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    After this Jesus, knowing that all was now finished, said (to fulfill the scripture), I thirst. A bowl full ofvinegar stood there; so they put a sponge full of the vinegar on hyssop and held it to his mouth. When Jesus

    had received the vinegar he said, It is finished and he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.1

    For what was Jesus thirsting and what exactly was finished? For nearly two thousand years

    Biblical scholars have attempted to answer these questions. There have been many and varied scholarly

    theories, literal interpretations, and mystical exposes written regarding these last words of Jesus from the

    Cross in the Gospel of John. Still, even the best of scholarly theories seem unable to give a completely

    satisfactory explanation, as if they only describe the tesserae without seeing how the pieces fit into the

    mosaic that is Johns Gospel. This paper initially attempts to answer these two questions by means of

    traditional scholarship, conveying the general lines of commentary and primary postulations these two

    lines of text have inspired among scholars. Then digging deeper into the greater thematical context, the

    trajectory of this paper leads one to conclude that there truly is another way to understand what the

    Gospel writer John intended with Jesus final words from the Cross. By considering them in the context

    of Johns passion account as a whole, the answers to these two questions become clear as these five

    words are understood to be the final pieces that perfectly complete the Gospel mosaic. We begin, then,

    by first taking closer look at the first of Jesus final words from the Cross.

    diyw (I thirst)

    This is the shortest of all words spoken on Calvary; while two English words in Greek there is

    only one: diyw. This word is found only in John, and the only other time is in John 4 where Jesus sat

    by the well of Samaria at noon. On the last day of the Feast of Tabernacles Jesus promised waters that

    would satiate all so that they would never thirst again.2 Now, here at the Cross, on Jesus last day, in his

    final hour of twelve, Jesus thirsts. This irony isnt lost on Brawley, whose strictly literal interpretation

    renders Gods Messiah crucified He who claimed to be able to satisfy with living water thirstsand

    1John 19: 28-30

    2John 7:37

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    in response is only given the gift that provokes thirst.3 Other scholars comment very little on this word,

    concluding that Jesus was simply expressing a very real physical need, as one cannot doubt that there

    was a human element to Jesus thirst as He endured the scourging, the loss of blood, the burning

    feverishness while the nails were fastened to the most sensitive parts of His body and the weight of His

    body tearing His tender nerves.4 Yet, one must ask why would this be significant enough for John to

    record in his Gospel? Keener thus notes that including this cry from the Cross may have been useful for

    John to counter the Gnostics who failed to embrace the humanity of Jesus.5 Still, it is difficult to believe

    that a strictly literal, or even political, reason would be motivation enough for John to record these as the

    final words of Jesus. Indeed, the structure of this verse reveals that John intentionally stresses Jesus

    thirst in relation to the previous clause so that Scripture may be fulfilled so as to ensure it wouldnt be

    seen merely as a token of his suffering.6 It must be concluded then, as is typical with Johns writing, he

    is clearly pointing to something beyond the literal.

    At the other extreme of this Johannine irony is the spiritual meaning of Jesus thirst. Witkamp

    and others suggest that the only way to a true understanding of Jesus thirst at the Cross is to see it in the

    context of Jesus other references to physical needs in the Gospel story.7 The food that he would eat

    (his Fathers will) and the cup that he would drink were the driving forces of Jesus mission. It follows,

    then that Jesus thirsts out of His love for God and his love for his own in this world.8 Other scholars

    generally speculate that His thirst was to do everything in accord with Gods plan and will.9 There are

    numerous writings from mystics and Church Fathers whose meditations upon Jesus spiritual thirst from

    3Brawley, Robert L. "The Absent Complement and Intertextuality in John 19:28-29."Journal of Biblical Literature 112, no. 3

    (1993): 443. It is difficult to reconcile Brawleys defeatist interpretation with the rest of Johns Gospel and Book of Glory4

    Medical experts say that among all the pains and afflictions of the body there can scarcely be one greater or more intolerable than

    extreme thirst.5

    Keener, Craig. The Gospel of John: A Commentary. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc, 2003: 1146.6

    Witkamp, L Th. "John's Thirst in John 19:28-30: Literal or Figurative?."Journal of Biblical Literature 115, no. 3 (1996): 494.7

    John 4:7-15, 34; 6:35; 7:37; 18:118

    Witkamp, 4979

    Witherington, Ben III.John's Wisdom. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1995: 310.

