The Bible is sometimes a strange
document. I’ve often wondered what it would look like if we had an editor who could
rid it of inconsistencies and had a better grasp of writing effective prose. If
I was such an editor, I’d certainly make several changes. And one of the first
would concern the Garden of Gethsemane.
In this passage, we’re
eavesdropping on Jesus as he prays in the Garden. We hear the odd soundbite,
which gives the impression of Jesus talking to God, maybe arguing, about the
task ahead. There’s a delicacy about it and almost a reticence. The prose is
sparse and says almost nothing. It’s almost as if Jesus is asking God in a
polite way to reconsider. But if we look at a parallel passage that’s usually
avoided because it’s not in the Gospels at all but is embedded in the Letter to
the Hebrews. Hebrews 5:7 says, ‘During the days of Jesus’ life on earth, he
offered up prayers and petitions with fervent cries and tears to the one who
could save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent submission.’
Taken together, these verses invite us to change our vision of Jesus’
prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane. He’s not so much praying as pleading.
Jesus is imploring God with every grain of his spiritual life to release him. He
feels sick with dread … but dread of what?
Jesus knew what death by
crucifixion was like — we know for example that the Romans sometimes forced the
common people to look at their countryfolk being crucified, to witness the
agony, because it cowed them into submission. Bullies are always the same.
Jesus’ dread could be a fear of
death, but I don’t think so because the Gospels always show him as a courageous
man: we see him facing demons, cleansing the Temples, and standing in the prow
of a tiny sinking boat and stopping a life-threatening storm.
Jesus’ agony in the Garden is
different because it’s a spiritual
battle. His life is so bound up with his relationship with God that it is his life. And he knows that ‘the cup’
he is about to drink will be so infect his soul with sin — your sin and mind —
that the relationship will stop as effectively as a car crash. That’s why he’s
shouting into the freezing night air on a barren hillside. He knows the imminent
spiritual pain of his loss will be greater than the physical pain of
crucifixion.
The Bible is sometimes a strange
document. But this much is clear: the story here is big and very, very painful.
And we’re being invited to share this journey.
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