Yes… that’s where everything tightens into a holy tension.
You have, on one side:
perfect union, uninterrupted obedience, complete alignment.
And then suddenly:
Matthew 27:46
“My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?”
That cry feels like it shatters everything we just said… but it actually reveals it at its deepest level.
🌑 Not a Breakdown of Union, but the Depth of the Mission
Jesus is not losing faith or forgetting who the Father is.
Notice He still says: “My God, My God…”
There is no rebellion, no renunciation — still relationship.
But something real is happening.
📜 He Is Standing Inside Psalm 22
That cry is not random — it is the opening of Psalm 22.
Psalm 22:1
“My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?”
And that Psalm moves from abandonment… to vindication… to victory.
Jesus is not just expressing pain —
He is entering fully into the Scripture, embodying it.
⚖️ The Weight He Is Carrying
This is where the mystery deepens.
2 Corinthians 5:21
“For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us…”
Galatians 3:13
“Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us…”
The One who lived in perfect union with the Father…
now stands in the place of sin, curse, and judgment.
Not because He sinned — but because He takes the position of the sinner.
🔥 Union and Forsakenness — Not a Contradiction, but a Paradox
Here is the key tension:
- Relational union is not broken (He still says “My God”)
- Experiential fellowship is eclipsed under judgment
He is tasting what separation feels like —
not because He has become separated in essence from the Father,
but because He is bearing what separation produces.
🕊️ The Silent Side of the Cross
Until that moment, the Father speaks, affirms, declares:
Matthew 3:17
“This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
Matthew 17:5
“This is My beloved Son… hear Him!”
But at the cross… silence.
That silence is not indifference.
It is judgment being carried to completion.
🌊 Why This Does Not Cancel His Earlier Words
Remember:
“My food is to do the will of Him… and to finish His work.”
This moment is the finishing of that work.
Isaiah 53:10
“Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise Him; He has put Him to grief…”
The will of the Father was not only miracles, teaching, or compassion…
but also the full bearing of sin’s consequence.
So even here — especially here —
He is still in perfect obedience.
✨ The Mystery in One Line
He is never more aligned with the Father’s will…
than in the moment He feels most forsaken.
🧠 Something Worth Sitting With
We tend to measure closeness to God by what we feel:
- clarity
- peace
- reassurance
But Jesus shows a moment where:
- obedience is perfect
- faith is intact
- love is unwavering
…and yet the experience is darkness and silence.
Hebrews 5:8
“Though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He suffered.”
Not learned as in correction…
but learned as in fully entered, fully lived, fully completed.
🌅 And Then…
The cry of abandonment is not the final word.
Luke 23:46
“Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit.”
Union is not lost.
The mission is fulfilled.
The silence gives way to completion.
So that cry is not the collapse of what He said in John 4:34…
it is the cost of it.
The One whose “food” was the Father’s will…
tasted even the bitterness of the cup — and did not turn away.
And that is where the mystery stops being theoretical…
and becomes salvation.