© 1997 Rod Benson. All rights reserved.
Alexander the Great once found his philosopher friend Diogenes standing
in a field, looking intently at a large pile of bones. Asked what he was
doing, the old man turned to Alexander and replied, “I am searching for
the bones of your father Philip, but I cannot seem to distinguish them
from the bones of the slaves.” Alexander got the point: everyone is equal
in death. From the greatest to the least, from the most beautiful to the
most ordinary, death is the universal equaliser.
Most of us know the shock and grief that comes with the death of a loved
one or colleague: the sense of loss, perhaps numbness or anger, perhaps
the realisation of our own mortality. Jesus – the King of the Jews, the
Messiah, the Son of God – shared the human experience of death. His heart
stopped beating, his lungs ceased their constant inhaling and exhaling,
and the electrical impulses within his brain slowed and subsided into nothingness.
Each of the Gospel writers describes the event of Jesus’ death: “When
Jesus had cried out again in a loud voice, he gave up his spirit”; “With
a loud cry, Jesus breathed his last”; “When he had said this, he breathed
his last”; “He bowed his head and gave up his spirit” (Matthew 27:50; Mark
15:37; Luke 23:46; John 19:30). But none of the Gospel writers focuses
on the physical sufferings of Jesus. Each tells part of the whole horrific
story, with his own emphasis and understanding of its significance. The
death of Jesus was not only unusual – it was unique.
Jesus shared the common experience of death that we all must encounter.
Some die accidentally, others by their own hand; some die deserving death;
others unjustly or prematurely – but all die. Yet Jesus’ death was unique
because it was perfectly timed.
People die in different ways. Sometimes the spirit leaves peacefully
while the person is asleep. Sometimes it is violently removed, and there’s
an agonising battle as the sufferer struggles frantically to hold onto
life. Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin died in 1953, and his daughter Svetlana
penned this graphic description of his last moments:
“The death agony was horrible . . . At what seemed like the very last
moment he suddenly opened his eyes and cast a glance over everyone in the
room . . . He suddenly lifted his left hand as though bringing down a curse
on us all. The gesture was incomprehensible and full of menace . . . The
next moment, after a final effort, the spirit wrenched itself free of the
flesh” (Svetlana Alliluyeva, Twenty Letters to a Friend).
Not so with Jesus: “After he took the wine, Jesus said, ‘It’s done .
. . complete.’ Bowing his head, he offered up his spirit” (John 19:30,
The Message). Even as he hung suspended by Roman nails between earth and
heaven, he was in control, bringing his life mission to its ultimate climax.
Augustine reminds us that “Jesus gave up his life because he willed it,
when he willed it, and as he willed it.”
Until Sir William Deane signs the Andrews Bill nullifying the Northern
Territory’s euthanasia legislation, you and I can choose to die in the
Northern Territory by computer-administered lethal injection. We can choose
the mode and time of our death, but we’re not masters of our spirits, able
to dismiss them and expire. Jesus had that power, and he dismissed his
own spirit; in this respect his death was unique.
His death was also an act of worship.Throughout his life
Jesus pleased his Father. At his baptism heaven opened and God declared,
“This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased” (Matthew 3:17).
To the Jews who persecuted him Jesus said, “I seek not to please myself
but him who sent me” (John 5:30). And Hebrews 9:14 reveals that on the
cross Jesus “offered himself unblemished to God.”
With the Old Testament sacrificial system in mind, the writer reminds
us that Jesus Christ offered not a lamb or a bull but himself in sacrifice
to God. Jesus was both the person offering the sacrifice for sin, and the
sacrifice! Nothing less would take away the sin of the world, and nothing
more valuable could take his place.
Unlike the temple priests who first sacrificed an animal to remove their
own sins before sacrificing on behalf of the people, Jesus offered to God
his own body – his own life – for our sins. In doing so, he demonstrated
his complete obedience to God as his holy Father, and the complete worthiness
of God as the object of his worship. In this respect also his death was
unique.
When Jesus dismissed his spirit and died, the soldiers stationed nearby
were surprised he had died so quickly; some victims remained alive for
up to two days before dying. But they were not the only ones surprised.
Across the valley, in the city centre, at the precise moment of Jesus’
death, Matthew records that “the curtain of the temple was torn in two
from top to bottom. The earth shook and the rocks split. The tombs broke
open and the bodies of many holy people who had died were raised to life”
(Matthew 27:51-52). The death of Jesus had supernatural consequences.
