Crossing Paths

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Category Archives: Good Friday

A Tale of Two Gardens

04 Saturday Apr 2026

Posted by michael schinker in crucifixion, Easter, Good Friday, Jesus Christ, Prophecy, religion, resurrection, Uncategorized

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It all started in a garden, the final step in the grand genesis of life.  It was called Eden, a name closely related to an Aramaic root word meaning fruitful. God formed a man from the dust of the earth, literally out of the same elements composing the cosmos. He placed him in the garden, “to work it, and take care of it.” Adam had but one rule to follow, and he failed. He and Eve, under the newfound weight of shame and guilt, hid from God and were forced to leave, to make their own way in a land of sin and death. Such is the bitter fruit of disobedience, inherited by everyone who would come afterwards. But there was a hint of an eventual deliverance of their offspring from the curse of a life of painful toil, of thorns and thistles, and a hopeless return to the dust of the earth.

After the Passover meal with his disciples, Jesus made his way with three of them to the Mount of Olives, to a garden known as Gethsemane. The name is actually two Hebrew words used to describe a place where olives are crushed under pressure into oil. He prayed alone, asking the Father if there was any possible way to achieve the redemption of all mankind other than the cross. He knew the answer. He obeyed.

And so the prophesy of Isaiah 53:5 was realized: But he was pierced for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his wounds we are healed. With his last breath, Jesus was the last Adam, representing the last in a long lineage of rebellion to the Creator. Resurrected, He is the second man, the firstborn of generations reconciled to God.

On the first day of the week, after Jesus had been buried, the disciples discovered His empty tomb. As she sat nearby, Mary Magdalen mistook the sudden appearance of the risen Jesus as . . . the gardener. What a beautifully rich metaphor! And so He is indeed, the One charged with bringing the chaos of ruined creation into a new order, into its originally intended fruitfulness, into a new heaven and earth. Finally, the mysterious parables about sowing seeds, good soil, the wheat and the weeds, pruning and the vine and the branches all make perfect sense!

Remembrandt’s version of John 20:15

Tetelestai

03 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by michael schinker in crucifixion, Good Friday, Jesus Christ, Life and death, Messiah

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On a day we remember as Good Friday, Jesus came to the end of His mission as savior of the world on the cross when he exclaimed, “It is finished.” The Greek translation sums up the exclamation so well in one word: tetelestai, a word used in the ancient commercial world on business documents or receipts indicating that a debt had been paid –– in full. Interestingly, the word in John’s gospel is in a tense used to describe an action that has been completed in the past with results continuing into the present. It conveys an idea that has happened and it is still in effect today. Contemporary readers of John’s record of Christ’s last moments would have understood the comparison he intended to make. The new covenant blood shed by the Lamb of God once and for all paid for that which the old covenant blood of bulls and goats could only cover up.

So far removed from the events and culture of the Bible, for most of us today the theology dealing with God’s sentence of death as the inevitable result of sin and the only acceptable recompense being the sacrifice of an innocent victim to pay the price of redemption can be difficult to grasp. That’s why many old time hymns are so much better at explaining complex spiritual realities than a hundred learned commentaries. The words for the following classic example were written in 1865 by Elvina Hall, a member of the Monument Street Methodist Church in Baltimore, Maryland.

I pray you will agree indeed that Jesus Paid It All.

cano_alonso-zzz-crucifixionI hear the Savior say,
“Thy strength indeed is small;
Child of weakness, watch and pray,
Find in Me thine all in all.”
Jesus paid it all, All to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.
For nothing good have I
Whereby Thy grace to claim,
I’ll wash my garments white
In the blood of Calv’ry’s Lamb.
When from my dying bed
My ransomed soul shall rise,
“Jesus died my soul to save,”
Shall rend the vaulted skies.

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