Rockville Church of Christ
When I Survey (Part 3)
When I Survey...(Part 3)

"See
from His head, His hands, His feet, sorrow and love flow mingled down. Did e're
such love and sorry meet, or thorns compose so rich a crown?"
When
we survey the wondrous cross of Jesus, we cannot help but imagine the suffering
the Son of Man must have experienced. An examination of Roman crucifixion
reveals that some men did not even survive the scourging itself. The rapid loss
of blood from flesh ripped down to the bone was enough to throw the body into hypovolemic
shock. Jesus probably experienced some of this effect when He lacked the
physical strength to finish carrying His cross to the hill outside Jerusalem.
More blood had been squeezed out from the crown of thorns pressing in around
his skull. To hold Him on the cross, soldiers would drive three spikes, one
through each wrist right below the hand, and a single spike hammered through
both feet. Therefore, blood would have flowed from His head, His hands, and
feet. Asphyxiation, the inability to pull the body up to draw breath any
longer, was usually the final cause of death for a crucified man. Isaac Watts'
hymn urges us to see the love and sorrow flowing through that blood.
But the
greatest suffering Jesus experienced was not the pain, nor was it the humiliating
shame of the nakedness and ridicule of being a public spectacle of mockery (to
which Hebrews 12:1 alludes -- "despising
the shame"), but it was the separation from the Father as He experienced
the weight of the fullness of sin upon Himself so that the sin could be crushed
with His death. 2 Corinthians 5:21 tells us that Jesus actually "BECAME SIN" for a teleological purpose
-- "so that WE might become HIS
righteousness." It was His love for you...and for me...that compelled Him to
finish the process. What a scene! What a Savior!
To His Glory,
Caleb