Matt. 27:46 “And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, “Eli, Eli, Lama Sabachthani?” that is, “My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?”
It has never shaken my belief in Jesus but it has confused me.
To switch topics for a second, what’s the first thing that comes to your mind when I say, “The LORD is my Shepard”? I imagine you probably think of the next verse, “I shall not want.” Then you think about green pastures and walking through the valley of the shadow of death and fearing no evil and so forth and so on. Some of you will even know that the reference is the 23rd Psalm. However, back then, before the Bible was constructed into a single volume not long after the death of Emperor Constantine, they didn’t have numbers for each chapter. They didn’t know it as the 23rd Psalm. They knew it like you knew it just now: by the first verse. Even with us now, if I mentioned the 23rd Psalm I would get some confused looks but if I said the first verse then you would most likely be able to tell me the gist of the rest.
Now, to switch topics back, Jesus was at the end of His life. Then, out of nowhere, He spouts out some random phrase. He cries it out so that everyone can hear Him. According to Matthew, some of the Romans thought that he was calling to Elijah, who they thought of as one of the Hebrew Gods, no doubt, since the Romans couldn’t imagine having only one God. However, what was the first thing the Hebrews standing there thought? All these people who had called for His death. All these people who had spit on Him and called Him cruel names. They stood there to watch Him die. They watched with amusement at every cruel thing the Romans did to Him. Then, Jesus calls out this statement near the end. They all know it is near the end and hence are listening intently. The question is, was the statement an actual calling out to God or was it something else? Could it be the first verse of a Psalm?
The Hebrews sang these Psalms every week. They knew them well.
So how do we know Jesus was pointing out this Psalm? By what is in the Psalm.
