Mark 15:21-32. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on March 14, 2021.
During the last week before the crucifixion, Jesus had said, “If I be lifted up from the earth, I will draw all people to myself.” He uses a verb that literally describes the crucifixion, but also has a metaphorical use that meant exaltation to a place of honor. The people of Israel would lift Jesus up, one way or another. We typically take this verse in the sense of exaltation. However, we are told that Jesus was speaking of the way in which he would be executed.
The world was going to crucify Jesus, but it would ironically be his exaltation. It would set in motion his power to draw all manner of people unto himself. They would be drawn to him spiritually, but not forcefully. The world will soon drag mankind into worship of a system and a god-man that will employ force. However, this is not the way of the omnipotent God of the universe.
If we are to exalt Jesus before the world, we must be careful of separating him from the cross in people’s minds. Yes, Jesus is coming back in power and great might, but he broke the might of our enemy at the cross. We live in the face of a backlash against Jesus and his people that is growing every day. It is a backlash against his word, the Bible. It has already been happening in people’s hearts, even some who profess to be Christians. This is being drawn to the surface through the events and social issues of our day. Satan will seek to cancel the truth about who God is, who Jesus is. Who will you stand with in this testing time? I pray that you will stand with the one true Jesus faithfully revealed to us in God’s Word.
In verse 21, it is time for Jesus to be crucified, and thus, they begin to lead him to the place of execution. Jesus is a “dead man walking,” as they say. It was typical for the victim to carry the crossbeam of the cross with the vertical member generally left standing in the same place between executions. The physical condition of Jesus is so bad that he is unable to carry his crossbeam all the way to the place of death. It is at this point that a man who happened upon the scene is forced into service. Simon of Cyrene is force to help carry the cross of Jesus.
Cyrene was a city in Africa, what we would call the coast of eastern Libya today. With a name like Simon, he is clearly a Jew who has made the long journey to participate in the Passover proceedings. The mention of his sons, Alexander and Rufus, seems to indicate that the original readers would recognize the names. They had most likely become a part of the early Christian community.
It is interesting that sometimes we are compelled to do things that we do not want to do, but they end up marking our life for good, and for God. Where Simon Peter had failed to stand beside Jesus, the Father supplied another Simon to help His Son to complete the mission. May God help us to do less complaining about the lot that we have received, and to do more praying about how we should respond to those difficult times. We must seek to discover what He is saying to us through it. Simon of Cyrene had a close encounter with Jesus as he went to the cross. This would mark him forever.
The execution site is named Golgotha, an Aramaic term meaning “place of a skull.” There are two sites that are contenders today for this location. The idea that it was a small hill that was shaped like a skull cannot be traced back to the first century, so it is unclear how dependable it is. However, all of Jerusalem in those days would know exactly where Golgotha was. It was the place that was just outside of the walls of Jerusalem, either to the west of the temple mount, or to the northwest of it.
Upon arrival at the execution site, Jesus is offered a mixed drink to help numb the pain. Proverbs 31:6-7 tells us to give strong drink to him who is perishing, and wine to those who are bitter of heart. It was common for the Jews to offer such to those being executed. However, Jesus refuses this, not so much because he loves pain and suffering, but because he must fully identify with our suffering in order to serve as a merciful High Priest, as the book of Hebrews details (Hebrews 2:17).
There is a certain amount of suffering that we must embrace in this life, not because of some masochistic desire, but because it helps us to identify with Jesus. It helps us to understand that his sufferings brought us life that our sufferings cannot neutralize. We should not seek to make ourselves suffer on purpose, but neither should we run from it when it comes knocking. Weep with those who weep, and know that, this too, Jesus shall overcome in the resurrection.
