become this Lord's Day after
two weeks gone. What a joy it is to be here again
and to meet around the Savior's feast and to remember what He
has done for us, how He has saved us by His dying for us. Well, I thought it would be appropriate
this Lord's Day to discuss in a few words the subject of weakness
and frailty. because that's what I've been
battling the last three or four weeks now. The lot of mankind
is frailty and weakness. When the body just won't go anymore,
and all the energy is drained out, you feel like you've been
wrung out like a dish rag, and the result of weakness is not
just that you are faltering in your strength, and power, but
also that you lose your appetite, and you lose your drive, and
you lose your motivation, and you just want to lie there and
rest and wait for the strength to come back. Nobody wants to
get out and exercise so they can restore their strength, not
when it's the kind of weakness that just saps you. We're talking
not just of mere thirst or hunger, or even exhaustion from hard
labor. Those are things that are normal
to the original creation that God made us in perfection to
be hungry and to seek food and eat, to be thirsty and to seek
out water and drink, to be tired and to obtain rest and restoration. All of those things are not any
result of evil or of sin or of the fall. But that's not what
we're talking about. We're talking about a weakness
that seems to know no cure. You see, all of those weaknesses
are temporary and fleeting and can be easily resolved. People get dehydrated, they can
drink water and they can be restored very quickly. grow exceedingly
hungry and weak, and they can be restored with a good meal.
Their strength can be restored with a good long sleep. But we're talking about the weakness
that none of those things cure. Old age brings about weakness
in our bodies. Our bodies break down, or our
medicine goes astray, as is in my case. and the doctors have
to tinker and adjust and poke and prod. So what we're really
talking about is the kind of weakness that's the result of
the fall. It's the result of sin. Your particular weakness
now is not the result of any particular sin that you committed,
but it is a result of the corruption of the fall that has come into
the world because of man's sin and that has taken away some
of the quality, has degraded the creature that God made. Because of this topic on my mind,
I came to think of the bodily weakness of Christ near the cross. The bodily weakness of Christ
near the cross. I'm talking about actual faintness,
actual weakness, actual draining of energy and of strength. As I thought of that, to a comfort
that Jesus knows even my weakness. Every time you come to think
about it, you'll discover that whatever frailty you have found
yourself in, the Lord Jesus has already beat you to the punch,
as it were. He already tops it. He doesn't
do it out of pride or anything like that. It's just that it
was part of His work as the Redeemer to come into the world, to be
made like His brethren, and to suffer many, many, many of the
problems that we suffer so that He could be a faithful high priest,
so that He could know how to intercede for us. You know, usually
when we talk of Christ's weakness, we talk more of His posture of
weakness, submitting to death, He appeared weak psychologically
and positionally. Powerful people seemed to hold
control over his body. He was subject to death. He went
to the cross and was crucified. The evil of this world seemed
to have taken over him and overwhelmed him, didn't it? That's usually
what we mean when we speak of the weakness of Christ. We sang
a song this morning. It has a verse that says, By
weakness and defeat he won a glorious crown. We exalt, though, in that
weakness, we exalt in his strength in that lowly posture. Because
unbeknownst to everybody else, Christ always had the upper hand
in all of that. He laid down His life to save
us. His victory was by weakness and defeat. He trod all our foes
beneath His feet by being trodden down." So you see, the weakness
that we usually discuss when we think about the weakness of
Christ is this sort of strategical weakness, if you will, by which
He frustrated, overturned, and overcame the forces of wicked
power that had seized his people and enslaved us and drug us down
to doom. But today we speak of Christ's
bodily physical weakness, not that strategic weakness postured
to great victory, but only known to Christ. There are several
places in the scripture where the bodily weakness of Jesus
is discussed. foretold, of course, by the Spirit
of Christ Himself, the David, in Psalm 22. Many aspects of
Christ's crucifixion are described in Psalm 22. How He would be
forsaken by God. How the people would mock Him
and say, He trusted in God, let Him deliver Him if He'll have
Him, for He said, I am the Son of God. How He was strung up
on the cross you could tell his bones because they had stripped
him of his garments. All sorts of little details of
the crucifixion which Christ by His Spirit revealed to David.
But we may focus only today on those references to his physical
weakness. In Psalm 22 at verse 14, Christ
says, I am poured out like water and all my bones are out of joint.
My heart is like wax. It is melted in the midst of
my bowels. My strength is dried up like
a potsherd, and my tongue cleaveth to my jaws." Here is a short
description of physical weakness by the Lord Jesus when He is
on the cross. It feels like He's poured out
like water. as all of his strength and vitality
just trickles away, trickles away onto the ground. His heart
is like wax. It is melted in the midst of
his bowels. This is a reference to the stress
and the strain on his heart that was brought on by the crucifixion.
