Page 241 - Lift Him Up (1988)

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By Faith, Christ was Victor, August 10
Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.
Luke 23:46
.
The spotless Son of God hung upon the cross, His flesh lacerated with stripes;
those hands so often reached out in blessing, nailed to the wooden bars; those feet
so tireless on ministries of love, spiked to the tree; that royal head pierced by the
crown of thorns; those quivering lips shaped to the cry of woe. And all that He
endured—the blood drops that flowed from His head, His hands, His feet, the agony
that racked His frame, and the unutterable anguish that filled His soul at the hiding
of His Father’s face—speaks to each child of humanity, declaring, It is for thee
that the Son of God consents to bear this burden of guilt; for thee He spoils the
domain of death, and opens the gates of Paradise. He who stilled the angry waves
and walked the foam-capped billows, who made devils tremble and disease flee,
who opened blind eyes and called forth the dead to life—offers Himself upon the
cross as a sacrifice, and this from love to thee. He, the Sinbearer, endures the wrath
of divine justice, and for thy sake becomes sin itself.
In silence the beholders watched for the end of the fearful scene. The sun shone
forth; but the cross was still enveloped in darkness. Priests and rulers looked toward
Jerusalem; and lo, the dense cloud had settled over the city and the plains of Judea.
The Sun of Righteousness, the Light of the world, was withdrawing His beams
from the once favored city of Jerusalem. The fierce lightnings of God’s wrath were
directed against the fated city.
Suddenly the gloom lifted from the cross, and in clear, trumpetlike tones, that
seemed to resound throughout creation, Jesus cried, “It is finished.” “Father, into thy
hands I commend my spirit.” A light encircled the cross, and the face of the Saviour
shone with a glory like the sun. He then bowed His head upon His breast, and died.
Amid the awful darkness, apparently forsaken of God, Christ had drained the
last dregs in the cup of human woe. In those dreadful hours He had relied upon the
evidence of His Father’s acceptance heretofore given Him. He was acquainted with
the character of His Father; He understood His justice, His mercy, and His great
love. By faith He rested in Him whom it had ever been His joy to obey. And as
in submission He committed Himself to God, the sense of the loss of His Father’s
favor was withdrawn. By faith, Christ was victor (
The Desire of Ages, 755, 756
).
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