“Maundy” Thursday - April 13, 2017
THE GREATEST PRAYER IN THE WORLD
John Piper
It is
Thursday, the night before Jesus’s crucifixion. This evening has been laden
with teaching (John 13–17), shocking with foot-washing by the greatest for the
least (John 13:3–20), epoch-making with the institution of the Lord’s Supper
(Matt. 26:20–30; Mark 14:17–26; Luke 22:14–20), and pivotal with the departure
of Judas (John 13:30). Now Jesus and the eleven have gone to the Garden of
Gethsemane (John 18:1; Mark 14:32). Here Jesus prays the greatest prayer in the
world. What hung in the balance was the glory of God’s grace and the salvation
of the world.
The success
of Jesus’s mission to earth depended on Jesus’s prayer and the answer given. He
prayed with reverence and his request was given. The question I would like to
try to answer is: How does Hebrews 5:7 relate to the prayers in Gethsemane?
Hebrews 5:7 says, “In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and
supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him who was able to save him from
death, and he was heard because of his reverence.” He was heard. He got his
request. What does this refer to in Jesus’s life?
Loud Cries in the Garden
Nothing in
Jesus’s experience comes closer to this description than the prayers of Gethsemane.
“Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears,”
corresponds emotionally to Luke 22:44, “Being in agony he prayed more
earnestly; and his sweat became like great drops of blood falling down to the
ground.” “Loud cries and tears” is a description of the “agony” of Jesus. What
was the content of Jesus’s “prayers and supplications” in Hebrews 5:7? If we
assume the content was: “Remove this cup from me” (Mark 14:36), then what would
it mean that “he was heard because of his reverence” (Heb. 5:7)? Hebrews
teaches that, precisely because of his “godly fear,” Jesus “was heard,” that
is, he received his request. But the cup was not removed. He suffered the
fullness of physical pain and divine wrath. So in what sense was Jesus “heard
because of his reverence”?
His First Prayer and the Angel’s Help
Both Matthew
and Mark portray Jesus as praying three separate times, and each time returning
to the sleeping Peter, James, and John. Luke, on the other hand, gives a single
summary description of Jesus’s prayers, and includes a detail that points to an
answer to our question, namely, the visitation of the angel. Luke writes, He
withdrew from them about a stone’s throw, and knelt down and prayed, saying,
“Father, if you are willing, remove this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my
will, but yours, be done.” And there appeared to him an angel from heaven,
strengthening him. And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly; and his
sweat became like great drops of blood falling down to the ground. (Luke
22:41–44) Before the angel came “to strengthen” him, Jesus prayed that the cup
be removed (Luke 22:42). Then the angel came, “strengthening him.”
Strengthening him for what? Presumably to do what he had to do. In other words,
the angel was God’s response to Jesus’s first prayer.
The angel
bears God’s message that there is no other way, but I will help you. Do not
turn from your mission now, in spite of the terrifying prospect. I will help
you. Here is my angel to strengthen you. Then the question is: What was the
content of the prayers that followed? Luke 22:44 says, “And being in an agony
he prayed more earnestly.” Does this mean he kept on saying: “Remove this cup
from me,” even more earnestly? That assumption would be unworthy of Jesus. What
then was he praying? And is this different prayer what Hebrews says “was heard
because of his reverence”?
He Prays a Second Time
According to
Matthew, when Jesus went away a second time to pray, he did not say the identical
words as the first time. The first time he said, “My Father, if it be possible,
let this cup pass from me.” The second time he said, “My Father, if this cannot
pass unless I drink it, your will be done” (Matt. 26:42). May we not assume
that the angel had come to Jesus the first time he prayed, and had made plain
to Jesus that it was, in fact, not possible for the cup to pass from him, but
that God would help him drink it? Which is why, in his second prayer, Jesus
does not ask for the cup to be removed, but instead asks for God’s will to be
done in view of the revealed fact that “the cup cannot pass”: “If this cannot
pass unless I drink it [which has now been made plain to me by the coming of
the angel], your will be done.”
When Mark
says, of the second prayer of Jesus, “And again he went away and prayed, saying
the same words” (Mark 14:39), it need not contradict this, as though only the
same words were spoken all three times. “The same words” may simply refer to,
“Your will be done,” which indeed Jesus prays each time. If we are on the right
track, then the content of Jesus’s supplications after the angel came was not
the same as before. He did not go on praying: “Let this cup pass from me.” It
says, “And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly” (Luke 22:44). If he was
not praying more earnestly for the cup to be removed, then what was he praying?
His Greatest Act of Obedience
Hebrews 5:7
says, “Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears,
to him who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his
reverence.” If “save his soul from death” does not mean, “Remove this cup from
me,” what does it mean? For he was certainly heard and received this request.
Jonathan
Edwards answers,
This was the
greatest act of obedience that Christ was to perform. He prays for strength and
help, that his poor feeble human nature might be supported, that he might not
fail in this great trial, that he might not sink and be swallowed up, and his
strength so overcome that he should not hold out, and finish the appointed
obedience. He was afraid lest his poor feeble strength should be overcome, and
that he should fail in so great a trial, that he should be swallowed up by that
death that he was to die, and so should not be saved from death; and therefore
he offered up strong crying and tears unto him that was able to strengthen him,
and support, and save him from death, that the death he was to suffer might not
overcome his love and obedience, but that he might overcome death, and so be
saved from it.
Jesus did
not go on praying for the cup to pass. He went on praying for success in
drinking it. When Paul says, of Jesus’s resurrection, “Therefore, God has
highly exalted him” (Phil. 2:9), the “therefore” refers to Jesus’s unwavering
obedience unto death: “Being found in human form, he humbled himself by
becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore…”
(Phil. 2:8). God saved Jesus from death because he was obedient. His prayers
were answered.
The Father’s Answer
If Jesus had
not been obedient unto death, he would have been swallowed up by death forever
and there would be no resurrection, no salvation, and no future world filled
with the glory of God’s grace and God’s children. This is what Jesus prayed for
“to him who was able to save him from death”—that is, save him from a death
that would not succeed its saving mission. “He was heard for his godly fear.”
God did save him from the threat that such a death posed to his obedience.
Jesus did succeed. There is salvation for all who believe. There will be a new
world full of the glory of God’s grace and God’s children. And all of this is
owing to the greatest prayer in the world. Every hope of the gospel succeeds
because of Jesus’s reverent earnestness in prayer, and the answer of the
Father. “Being in an agony he prayed more earnestly… and he was heard because
of his reverence” (Luke 22:44; Heb. 5:7).
Evidently,
by the time Jesus was done praying in Gethsemane, the Father had not only made
clear that there is no other way than the cross, but also that this way would
succeed. The Lamb would have the reward of his suffering. He will “see his
offspring; he will prolong his days; the will of the Lord will prosper in his
hand. Out of the anguish of his soul he will see and be satisfied” (Isa.
53:10–11). Surely this is why Hebrews 12:2 could say, “For the joy that was set
before him he endured the cross.” Beneath the terrors of present agony was the
taste of future joy. The angel had come, “strengthening him”—clarifying,
confirming, connecting the coming joy.
Bible
Reading Plan: (52 weeks; 5
days a week)
Week 15
– Judges 19-21; Acts 2
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