In Albert N. Martin's sermon titled "The Cups of Our Savior #2," the central theological topic addressed is the significance of the cup that Jesus refused to drink during His crucifixion. Martin articulates that this cup, described as wine mingled with myrrh or gall, was intended to dull His senses amidst extreme suffering, yet Jesus resolutely declined it to demonstrate the voluntary nature of His suffering and to remain fully aware during His final hours. He supports this argument using Scripture references such as Mark 15:22-23 and Matthew 27:34, illustrating the contrast between the pain of the cup He drank—representing divine wrath—and His refusal of the drugged cup. The doctrinal significance rests in understanding Christ's commitment to bear the full weight of judgment for sin while highlighting His love for humanity, encouraging believers to immerse themselves in His love, rest assured in their justification, and embrace their own trials with faith.
“He refused the cup to ensure His complete sensibility to all the realities of the consummate suffering of the next three hours.”
“His physical agony was about to be heightened to its most intense level... but his physical trauma, though great and intense, was such that he refused to do anything that would in any way lessen his bearing for you and for me, the full fury of the wrath of his Father.”
“Shame on us when we spit out and are irritated and question the heart of God when He puts something to our lips that is not saccharine sweet like Kool-Aid.”
“What you will do in drinking the cup of God's wrath, you would give anything for a cup of drugged wine.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
Comments
Your comment has been submitted and is awaiting moderation. Once approved, it will appear on this page.
Be the first to comment!