Looking Unto Jesus by Isaac Ambrose: A View of the Everlasting Gospel.
Section 6.1.4. - Of the Prayer that Christ there made.


BOOK 6. THE DEATH.

CHAPTER 1.

6.1.4. Of the Prayer that Christ there made.


Of the Prayer that Christ there made.

Jesus entering the garden, he left his disciples at the entrance of it, called with him Peter, James and John; they only saw his transfiguration, the earnest of his future glory: and therefore his pleasure was, that they only should see of how great glory he would disrobe himself even for our sakes. -- In the garden we may observe, first his prayer, and secondly, (next section) his passion.

He betakes himself to his great antidote, which himself (the great physician of our souls) prescribed to all the world; he prays to his heavenly Father: he kneels down; and not only so, but falls flat upon the ground: he prays, with an intention great as his sorrow; and yet with a submission so ready, as if the cup had been the most indifferent thing in the world. The form of his prayer runs thus, "O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me, nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt," Matt xxvi 39. In this prayer, observe we these particulars: 1. The person to whom he prays, "O my Father." 2. The matter for which he prays, "let this cup pass from me." 3. The limitation of this prayer, "if it be possible, and if it be thy will."

1. For the person to whom he prays, it is his Father; as Christ prayed not in his Godhead, but according to his manhood, so neither prayed he to himself as God, but to the Father, the first person of the Godhead: hence some observe, that as the Father sometimes saying, "This is my beloved Son," he spake not to himself but to the Son; so the Son usually saying, "O my Father," he prays not to himself, but to the Father.

2. For the matter of his prayer, "Let this cup pass from me," some interpret thus, "Let this cup pass from me, Oh that I might not taste it." But others thus, "Let this cup pass from me, though I must taste it, yet, Oh that I may not be (Quod dicit, transfer calicem istum a me, non hoc est, non adveniat mihi: nisi enim advenerit, transferri non poterit: sed sicut quod peterit, nec intactum est, nec permaneus; sic salvator leviter invadentem tentationem flagitat pelli. Sic, Dionysius Alexandrinus.) too long or tediously annoyed by it!" That which leads us into this last interpretation, is that of the apostle, "Christ in the days of his flesh offered up prayers and supplications, with strong cries and tears, unto him that was able to save him from death, and he was heard in that which he feared," Heb. v. 7. How was he heard? Not in the removal of the cup, for he drank it up all; but, in respect of the tedious annoyance, or poisoning of the cup; for though it made him sweat drops of blood, though it grieved him, and pained him, and made him cry out, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" Though it cast him into a sleep, and laid him dead in his grave, and there sealed him for a time, yet presently, within the space of forty hours, or thereabouts, he revived, and awakened as a lion out of sleep, or as a giant refreshed with wine; and so it passed from him, as he prayed, in a very short time; and by that short and momentary death, he purchased to his people everlasting life.

3. For the limitation of his prayer, "If it be possible, if it be thy will;" he knows what is his Father's will, and he prays accordingly, and is willing to submit unto it: if the passing of the cup be according to the last interpretation, we shall need none of those many distinctions to reconcile the will of God and Christ: "if it be possible," signifies the earnestness of the prayer; and "if it be thy will," the submission of Christ unto his Father. The prayer is short, but sweet: how many things needful to a prayer do we find concentered in this one instance. Here is humility of spirit, lowliness of deportment, importunity of desire, a fervent heart, a lawful matter, and a resignation to the will of God. Some think this is the most fervent prayer that ever Christ made upon earth, "If it be possible, O, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me;" and I think it was the greatest dereliction and submission to the will of God that ever was found upon the earth, for whether the cup might pass or not pass, he leaves it to his Father; "nevertheless, not as 1 will, but as thou wilt," q.d. Though in this cup are many ingredients, it is full red, and hath in it many dregs; and I know I must drink and suck out the very utmost dreg; yet, whether it shall pass from me in that short time, or continue with me a long time, I leave it to thy will. I see, in respect of my humanity, there is in me flesh and blood; O I am frail and weak, I cannot but fear the wrath of God, and therefore I pray thus earnestly to my God, "O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me, nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt."

