ow, 46 and said unto them, Why sleep ye? rise and pray, that
ye enter not into temptation.
From the quiet fellowship in the upper room Jesus with his disciples,
under the shadow of the night, went forth to the Garden of Gethsemane, a
favorite resort on the slope of the Mount of Olives, and he there
experienced that unequaled anguish of soul which is commonly known as his
"agony." To enter the sacred privacy of that scene even in imagination
seems to be an intrusion, and yet some glimpses have been revealed for our
instruction and encouragement as his disciples.
There can be no doubt that this distress which seized him was due to his
clear vision of the death he was to endure on the following day; and this
very agony adds beyond measure to the meaning and the mystery of that
death. For any sensitive soul to shrink from pain and anguish is but
natural and pardonable; yet if Jesus suffered such incomparable agony
simply in view of physical torture, he was less heroic than many of his
followers have been. If, however, in the hour of death, he was to be so
identified with sin as to become the Redeemer of the world; if he was "to
give his life a ransom for many;" if his experience as the Lamb of God was
to be absolutely unique; if he was to endure the hiding of his Father's
face, then we can understand why it was that in the dark hour of
anticipation his soul was sorrowful "even unto death." The agony of our
Lord must never be supposed to reflect upon his human heroism; it is
rather a proof of his divine atonement. The "cup" which Jesus was asked to
drink consisted of death as "the Bearer of sin."
In this hour of most bitter trial Jesus found relief in prayer. He had
come to Gethsemane that he might be alone with God. He had exhorted his
disciples to follow his example. When the agony most fiercely gripped his
lonely heart he still prayed and he was heard. The cup was not removed,
but "There appeared unto him an angel from heaven, strengthening him." He
was given grace to drain the cup to its very dregs and death lost its
sting and the grave its terror. He was fitted for perfect sympathy with
those who are called upon to face the mystery of "unanswered prayer." "He
became unto all them that obey him the author of eternal salvation."
Jesus prayed in faith; and the very essence of such believing prayer is
the willingness to obey. This was the petition which comes to us as an
example, "Nevertheless not my will, but t
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