Hello, this something I am going to be teaching.
Did God, forsake Jesus on the cross?
First things first, let’s look at and consider the Greek definition of the word; doctrine, in Greek.
Let’s see if we can by the spirit see, if Yahavah did forsake the man, whom was his beloved Son, which was the Word which was sent down from above. Have you ever questioned or thought about it?
Did God forsake Jesus on the Cross?
Let’s consider,
I believe that Jesus had hope of being redeemed and resurrected and glorified in his heart and soul. Jesus also had God within Him, as Christ.
With this in mind, of God being in Christ, let’s look at the cross one more time, by the subject matter. You have the Pharisees wragging their heads at Jesus, mocking him, and then Jesus cries out.
have you forsaken
ἐγκατέλιπες (enkatelipes)
Verb - Aorist Indicative Active - 2nd Person Singular
Strong's 1459: From en and kataleipo; to leave behind in some place, i.e. let remain over, or to desert.
Many people desire to express that Jesus is feeling this way. However, it’s a reality in which God had forsaken the Body which Jesus had given up in order for it to be the sacrifice for sins forever after three days in which God resurrected the only Begotten Son of God.
If God was in Christ. And Jesus had the ability to lay down his own life or not, God not being able to indwell sin that had partaken in that body (the Law fully), given forth the weight and sting of death, in restoring everything back to the way it was in the Garden.
God forsake Jesus, and while Jesus still had hope, God left him there to die. Which somewhere is mentioned in Psalms where it pleased God to crush his son, because of the eternal precious blood that outweighed sin, having been the very Word of God, which came down and was born within flesh. Jesus was the first man to be of heavenly originality, as the Word of God, which was expressed through Jesus as a man now wrapped in flesh. However, while Jesus body had yet to retain sin, and Jesus allows death to ensue by giving up his own life, Yahavah/Yahweh/Jehovah in Christ, the anointed one named Emmanuel, (God with us), and Jesus, (who would save his people from their sins) who paid for the wages of sin in death as a willful, unselfish, and goodwilled by the Spirit of the Father in order for us to also partake in his death, burial and resurrection. I’m not saying getting a cross and carrying around all day in town means very much of very little but if you are living your life before your Father in faith, and seek Him, and you seem to love God and live loving others by the spirit, continue in one’s own godliness (which is to say continue in your devotion towards your Father daily and be encouraged to take time to reflect and read one’s Bible of their choice and grow to know more about God who loves you and desires to give you new life.
It’s interesting to think about, the abandoned house of Jesus no longer “Christ” because God in Christ, left him. Jesus was left utterly alone, and died on the cross. Three days later by the Spirit of Yahavah, Jesus was restored back filled with life. (Thinking about the decay of a body which died for sin perfectly, and the disciples can’t see spirits, Jesus body that is seen I wonder if it really had much decay, even after taking on the sins of the world (which was the commandments which the people of Israel could never keep except some whom were deemed blameless under the law. (Just a few extra side thiughts.)
Thank you for reading.
Did God, forsake Jesus on the cross?
First things first, let’s look at and consider the Greek definition of the word; doctrine, in Greek.
(Source:https://biblehub.com/greek/1322.htm)didaché: doctrine, teachingOriginal Word: διδαχή, ῆς, ἡ
Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine
Transliteration: didaché
Phonetic Spelling: (did-akh-ay')
Definition: doctrine, teaching
Usage: teaching, doctrine, what is taught.
HELPS Word-studies
Cognate: 1322 didax (from 1321 /didáskō, "to teach") – established teaching, especially a "summarized" body of respected teaching (viewed as reliable, time-honored).
[The NT uses two feminine nouns (1319/didaskalía, 1322 /didaxḗ) from the same root. For more on this see 1319 /didaskalía ("applied-teaching, systematic theology").]
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Did God forsake Jesus on the Cross?
Let’s consider,
Hebrews 5:7
While Jesus was here on earth, he offered prayers and pleadings, with a loud cry and tears, to the one who could rescue him from death. And God heard his prayers because of his deep reverence for God.
I believe that Jesus had hope of being redeemed and resurrected and glorified in his heart and soul. Jesus also had God within Him, as Christ.
2 Corinthians 5:19 It was God [personally present] in Christ, reconciling and restoring the world to favor with Himself, not counting up and holding against [men] their trespasses [but cancelling them], and committing to us the message of reconciliation (of the restoration to favor).
2 Corinthians 5:19 I mean that God was in Christ, making peace between the world and himself. In Christ, God did not hold people guilty for their sins. And he gave us this message of peace to tell people.
With this in mind, of God being in Christ, let’s look at the cross one more time, by the subject matter. You have the Pharisees wragging their heads at Jesus, mocking him, and then Jesus cries out.
”Now from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour. And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?“
Matthew 27:45-46 KJV
have you forsaken
ἐγκατέλιπες (enkatelipes)
Verb - Aorist Indicative Active - 2nd Person Singular
Strong's 1459: From en and kataleipo; to leave behind in some place, i.e. let remain over, or to desert.
Many people desire to express that Jesus is feeling this way. However, it’s a reality in which God had forsaken the Body which Jesus had given up in order for it to be the sacrifice for sins forever after three days in which God resurrected the only Begotten Son of God.
If God was in Christ. And Jesus had the ability to lay down his own life or not, God not being able to indwell sin that had partaken in that body (the Law fully), given forth the weight and sting of death, in restoring everything back to the way it was in the Garden.
God forsake Jesus, and while Jesus still had hope, God left him there to die. Which somewhere is mentioned in Psalms where it pleased God to crush his son, because of the eternal precious blood that outweighed sin, having been the very Word of God, which came down and was born within flesh. Jesus was the first man to be of heavenly originality, as the Word of God, which was expressed through Jesus as a man now wrapped in flesh. However, while Jesus body had yet to retain sin, and Jesus allows death to ensue by giving up his own life, Yahavah/Yahweh/Jehovah in Christ, the anointed one named Emmanuel, (God with us), and Jesus, (who would save his people from their sins) who paid for the wages of sin in death as a willful, unselfish, and goodwilled by the Spirit of the Father in order for us to also partake in his death, burial and resurrection. I’m not saying getting a cross and carrying around all day in town means very much of very little but if you are living your life before your Father in faith, and seek Him, and you seem to love God and live loving others by the spirit, continue in one’s own godliness (which is to say continue in your devotion towards your Father daily and be encouraged to take time to reflect and read one’s Bible of their choice and grow to know more about God who loves you and desires to give you new life.
It’s interesting to think about, the abandoned house of Jesus no longer “Christ” because God in Christ, left him. Jesus was left utterly alone, and died on the cross. Three days later by the Spirit of Yahavah, Jesus was restored back filled with life. (Thinking about the decay of a body which died for sin perfectly, and the disciples can’t see spirits, Jesus body that is seen I wonder if it really had much decay, even after taking on the sins of the world (which was the commandments which the people of Israel could never keep except some whom were deemed blameless under the law. (Just a few extra side thiughts.)
Thank you for reading.