At last, Jesus is nailed to the crossbeam and lifted into place. Mark tells us that this happens at the third hour. The Jews divided the day as hours counting from what we would call 6:00 AM. Thus, the third hour would be the hour beginning at 9:00 AM. Later in this chapter, we will be told that Jesus dies just after the ninth hour, or 3:00 PM. This would put him on the cross for six hours total. The Roman reckoning of time was as ours. John’s Gospel must have been using this when it refers to Jesus being before Pilate at the sixth hour, or 6:00 AM.
Mark tells us that an inscription, or sign, is put above Jesus. Typically, this would be the charge for which the person is being executed. However, Pilate words it in such a way as to slight the Jews, or at least their leaders. “King of the Jews,” is what it says. John’s Gospel adds that it also said “Jesus of Nazareth.” It was in Greek, Hebrew, and in Latin. Though the Jewish leaders complained that the sign made it look like Jesus actually was the king of the Jews, it was fitting that the Savior of all peoples, of every language, should be declared in the main languages of the day. Here is Jesus of Nazareth, the king of the Jews. Of course, Jesus is much more than this. What Pilate does out of spite, God allows to drive home the point to the Jewish onlookers. We have crucified the king that God has finally sent us.
Mark mentions that Jesus is crucified between two robbers. Only Luke mentions that one of the robbers ends up putting his faith in Jesus while he was on the cross. Mark’s gospel implies that both of the robbers mock Jesus at first. Mark points us to Isaiah 53:12, which tells us that the suffering Messiah would be numbered among those who are transgressors.
Jesus was executed as if he was the same as these two robbers, worthy to be executed and cast out as a dead branch. Yet, Jesus is eternal life! Even today, this world will control the narrative by castigating believers as transgressors. It is not what this world says about you that is most important. It is what Jesus will say about you when you stand before God the Father. May we be found as faithful in this generation.
We talked about the mocking of the soldiers last week. Now, Jesus is opened to further public mocking. The terms blaspheme and mocking are used. They can serve as synonyms in this situation, but essentially to blaspheme is to speak a falsehood about someone, especially God. Whereas, mocking is more about the ridicule of a person and what they stand for.
The common people and the chief priests are all blaspheming and ridiculing Jesus. It is unclear why these priests would be here when there are clearly duties to be done at the temple. It can only be chalked up to their vitriol towards Jesus.
The first statement mentioned is blasphemy and mocking. “You who destroy the temple and rebuild it in three days…” Jesus never said that he would destroy the temple, but here they ridicule the idea that a man who is powerless to stop his own execution would have the power to rebuild the temple in three days. What of your wild claim now, Jesus? Of course, it is they who are destroying the temple of his body, and on the third day, Jesus would raise it up in his own resurrection. It is not an honor to mock things that you do not understand because you end up being revealed as a fool in the end.
This is followed up with mocking his ability to save. Save yourself and come down from the cross. In a sense, they throw down the gauntlet for him to prove himself, but on the other hand, it is not something they expect him to do. To them, Jesus has been checkmated and there is no way out. He is proven to be a false prophet in their eyes. Jesus was famous for saving people from the death sentence of hideous diseases. Yet, he is powerless in the face of crucifixion.
They even add the twist that if he does come down from the cross then they would believe that he is the Messiah, and the rightful king of Israel. The sad thing is that Jesus did have the power to save himself, but if he saved himself, he would be damning all mankind. The logic goes like this. “God, do this thing and I will believe.” However, if God does that thing my belief would be to late to help me. I would be trapped forever in guilt, knowing that he was right and I failed to believe when I should have.
This is the great wisdom of the world. It seems so powerful and wise, but in the end, it is folly. It foolishly tells God how to run the universe, or ridicules the idea of God because the universe is not running in a particular way. Imagine God at the beginning of creation, looking ahead and writing down a list of every demand from every human being who ever existed as to what he must do to prove Himself to them. God is not a dog to jump through all the hoops we demand that He must jump through. Yet, He does love us and demonstrated it powerfully on the cross.
So, I end with this. Save yourself from this stubborn and wicked generation, by putting your faith in the crucified Lord who died for your sins, and rose up from the grave to give you eternal life!