The Hour of Darkness
Chapter 26
Matthew 26-27; Mark 14-15; Luke 22-23; John 13-19
During the final hours of Jesus’ life, He shows what it means to serve others and follow God’s plan all because of His great love for us.
Think about this for a moment - If you knew you only had a few hours to live, who would you choose to be with? What would you choose to say to them?
This chapter of The Story brings us to the final moments of Jesus’ life. Before He heads to the cross, He has some last words with His followers. What does He say? What does He do?
The Hour of Darkness
Chapter 26
Why did Jesus die?
Let's Prepare For The Hour Of Darkness
AS YOU READ CHAPTER 26
Why did Jesus die?
Make no mistake about it – Jesus died on the cross for your
sins. God made Him who had no sin to be
sin for us. Nothing about this is
right. Nothing about this is fair. But once again, God proves how far He will go
to have a relationship with you.
Let's Prepare For The Hour Of Darkness
The Last Supper
Pages 367–369
Pages 367–369
Jesus gathered with His disciples to eat the Passover meal on Thursday of His final week. They recalled how Pharaoh refused to believe Moses came from God, despite miraculous signs; how the Israelites painted the blood of a lamb on the top and sides of their homes’ doorframes so the destroyer would pass over their homes without bringing death; how God freed the Israelites from slavery to Egypt; and how God led them to the Promised Land.
Before they ate, no servant had washed their feet, which were dusty from walking dirt roads. So Jesus arose from the meal and performed the lowly task.
1. (a) What was Jesus to the disciples (John 13:12–13)? (b) Washing feet was a lowly servant’s job. What did Jesus want them to do for each other (13:14–15)? (c) Consider prayerfully if there’s an area of service which you’ve considered beneath you. What do Jesus’ words tell us about this attitude (13:15–16)? (d) What does Jesus say will happen if we follow His example (13:17)? (e) In Jesus’ time, foot washing was welcomed and necessary. What is an equivalent welcome and needed service you could do for someone this week?
During the meal, Jesus did something special with the bread and wine.
While they were eating, Jesus took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to His disciples, saying, “Take and eat; this is My body.” Then He took the cup, gave thanks and offered it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you. This is My blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.” Matthew 26:26–28
When Moses confirmed the Book of the Covenant with the Israelites, he sacrificed young bulls, sprinkled half their blood on the altar and half on the people who agreed to obey the covenant, and said, “This is the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you.”
Jeremiah foretold that God would one day establish a new covenant, for the Israelites had broken the old one.
2. (a) Whose blood would be shed to establish this new covenant (Matthew 26:28a)? (b) What would the pouring out of blood bring (26:28b)?
Jesus told His disciples to eat bread and drink wine in memory of Him, a practice we call Communion.
Final Words
Pages 369–371
Pages 369–371
Jesus continued to teach His disciples.
3. (a) Jesus knew difficult events would soon shake the disciples. What did He tell them to do (John 14:1)? (b) How can you apply these words to a situation you are currently going through?
4. (a) Where was Jesus going and what was He going to do there (14:2)? (b) What did he promise (14:3)? (c) What comfort do these words offer?
Jesus told them they knew the way to where He was going. But Thomas was confused and said he didn’t know where Jesus was going, so how could he know the way. He didn’t understand what Jesus had been telling them about dying and rising from the dead, so he didn’t grasp that Jesus spoke of his Father’s house in heaven.
5. (a) What did Jesus say was the only way to the Father (John 14:6)? (b) This was quite a claim. Consider it prayerfully. Have you been trying to reach the Father by being good enough, like the Pharisees? Have you been trying to reach the Father through a person other than Jesus? (c) What might you tell someone who is trying to reach the Father through a means other than Jesus?
6. (a) What did Jesus say those who love Him will do (John 14:15)? (b) What is the difference between obeying to earn a place in heaven and obeying out of love? (c) How would you respond to someone who says, “I love Jesus, but I don’t have to obey His commands”?
7. (a) What word of comfort did Jesus give in John 16:33? (b) How can you apply this encouragement to the troubles that you have today?
Jesus’ Arrest & Trial
Pages 371–374
Pages 371–374
Jesus and the eleven disciples went to the Garden of Gethsemane on the Mount of Olives. He warned them what was about to happen.
8. (a) What did Jesus say all the disciples would do that night (Matthew 26:31)? (b) What did Peter declare he would never do (26:33–35)? (c) Jesus knew His disciples wouldn’t stand by Him. Briefly describe a time someone didn’t stand by you, without naming names. What did you learn?
Jesus took Peter, James, and John aside.
9. (a) Was the task Jesus was about to accomplish easy for Him (Matthew 26:38)? (b) What can we learn about prayer from Jesus (26:39–42)?
Judas Iscariot arrived with an armed crowd. They arrested Jesus and brought Him before the Sanhedrin. The Jewish leaders looked for false evidence against Jesus so they could put Him to death.
10. (a) What did the high priest command Jesus (Matthew 26:63)? (b) Where did Jesus say they would see Him in the future (26:64)?
Thus Jesus gave Himself a position of heavenly authority, and applied to Himself a prophecy from Daniel in which one like a “Son of man” would be given authority, glory, and sovereign power; would be worshiped by people from all nations; and would rule forever.
11. What does Jesus’ statement tell us about Jesus (Matthew 26:64)?
Just as Pharaoh refused to believe Moses came from God despite miraculous signs, so the Jewish leaders refused to believe Jesus came from God. They rejected Jesus’ claim as blasphemy, and condemned Him to death.