The enormous, thickly lined curtain separating the holy of holies from
the holy place was torn in two, symbolising that through the death of Jesus
the way into God’s immediate presence was open to all, regardless of the
distinctions often made between clergy and laity, Jew and Gentile, master
and servant, man and woman. All people now had equal access to God and
to his salvation, and equal opportunity for worship and service.
And then the earth shook and rocks were split in pieces! The event was,
quite literally, earth-shaking, as the natural environment responded to
the death of its creator. Burial chambers broke open, probably through
the force of the earthquake. Then something occurred that no earthquake
could achieve: the bodies of many dead people returned to life (verse 52)!
The death of Jesus Christ triggered the resurrection of God’s people, and
his resurrection guarantees our future resurrection when he returns to
earth. There was no other death like it, before or since; in this regard
also the death of Jesus was unique.
But his death also had eternal consequences. Immediately
before he died, Jesus said, “It is finished” (John 19:30). What was finished?
The work he came to earth to accomplish. Michaelangelo, the Renaissance
artist of Sistine Chapel fame, was a genius. He excelled as a sculptor,
designer, painter and architect. His statues of Moses and David are widely
recognised and appreciated. What many people don’t know is that in Florence,
there’s an entire hall filled with his ‘unfinished’ sculptural works. As
great an artist as he was, he left much unfinished.
Jesus left no unfinished work – he accomplished everything he came to
do. He completed his monumental mission. Hebrews 2:9 says with majestic
simplicity, “In that death, by God’s grace, he fully experienced death
in every person’s place” (The Message). Jesus not only died – he died in
your place. He died so you could have life. He suffered so you could find
peace. He endured the darkness of Calvary so you could experience the light
of the Good News. He endured the curse so you could enjoy the blessing.
He was alienated from God so you could be reconciled to God.
He who never did wrong suffered under the agonising weight of your wrongs,
so you could be put right with God. “He personally carried the load of
our sins in his own body when he died on the cross, so that we can be finished
with sin and live a good life from now on” (1 Peter 2:24, LB).
In his death Jesus demonstrated God’s love for us in the fullest possible
way, achieved total victory over evil, and made our salvation possible.
He was not merely a good man who died as an example of virtue or meekness;
he was the perfect God who took our burdens of sin and guilt and made them
his burden. His death was not an example to inspire us but a sacrifice
to save us!
As John Stott says, “A pattern cannot secure our pardon . . . an example
can stir our imagination, kindle our idealism and strengthen our resolve,
but it cannot cleanse the defilement of our past sins, bring peace to our
troubled conscience or reconcile us to God” (Basic Christianity 1971:89).
Only the death of the holy Son of God could achieve those purposes.
His death was an example, but it was much more than that. It was the
only way God could bring you into relationship with himself, into his glorious
kingdom, his new community. Jesus’ death was unique because it was perfectly
timed, it was a priceless act of worship, and it had supernatural consequences;
but above all his death had eternal consequences.
“There is one God and one mediator between God and men,” says Paul to
Timothy, “the man Christ Jesus” (1 Timothy 2:5). Jesus did not step out
of his human body when he rose from the grave, nor when he sat down at
the right hand of the throne of God. And heaven will be filled with people
from every nation, tribe, people and language because Jesus came, and lived
among us, and died in our place. Will you be there? Thank God for Jesus,
and his great love for us!
That’s the good news of Easter! It’s the kind of news that both sobers
me and fills me with joy and a desire to know my Lord better. But you may
not yet have surrendered your life to Jesus Christ and experienced his
forgiveness and joy. Don’t let the opportunity pass by! I invite you, right
now, to thank Jesus for dying for your sins, in your place, and ask him
to enter your life, to cleanse you and take control of your life. Pray
this prayer with me:
“Lord Jesus Christ, I acknowledge that I have gone my own way. I have
sinned in thought, word and deed against you. I’m sorry for my sins. I
turn from them now in repentance. I believe that you died for me, bearing
my sins in your own body. I thank you for your great love for me.
“I invite you to enter my life. Come in, Lord Jesus, as my Saviour,
and cleanse me. Come in as my director, my Lord, and take control of me.
Fill me with your Holy Spirit, and with your joy. And I will serve you
as you give me strength, all my life. Amen.”
Message no. 109 preached by Senior Pastor Rod Benson
at Flinders Baptist Community Church, Ipswich, Australia, on Friday 28
March 1997. To respond, please email Unless otherwise noted, scripture quotations are from The Holy
Bible, New International Version (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1980).
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