But what was there in the cup, that made Christ pray thus earnestly that it might pass from him! I answer, --

(a). The great pain that he must endure, buffetings, whippings, bleedings, crucifying; all the torments from first to last throughout all his body; why, all these now came into his mind, and all these were put into the cup, of which he must drink.

(b). The great shame that he must undergo; this was more than pain, as "a good name is better than precious ointment, and loving favour better than silver and gold," so is shame a greater punishment to the mind than any torture can be to the flesh. Now came into his thoughts, his apprehending, binding, judging, scorning, reviling, condemning; and oh, what a bloody blush comes into the face of Christ, whilst in the cup he sees these ingredients!

(c). The neglect of men, notwithstanding both his pain and shame, I look upon this as a greater cut to the heart of Christ than both the former, when he considered that after all his sufferings and reproaches few would regard. O this was a bitter ingredient, naturally men desire, if they cannot be delivered, yet to be pitied; it is a kind of ease, even to find some regard among the sons of men; it shows that they wish us well, and that they would give us ease if they could; but, oh! when it comes to this, that a poor wretch is under many sufferings and great shame; and that he finds none so much as to regard all this: now, verily, it is an heavy case, and hence was Christ's complaint, "Have ye no regard, O all ye that pass by the way? Consider and behold, if ever there was sorrow like unto my sorrow, which was done unto me, wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the days of his fierce anger," Lam. i. 12. Christ complains not of the sharp pains he endured; but he complains of this, "Have ye no regard?" He cries not out, "Oh deliver me and save me; but. Oh consider and regard me." q d. All that I suffer I am contented with, I regard it not, only this troubles me, that you will not regard; why, it is for you that I endure all this, and do you look so upon it, as if nothing at all concerned you? Suppose a prince should pay some mighty price to redeem a slave from death, and the slave should grow so desperate, as after the price paid, to throw himself upon his death, yea, with all the strength and might he hath, to offer a death upon his very redeemer. Would not this trouble? Why, thus it was, Christ is willing to redeem us with his own precious blood, but he saw many to pass by without any regard, yea, ready to trample his precious blood, under their feet; and to "account the blood of the covenant as an unholy thing," Heb. x. 29. Oh! this was another spear in the heart of Christ, or a bitter ingredient in this cup.

(d). The guilt of sin which he was now to undergo; "upon him was laid the iniquity of us all," Isa. liii. 6. All the sins of all believers in the world, from the first creation to the last judgment, were laid on him; Oh! what a weight was this? Surely one sin is like a talent of lead; oh! then, what were so many thousands of millions? The very earth itself groans under the weight of sin until this day; David cried out. That "his iniquities were a burden too heavy for him to bear," Psal. xxxviii. 4. Nay, God himself complains, "Behold I am pressed under you, as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves," Amos ii. 13. Now then no wonder, if Christ bearing all the sins of Jews and Gentiles, bound and free, cry out, "My soul is heavy," for sin was heavy on his soul. In that I say, all the sins of all believers were laid on Christ, understand me soberly; my meaning is not that believers sins were so laid on Christ, as that they ceased to be believers sins according to their physical, and real indwelling, but only that they were laid on Christ by law imputation, or by legal obligation to satisfactory punishment. I make a difference betwixt sin and the guilt of sin; for sin itself is macula, the blot, defilement, and blackness of sin, which I conceive is nothing but the absence and privation of that moral rectitude and righteousness which the law requireth: but the guilt of sin is somewhat issuing from this blot and blackness, according to which the person is liable and obnoxious to eternal punishment. Some indeed give a distinction of the guilt of sin, there is reatus calpae, the guilt of sin as sin: and this is all one with sin, being the very essence, soul, and formal being of sin; they call it a fundamental or potential guilt; and there is reatus panae, reatus personae, reatus actualis, the guilt or obligation to punishment, the actual guilt, or actual obligation of the person who hath thus sinned to punishment; and this guilt is a thing far different from sin itself, and is separable from sin: yea, and is removed from sin in our justification. Now, this was the sin or guilt which was laid on Christ, in which sense the apostle speaks, "Who his ownself bare our sins in his own body on the tree," 1 Pet. ii. 24. How bare our sins on the tree, but by his sufferings! -- "And he hath laid on him the iniquity of us all," Isa. liii. 6. -- How laid on him but by imputation? -- "And he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin," 2 Cor. v. 21. How made sin for us! Surely there was in Christ no fundamental guilt: no, no, but he was made sin by imputation and law account: he was our surety, and so our sins were laid on him in order to punishment, as if now in the garden he had said to his Father, "Thou hast given me a body, as I have taken the debts and sins of all believers in the world upon me? come now, and arrest me, as the only pay-master; lo here I am to do and suffer for their sins whatsoever thou pleasest," Psal. xl. 6, 7, 8. Heb. x. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Or as if he had said to his Father thus, "I am the sinner, O Father, I am the surety, all my friends' wants, and all their debts let them be laid on me; my life for their lives, my soul for their souls, my glory for their glory, my heaven for their heaven." Now, this was no small matter; little do we know or consider, what is the weight and guilt of sin. And this was another ingredient in Christ's cup.