Peter & Pilate
Pages 374–378
Pages 374–378
Peter had followed the soldiers to the high priest’s house. 12. (a) Peter had assured Jesus he would never deny Him. But what happened (Luke 22:60–62)? (b) Next week we’ll see Jesus forgive and strengthen Peter. Briefly describe what you learned from failing at something you thought you could handle.
They tortured and mocked Jesus throughout the night. Early Friday morning, the Jewish leaders delivered Jesus to Pilate, the Roman governor. Pilate asked Jesus if He was the king of the Jews and what He had done.
13. Why didn’t Jesus want His supporters to fight for Him (John 18:36)?
Repeatedly Jesus had taught on the kingdom of heaven. Yes, He was the Messiah, but He wasn’t there to establish an earthly kingdom, as most Jews expected.
14. How does remembering we belong to a heavenly kingdom help us when we, like Jesus, are treated unfairly?
Jesus’ Crucifixion
Pages 378–380
Pages 378–380
At 9:00 a.m. Friday, Roman soldiers crucified Jesus, the Holy One of God. They nailed His wrists and feet to a wooden cross and lifted Him from the earth. He endured excruciating pain and the insults of bystanders and criminals. Then at noon, darkness covered the land. At 3:00, still in darkness, Jesus cried, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?”
In this prayer, Jesus quoted the first line of Psalm 22. Anyone who recognized the words could have turned to the psalm and read an amazing prophecy of the crucifixion.
15. Compare the following verses and explain how Psalm 22 was fulfilled in Christ:
Matthew 27:35 Psalm 22:16, 18
Matthew 27:39 Psalm 22:7
Matthew 27:43 Psalm 22:8
Matthew 27:46 Psalm 22:1
John 19:28 Psalm 22:15
John 19:30 Psalm 22:31
The prophecy would have encouraged them to trust God as they struggled to understand the dying of the one whom they thought was the Messiah come to rule the world.
However, there was more to Jesus’ cry to His Father, for in these words He proclaimed to humankind that He too suffered in darkness without sensing God’s presence or hearing God’s answer. Even in this, He became like us.
Shortly after uttering the first line of Psalm 22, Jesus echoed the psalm’s last line by crying out, “It is finished.”
Jesus died.
Perhaps the spiritual forces of darkness thought the victory won.
But at Jesus’ last breath an earthquake shook the land and the curtain that separated humans from the temple’s Most Holy Place ripped in two from top to bottom, for something had happened in the heavenly realms: Jesus’ torn body had opened the way to the throne of grace in heaven.
Jesus’ work was finished. With the Father’s purpose achieved, light returned to the land.
16. In the midst of our own dark times when we cannot sense God’s presence or hear His voice, we must remember that when the Father’s work is finished, light returns. (a) What can we learn from Jesus’ willingness to drink the cup the Father gave Him? (b) What encouragement can we take from Jesus’ endurance through darkness?
Although light returned to the land, Jesus’ followers could not yet see the parallel of Jesus’ last meal with them to the sight before their eyes. They did not comprehend that the blood that dripped from the wooden cross was the blood of the Great Passover Lamb. It was the blood that would protect those who trust in it from death and free them from slavery to sin. It flowed from the body that opened the Way to the heavenly Promised Land.
But we have not reached the end of His story, for Jesus promised that in three days He would rise. But that will be next week's story!
AS YOU READ CHAPTER 26
Journal your answers to these questions as you read through the chapter this week. You may wish to read one day and journal the next, or spread the questions over the whole week.
1. While in the upper room with His disciples, Jesus knew His death was imminent. He was with the men, His friends, He’d spent three years teaching, yet He knew soon one would betray Him, one who would deny Him and all would abandon Him. Then He says, “This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.” The disciples were anything but worthy, and still Jesus gives them this gift of life. How does reading this story impact what you experience in communion?
2. What was Jesus trying to teach the disciples when He washed their feet? What does this tell you about God’s kingdom? Would it be easier for you to wash someone else’s feet or for someone else to wash your feet? What is it, for Peter and for us, that makes the servant life of Jesus hard to accept?
3. What can we learn about prayer from Jesus’ prayers at the Garden of Gethsemane and on the cross?
4. Describe Peter’s volatile relationship with Jesus. What lessons from him can you apply to your own relationship with the Lord?
5. Jesus’ betrayal, arrest, trial, crucifixion and death are also known as the “Passion.” Describe your most dramatic experience of the Passion. What was it? Scripture? A movie? A play? A Good Friday worship service? What did you think, and how did it make you feel? How does it feel to know that Jesus knowingly did all of this for you?
6. “It is finished,” (John 19:30, p. 380) could also be translated as “fulfilled,” “accomplished” or “brought to purpose.” Very different than “It’s over” in many ways, Jesus’ last words are a declaration that something new is just beginning. What do you think this new thing is (see Jeremiah 31:34 and Ezekiel 36:26-28)? What new things has Jesus done in you through your faith journey?
PRAYER: God, in Your hour of darkness, You took my sin upon Yourself. Forgive me, Lord, for the ways I have fallen into sin, and free me from the things that draw me away from You. Lord, shine Your light and Your grace into my life so that I may more wholeheartedly serve You as You did for Your followers, even in Your darkest hour. Amen.
Hope to see you on Palm Sunday!
In His Love,
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