As a pastor, I’ve had the opportunity of being around several people as they are dying. I can tell you that in these moments, if they are cognizant, their words and actions have a profound significance.
One could argue that Jesus was always intentional. Yet, there seems to be added significance to events leading up to His death. He was fully aware of the impending culmination of His earthly ministry, and these actions often held deep symbolism and theological importance.
There were many things Jesus did in the days leading up to His crucifixion. Here are five which hold great significance.
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Matthew 21:1-22; Mark 11:1-26; Luke 19:28-48
You might call this the triumphal entry, but the way the gospel writers frame this, it seems like anything but triumphal. If you read the Psalm of Solomon, Jewish apocryphal literature, you get a glimpse at the Messianic expectation. This is what they expected the Messiah to do when he takes the throne of his kingdom:
“Behold, O Lord, and raise up unto them their king, the son of David, at the time known to you, O God, in order that he may reign over Israel your servant. And gird him with strength, that he may shatter unrighteous rulers, and that he may purge Jerusalem from gentiles who trample (her) down to destruction. Wisely, righteously he shall thrust out sinners from (the) inheritance; he shall destroy the arrogance of the sinner as a potter's jar. With a rod of iron he shall shatter all their substance; he shall destroy the godless nations with the word of his mouth.”
Jesus, in contrast, comes riding in on a donkey. In Mark’s account it is incredibly anti-climactic. Jesus gets there and nobody is in town. They leave for the morning. Then his first action is to curse a fig tree. Shortly after, he clears the temple of all the money-changers. It’s shocking because the Messiah was supposed to rid the kingdom of the godless pagans. Why is he going after the religious leaders?
The cursing of the fig tree is connected to the temple cleansing. Both are indictments against the temple system and the corrupt religious leaders. The fig tree was advertising fruitfulness but it was in reality good for nothing. The temple system, Jesus is showing us, was similar — outwardly beautiful, inwardly rotten to the core.
One of Jesus’ final actions was to symbolically turn his back to the religious leaders of the day and the temple system. What should have brought life was crushing people and shutting the doors of the kingdom in the face of others. Jesus would have none of it.
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Matthew 26:6-13; Mark 14:3-9; John 12:1-8
This isn’t technically something that Jesus did but more what was done to Him. In Bethany, a woman (identified as Mary in John's Gospel) anointed Jesus with expensive perfume. This act of extravagant devotion was met with criticism by some disciples, but Jesus defended her, recognizing it as a preparation for His burial (Matthew 26:12).
The gospel writers also intentionally have the religious leaders lurking in the background. It’s a beautiful contrast. Mary breaks up this jar of expensive perfume. It would have been her most valuable possession — but she has now found One who is more valuable. She busts up her treasure in order to give it to Jesus.
But the religious leaders are the opposite. They are plotting to kill Jesus. Just as that alabaster jar is burst upon the floor, so the religious leaders wish they could do to Jesus. And that is what the idolatrous heart will always do — it will sacrifice Jesus for the idol. The redeemed heart does the opposite — it sacrifices the idol for the sake of Jesus.
There is an action here on the part of Jesus. He is accepting worship. That is profound. Worship was reserved for God alone. By allowing this expression of worship, Jesus is taking His rightful place as the object of our affection.
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Matthew 26:17-30; Mark 14:12-26; Luke 22:7-23; John 13:1-17
N.T. Wright once said, “When Jesus himself wanted to explain to his disciples what his forthcoming death was all about, he didn’t give them a theory, he gave them a meal.”
It’s amazing to me that in Luke, Jesus says, “I have earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer.” Earnestly desired is an expression of intense longing. It’s his last night. And he wants to be with his friends. Certainly, we see his humanity here. He loves these men that he has spent this time with. And Passover was a picture, a celebration, of God’s rescue.
Jesus would have sat around this table with the disciples whom he loved dearly. Certainly, the Son who would have been present at the original Passover, now sees the fulfillment. It’s no longer in shadow form but now the Lamb of God would spill his blood for humanity — pictured in the very disciples around the table.
This is why He is excited. Yes, it is a time for suffering. But this is the time for the good news. It is because of the joy set before Him that he’ll endure this brutal cross.
