"And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, he said, Father, into thy
hands I commend my spirit: and having said thus, he gave up the
ghost." - Luke 23:46
My soul, ponder well these last of the last seven words of thy God and
Saviour which he uttered on the cross; for surely they are most sweet
and precious, and highly interesting, both on thy Saviour's account and
thine own. And first remark, the manner in which the Lord Jesus thus
breathed out his soul; not like a man spent and exhausted, after
hanging so many hours on the cross, faint with loss of blood, and such
agonies of soul as never one before endured; but it was with a loud
voice, thereby proving what he had before declared - "No man taketh my
life from me; I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it
again." Precious Jesus, how sweet this assurance to thy people. But
wherefore cry with a loud voice? A whisper, nay, a thought of the soul
only, if with an eye of communication to God the Father, would have
been sufficient, if this had been all that was intended. Wherefore then
did Jesus cry with a loud voice? Was it not that all in heaven, and all
in hell might hear? Did not angels shout at the cry? Did not the
spirits of just men made perfect among the faithful gone to glory in
Jesus's name, hear, and sing aloud? Did not all hell tremble when Jesus
thus cried aloud, conscious that the keys of the grave, and death, and
hell, were now put into his Almighty hand? Oh! precious, precious
Jesus! was this among thy gracious designs for which, when thou wert
retiring from the bloody field of battle, as a conqueror, thy loud
voice shouted victory? And was there not another sweet and gracious
design in this loud cry, Oh! thou blessed Jesus? Didst thou not intend
thereby that poor sinners, unto the ends of the earth, might, by faith,
hear and believe to the salvation of their souls? Didst thou not,
dearest Lord! when bowing thy sacred head, as if to take a parting look
of the disciple and the Marys, at the foot of the cross, and beholding
them as the representatives of all the members of thy mystical body,
didst cry with a loud voice, that all with them might behold thy
triumphs, and rejoice in thee their glorious Head? Yes, Lamb of God! we
adore thee in this glorious act; for we do accept it as it really is,
the act of our one glorious head. In this solemn committing of thy
spirit to the Father, we consider our spirits also as committed with
thee, and by thee. (My soul! mark this down carefully in. the inmost
tablet of thine heart.) In all this, blessed Jesus! thou wert, and art,
our Head. Thou didst, to all intents and purposes, take every
individual believer of thine as a part of thyself, and by this act
didst commit, with thyself, the whole into thy Father's hands, to be
kept until the hour of their dropping their bodies, then to be united
to thee forever. Oh! precious Jesus! O precious mercy of our Jesus, how
safe, how eternally safe, and secure, are all thy redeemed! Well might
thine apostle say, "No man liveth to himself, and no man dieth to
himself; for in Jesus his people ever live, and in Jesus they securely
die." Henceforth, dear Lord! let me know myself to be already committed
with thee, and by thee, into the hands of my God and Father in Jesus,
and when the hour cometh that the casket, in which that precious jewel,
my soul, now dwells, is opened for the soul to take her departure, O
then for faith in lively, active, earnest faith, to follow the example,
and to adopt the very language of my God and Saviour; and to cry
out - "Lord Jesus, into thy hands I commend my spirit; for thou hast
redeemed me, O Lord, thou God of truth!"
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