The Bible Is Good
The Psalm Behind the Cry (Psalm 22 / Matthew 27) When Jesus cries out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” on the cross, he is not just expressing pain. He is pointing somewhere. In this episode, we follow that line back to Psalm 22. What we find is not just a moment of suffering, but an entire pattern—complaint, trust, suffering, rescue, and ultimately global praise. This psalm mirrors the crucifixion in striking detail. Mocking crowds, pierced hands and feet, divided garments—it is all there. But it does not end in despair. It moves toward victory. Jesus isn’t losing on the cross. He is fulfilling something bigger. Support the show: www.buymeacoffee.com/thebibleisgood [https://buymeacoffee.com/thebibleisgood] Episode Chapters / Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction Setting the context: Matthew 26–28 and the cross 01:00 – Jesus’ Cry on the Cross “My God, my God…” and what it means 02:30 – A Deeper Possibility Is Jesus pointing to Psalm 22? 03:30 – The “Hyperlink” Idea How Scripture often references entire passages 05:00 – Psalm 22: Complaint God feels far, no rest, no answer 06:30 – Psalm 22: Trust Remembering God’s past faithfulness 08:00 – Mocking and Scorn Direct connection to the crucifixion 09:30 – Created for Trust God as Creator and foundation. 10:30 – Surrounded and Suffering Bulls, lions, dogs, and enemies. 12:30 – Physical Breakdown Bones, thirst, and exhaustion. 13:30 – Pierced Hands and Feet A striking connection to the cross. 14:30 – Dividing Garments Fulfilled in Matthew 27. 15:30 – The Turning Point “Be not far… come quickly.” 17:00 – From Suffering to Praise God hears and responds. 18:30 – Corporate Worship Praise spreads to others. 20:00 – From Israel to the Nations All the earth joins in. 21:30 – Future Generations “This will be told…” 22:30 – Final Reflection Read Psalm 22 through the lens of the cross.
13 episodios
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