In "The Cup the Father Gave to Christ Pt. 1," Angus Fisher addresses the profound significance of the cup that Jesus drank in the Garden of Gethsemane, focusing on the themes of divine justice, substitutionary atonement, and the holiness of God. He argues that this cup, filled with the sins of the elect and the wrath of God, symbolizes the weight of sin that Christ bore on behalf of His people. Drawing heavily from Scripture, particularly Matthew 26 and John 18, Fisher illustrates how Christ’s willingness to drink the cup reflects His obedience to the Father and the fulfillment of the covenant of grace. This message emphasizes the Reformed doctrines of total depravity and limited atonement, highlighting the necessity of Christ’s sacrifice for the salvation of the church, and calls believers to understand the gravity of sin and the boundless grace of God.
“The cup which my father hath given me shall I not drink it?”
“God must satisfy God in all of His attributes before He can do anything for you.”
“This cup is the cup that the wicked drink. This cup is the cup that all those in hell will drink forever, because there is no redeemer.”
“When He drank that cup dry, those sins became one with Him, which means it's impossible for us ever to drink those sins ourselves.”
The cup represents the wrath of God and the sins of God's elect that Jesus took upon Himself.
Matthew 26:36-46, John 18:11
Substitutionary atonement is affirmed through the biblical narrative of Christ's sacrifice for the sins of the elect.
Isaiah 53:10, Romans 3:25, 2 Corinthians 5:21
It highlights God's justice and the necessity of Christ's sacrificial role in atonement.
Matthew 26:42, John 17:6, Romans 5:8
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