My God, My God. Why have you forsaken me?

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cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
22,993
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#61
I think this is a much better explanation than those that try to explain why God did abandon his son (which is kind of absurd to me).
It is absurd.....
This is waaaay past the pay grade of most people, simply because they really are not that interested to understand what is actually happening here.

Having said that, I can tell you that I am definitely not the sharpest tool in the shed, and if I am packing the gear to "get it" so can anybody else. It is tough sledding though.

This CORRECT interpretation was evidently well understood long ago. And the knowledge was lost.
This kind of cluelessness is VERY common in the Church today. Tragically.


 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
22,993
8,367
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#62
I think this is a much better explanation than those that try to explain why God did abandon his son (which is kind of absurd to me). I tend to lean toward this understanding of the text.

There are also Aramaic speakers who say that "forsaken" is not a good English rendering of "Sabacthanai"; which they say means "kept or left behind for a purpose" ; in this case his last words are understood as declarative instead of interrogative. Kinda goes against western tradition; but tradition is only as valuable as it is valid.
Oh yes before I forget....let me ask:
Does God actually foresake Israel?

No. He delivers them.

Does God actually foresake ANYONE? EVER?

No He does not, this is impossible.

The point being that all of these absurd specious arguments regarding
Jesus reciting Psalm 22 on the cross are predicated upon a false assumption.
That being God can and will do the impossible by foresaking someone.
 

cv5

Well-known member
Nov 20, 2018
22,993
8,367
113
#63
Oh yes before I forget....let me ask:
Does God actually foresake Israel?

No. He delivers them.

Does God actually foresake ANYONE? EVER?

No He does not, this is impossible.

The point being that all of these absurd specious arguments regarding
Jesus reciting Psalm 22 on the cross are predicated upon a false assumption.
That being God can and will do the impossible by foresaking someone.
Not forsaken.....delivered.

Joe 2:32 - And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the LORD shall be delivered: for in mount Zion and in Jerusalem shall be deliverance, as the LORD hath said, and in the remnant whom the LORD shall call.

Dan 12:1 - And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.
 

wattie

Senior Member
Feb 24, 2009
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#64
I'm trying to understand. If according to the Trinity Jesus is all God, how or why would Jesus think that He had forsaken Himself? Why would He even question the Father or even pray to himself? The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are supposed to be one being. If they are three different minds, how can they be one being? Someone please explain.
One being, in three substances.

Forsake ... doesn’t mean Jesus no longer being God ..or that the Father had left Him.

Jesus was crying out in pain, taking on the full weight of sin. In this He would have felt.. I think.. in his humanity.. alone in it.

But the main point is He was quoting from a Psalm.. showing fufilled prophecy.

That is the key thing in the context.

Jesus never ceased being God...never had to 'become God'. He always Has been God.

one thing that I dont like is seperating out the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.. like 3 gods.

They are obviously distinct centres of consciousness.. but I dont believe they are spiritually separate. Just look at Revelation. All 3 are doing the same things at the same time.
 

GWH

Groovy
Oct 19, 2024
999
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#65
IMO If you believe Jesus was " God with us " then what was he teaching?? Maybe like an event in the future!
Perhaps Jesus' (God the Son) cry teaches us that God (the Father) designed reality so His presence (God the H.S.) is less than compelling, so that we experience God (the Father) as distant from us and “unknown” (ACTS 17:23).

Thus, even Jesus (God the Son) on the cross cried out “My God [the Father], why have you forsaken [taken God the Spirit from] me?” (MT 27:46, PS 51:11) We may feel distant from God (the Father) even though He is close or immanent, “for in Him [the H.S.] we live and move and have our being” (ACTS 17:28)

We might note also that Christ's (the Son) crucifixion was God's (the Father's) answer to Jesus' prayer in MT 26:42=MK 14:36=LK 22:42.
 

DavyP

Active member
Aug 11, 2024
281
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#66
Hi believers,

For many years I wondered about these words that Jesus spoke. Why would God forsake His Son for doing exactly what he was supposed to do. I mean the old covenant is clear that Jesus had to die for our sin. So, he did. He brought glory to the Father through his steadfast love and obedience to all that his Father asked of him. Why would God forsake him for that?
....
Yes, Lord Jesus was teaching even while upon His cross, when He quoted that from Psalms 22. God had given David to prophesy of that in Psalms 22, "Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?" (Matt.27:46)

Ps 22:1
22 My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me? why art Thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?
KJV


No doubt more of the Jews that were present at Jesus' crucifixion understood when Jesus said that, that He truly is The Messiah of Bible prophecy.
 