His strength is dried up like a potsherd. It just vanishes
away. We've all had that feeling. when
our strength has drained out of us. Sometimes it comes on
in an instant, in a terror or a horror that we face or a shock,
and sometimes it comes on little by little until finally we're
drained. And my tongue cleaveth to my jaws, probably referring
to intense thirst, intense thirst. But note Christ's cry to God
a few verses later. but be not thou far from me,
O Lord, O my strength. Haste thee to help me." See,
the Lord Jesus knew in whatever weakness that he was facing,
whether it was physical exhaustion, physical weakness, or whether
it was the attacks of wicked men, or the pain and anguish
of the crucifixion, he knew that God was his strength. Haste thou
to help me. And we've spoken on this subject
many times, and of course, God did help Christ. He helped Him
when He raised Him from the dead. Christ had to go through the
awful wrath of God on the cross and all the pain and sorrow before
the help of God would come. The God of His strength is who
Christ looked to in His physical weakness. How did Jesus come
to be weak though? And here is the great distinction
between our weakness and that of the Lord Jesus. For Jesus
was no doubt a fit young man. He walked everywhere, not just
down to the grocery store, but miles and miles and miles and
miles he walked. He didn't eat any processed foods.
So assuming that the Father provided his bread that he needed, which
is a reasonable assumption. He had good food. He had adequate
food. He had sunshine. And so there
was every reason to believe that the Lord Jesus physically was
a fit young man. He was in his early 30s, of course. He walked everywhere. And so
he should have been in good strength, shouldn't he? Naturally. As I
mentioned earlier, we're not speaking of ordinary daily weakness,
which is a regular, normal thing that's not a product of the fall. Christ grew hungry. Remember, after He fasted in
the wilderness, it says He grew hungry. And that's when Satan
showed up to try to take advantage of that temporary weakness. And
the Lord Jesus grew thirsty. Remember, at the woman at the
well in John, He sat by the well when He asked her for a drink.
And then He launched off into His teaching on the living water
that she ought to seek. She kept confusing it with just
free water that's delivered without any work, but that's not at all
what he had in mind. And of course, the Lord Jesus
grew tired. You remember he slept in the
bottom of the boat when the sea erupted in all of its anger and
fury. But you see, the natural state
of the creature, is such as what Christ underwent, even without
sin, even without fall, even without the corruption. And people
argue a lot about whether Christ was ever ill, whether He could
ever injure Himself because He had never committed any sin. And it's generally believed that
illness and so forth are the consequence of sin and corruption.
And Christ was not subject to corruption. We know that for
sure. So Christ's weakness at Calvary was not the weakness
brought on by the fall, that is, any sin of Christ on Christ's
part or by any health failures or the breaking down of the body
due to the natural course of things, due to the corruption
of the body by sin, which Christ had none of. So where did Christ's
bodily weaknesses come from? We read what wicked men did to
Jesus. We read that passage in Mark
15 this morning. Consider at verse 12, Pilate
answered and said again unto them, what will ye then that
I shall do unto him whom ye call the king of the Jews? And they
cried out again, crucify him. Then Pilate said unto them, why,
what evil hath he done? And they cried out the more exceedingly,
crucify him. And so Pilate, willing to content
the people, released Barabbas unto them, who was a murderer,
and delivered Jesus when he had scourged him to be crucified. And the soldiers led him away
into the hall called Praetorium, and they called together the
whole band, and they clothed him with purple and plaited a
crown of thorns and put it upon his head, began to salute him,
Hail, King of the Jews. And they smote him on the head
with a reed and did spit upon him, and bowing their knees worshiped
Him. And when they had mocked Him,
they took off the purple from Him and put His own clothes on
Him and led Him out to crucify Him." You see that it was by
sin and the fall that Jesus was weak, but not His own sin and
not His own fall. No, it was wicked men who beat
Him and tortured Him mercilessly. It is our crimes that made Jesus
weak in His body. Anybody else who had been weak,
any of us, any other, unless it's due to some cruelty by someone
or some sin or some crime by someone, maybe some drunk driver
runs into you and hits you and you're reduced to a weakened
state in the hospital. But no, see, in this case, it
was wicked men who beat Christ pierced his head with the crown
of thorns and who hit him on his head, who tore out his beard,
as Isaiah the prophet told us. And so therefore, it was the
sin of mankind, it was our sin, if you will, that made Christ's
body weak. His body was weak because of
our crimes carried out and exhibited against Him personally. You remember
the thief on the cross argued, we suffer justly for our sins,
but this man hath done nothing amiss. This man hath done nothing
