
Psalms 22:1
My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? why art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?
We here behold the Savior  in the depth of His sorrows. No other place so well shows the griefs of  Christ as Calvary, and no other moment at Calvary is so full of agony  as that in which His cry rends the air- "    My God, my God, why hast thou  forsaken me? "    At this moment physical weakness was united with acute  mental torture from the shame and ignominy through which He had to pass;  and to make His grief culminate with emphasis, He suffered spiritual  agony surpassing all expression, resulting from the departure of His  Father's presence. This was the black midnight of His horror; then it  was that He descended the abyss of suffering. No man can enter into the  full meaning of these words. Some of us think at times that we could  cry,
 "  My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?"   There are seasons when  the brightness of our Father's smile is eclipsed by clouds and  darkness; but let us remember that God never does really forsake us. It  is only a seeming forsaking with us, but in Christ's case it was a real  forsaking. We grieve at a little withdrawal of our Father's love; but  the real turning away of God's face from His Son, who shall calculate  how deep the agony which it caused Him?    
In our case, our cry is often  dictated by unbelief: in His case, it was the utterance of a dreadful  fact, for God had really turned away from Him for a season. O thou poor,  distressed soul, who once lived in the sunshine of God's face, but art  now in darkness, remember that He has not really forsaken thee. God in  the clouds is as much our God as when He shines forth in all the luster  of His grace; but since even the thought that He has forsaken us gives  us agony, what must the woe of the Savior have been when He exclaimed, "    My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
Charles Spurgeon
 
 
 
