It Is Finished!

  • Thread starter Thread starter dessert
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
D

dessert

Guest
Since Lent is here and I am contemplating all God did for me, I wanted to ask just what you all interpret in this Statement Jesus said on the cross.
Did he mean His work was done?
That the devil was beat?
What was finished ?
I know our salvation was done in the new covenant so what other issues were finished thanks it helps me in my discussions. Dessert
 
Since Lent is here and I am contemplating all God did for me, I wanted to ask just what you all interpret in this Statement Jesus said on the cross.
Did he mean His work was done?
That the devil was beat?
What was finished ?
I know our salvation was done in the new covenant so what other issues were finished thanks it helps me in my discussions. Dessert
On one level He was referring to Passover. Passover started in the upper room on Holy Thursday and ended on the cross on Good Friday.

On another level, He was referring to the work of Salvation.
 
He did what He came to do; His job on earth was complete.

That is my take on it anyway…😉
 
On one level He was referring to Passover. Passover started in the upper room on Holy Thursday and ended on the cross on Good Friday.

There is a part in A Father Who Keeps His Promises by Scott Hahn which discusses this in more detail, specifically in chapter 12

BTW it’s a great book 👍
 
Only someone of Infinite nature could atone for an infinite offense (sin). God became Man in Jesus Christ in order to Redeem man. Christ was the only one who could do this, being of Infinite Nature. His sacrifice satisfied the Wrath of the Father, re-opened the Gate of Heaven and restored and saved man through Grace. That is what “It is finished,” means.

Because the Catholic Mass is outside space and time, we are therefore present at the eternal “It is finished” at every Consecration of the Host, participating in that One single and Eternal Sacrifice.

Hope this helps.

God Bless!
 
Though we live in the finite world our finite lives operate also in eternity because we are spiritual creatures with an infinite soul. The soul does not die but when our earthly body dies our soul passes either to Heaven for eternity or to hell for eternity. Therefore by the grace of God what we do here has eternal consequences.

The work of redemption is not finished personally until we personally die and the soul is seperated from our body by God, this is why we must participate in our own salvation.

When Jesus said upon the Cross ‘It is finished’ He proclaimed the establishment of His Kingdom on earth for all eternity, never to be revoked and by His Eternal Sacrifice opened the door (as Jesus is the Door) to peace between man and God and for that peace to be eternal, in other words Salvation.

With Christ we are each co-redemptors. We are to actively participate in the Gospel wherein we each become a living word of God by our transformation in, by and through Christ Jesus by the power of the Holy Spirit and in accordance with the will of the Father.

We each at the end of our lives can say ‘It is finished’ as we make our final sacrifice renouncing self and unite ourselves to Christ and His Cross by His grace.

It truly will be finished and finished well if we have lived our lives united to Christ in the Eternal Sacrifice of the Cross and to undertake this arduous journey spiritually and physically we enter into the eternal offering of Jesus at Calvary by celebrating in thanksgiving the Holy Mysteries of the Eucharist at Holy Mass.

When we hear the words ‘Well done My good and faithful servant’ we will know that for our part ‘It is finished’ and have faithfully entered into during our lifetime the Eternal ‘It is finished’ of Christ Jesus.

We may live in eternity now and do so whenever we make communion with the Triune God, the Angels and Saints or may do so unceasingly in unceasing prayer that is with the prayer of our lives.

Heaven and earth are not far apart, heaven is intimately close to us and by the power of the Holy Spirit a soul may enter into Heaven by the spiritual state of their soul even though they live on earth, by this I mean that the Kingdom of Heaven is close if the soul by the grace of God lives the Gospel and lives in love, therefore living in God. Of course there is no dwelling in the Beatific Vision and so on this earth we cannot ever say ‘It is finished’, we may only say this when we are blessed to behold God after our own personal calvary.

The Cross of Christ is Victory and our cross united to His is victorious also. It is the Victorious reign of God’s Kingdom and the fulfillment of the expulsion of satan from Heaven and now those who endure the Way of the Cross to live in Christ are also victorious over satan though they may fall because they may wash themselves clean again in the Precious Blood of Christ by way of Reconcilation and Confession so that none whom God has chosen may be lost and this is the Victorious work of Christ on the Cross and Risen from the Tomb.

‘No-one can take My children out of my Hand’
‘I have called you by name, you are Mine’

With our Blessed Virgin Mother Mary we can say ‘God has done great things for me’🙂

A fruitful Lent to you and all posters:)

In my prayers
 
Since Lent is here and I am contemplating all God did for me, I wanted to ask just what you all interpret in this Statement Jesus said on the cross.
Did he mean His work was done?
That the devil was beat?
What was finished ?
I know our salvation was done in the new covenant so what other issues were finished thanks it helps me in my discussions. Dessert
Scott Hahn is very insightful… check this out for an answer to this questionzuserver2.star.ucl.ac.uk/~vgg/rc/aplgtc/hahn/m4/4cp.html
 
K-McD;1955918:
On one level He was referring to Passover. Passover started in the upper room on Holy Thursday and ended on the cross on Good Friday.

There is a part in A Father Who Keeps His Promises by Scott Hahn which discusses this in more detail, specifically in chapter 12

BTW it’s a great book 👍
I just ordered the book and should have it in a couple days as I see now and have read on the posts that I still need work in my soul and do Hope yoou all do have a Holy Easter. Dessert
 
Since Lent is here and I am contemplating all God did for me, I wanted to ask just what you all interpret in this Statement Jesus said on the cross.
Did he mean His work was done?
That the devil was beat?
What was finished ?
I know our salvation was done in the new covenant so what other issues were finished thanks it helps me in my discussions. Dessert
Jesus was referring to the Passover meal that had been left incomplete when he did not drink the fourth (and most important) cup of wine with his disciples. He said, I will not drink of the fruit of the vine again…" You can follow the text from there.

Notice also that he did not drink the wine mixed with myrrh which was offered to him before the crucifixion and only after everything was completed upon the cross did he say, “I thirst”, drink the “fourth cup” and say, “it is finished.” Surely he must have thirsted before this point - he said it in order to get that final sip to complete his seder.

Here is a link to a transcript of Hahn’s talk on this subject:

webpages.marshall.edu/~trimbol3/4thcup4.htm

and an article:

catholic.com/thisrock/1991/9109fea1.asp
 
MH84;1956564:
I just ordered the book and should have it in a couple days as I see now and have read on the posts that I still need work in my soul and do Hope yoou all do have a Holy Easter. Dessert
A great man (well, great to me), was asked one day, “You have completed all studies on Theology and have several degrees. Tell me, what do you know?”

His reply was, “I know nothing.”

Don’t be so hard on yourself. The more we know about God, the more we realize we how much we really don’t know.

The “great man” was Fr Corapi.
 
dessert;1957742:
A great man (well, great to me), was asked one day, “You have completed all studies on Theology and have several degrees. Tell me, what do you know?”

His reply was, “I know nothing.”
. . .
This reminds me of a talk by Edward Teller many years ago.

He related that someone had recently asked hin about the prospects of controlled fusion as a power source. He had replied that he had no idea how to accomplish it. His questioner noted that that was the same answer he had given ten years before. Teller responded, "Yes. But now I don’t know on the basis of much more complete information."
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top