amiss. So you see, the thief on the
cross was weak and dying and powerless, but it was because
of his sin. The Lord Jesus on the cross next
to him was weak and dying, but it was because of our sin. Our
sin laid on Him and our sin specifically executed against Him by wicked
men. There is another hint about Christ's
weakness to be found in Luke's Gospel, the 23rd chapter at verse
26. And as they led Christ away,
they laid hold upon one Simon, a Cyrenian, coming out of the
country and on him they laid the cross that he might bear
it after Jesus." Now, John tells us that at first they laid the
cross on Jesus himself. Only later did they shanghai
Simon of Cyrene and impress him into the duty of carrying the
cross. Well, why might this be? Old
Brother John Gill says, of that phrase, him they compelled to
bear the cross, which they did, he says, not out of goodwill
to Christ, but fearing lest through his faintness and weakness he
should die before he got to the place of execution, and they
be disappointed of their end, the crucifixion of him. They
were in haste to have him executed, and he was not able to go as
fast as they desired, and when they first came out, the cross
was laid upon Christ, and He bore it. But He being weak and
ready to faint under it, not able to go the pace they would
have Him, and meeting with this man, that is, Simon the Cyrenian,
they pressed Him to bear it after Him, which He might be unwilling
to do, partly because it was scandalous and ignominious, and
partly because as a favor of Jesus, He did not choose to be
any way's accessory to His death, But he was obliged to it, and
it may be observed from hints that taking up the cross and
following Christ is disagreeable to flesh and blood. Though the
spirit may be willing, the flesh recoils. None care for it or
choose to bear it unless constrained to it. And so the Scriptures
say that then they crucified Jesus. We've discussed before
the details of crucifixion. It wasn't just the driving of
the nails through the wrists or hands to affix the body to
the cross. It wasn't just the driving of
the nails through the feet to transfix the body upon the cross. It was the positional nature
of being strung up by one's hands where your feet can't reach the
ground, where you can't stand on your feet. And when that happens,
there's a process called positional asphyxiation by which your arms
being drawn up, your rib cage and all find it harder and more
difficult to draw breath. Fluid develops on your chest
and in your heart because of the severe pressure upon the
heart by this position that you're held in. And it's an agonizing
death and it goes on sometimes for days. You might call it death
by exhaustion because you could gain relief if you were able
to stand on your feet and give your chest relief. But if you
pushed up with your feet, then the pain was so great that you
would collapse again. And so you were in a hopeless
cycle of despair and the longer it went, the weaker you got,
probably primarily due to lack of oxygen. Now, this is a method
of death that is being used even today. The CIA has murdered several
people on the record by tying them up by their wrists and suspending
them above the ground until they died. You know, we ought never
to scoff at those who die because they can't breathe, because of
something physical being done to them to restrict or constrain
their breathing. And you remember, if you want
a picture of how badly beaten and mauled and mutilated the
Lord Jesus was when He hung on the cross. After all they had
done to Him, after the flogging After the scourging, they had
whips with pieces of glass or pieces of metal wound into them,
and they would lash the man on his back, and he would bleed
rivers of blood. If you want a picture of it,
remember that verse in Isaiah 52 at verse 14. As many were
astonished at thee, that is Christ, His visage was so marred more
than any man, and His form more than the sons of men. I once
preached a message on that text. And I made the point that the
devil, through his henchmen, the wicked men, were trying to
efface the humanity of Christ because somehow the devil knew
that it was the incarnation by which Christ would save His people. It was His identity with His
people, with His creatures, with mankind, that Christ would somehow
find a way, inexplicable to Satan and his people, of saving his
people. And so, anything that could be
done to short-circuit Christ's life, to mar his image as a man,
to alienate him from his fellow man, was all to the good as far
as the devil was concerned. Now, Christ's weakness therefore
came from the criminal acts of wicked men which they inflicted
upon him." Criminal acts of wicked men. The beating and the flogging. The torture of the crown of thorns. Have you ever pierced your scalp
with a needle or something or cut it? It hurts so bad. With the nails pounded into his
hands and feet, the agony of being strung up on the cross,
the heart pounding, growing larger, the agonizing thirst, the sweat,
all those awful things, and the loss of blood from all the flogging
and from the wounds and the inability to take a good breath. Sometimes we think about these
things and it almost overwhelms us. I take away these three thoughts
from the truth of Christ's weakness on the cross, physical weakness.