Publican

Active member
Oct 1, 2024
438
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#67
A t
There is a wide range of Christologies within the church universal. This is mine, which I am sure will be classified as heretical to many.

At the end of Augustus Caesar's reign he adopted Tiberius as his son, and for two years both Augustus and Tiberius jointly reigned as Caesar. What Tiberius decreed and ruled, Augustus validated and vice versa. So there was one imperium but two persons operating co-equally within that one imperium.

I would see my position as that of a kenotic social trinitarian. I think that God is one unanimous imperium of three co-equal persons, who are each ever-existing, omnipotent, omnipresent and omniscient, It is the distinct ego of each Person that makes them three distinct persons. It is their common ever-existence that makes them each Divine. It is their unanimity in decision-making that makes them one God/imperium. I see them as a Community of three Divine Persons. Hence, "social trinitarian".

I regard each person's distinct ego, their centre of consciousness from which they are aware of themself as "I" , as enduring through ; but each persons attributes can vary over time. they do not become a different ego/I when their attributes change. I consider that the Divine Son's ego/I gave up (emptied Himself of, Greek kenoO, hence kenosis) certain divine attributes when He incarnated to become human, yet remained the same ego/I, who had created the world with the Father and Holy Spirit. I regard Jesus prayer in John 17 to include His request to receive back the divine attributes given up to incarnate as human, attributes He had had with the Father before the world began.

Because the ever-existing Ego/I of the Son is distinct from the Father and Spirit, and lacked His surrendered omnipotence, omniscience and omnipresence, he relied on the Father and Spirit to work their divine attributes through Him. he Himself was not doing the works, but the Father in Him was doing the works. Holding this understanding of the relationship between Father, Son and Spirit means that the Father forsaking the Son, and the Son praying to the Father are not problematic at all.

The classical trinitarian model I do find problematic. being and essence are not biblical categories. They are philosophical categories. Imposing them into the Bible to squeeze scripture into a foreign philosophical construct is not at all helpful IMHO.
A thoughtful response, and not heretical at all. I've been back and forth over the Trinity my entire 30 plus years of knowing Christ. Your post has given me even more to ponder. I'm so glad I don't have to pass a theology exam to get into Heaven.
Christ crucified. The hope of glory.
 

GWH

Groovy
Oct 19, 2024
999
278
63
#68
A t

A thoughtful response, and not heretical at all. I've been back and forth over the Trinity my entire 30 plus years of knowing Christ. Your post has given me even more to ponder. I'm so glad I don't have to pass a theology exam to get into Heaven.
Christ crucified. The hope of glory.
Ditto, although ego seems akin to being and essence not much different from emporium in terms of philosophical categories attempting to explain biblical concepts.
 

Publican

Active member
Oct 1, 2024
438
225
43
#69
Ditto, although ego seems akin to being and essence not much different from emporium in terms of philosophical categories attempting to explain biblical concepts.
Christ told the disciples that the Comforter could not come until after He departed. I believe that was because the Comforter or Spirit embodied Christ fully. Much like I expect He will inhabit the Saints in these last days. Is the Spirit a distinct personality or the energy for lack of a better word that exists between the Father and the Son. I think either view is acceptable. But I really don't come down on one side or the other. One less thing to argue about.
 

GWH

Groovy
Oct 19, 2024
999
278
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#70
Christ told the disciples that the Comforter could not come until after He departed. I believe that was because the Comforter or Spirit embodied Christ fully. Much like I expect He will inhabit the Saints in these last days. Is the Spirit a distinct personality or the energy for lack of a better word that exists between the Father and the Son. I think either view is acceptable. But I really don't come down on one side or the other. One less thing to argue about.
I think JN 16:13, "When he, the Spirit of Truth, comes, he will guide you into all the truth", indicates that the Holy Spirit is conveyed by God's Word and manifested by God's love (JN 13:35).

