken. When our Lord was doing His greatest
work on earth, He was uttering some of His most
powerful and life-changing words. These seven last
words from the cross are windows that enable us to
look into eternity and see the heart of God.”These
words spoken as Christ was dying reveal truths we
need to know for living.They are absolutely crucial
to our well-being.Without them we cannot possibly
experience life in all its fullness.
The first of these seven statements is found in our
text for this morning. Brought to trial and unjustly
condemned, Jesus was led to Calvary by Roman
soldiers. He was mercilessly nailed to a wooden
cross. He was crucified between two common
criminals.The sinless Son of God was mocked,
tortured and left to die.Nevertheless, lifting His
head to heaven, He cried out saying,“FATHER,
FORGIVE THEM FOR THEY DO NOT KNOW
WHAT THEY ARE DOING.” (Luke 23:34)
Astoundingly, He asked forgiveness for His
enemies. Can you imagine that?
FORGIVENESS IS AVAILABLE
Forgiveness is one of our greatest needs. Without it
we cannot get on properly with our lives. As guilty
sinners we all fall far short of God’s expectations.
Max Lucado says, God “tells us to go north and we
go south. He tells us to turn right and we turn left.
Instead of seeking His will, we seek our own.We
disregard and disobey Him.” In our natural state we
are lost; alienated and separated from God.. Romans
3:23 declares that “ALL HAVE SINNED AND
FALL SHORT OF THE GLORY OF GOD.”
Knowing our need for forgiveness, Jesus’ first word
from the cross speaks to this great need.He offers us
that which “In one bold stroke…..obliterates the
past and permits us to enter the land of new
beginnings". Fortunately, “God is more concerned
for the future than the past.
He is more interested in what we can yet become
than in all the things we used to be.”
Forgiveness is available simply because Christ paid
the just penalty of our sin. Being holy and just, God
cannot just close His eyes to our sin. If He did that
He would not be true to Himself. He would betray
His holy and just nature. Being holy He cannot
tolerate sin. Being just He cannot allow it to go
unpunished. Yet He is love and doesn’t want to
inflict upon us the just penalty of our sin. Therein
lies the dilemma. The only solution was for God
Himself to pay the just penalty of our sin. So He
sent His Son to earth to die on the cross for you and
me.1 Peter 2:24 declares that “HE HIMSELF BORE
OUR SINS IN HIS BODY…”
As a result of Christ’s dying for you, God can
forgive your sin. This forgiveness, however, is not
automatic. You must personally receive it by
receiving Christ as your Savior.“The story is told of
a time when a father and his daughter were walking
through the grass on the Canadian prairie. In the
distance they saw a prairie fire which would soon
engulf them. The father knew there was only one
way of escape: they must quickly build a fire right
where they were and burn a very large patch of
grass. When the huge prairie fire drew near, they
could stand on the section that had already burned.
When the flames approached them, the girl was
terrified, but her father assured her saying, ‘The
flames can’t get to us. We are standing where the
fire has already been.’So it is with the forgiven
when they see the judgment of God approaching.