Saturday, April 19, 2025

Our Day of Atonement

A Lenten series on Mountaintop Moments
– Jesus on Mount Calvary (Golgotha)
(Click on the link below to read the verses.)
Mark 15:21-41 

[In this Lenten series, we will be looking at Mountaintop Moments. These mountains are more than just geographical features. They symbolize divine encounters and moments of revelation, faith and transformation. In other words, meeting God on the mountain top.]

  

In 2004, Mel Gibson’s movie The Passion of the Christ was released. It was an epic drama about the final twelve hours of Jesus’ life focusing on his suffering and crucifixion. 


If you saw the movie, you know how graphic and violent it was. But living it for real must have been horrific.

 

Following Jesus’ arrest at Gethsemane, he was subjected to a kangaroo court, both from the Jewish religious leaders and the Romans. The result was a conviction that condemned Jesus to death by crucifixion. There was no death worse than this, and the Romans had become experts at it.

 

After being slapped, spat upon, scourged and ridiculed, Jesus carried his crossbar to Golgotha, which means “Place of the Skull”. It was a site known for crucifixions, with skulls possibly laying on the ground as a reminder. In a macabre scene, the Roman guards drove nails through his hands and feet and placed him on the cross.

 

From 9am until noon, Jesus hung there, possibly naked, or at best with only a loin cloth covering him. He was outside the city gates by a highway where passersby would taunt him. The sign that Pilate had insisted on placing above him mockingly read, “Jesus of Nazareth, the king of the Jews”.

 

Other than John, and a group of women who had helped during his ministry, Jesus had been abandoned by all of his disciples - his closest friends. The crowds who had welcomed him into Jerusalem as the Messiah had now deserted him. From noon until three, “darkness fell across the whole land”.

 


34 Then at three o’clock Jesus called out with a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?" which means “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?”     NLT

 

According to scholars, it was at this point that Jesus took upon himself the sins of the world; our sins; yours and mine. His Heavenly Father, who was “holy, holy, holy”, abandoned his only Son, who he loved, because he had become sin. Both Father and Son must have experienced deep despair and heartache.

 

37 Then Jesus uttered another loud cry and breathed his last. 38 And the curtain in the sanctuary of the Temple was torn in two, from top to bottom.        NLT

 

The curtain in the Temple hung between the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies. The Holy of Holies was considered the dwelling place of God. Because of that, only the High Priest could enter once a year, and then, only on the Day of Atonement to offer a sacrifice for the people’s sins.

 


Jesus’ death was our Day of Atonement. He entered the Holy of Holies, not only as our high priest, but also as the sacrifice for our sins once and for all. Nobody else could have done this. Only Jesus, the spotless Lamb of God.

 


12 With his own blood—not the blood of goats and calves—he entered the Most Holy Place once for all time and secured our redemption forever.                                   NLT    Hebrews 9

 

21 And since we have a great High Priest who rules over God’s house, 22a let us go right into the presence of God with sincere hearts fully trusting him.                NLT   Hebrews 10

 

Copyright 2025 Joseph B Williams

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