And JN 14:15-20, especially v. 17, "...he lives with you and will be in you..." along with EPH 3:16-19, "I pray that... through His Spirit in your inner being... may know the love of Christ and... be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God", indicates that the main "betweenness" we experience or "grasp" is between believers and God the Father and Son.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
37,833
13,558
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#71
There is a wide range of Christologies within the church universal. This is mine, which I am sure will be classified as heretical to many.

At the end of Augustus Caesar's reign he adopted Tiberius as his son, and for two years both Augustus and Tiberius jointly reigned as Caesar. What Tiberius decreed and ruled, Augustus validated and vice versa. So there was one imperium but two persons operating co-equally within that one imperium.

I would see my position as that of a kenotic social trinitarian. I think that God is one unanimous imperium of three co-equal persons, who are each ever-existing, omnipotent, omnipresent and omniscient, It is the distinct ego of each Person that makes them three distinct persons. It is their common ever-existence that makes them each Divine. It is their unanimity in decision-making that makes them one God/imperium. I see them as a Community of three Divine Persons. Hence, "social trinitarian".

I regard each person's distinct ego, their centre of consciousness from which they are aware of themself as "I" , as enduring through ; but each persons attributes can vary over time. they do not become a different ego/I when their attributes change. I consider that the Divine Son's ego/I gave up (emptied Himself of, Greek kenoO, hence kenosis) certain divine attributes when He incarnated to become human, yet remained the same ego/I, who had created the world with the Father and Holy Spirit. I regard Jesus prayer in John 17 to include His request to receive back the divine attributes given up to incarnate as human, attributes He had had with the Father before the world began.

Because the ever-existing Ego/I of the Son is distinct from the Father and Spirit, and lacked His surrendered omnipotence, omniscience and omnipresence, he relied on the Father and Spirit to work their divine attributes through Him. he Himself was not doing the works, but the Father in Him was doing the works. Holding this understanding of the relationship between Father, Son and Spirit means that the Father forsaking the Son, and the Son praying to the Father are not problematic at all.

The classical trinitarian model I do find problematic. being and essence are not biblical categories. They are philosophical categories. Imposing them into the Bible to squeeze scripture into a foreign philosophical construct is not at all helpful IMHO.
ego and consciousness aren't Biblical terms either..

but aren't those terms together, equivalently expressed by His 'being'?
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
37,833
13,558
113
#73
Perhaps Jesus' (God the Son) cry teaches us that God (the Father) designed reality so His presence (God the H.S.) is less than compelling, so that we experience God (the Father) as distant from us and “unknown” (ACTS 17:23).

Thus, even Jesus (God the Son) on the cross cried out “My God [the Father], why have you forsaken [taken God the Spirit from] me?” (MT 27:46, PS 51:11) We may feel distant from God (the Father) even though He is close or immanent, “for in Him [the H.S.] we live and move and have our being” (ACTS 17:28)

We might note also that Christ's (the Son) crucifixion was God's (the Father's) answer to Jesus' prayer in MT 26:42=MK 14:36=LK 22:42.
Psalm 22 is Messianic but also primarily about Israel - it is Israel about whom He sings, Israel who thinks herself abandoned but is not, ever.

as you said, they considered themselves forsaken, that He was far from her - though her God was right in front of them in the act of saving them.
 

GWH

Groovy
Oct 19, 2024
999
278
63
#74
Psalm 22 is Messianic but also primarily about Israel - it is Israel about whom He sings, Israel who thinks herself abandoned but is not, ever.

as you said, they considered themselves forsaken, that He was far from her - though her God was right in front of them in the act of saving them.
Well, Israel is ultimately all who are saved per the apostle Paul.
 
Feb 18, 2019
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#75
Hi believers,

For many years I wondered about these words that Jesus spoke. Why would God forsake His Son for doing exactly what he was supposed to do. I mean the old covenant is clear that Jesus had to die for our sin. So, he did. He brought glory to the Father through his steadfast love and obedience to all that his Father asked of him. Why would God forsake him for that?

