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J.C. Ryle

130. Jesus Prays on the Mount of Olives, Luke 22:39-46

Luke 22:39-46
J.C. Ryle October, 19 2018 Audio
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J.C. Ryle's Devotional Thoughts on the Gospel of Luke, section 130. Jesus prays on the Mount of Olives. Luke chapter 22, verses 39 through 46.

And he came out and went, as he was accustomed, to the Mount of Olives. And his disciples also followed him. And when he was at the place, he said unto them, Pray that you enter not into temptation. And he was withdrawn from them about a stone's cost, and kneeled down and prayed, saying, Father, if you be willing, remove this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my will, but yours be done.' And there appeared an angel unto him from heaven, strengthening him. And being in an agony, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground. And when he rose up from prayer, and was come to his disciples, he found them sleeping for sorrow. And said unto them, Why sleep you? rise and pray, lest you enter into temptation.

The verses before us contain Luke's account of our Lord's agony in the garden. It is a passage of scripture which we should always approach with peculiar reverence. The history which it records is one of the deep things of God. While we read it, the words of Exodus should come across our minds. Put off your shoes from off your feet. The place whereon you stand is holy ground. Exodus 3, 5.

We see firstly in this passage an example of what believers ought to do in time of trouble. The great head of the church himself supplies the pattern. We are told that when he came to the Mount of Olives the night before he was crucified, he knelt down and prayed. It is a striking fact that both the Old and New Testaments give one and the same receipt for bearing trouble. What does the Book of Psalms say? Call upon me in the time of trouble, I will deliver you. Psalm 50, 15. What does the Apostle James say? Is any afflicted? Let him pray. James 5, 13. Prayer is the remedy which Jacob used when he feared his brother Esau. Prayer is the remedy which Job used when property and children were suddenly taken from him. Prayer is the remedy which Hezekiah used when Sennacherib's threatening letter arrived. And prayer is the remedy which the Son of God Himself was not ashamed to use in the days of His flesh. In the hour of His mysterious agony, He prayed.

Let us take care that we use our Master's remedy if we want comfort in affliction. Whatever other means of relief we use, let us pray. The first friend we should turn to ought to be God. The first message we should send ought to be to the throne of grace. No depression of spirits must prevent us. No crushing weight of sorrow must make us speechless. It is a prime device of Satan. to supply the afflicted man with false reasons for keeping silence before God. Let us beware of the temptation to brood sullenly over our wounds. If we can say nothing else, we can say, I am oppressed, undertake for me. Isaiah 38, 14.

We see, secondly, in these verses what kind of prayers a believer ought to make to God in time of trouble. Once more, the Lord Jesus himself affords a model to his people. We are told that he said, Father, if you are willing, remove this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my will, but yours be done. He who spoke these words, we must remember, had two distinct natures in one person. He had a human will as well as a divine. When he said, Not my will be done, he meant that will which he had as a man, with a body, flesh, and blood like our own. The language used by our blessed Master in this place shows exactly what should be the spirit of a believer's prayer in his distress. Like Jesus, he should tell his desires openly to his Heavenly Father and spread his wishes unreservedly before him. But like Jesus, he should do it all with an entire submission of will to the will of God. He should never forget that there may be wise and good reasons for his affliction. He should carefully qualify every petition for the removal of crosses with the saving clause, If you are willing. He should wind up all with the meek confession, Not my will, but yours be done.

Submission of will, like this one, is one of the brightest graces which can adorn the Christian character. It is one which a child of God ought to aim at in everything if he desires to be like Christ. But at no time is such submission of will so needful as in the day of sorrow, and in nothing does it shine so brightly as in a believer's prayers for relief. He who can say from his heart when a bitter cup is before him, Not my will, but yours be done, Has reached a high position in the school of God.

We see thirdly in these verses an example of the exceeding guilt and sinfulness of sin. We are meant to learn this in Christ's agony and bloody sweat and all the mysterious distress of body and mind which the passage describes. The lesson at first sight may not be clear to a careless reader of the Bible but the lesson is there. How can we account for the deep agony which our Lord underwent in the garden? What reason can we assign for the intense suffering, both mental and bodily, which he manifestly endured? There's only one satisfactory answer. It was caused by the burden of a world's imputed sin, which then began to press upon him in a peculiar manner. He had undertaken to be sin for us, to be made a curse for us and to allow our iniquities to be laid on himself 2 Corinthians 5.21 Galatians 3.13 Isaiah 53.6 It was the enormous weight of these iniquities which made him suffer agony. It was the sense of a world's guilt pressing him down, which made even the eternal Son of God sweat great drops of blood and called from him strong crying and tears. The cause of Christ's agony was man's sin. Hebrews 5.7.

We must beware, jealously, of the modern notion that our blessed Lord's life and death were nothing more than a great example of self-sacrifice. Such a notion throws darkness and confusion over the whole gospel. It dishonours the Lord Jesus, and represents him as less resigned in the day of death than many a modern martyr. We must cling firmly to the old doctrine that Christ was bearing our sins both in the garden and on the cross. No other doctrine can ever explain the passage before us or satisfy the conscience of guilty man.

Would we see the sinfulness of sin in its true colors Would we learn to hate sin with a godly hatred? Would we know something of the intense misery of souls in hell? Would we understand something of the unspeakable love of Christ? Would we comprehend Christ's ability to sympathize with those that are in trouble? Then, let the agony in the garden come often into our minds. The depth of that agony may give us some idea of our debt to Christ.

We see, lastly, in these verses, an example of the feebleness of the best of saints. We're told that while our Lord was in agony, his disciples fell asleep. In spite of a plain injunction to pray and a plain warning against temptation, the flesh overcame the spirit. While Christ was sweating great drops of blood, his apostles slapped Passages like these are very instructive. We ought to thank God that they've been written for our learning. They're meant to teach us humility. When apostles can behave in this way, the Christian who thinks he stands should take heed, lest he fall. They are meant to reconcile believers to death and make them long for that glorious body which they will have when Christ returns. Then, and not until then, shall we be able to wait upon God without bodily weariness and to serve him day and night in his temple. you
J.C. Ryle
About J.C. Ryle
John Charles Ryle (10 May 1816 — 10 June 1900) was an English evangelical Anglican bishop. He was the first Anglican bishop of Liverpool.
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