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    the Cross truly stir the heart. Yet such general and otherwise ethereal responses seem to read more

    theology into the Scripture than from drawing actual meaning directly from the text. Moreover, in

    consideration of the linguistic structure noted above the lack of specificity seems unsatisfactory.

    A number of scholars have thus searched for the exact Scripture citations John intended to invoke

    with Jesus cry of thirst. Most have given their side in the debate whether the Scripture Jesus fulfilled

    was Psalm 69v21: for my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink or Psalm 22v15: my tongue cleaves to

    my jaws. The former is more popularly chosen due to the closer parallel while others argue for the latter

    in light of the soldiers who cast lots for (Jesus) clothing.10 While journal articles have been written

    defending one or another choice of passage, even these explanations seem to fall into mere speculation

    and still fail to answer the question of why fulfilling any chosen passage would be significant enough for

    John make this reference in the very last words of Jesus. A closer look at the next and final words of

    Jesus from the Cross seem to suggest there is, in fact, something greater Jesus was thirsting to fulfill.

    tetelestai (it is finished)

    Culpepper looks to the Greek root of the term used :

    it is finished and notes the

    irony that it is Jesus death that marks the completion of the mission to give life abundantly.11

    Bultmann concludes in his commentary that Everything happened that has had to happen; the work of

    Jesus is completed; he has carried out that which his Father had commanded him.12 Calvin and others

    note that all the prophecies of Scripture were fulfilled and there was nothing that remained for Jesus to

    do. This is representative of the typical commentary on these final words Jesus spoke from the Cross,

    all noting in some way the perfection of Jesus task given by the Father was now finished. Not only do

    such general interpretations seem to lack real substance, but Hahn (et al) suggest they even lack

    validity.13 After all, St Paul reminds us that all was not finished at the Cross, since Christs resurrection

    10Psalm 22:18

    11Culpepper, Alan. The Gospel and Letters of John. Abingdon Press: Nashville, 1976.

    12Bultimann, Rudolf. The Gospel of John: A Commentary. Phiadelphia: Westminster Press, 1971: 675

    13Hahn, Scott: The Fourth Cup, [2006], Transcript of taped address from Catholic Answers, Franciscan University of Steubenville,

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    is as essential for mans redemption as the crucifixion. Indeed, the crux of salvation is that Jesus was

    "raised for our justification."14 Even Jesus own prophetic words were not finished: Destroy this

    temple, and in three days I will raise it up.15 Browns linguistic analysis reveals an important clue that

    is key to unlocking the deeper meaning. He notes that the normal New Testament (and Johannine) word

    for bringing Scripture to fulfillment is plhrwqhv (also used in v24 and v36). Here, however, John

    intentionally uses a different verb, indicating that there must be something else Jesus is referring to as

    being finished.16 Even more remarkably, Brown points to the possibility of sacrificial overtones with the

    use of this particular verb, perhaps even directly linking Jesus completion with Moses words in

    finishing the workof the Tabernacle.17

    Nevertheless, unable to establish further textual substantiation,

    Brown merely footnotes this connotation since it is a fragile basis for resting on this interpretation.

    It seems, however, that Brown unveiled not a fragile fragment but rather the tip of the

    Johannine iceberg as his insight seems to offer a glimpse of the embedded depth of meaning intended

    throughout this entire pericope. What rests on a fragile basis, rather, are all the standard answers given

    for Jesus thirst and fulfillment since they fail to interpret them in the broader context of Johns Gospel.