However, I have since come to an understanding that answers my ponderings. God did not forsake His Son. Jesus referred to himself as Rabbi. He said at one time, "You call me Rabbi and so it is." A Rabbi is a Jewish teacher. Jesus was a Jewish teacher to Israel. In the early beginning of his ministry in a gathering of Jewish believers in Nazareth, he read and proclaimed the words of the prophet Isaiah. He then told the people in attendance that this prophecy was being fulfilled in their very hearing. So, Jesus opened his ministry with likely the most powerful and accurate description of all that Messiah was supposed to do. Then he went out and did it.

As the end of his ministry, he also closed with one of the most powerful words of the Scriptures about how his death was going to happen. That passage begins, My God, my God. Why have you forsaken me?

So, he began his ministry telling everyone from the Scriptures all that Messiah was going to do as he lived among us. He closed his ministry telling everyone from the Scriptures that they were witnessing the very death that had been prophesied by Isaiah, also. It's a practice that is referred to as 'remez'. Remez is a technique of using part of a Scripture passage to imply the fuller meaning of a teaching.

In Israel, in the days of Jesus, the Scriptures did not have chapter and verses as we have today to easily locate a passage that a preacher might be teaching on. In our day, our teachers just say, "turn in your bibles to the book of Acts chapter 3 vs 12- 18." Everyone opens their copy of the Scriptures to the book of Acts chapter 3 and verse 12. But in Jesus day there was no such way to identify where a teaching might be coming from in the Scriptures. So, it was a very common practice for the teacher to begin by quoting a particular passage and everyone would know where that passage was and be able to see where the teaching was in the Scriptures. This is what Jesus was doing for those chief priests and scribes and pharisees that were hanging around as he was dying for their sin. He was telling them as their Rabbi, "Go look and find this passage and read what it says about this death that you are right now in your life witnessing before your very eyes. In their very hearing would be how Jesus would have put it

So, I don't believe that God did forsake His Son. But I do believe that God caused to be written some hundreds of years before the event, those words found in psalm 22. I further believe that just as Jesus' purpose in quoting the words of Isaiah to that fellowship of Jewish believers in Nazareth when he began his ministry as a testimony to them to watch and see, that he also spoke the words of this psalm telling them to watch and see.

God bless you all,
Ted
Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? Nicely done well said you're right i appreciate your effort..
did you see this its a possible extra meaning as well?
Jesus took on our sins, all of our sins became his. and he took the whole cup of punishment.
From Sin also comes separation from the Lord and Jesus cried out and showed that He was taking on the whole weight of sin even the Feeling he was briefly separated from the father. Perhaps the father also briefly turned his face and some suggest. it's an amazing scripture Psalms 22 my name may even suggest I feel this way well done with your research



Isaiah 59:1-2
"Behold, the Lord’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save, or his ear dull, that it cannot hear; but your iniquities have made a separation between you and your God, and your sins have hidden his face from you so that he does not hear."
 

PaulThomson

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2023
3,474
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#77
ego and consciousness aren't Biblical terms either..

but aren't those terms together, equivalently expressed by His 'being'?
No. I would say that the Son's being is all that He is, i.e. both His ego which does not change and His attributes that can change in their expression according to circumstances. The Son's ego is that sense of identity/ I-ness distinct from other identities that has continuity despite any changes to the attributes experienced by the ego. I would say that consciousness is a variable attribute.
 

PaulThomson

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2023
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455
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#78
Did Jesus pray to receive His divine attributes back or His glory?
Does His glory not include His divine attributes? If I surrender my glory as a prince to visit my commoners appearing to be one of them, and I request the King to return me to my former glory, does the fact that I asked for my former glory mean that we can conclude that I did not give up any of my princely atttributes when I previously gave up my glory?
 

Cameron143

Well-known member
Mar 1, 2022
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#79
Does His glory not include His divine attributes? If I surrender my glory as a prince to visit my commoners appearing to be one of them, and I request the King to return me to my former glory, does the fact that I asked for my former glory mean that we can conclude that I did not give up any of my princely atttributes when I previously gave up my glory?
I'd love to answer but I'm not sure at this juncture what my point was. I'm sure it was outstanding, but as my response was some time ago and I'm not sure what context I asked the question.
 

wattie

Senior Member
Feb 24, 2009
3,236
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#80
this implies He lacked faith...
yea its not the best interpretation.. just trying to get how He is never not God but still can say 'why hast thou forsaken me'.

I like the better contextual point of Him speaking on fulfilling prophecy.