Friends in Christ,
I debated studying this Psalm at this time, or waiting until next week or the following. The conclusion I have come to however, is to enjoy all that this Psalm offers us for the next weeks leading up to Easter.
Psalm 22 is one of the most important Psalms recorded. No Psalm so clearly relates the details of Jesus' suffering and crucifixion and no Psalm is quoted more times in the Scriptures. Thus Luther calls this "one of the chief psalms." Because Psalm 22 is so weighty, we will pick it apart piece by piece, little by little.
Read Luther's comments, the Psalm and prayer. For the next few weeks, meditate upon the portions of this psalm that we cover as well as what is recorded for us in the Gospels during Holy Week, that is, from Jesus' Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem through Good Friday. Read one or all of these sections devotionally as you have time. If you live with your family this would be a great section of Scripture to highlight for daily reading from now through Easter. You will find these accounts beginning at:
Matthew 21
Mark 11
Luke 19
John 12
Now then, we will go no farther than verses 1-2 today. For already you are reminded of the crucifixion:
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, from the words of my groaning? O my God I cry out by day but you do not answer, by night but I find no rest."
In Matthew 27:46 and Mark 15:34 Jesus cries out, "Eloi, Eloi lama sabachthani" which is translated, "My God, My God why have you forsaken Me?" Jesus words exactly.
Here in the first two verses of the Psalm the Messiah is pleaing for help from the Father. Just as He prayed in Gethsemane, "If it be your will take this cup from Me..." so now He continues to plea but it looks hopeless.
There are so many questions to ask, "What is going on here?" Why does the Son receive no help from the Father? Why is He tortured so? It is bad enough to be physically tortured, but being forsaken by your beloved, the Father no less, is unimaginable. We often miss the absolute horror of Christ's passion when we only talk about physical things. It is safe to say that Christ's spiritual suffering was far more torturous than the torture endured by His body.
The Son of God is the only one in the world who was ever forsaken by God. Yes, God's only-begotten Son from eternity, God Himself, the perfect one, is the only one to be forsaken.
To be forsaken is to be rejected, trashed, discarded, ignored, abandoned. Like an item left off at the local landfill, Jesus was dumped by the Father because He was loaded up with OUR SINS.
That's right. No human being, no matter how trashy and corrupt has, is or will ever be forsaken by the Father because out of His great love for the world, the Father saw fit to forsake the Son on our behalf. So there hangs Jesus, pleading for mercy from the Father, and He doesn't get it.
I don't know what was worse when I was growing up, getting a spanking or knowing that I displeased my father. When you have someone's full attention, full love and full trust and you do something stupid or thoughtless, you ruin a relationship. There is no way to fix something that is ruined. Your only option is repent. Say you're sorry. Be forgiven.
Christ took a spanking for us. Christ felt the heat. Christ was trashed, abandoned, forsaken for our sins so that we wouldn't be. By His death and resurrection He has brought us into a new relationship with our heavenly Father. Because Christ was forsaken, our God is not an angry judge, a Father waiting with a paddle. Rather, He is love, like the Father anxiously awaiting the prodigal sons return. Full of compassion, He wants us to come home and can't wait to lavish us with kisses.
In the name of the Father + and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.