    At best they may mine fragments of truth or ancillary layers of meaning, but traditional scholarship falls

    short of unveiling the greater mosaic that can only be seen through the lens of Johns intended context.

    Brown failed to note that what followed Moses work was the Passover, as well as the fact that Johns

    Gospel is laden with references to Moses and imagery of Jesus as a new type of Moses.18 Moreover,

    Johns entire Gospel is structured around Passover, this greatest of Jewish feasts, as he records Jesus

    going up to Jerusalem to celebrate this feast three times in his public ministry. Witherington and other

    scholars note that the three uniquely Johannine elements in the final scene of Johns Gospel the Day of

    Steubenville, OH.14

    Romans 4:2515

    John 2:1916

    Brown, Raymond. The Gospel According to John. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970: 74.17

    Exod 33:40, Moses completed the workin preparation for the glory of the Lord to fill the Tabernacle.18

    Many scholars recognize this typology, the presentation of which is beyond the scope of this paper. Reference in John are as

    follows: John 1:17; 1:43; 3:14: 5:45-46; 6:28; 7:19-23; 8:5; 8:28.

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    Preparation, the Hour of Sacrifice, the hyssop, and the unbroken bones- present distinctively Passover

    overtones. Yet the traditional scholarship typically stops there, failing to link the words with context

    and symbolism in order to draw out the primary reason John was so persistent with his references to

    Passover. It wasnt merely for poetic allusions or some other mere literary device. The first-century

    reader would have been able to see this and understand the fullness of what John intended to convey

    through this imagery: the first-century readers, and certainly the Apostles, understood the details and

    significance of Passover. Perhaps the fact that an understanding of the meaning of Passover has been

    lost requires us first to revisit this feast as it was understood in Israelite history and early Christianity.

    The Passover ritual would have been very familiar to the Apostles and all faithful Jews in Jesus

    time.19 This memorial feast celebrated Gods deliverance of Israel from Egypt. During that fateful night,

    every firstborn son in Egypt perished except those Israelite families who followed the instructions of God

    through Moses: Sacrifice a lamb without blemishTake a bunch of hyssop and dip it in the blood and

    touch the lintel and the two doorposts with the blood.20 Thus, by the power of the blood of that

    sacrificial lamb, God saved the Israelites and led them towards the Promised Land. So that they would

    not forget the saving work of God and would rest their hope on His promise of future redemption, God

    instructed the Israelites to commemorate that first Passover night as part of their ritual and identity.

    The ritual was centered around four critical cups: A preliminary course consisting of a festival blessing

    (kiddush) spoken over the first cup of wine, followed by the serving of a dish of herbs. The second

    course included a recital of the Passover narrative and the "Little Hallel" (Psalm 113), followed by the

    drinking of a second cup of wine. The third course was the main meal, consisting of the sacrificial

    (Paschal) lamb and unleavened bread, after which was drunk the third cup of wine, known as the "Cup of

    Blessing." The culmination and the very heart of this ancient Passover liturgy would occur with the

    fourth cup of wine, known in the first century as the "Cup of Redemption." It was the blood of the

    19 Feely-Harnik, Gillian. The Lords Table: Eucharist and Passover in Early Christianity. Philadelphia:University of Pennsylvania Press, 1981.20Ex 12:22

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    sacrificial Paschal lamb the blood of atonement- that was symbolically contained in this fourth cup.21

    "I have given you the blood so you can make atonement for your sins. It is the blood, representing life,

    that brings you atonement."22 The fourth cup wasnt consumed until all the participants would sing a

    song, a long hymn known as the "great Hallel," a very long and beautiful hymn with explicit praises to

    the eternal God in expectation of the final redemption, to achieve the promise of the fourth cup: be at one

    (at-one-ment) with God.23 Only then would the leader (typically a priest, rabbi, or the most distinguished

    present) drink the fourth cup and announce that the Passover is finished.24

    From the Synoptics as well as other NT writings, it is clear that the Apostles understood the Last

