Prayer in the Garden
9/24/2009 11:30:49 PM
And so Jesus departs from the Upper Room. . . and begins the quiet march toward His arrest. He returns again this night to the Mount of Olives, and stops in the garden that we hold so dear, the Garden of Gethsemane, where He prayed to His Father, about the agony that was soon to come upon Him. . . Luke 22.39-46 - www.biblegateway.com


And so Jesus departs from the Upper Room. . . and begins the quiet march toward His arrest. He returns again this night to the Mount of Olives,

and stops in the garden that we hold so dear, the Garden of Gethsemane, where He prayed to His Father, about the agony that was soon to

come upon Him. . . Luke 22.39-46 - www.biblegateway.com

unknown.jpg


Good Morning, my dear friends. Let's think for a moment about what it must have been like on that night. . . The disciples were with Him, and had been forewarned about the urgency of that evening--they saw it, and knew Judas was somewhere putting his plot into motion. Jesus turned and looked at the men, and asked them to 'watch and pray--to wait for Him', and then took Himself a little way off, and entered into the most desperate prayer of His lifetime. Once again, He knew He was in this alone--how He loved the disciples, but they didn't get it. . . and as Jesus looks over his shoulder, He sees that they have dozed off. Oh, the loneliness of the anguish our Lord must have felt. . . but we can't be too hard on the disciples; remember, they had just had the Passover meal, which included four cups of wine, and it had been a long day.

Jesus knelt down to pray, "Father, if you are willing, please take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine." It was not just the horror of the crucifixion that awaited Jesus, but the moment when God the Father would turn His back on him as all of our sins were upon him--it was the total separation from God. So, "being in agony, He was praying very fervently; and His sweat became like drops of blood, falling dow upon the ground." Luke 22.44 Luke, a physician, was the only gospel writer who wrote of this condition - The clinical term is β€œhematohidrosis. β€œ Around the sweat glands, there are multiple blood vessels in a net-like form. Under the pressure of great stress the vessels constrict. Then as the anxiety passes β€œthe blood vessels dilate to the point of rupture. The blood goes into the sweat glands.” As the sweat glands are producing a lot of sweat, it pushes the blood to the surface - coming out as droplets of blood mixed with sweat. [Mel Gibson did a masterful job recreating this Garden scene, including the hematohidrosis Jesus experienced in "The Passion of the Christ," if you saw it.]


The Garden is still there - Right next to the Church of All Nations is the Garden of Gethsemane, the place widely accepted as the spot where Jesus spent his last night in prayer and where he was arrested. What I found interesting is that there are a few olive trees within the fenced garden that date over 2000 years. They are among the oldest trees in the world...silent witnesses in a beautiful garden. The trees were silent witnesses, and still are today, as this was verbiage taken from a travel-site on an Israel tour. Yes, the trees could describe that night for us. . .


What are we to take from that Garden, when our Lord prayed, crying out to the Father? Several thoughts. . . every time it is noted in the Old Testament, that the people 'cried out to God', He heard their prayer, and came and answered--usually delivering them. When we cry out to God in prayer, He hears us too.

>Then, as Paul said, Jesus was a man, who suffered everything we did/have/will, and yet was without sin. He sought the Father's will, and accepted the Father's will.

>We know from the gospel narratives, that Jesus regularly retreated to pray, and be alone with His Father; so, on this the night of His greatest trial, it was natural that Jesus would pray. 'Natural for us too?

>And while you and I cannot go back in time and take the disciples' place that night--sure that we could have stayed awake, and prayed for Jesus and ourselves--we can do what He has asked us to do--be ready, be faithful.


Retreat to a garden to pray. . .

Christine