"After this, Jesus knowing that all things were now accomplished, that
the scripture might be fulfilled, saith, I Thrist." - John 19:28
After this, that is, I conceive, (though I do not presume to mark the
very order in which the Lord Jesus uttered his loud cries upon the
cross,) after his complaint of desertion: for whether this was the
fourth or fifth of the seven last words of the Redeemer, I dare not
determine: yet the words themselves were highly important, and
significant of great things, in reference to Jesus and his people.
Jesus thus cried, that the scriptures might be fulfilled, it is said;
for it had been prophesied of him, that gall was given him to eat - and,
when thirsty, vinegar to drink, Ps. lxix. 21. And the soldiers,
unconscious of what they did in fulfilling this very prophecy, gave him
sponge dipped in vinegar. But, my soul, was it the thirst of the body
thy Jesus complained of? I think not. He had before declared, at his
last supper, that he would drink no more of the fruit of the vine,
until the day he drank it new in the kingdom of his Father. What could
be then the thirst of Jesus, but the thirst of his soul, for the
accomplishment of redemption for his people, and the accomplishment of
redemption in his people. He thirsted with an holy vehement thirst for
the everlasting salvation of his ransomed, and seemed to anticipate the
hour by this expression, when he should see the travail of his soul,
and be satisfied. But did not Jesus also, in this hour, as bearing the
curse and wrath of God for sin, thirst in soul with that kind of thirst
which, in hell, those who bear the everlasting torments of condemnation
feel, when they are under an everlasting thirst which admits of no
relief! That representation the Lord Jesus gives of this state, in the
parable of the rich man's thirst, serves to afford a lively but
alarming view of such superlative misery. Oh that those who now add
drunkenness to thirst, would seriously lay this to heart. Did God
Suffer his dear Son, to whom sin was but transferred, and not committed
by him - did he suffer him to cry out under this thirst? and what may we
suppose will be the everlasting cry of such as not only merit his wrath
for sin, but merit yet more his everlasting wrath for refusing
redemption by Jesus, who thirsted on the cross to redeem sinners: from
endless thirsting in despair and misery? My soul, did Jesus thirst for
thee? Were his dying lips parched, and his soul deeply athirst, for thy
salvation? And shall not this thirst of thy Redeemer kindle an holy
thirst in thee for him, and his love and his great salvation? Wilt thou
not now this morning anew, look up by faith to the cross and to the
throne, and catch the flame of love from his holy, loving, longing, and
languishing eyes, until all thy powers go forth in vehement desires,
like him of old, crying out - "As the hart thirsteth for the water
brooks, so longeth my soul after thee, O God. Let him kiss me with the
kisses of his mouth; for thy love is better than wine."
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