    Supper shared with Jesus in the Upper room was a Passover meal.25

    In fact, New Testament scholars see

    the exact ritual pattern (Haggadah) reflected in the Gospel narratives of the Last Supper.26 While little

    detail is given on the early parts of the meal, there is consensus that the cup blessed and distributed by

    Jesus is the third cup in the Passover celebration: the Cup of Blessing. This is established in part by the

    following of observations: First, the third cup was apparently drunk after the main meal. The earliest

    account of the Last Supper (1 Cor 11:23) tells us that Jesus took the cup after supper and pronounced

    the Eucharistic words over it.27 Secondly, the third cup was associated with a blessing after the meal and

    was even referred to as the Cup of Blessing.28 Most scholars agree that the blessing said over the

    bread by Jesus at the Last Supper was in relation to this third cup whereupon the remembrance of the

    covenant would be invoked through the telling of the Exodus story.29 Jesus also makes covenant

    21It is significant to note the AT-ONE-ment anticipated with the fourth cup of atonement, in light of Jesus words in John 17:22

    that they may become perfectly one.22

    Leviticus 17:11

    23 Hallel Psalms: 114, 115, 116, 117 and 11824

    From the Talmuds: the most distinguished of the company assembled for the seder conducts it, says the blessings aloud, and leads

    the singing of praise in the Hallel psalms between the 3rd and 4th cup.25

    Mark 14:12-16, Matt 26:17, Luke 22:7; 1 Peter 1:19, 1 Cor 5:7: See End Note for discussion on apparent timing discrepancy.26

    While John makes little mention of the Last Supper account, this paper is written with the understanding of some scholars that

    since John was written last partly in order to fill in the critical gaps of the Synoptics. There was no need to repeat what was already

    written.27

    Words which significantly recall Moses words in Exodus 24, celebrating Passover at Mt Sinai.28

    1 Cor. 10:1629

    Nolland notes: On the basis of the indication in Lk 22:20; 1 Cor. 11:25 that the cup intended came after the meal, the cup is

    normally identified as the third cup. The only reason to reject this is because no other cup is mentioned!

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    reference here: This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood. Anotherrevealing aspect of this particular meal reflected upon by one scholar30is that since this blessing was

    after the main meal, the bread Jesus was blessing was likely the aphikoman: traditionally a part of the

    unleavened bread set aside to symbolize the hidden Messiah that would come.31 By blessing the

    aphikoman and offering a cup of blessing in his own blood, Jesus would patently imply that this Passover

    was, indeed, a night unlike all the others.32 It is also significant to note here also that Jewish texts

    dating to the time of Jesus intimate the expectation that the Messiah would arrive on the very night of

    Passover.33 Finally, after the supper and the drinking of this third Cup of Blessing, Jesus leads the

    apostles in song out to the Mt of Olives.34

    This is the only record in the Bible of Jesus singing and,

    given the Passover celebration has not concluded, it seems logical to assume that the songs were the

    Hallel Psalms traditionally sung between the third and fourth cup of the Passover feast.

    The disciples must have wondered why Jesus did not complete the Passover. Nonetheless, they

    follow Jesus to the Mount of Olives, which is critical to note is still in the district of Jerusalem and thus

    in keeping with the Pharisaic rules of the Passover celebration.35 The Synoptic Gospels never mention

    the Passover specifically again, although they convey potent hints that Jesus has not merely forgotten

    about the final cup -climax and ultimate purpose of the Passover meal. There, in the Garden of

    Gesthemani He prays: My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me.36 In fact, Jesus prays

    three times for the cup to be removed. The Gospel of Mark records Jesus refusing a cup of myrrh,

    reminding the reader of his early vow to not drink again of the fruit of the vine until that day when I

    30Feely-Harnik, Gillian, 130.

