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Mar 21

Τετέλεσται

Posted by Matt Jones on Friday, March 21, 2008.

Τετέλεσται – “It is finished.”

And as he hung on the cross, having lived a sinless life, having paid the penalty for your sins and mine, Jesus uttered his last words before dying. Τετέλεσται (tetelestai) “It is finished” (John 19.30). This one word summary of Jesus’ life and death is perhaps the single most important statement in all of Scripture. The word means “to complete,” “to bring to perfection.” Jesus had fully done the work God the Father sent him to do. Paul spends Romans 5 discussing this very fact, that our salvation is sure because Christ’s death totally defeated the effects of Adam’s sin, completely.

But the tense of the verb, the “perfect” tense, brings out even more of what Jesus was saying. The perfect describes an action that was fully completed and has consequences at the time of speaking. Jesus could have used the aorist, ετελέσθη (etelestha), and simply said, “The work is done.” But there is more, there is hope for you and for me. Because Jesus fully completed his task, the ongoing effects are that you are I are offered the free gift of salvation so that we can be with him forever. Praise the Lord. Τετέλεσται

I stole this from a previous post; the insight comes from William Mounce’s Basics of Biblical Greek (Second Edition from Zondervan Publishing, 2003). I found it quite fitting for today.

I hope you are pondering, again, the mystery of Good Friday. Τετέλεσται

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Posted by Matt Jones @ 6:37 pm on March 21, 2008  •  Filed under: Religion
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3 Responses to “Τετέλεσται”

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  1. Stackhouse: The Subversiveness of Easter | Matt Jones’ Random Acts of Verbiage on 22 Mar 2008 at 11:01 pm Said:

    [...] Τετέλεσται [...]

  2. Matt Jones’ Random Acts of Verbiage » The Seven Words of Jesus on the Cross on 02 Apr 2010 at 8:52 pm Said:

    [...] 19.30: When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, “It is finished,” and he bowed his head and gave up his [...]

  3. Matt Jones’ Random Acts of Verbiage » The Gospel: Good Friday leads to Easter on 04 Apr 2010 at 1:03 am Said:

    [...] Friday, we saw the beautiful tragedy. There, Jesus’ work was finished and the effects of that work are still being felt. We live in the post-Easter world. Jesus returned and holds the priesthood forever. He is calling [...]

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