Saturday, May 19, 2007

First and Last

We all have uttered something that we regret or possibly even grumbled with ourselves when we blurted out, when we should have kept silent.

The first thing that comes from our lips can make the biggest impression, and by the same token the last words we say are left rolling around in the minds of those who heard them.

Jesus, as you would expect, is known well for both His first and last words. They stand like purposeful bookends in a life with the most significant purpose of all time.

When Jesus was a boy, his first words ever recorded in the Bible are found in Luke 2:49. He declared to His earthly parents that he should be ...about His Father's business.

The very last statement that He uttered from His lips are the other side of that bookend: "It is finished." The Greek for this statement is held in just one word. Tetelestai. John 19:30. which means, 'to bring to perfection' or 'to complete'.

Jesus had fully completed what He indicated he began in the Synagogue in Luke 2:49. He was about His Father's business and He brought it to a perfect conclusion even with His last breath.

The really amazing thing about the choice of words that Jesus used you see, is that he could have chosen the word, Etelesthe, which means, 'The work is done.' But He didn't.

Etelesthe is in the aorist tense, whereas the tense of Tetelestai is perfect tense, meaning that it describes an action that is 'fully' completed and has consequenses at the time of speaking. The word is rich with meaning.

The implications for you and me are that His purposeful choice of words imply ongoing effect for all generations. This include ours too.

Tetelestai!

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