    31The words origin derives from the Greek verb meaning to come, arrive. In the era of great Messianic hope in first century

    Judaism, it is also significant to note that the Messiah would arrive on the night of Passover.32

    A traditional part of the Haggadah was for the youngest present to ask the question why is this night unlike all the others so that

    the Exodus story could be retold, and remembered.33

    Mekhita on Exodus 12:42; Targum Exodus 12:42; Targum Exodus 15:18; Targum Ps 118:23-29; Didache 10:6.34

    Matt 26:3035

    According to ancient stipulations, the Passover meal take place in its entirety within the jurisdiction of Jerusalem city limits (see:

    Feeley-Harnick: The Lords Table).36

    Mathew 26:39

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    drink it new in the kingdom of God."37 The hour for the Cup of Redemption had not yet come: for the

    hour for the Paschal lamb to be sacrificed had not yet arrived.38 Recall that was to be in that Passover

    cup was the purifying blood of the Paschal Lamb. For John, the apostles, and no doubt for early

    Christians, the Passover ritual was not yet concluded: the Rabbi has not yet declared it is finished.

    Perhaps the apostles wondered not only about the cup but also why there wasnt a lamb at this

    particular Passover meal. Bultmanns curiosity at this absent mention of lamb at the Last Supper leads

    him to reject this meal as a Passover feast.39 It is precisely this omission, however, that confirms for

    Ratzinger, Brown (et al) that Jesus was (is) the Paschal lamb.40 In the words of Pope Benedict: Jesus

    celebrated the Passover without a lamb no, not without a lamb: instead of the lamb he gave himself,

    his Body and his Blood. Thus, He anticipated His death in a manner consistent with his words: No one

    takes my life from me, but I lay it down of my own accord."41 From the very outset of Johns Gospel we

    hear John the Baptist proclaim: Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.42 This

    phrase is a direct allusion to the sacrificial lamb in Isaiah upon whom the Lord has lain the iniquity of

    us all.43 The entire Gospel of John comes full circle, then, when Jesus lays down his life for his sheep;

    when the Paschal Lamb whose purifying blood poured out at the Cross takes away the sin of the world.

    Moreover in John 10:9 Jesus proclaims himself to be the door, and if any one enters by me, he will be

    saved. Just as the Israelites went in through their bloodshed door on that first Passover and were

    protected and redeemed by sacrificial blood, the blood of Jesus opens the door for all to be saved and

    begin a journey toward the Promised Land.

    While the Gospel itself is laden with powerful allusions to Jesus as the Paschal Lamb, historians

    37Mark 14:25. Myrrh was actually wined mixed with a sedative, which would have helped to numb Jesus suffering. Not only had

    his hour not yet come but this shows how Jesus fully and painfully embraced the suffering of all humanity.38

    See endnote39

    Bultimann, 675.40

    Brown, Raymond. The Gospel According to John. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970.41

    Pope Benedict XVI, Homily of April 5, 2007, citing John 10:1842

    John 1:2943

    Isaiah 53:6-7

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    have also uncovered convincing external evidence for this interpretation of Jesus as the perfect Paschal

    sacrifice. The first-century world attached great importance to the outward behavior of a sacrificial

    victim, where animals were to be led freely to the sacrificial table in order to please the deity(ies) and

    even the slightest resistance would be unacceptable.44 In Jerusalem, the Jews built a causeway with a

    high and narrow embankment leading from the Mt of Olives to the temple so that sacrificial animals

    might freely walk to the altar to be sacrificed. Given this context, new light is shed on Jesus openness to

    his captors on the Mt of Olives when he came forward and freely offered himself to the soldiers: I am

    He.45 Jesus is then also inspected, as were the lambs for sacrifice, when he was brought to the High

    Priests for examination. While Pilate comes out (since the priests wont be defiled and will be able to eat

    the Passover sacrifice)46pronouncing Jesus without blame and yet handing Him over to be crucified,

    John notes that it was on the Day of Preparation of the Passover, about the sixth hour.47 This is

    precisely the moment priests were prescribed to begin slaughtering the Passover lamb in the temple. On

    this Passover, however, it is Jesus the first-born Son of God, the lamb without blemish, freely led to

    slaughter- who is the Paschal Lamb through whose death all the sacrifices for sin performed at the temple

    were now to be fully consecrated.