(e). The power and malice of Satan; the devil had a full leave and license, not as it was with Job, "Do what thou wilt, Satan, but save his life;" no, no, he had a commission without any such restriction or limitation; the whole power of darkness was let loose to use all his violence; and to afflict him as far as possible he could; and this our Saviour intimates, when he saith, "That the prince of this world cometh," John xiv. 30. Now was it that the word must be accomplished, "Thou shall bruise his heel," Gen. iii. 15. The devil could go no higher than the heel of Christ, but whatever he could do he was sure to do: he had been nibbling a great while at his heel; no sooner he was born, but he would have killed him, and after he fell fiercely on him in the wilderness: but now, all the power and all the malice of hell conjoins. If we look on the devil in respect of his evil nature, he is compared to a roaring lion; not only is he a lion, but a roaring lion, his disposition to do mischief is always wound up to the height; and if we look on the devil in respect of his power, there is no part of our souls or bodies that he cannot reach: the apostle, describing his power, he gives him names above the highest comparisons, as "principalities, powers, rulers of the darkness of this world, spiritual wickedness above" Eph. vi. 19. Devils are not only called princes, but principalities: not only mighty, but powers; not only rulers of a part, but of "all the darkness of this world;" not only wicked spirits, but spiritual wickedness: not only about us but above us: they hang over our heads continually; you know what a disadvantage it is to have your enemy get the hill, the upper ground; and this they have naturally, and always. Oh then, what a combat must this be, when all the power and all the malice of all the devils in hell should (by the permission of God) arm themselves against the Son of God? Surely this was a bitter ingredient in Christ's cup.

(f). The wrath of God himself; this (above all) was the most bitter drear: it lay in the bottom, and Christ must drink it also: "Oh! the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger," Lam. i. 12. God afflicts some in mercy, and some in anger, this was in his anger, and yet in his anger, God is not alike to all, some he afflicts in his more gentle and mild, others in his fierce anger: this was in the very fierceness of his anger. It is agreed upon by all divines, that now Christ saw himself bearing the sins of all believers, and standing before the judgment seat of God; to this end are those words, "Now is the judgment of this world, and the prince of this world shall be cast out," John xii. 31. Now is the judgment of this world, q.d. Now I see God sitting in judgment upon the world; and as a right representative of all the world of believers, here I stand before his tribunal, ready to undergo all the punishments due to them for their sins; why, there is no other way to save their souls, and to satisfy justice, but that the fire of thy indignation should kindle against me; q.d. "O I know it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God;" O I know God is a consuming fire: "who can stand before his indignation; and who can abide in the fierceness of his anger? His fury is poured out like fire, and the rocks are thrown down by him," Nah. i. 6. But for this end came I into the world; O my Father, I will drink this cup, lo here an open breast, come prepare the armory of thy wrath, and herein shoot all the arrows of revenge. And yet O my Father, let me not be oppressed, subverted or swallowed up by thy wrath; let not thy displeasure continue longer than my patience or obedience can endure; there is in me flesh and blood in respect of my humanity; "and my flesh trembleth for fear of thee, I am afraid of thy judgments: oh! if it be possible, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me."