The first is this, nobody knows weakness like our Lord Jesus. No matter how bad our weakness
may feel in our body, Jesus was far worse. And so we ought to
take comfort that when we are weak, that Jesus sympathizes
with us because he has gone through worse that we ever will, even
if you just limit it to the physical weakness of the body, not to
mention having our sins laid on and being treated as guilty,
being made sin for us, He who knew no sin, all of those things
piled on top of Him all at one time. Think about how the bodily
weakness of Christ impacts His thoughts and His feelings and
His heart regarding all the spiritual oppression and judgment that
was also raining down on him. It's one thing, you know, to
be weak and then pile on top of that other problems that you
don't even have the power or strength to address. But then secondly, he underwent
all of this deliberately to save his loved ones. This didn't just
sneak up on him. It didn't suddenly overtake him
as a surprise, like my weakness did. He knew long beforehand,
from eternity, he knew that he would be hit with an overwhelming
weakness of the body. He who had been so strong in
his ministry, and better yet, more glorious yet, he who had
created the human body. and all other things in this
world, and created Him perfect. Yet because of sin imposed upon
Him by wicked men, He knew He would be weak. He always knew
of the travails of the cross. And yet He went towards it with
His face set like flint, didn't He? He would not turn away. He
was fully aware of all the consequences that were about to overwhelm
him, as it were, although he was not overwhelmed. And yet
he went straight into the maw of death to save us. No wonder
Isaiah said that he is a man of sorrows and acquainted with
grief. And then thirdly, Christ was
raised up in power and glory. from the depths of his weakness,
from the depths of his physical loss of strength, from the depths
of all the other things that crashed upon him, from the depths
of being punished for our sin and treated as guilty and mocked
and taunted and abused and put through unspeakable pain for
us from those depths. Three days later, you see, he
was raised in power and glory And one day He has promised that
He will raise up us also. And that's the ultimate cure
of physical weakness, isn't it? The ultimate cure of the corruption
of the body, the ultimate cure of the presence of sin in our
body, the ultimate cure of all the sorrows that come upon the
Lord's people throughout our lives because of sin, because
of the fall, because of the sin of other people, because of the
sin of ourselves, because of the general corruption and degradation
of our physical beings, the only solution to that is our resurrection,
isn't it? He will raise us up also. If
you go and read 1 Corinthians 15, you'll see Paul goes through
the litany, buried in weakness, raised in power, Buried in corruption,
raised in incorruption. Buried in mortality, raised in
glory and immortality. We have a glorious future which
Christ has purchased for us with His own body and blood. And because
of that, He will take away all the weakness. He will wipe away
all the tears. You wouldn't believe the stupid
things people claim in order to try to frustrate what God's
Word says. The latest one I've come across
is that, well, God can't wipe away tears in eternity unless
we have tears. And so therefore, we're going
to be very sad in heaven so that God can continually wipe away
our tears. What a bunch of fools these people
are. That's not the promise of Christ
at all. Sorrow and sighing shall flee
away and never come back. Death shall lose its power and
its sting, and one day soon, when Christ appears and raises
us up, we shall be completely free of all these things, the
weakness, the sorrow, the dying, and the sinning. We'll be free
of it all. And it's because of what Jesus
did for us and how He went through His death on the cross to save
us. Well, let's give thanks for the
Lord's table. and rejoice at what the Lord Jesus bought for
us there on Calvary's tree, with all of the horrible details,
many of which we never even consider, but which perhaps sometimes in
our own personal lives, things may be brought to our personal
feelings that will help us to recall and to rejoice and to
glorify our Lord Jesus. Let's give thanks first for the
bread that pictures the body that was broken for us. Oh God,
our Father, we rejoice in the goodness of Christ, the obedience
of Christ. We thank you that he laid down
his life for us. We thank you that he went to
the cross, despising the shame, that he endured all these things
for us, that he patiently bore our sins in his own body. that
we're healed by the stripes of Jesus, healed from our sinning,
healed from our rebellion and our going astray. Thank you that
He has captured us and brought us back unto His presence and
around this table. Thank you that He left us this
bread to picture the body that was broken. We pray in Jesus'
name. Amen. The scriptures tell us
that on the night our Lord was betrayed, He took the bread and
He blessed it and He broke it And he said, take and eat. This
is my body which is broken for you. Do this in remembrance of
me. I'd like to ask Brother Whitten
if he'd give thanks for the cup that pictures the blood of Christ
shed for us. The Scriptures tell us after
they had supped that he took the cup and he blessed it. And
he said, drink ye all of it. This cup is the new covenant
in my blood for the remission of sin. Do it as often as ye
do it in remembrance of me. And the scriptures tell us that
as often as we eat this bread and drink this cup, we do preach
the Lord's death until he comes. Let's stand and sing number 169
in the black book. Lord, we would ne'er forget thy
love, who hast redeemed us by thy blood. And now as our high
priest above does intercede for us with God. 169.