Desert Snake
Veteran Member
Whether you believe these words are literal, or added parable, or just added, what do these words mean to you?
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I believe these words are literally what Jesus said just before He died. He knew He had an important mission to fulfill here on earth, a big part of which was to take upon himself the sins of all mankind, in order that they might receive eternal life. He suffered tremendously, both in Gethsemane and on Calvary. When He uttered these words, it was an acknowledgment that He had completed all that His Father had sent Him here to do. I don't believe that the word "it" in the sentence refers to anything else or is anything other than a literal statement that meant what it said.Whether you believe these words are literal, or added parable, or just added, what do these words mean to you?
I had actually answered the question on another thread last year.Whether you believe these words are literal, or added parable, or just added, what do these words mean to you?
Whether you believe these words are literal, or added parable, or just added, what do these words mean to you?
I take it to mean he had fulfilled his destined mission and recognised it so.
but at that point he hadn't. I think Christians believe that his mission was to rise from the dead.
My own belief is that inspite of his pleas and prayers for God to save him from death on the cross and allow him to complete his mission to reach the 'lost sheep of the house of Israel' he felt that he had failed.
Earlier Jesus had rejected the drugged wine as he wanted to continue to plead with God to save him.
Fortunately, as following events showed, he did not die but only became unconscious so was able to go on to complete his mission.
To bypass the DIR restriction I will state this in the form of a question: Taking this utterance and pairing it with "my God, why have you forsaken me" and "I thirst", is it possible Jesus was trying to recite Psalm 22?
Whether you believe these words are literal, or added parable, or just added, what do these words mean to you?