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John 19 brings us to the cross and shows both the guilt of man and the glory of Jesus. Pilate knows Jesus is innocent and says again that he finds no guilt in Him, yet he still gives Him over to be crucified under pressure from the crowd and the chief priests (John 19:4, 6, 12, 16). The soldiers mock Jesus with a crown of thorns and a purple robe, but in John’s deep irony they are mocking the very King He truly is (John 19:2–3, 14–15, 19). The Jewish leaders reject their own Messiah so completely that they say, “We have no king but Caesar” (John 19:15). In this chapter, everyone seems to think they are judging Jesus, yet the One standing before them is the true King and Judge. Even in suffering, Jesus is not helpless. Pilate’s authority is only “given… from above,” and Jesus goes to the cross in obedience to the Father’s will (John 19:11; cf. John 10:17–18).
At Golgotha, Jesus is crucified between two others, bearing shame, pain, and the curse that sinners deserve (John 19:17–18; cf. Deut. 21:23; Gal. 3:13). John keeps showing that this is not a tragic accident but the fulfillment of Scripture and the plan of God (John 19:24, 28, 36–37). The soldiers divide His garments (John 19:23–24; Ps. 22:18), He is given sour wine in His thirst (John 19:28–29; Ps. 69:21), none of His bones are broken like the Passover lamb (John 19:33, 36; Ex. 12:46), and His pierced body fulfills the word of Zechariah (John 19:34, 37; Zech. 12:10). John wants us to see that Jesus is the true Passover Lamb who takes away the sin of the world (John 1:29; cf. 1 Cor. 5:7). When Jesus cries, “It is finished,” He is not speaking in defeat but in victory (John 19:30). The work the Father gave Him to do has been completed. The debt of sin has been paid in full.
Even in His final moments, Jesus continues to love and care for others. He entrusts His mother to the beloved disciple (John 19:26–27), and after His death, Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus step forward to honor Him openly in burial (John 19:38–42). The One the world rejected is the One heaven delights in. The chapter closes not with Jesus abandoned to shame, but laid carefully in a new tomb, with the quiet sense that God’s story is not over. John 19 is heavy with sorrow, but it is also full of hope, because the crucified Christ has finished the work of redemption.
🌀 Reflection:
Jesus did not merely suffer as an example of love; He suffered to accomplish salvation. John 19 calls us to look at the cross and see both the ugliness of our sin and the greatness of Christ’s mercy. Do you live as though His work is unfinished, trying to earn what Jesus has already accomplished? Rest today in the finished work of your crucified King.
💬 Mission Challenge:
Share with someone today what Jesus meant when He said, “It is finished,” and point them to the hope that forgiveness and peace with God are found only through His completed work on the cross.

Continue reading in our NT260 plan in the rest of Phase 4 — That You May Believe.