Matthew 27:46 says, “And about the ninth hour [on the cross] Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying…’My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’” Writers have said that Jesus wasn’t speaking on his own behalf, but rather he was speaking on behalf of the Roman soldiers who took part in his crucifixion. If that were the case, then we know the answer although the Romans, who were in total ignorance of God, wouldn’t have known. The answer may be found in Mark 16: 15 which says, “And [Jesus] said to them, ‘Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation. Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but WHOEVER DOES NOT BELIEVE WILL BE CONDEMNED.” The Romans who crucified Jesus therefore were destined to be condemned even though they didn’t know it! The question that Jesus asked is the question that those Romans would have asked if they had any knowledge of God’s existence, and of their own fate for not believing.
One may say there is a touch of irony in that God, who as described in John 3:16, out of his love for the world wants that all be saved, apparently, if we take Jesus’ question literally, couldn’t care less about the soldiers crucifying Jesus except to condemn them. But Jesus, even being on the cross, attempted to intervene on their behalf when in Luke 23:34 he says, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” We know that that call would go unanswered if the Romans didn’t ask God themselves for forgiveness. One is accountable for one’s own sins and must answer for them.
What of Jesus’ sins? The only sins he personally may have had was whatever the world attempted to place on him from his moment of birth. But he threw off the temptation of those sins as he got older, even as those around him were not as conscientious at doing so. Surely the Pharisees who allowed gambling in the temple on the Sabbath were not as conscientious!
Jesus said that whoever believed in God would be saved from the fate imposed on them by their sins. They would be led away from temptation and delivered from evil.
Like the Romans, though, those who didn’t believe in God through Jesus were condemned and didn’t know it. So Jesus commanded his disciples to spread the Word, as he told them in Mark 16: 15. They had quite a chore held out for them. For how do you convince the gentiles of the time that they will be condemned if they do not believe in a being they never heard of? And how would they know what it is to be condemned? Maybe for those who believed in other gods, they may have been familiar with the idea of condemnation even if not God’s condemnation. And perhaps it may be easier to convince those who believed in other gods that God is the only one that matters, having been exposed to the idea of a superior being. In this regard, perhaps, it was easier to convince the Romans of God’s existence that to convince those who put their belief on no god at all.
The Gospels served as a reassurance and reinforcement to those who already had learned and had started to believe in God through Jesus. The difficulty was in conveying the Gospel to the pagans. On this, many of Jesus’ disciples were met with hostility. Paul, for instance, met his death in the hands of others.
Some may question why people would risk their lives to convey God through Jesus. It’s a relatively simple answer: Jesus commanded us to love God with all our heart, soul and mind and to love eachother as we do ourselves. We would therefore want to impart on the rest of the world the things we know of the Kingdom of God that awaits us if we believe in him. It is a treasure that we, in loving others as we love ourselves, would be willing to share, so that those who did not know of God’s existence would not be forsaken by Him.
One may say there is a touch of irony in that God, who as described in John 3:16, out of his love for the world wants that all be saved, apparently, if we take Jesus’ question literally, couldn’t care less about the soldiers crucifying Jesus except to condemn them. But Jesus, even being on the cross, attempted to intervene on their behalf when in Luke 23:34 he says, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” We know that that call would go unanswered if the Romans didn’t ask God themselves for forgiveness. One is accountable for one’s own sins and must answer for them.
What of Jesus’ sins? The only sins he personally may have had was whatever the world attempted to place on him from his moment of birth. But he threw off the temptation of those sins as he got older, even as those around him were not as conscientious at doing so. Surely the Pharisees who allowed gambling in the temple on the Sabbath were not as conscientious!
Jesus said that whoever believed in God would be saved from the fate imposed on them by their sins. They would be led away from temptation and delivered from evil.
Like the Romans, though, those who didn’t believe in God through Jesus were condemned and didn’t know it. So Jesus commanded his disciples to spread the Word, as he told them in Mark 16: 15. They had quite a chore held out for them. For how do you convince the gentiles of the time that they will be condemned if they do not believe in a being they never heard of? And how would they know what it is to be condemned? Maybe for those who believed in other gods, they may have been familiar with the idea of condemnation even if not God’s condemnation. And perhaps it may be easier to convince those who believed in other gods that God is the only one that matters, having been exposed to the idea of a superior being. In this regard, perhaps, it was easier to convince the Romans of God’s existence that to convince those who put their belief on no god at all.
The Gospels served as a reassurance and reinforcement to those who already had learned and had started to believe in God through Jesus. The difficulty was in conveying the Gospel to the pagans. On this, many of Jesus’ disciples were met with hostility. Paul, for instance, met his death in the hands of others.
Some may question why people would risk their lives to convey God through Jesus. It’s a relatively simple answer: Jesus commanded us to love God with all our heart, soul and mind and to love eachother as we do ourselves. We would therefore want to impart on the rest of the world the things we know of the Kingdom of God that awaits us if we believe in him. It is a treasure that we, in loving others as we love ourselves, would be willing to share, so that those who did not know of God’s existence would not be forsaken by Him.