“But standing by
the cross of Jesus were His mother, and His mother’s sister, Mary the wife of
Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus then saw His mother, and the disciple whom
He loved standing nearby, He said to His mother, ‘Woman, behold your son!’ Then
He said to the disciple, ‘Behold, your mother!’ From that hour the disciple
took her into his own household” (John 19:25 – 27).
This was a
horrid and cruel scene; a violent and bloody and drawn-out torture of three men
filled with taunts directed to the One in the center. “If you are the Son of
God, save Yourself, come down from the cross!” When the veil is drawn back, we
often see the world’s leadership for what it is, including its religious
leadership – here we see the “heirs” of Moses and Abraham not as they purport
to be, but as their hearts truly are. What about our hearts?
Whether we trace
our inheritance to the Fathers, to a branch of the Reformation, to the Ancient
East, to more recent traditions and distinctives, or even to the Apostles; what
about our own hearts?
The mother of
Jesus stands by her Son in His agonizing death. Thank God she is not alone,
other women are with her, and the disciple whom Jesus loves is there. Amid the
shouts, the jeers, the gambling away of His clothing (is anyone selling popcorn?),
the life of Jesus is ebbing away, His blood is dripping from the cross; it is
on the wood, on the ground…is the blood of Jesus on those gathered around Him?
Are Mary’s tears intermingled with Jesus’ blood?
Where are the
multitudes whom Jesus has fed?
Where are the
lepers He cleansed?
Where are the
many who followed Him?
Where are the
few who were with Him in the Upper Room?
These are not questions
that matter so much, the question that matters is, “Where am I?”
Where are you?
Today, it is not
enough to ask, “Am I standing by the cross?”
I must ask, “If
I am standing by a cross, which cross am I standing by?”
Am I standing by
a cross that has a dollar sign affixed to it? Is it a cross with a national flag
wrapped around it? Is it a cross used to budgeon, imprison, and trample on
others? Is it a cross employed to gather votes? Has the cross I am standing by
been wrapped in cotton candy and entertainment? Has it had a “do over” to make
it attractive and tasteful and profitable?
There are typically
only two types of crowds around a cross, one crowd is crucifying the Son of
God, the other crowd is around a cross they have made to order – a Christless cross.
Perhaps the only place we shall see a faithful crowd around the true Cross is
in heaven…at least until heaven is manifested fully on earth.
If there is no
reproach, no shame…there is likely no true Cross with Christ crucified.
We are taught that
we are to “Go out to Him outside the camp, bearing His reproach. For here we do
not have a lasting city, but we are seeking the city which is to come” (Hebrews
13:13 – 14). How tragic when professing Christians are made the servants and slaves
of the powers, leaders, and agendas of this world.
The Cross is
offensive, it is foolishness, it is a stumbling block – it always has been, in
this present age it always will be (1 Cor. 1:17 – 2:2).
On Easter morning
the message of His resurrection first came to those women who had stood by the Cross
of Jesus. As we know Him in the koinonia of His sufferings, we will know Him in
the koinonia of His Resurrection!