I also can’t help but think about those men who are around the table. Jesus knows their future. In only a few moments, they’ll fall asleep at Jesus’ time of great need. He knows that Peter is only hours from betraying Him. The other disciples will walk away. He will be abandoned by the very ones that will share this meal.
He knows all the ups and downs of their muddy obedience. Peter will be a hypocrite. But he’ll also have times when he totally “gets it.” He will see all the failures and falls and boneheaded things they will do until the point of their death. But this isn’t his focus in that moment. It’s on the meal. The significance of this meal will overcome all their weakness and rebellion.
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After the Last Supper, Jesus shares an intimate moment with his disciples. In the Gospel of John, this is known as the Farewell Discourse and it culminates in Jesus’ prayer for them — and ultimately for us. This might be one of the most intimate moments in all of Jesus’ ministry.
The discourse itself is rich in theology and pastoral care. Most see the discourse as having several distinct parts. The first part focuses upon his departure and their sorrow. Here he gives them assurance of His love and continued dedication to them. He will give them “the Comforter.” Jesus then moves to a metaphor of “abiding in the vine.” It is a call to obedience and pointing to Jesus as the source of their continued life. After this part of the discourse, Jesus circles back to the promise of the Spirit, but now the Spirit will help them with coming persecution. Here there is a contrast between the world and their love for one another.
The farewell discourse closes with Jesus’ prayer for the disciples as well as those of us who would become disciples through their ministry. Jesus intercedes for the disciples and for all future believers, asking the Father to protect them from evil, to sanctify them in the truth, and to unify them as one. In this prayer we see Jesus’ heart for His followers and His hopes for their future.
The heart of the Good Shepherd is on full display here. One of the last things Jesus did was assure the disciples and encourage them. He then prays for them. Even in his final moments Jesus was thinking of others.
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Matthew 26:36-56; Mark 14:32-52; Luke 22:39-53; John 18:1-12
Luke tells us that in the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus is in such anguish that He is sweating blood. It is not the physical suffering that has Jesus so worked up. It isn’t even His death. What is causing the anguish is the prospect of drinking the cup of God’s wrath. Jonathan Edwards says it well:
“Christ was going to be cast into a dreadful furnace of wrath, and it was not proper that he should plunge himself into it blindfold, as not knowing how dreadful the furnace was. Therefore that he might not do so, God first brought him and set him at the mouth of the furnace, that he might look in, and stand and view its fierce and raging flames, and might see where he was going, and might voluntarily enter into it and bear it for sinners, as knowing what it was. This view Christ had in his agony. Then God brought the cup that he was to drink, and set it down before him, that he might have a full view of it, and see what it was before he took it and drank it.”
In this moment of distress, Jesus looks to His disciples for companionship. But they fall asleep. This foreshadows their most substantial abandonment that will soon come. The greater point, though, is that Jesus must face the anguish of Gethsemane, and the cross, alone. He alone can drink the cup of staggering.
Jesus’ humanity is on full display in the Garden. If we can point to Christ having a “weak” moment it would be this one. He remains sinless, yet at this point is experiencing in His body the fullness of what it truly means to take upon our sin. It is here that He will experience our grief. At the Garden will be the onslaught of temptation which no human has faced since. It is fitting to say that He was tempted in every way. Viewing this cup is what causes Jesus to pray, “if it is possible take this cup from me.”
Can you hear Jesus’ prayer?
“Abba, you can do anything! Can you take this cup from me? Is it possible to redeem sinners and yet not suffer estrangement from you? Is it possible to redeem them in any way other than me being the sin-bearer.”
No, he didn’t say exactly those words. But that is the appeal. That is why He is asking if it is possible for the cup to pass.
He appeals.
Silence.
He appeals a second time.
Silence.
He appeals a third time.
Silence.
Why silence? Because there is no other way. God could have chosen not to sacrifice His Son in our place. He could have left us to our just reward. But because He had purposed before the foundation of the world to redeem us —it wasn’t possible. As John Stott has said, “God’s purpose of love was to save sinners, and to save them righteously; but this would be impossible without the sin-bearing death of the Savior.”
These final actions before the crucifixion show Jesus’ love for humanity and His dedication to the Father. As we reflect upon them, may we remember anew what Christ has accomplished on our behalf.
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