    One other uniquely Johannine detail further echoes this point. The Exodus prescription for

    Passover sacrifice strictly prohibits breaking the bones of the Paschal lamb.48 In fact, this would have

    been very top of mind to the Jews since Brown insightfully notes that these same Old Testament

    passages that would have been read in the synagogue lectionaries at Passover in the second year of the

    three year cycle: at thatvery Passover.

    49

    It was also prohibited for bodies to be left on a cross after

    44Manila, Bruce J and Richard L Rohrbaugh. Social Science Commentary. Gospel of John. Minn, MN: Fortress Press, 1998: 274.

    45John 18:5

    46Johns account makes it clear that it is the high priests and chief priests who orchestrate execute Jesus death. This is even further

    confirmation of Jesus role as the sacrificial lamb since it is was paramount function of priests to serve God and his people by offering

    sacrifices in His temple.47

    John 19:1448

    Exodus 12:46 (also Numbers 9:12)49Brown, Raymond. The Gospel According to John. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970: 926.

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    sundown, a law the Jews would have most wanted to observe on the feast of Passover.50 As Roman

    soldiers complied with the Jews request they broke the bones of the two others crucified with Jesus in

    order to speed up the dying process. Yet when they came to Jesus there was no need since they saw He

    was already dead. The soldiers also unwittingly affirm Jesus as the perfect kosher sacrifice when they

    subsequently pierce His side. The blood and water of the Paschal lamb had to spurt out at the moment of

    death so that the blood could be sprinkled, lest the sacrifice was invalid. 51 Notably, this consecration

    was done on the first Passover and on this final Passover- with a sprig of hyssop.

    It is scarcely believable that Jesus should be designated as the Passover lamb through the

    statement that a sponge filled with vinegar was stuck on a hyssop stem.52

    Perhaps, if considered in

    isolation without the Passover theme resounding throughout Johns passion narrative, Bultmanns

    comment on this Scripture would have some merit. Even so, it can be convincingly argued that even this

    singular detail does, indeed, point in a powerful way to Jesus as the Passover lamb. In response to Jesus

    cry of thirst He is offered bitter oxou53on a stalk of hyssop, the very plant that was used to mark the

    lintels of houses with blood during the initial Passover in Egypt. Some scholars dismiss this allusion to

    Passover and instead cling to a theory that it wasnt hyssop at all but a spear that delivered the sponge

    full ofoxou to Jesus lips.54 Bruce suggests this notion can be traced back to an 11th century Greek

    manuscript where an errant Scribe inserts the textual variant usswpo (a Roman javelin) in place of

    the original uJsswpw (on hyssop).55 According to Kilpatrick, this plausible conjecture leads us

    to improbabilities and difficulties greater than those of the text of the manuscripts. His research

    revealed that during the six decades before AD 66, it was auxiliary troops not legionary troops stationed50

    Witherington, Ben III.John's Wisdom . Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1995: 464.51

    According to Manila, blood and water immediately pouring out from his side Jesus proves himself a kosher offering in

    accordance with Pharisaic requirements.52

    Bultmann, 674.53

    A sour wine or water mixed with bitter wine that would have been typical for soldiers to have with them. This paper originally was

    intended to explore and debate this point but the evidence and commentaries are mostly consistent on this. It is important to note that

    it was a variation of wine, the blood of the grape in Hebrew.54

    For both practical reasons (as the tiny hyssop stalk seems inadequate for the task) but also since the Synoptics fail to give this

    detail.55

    Bruce, FF. The Gospel of John. Cambridge: Pickering & Inglis, 1983: 373.

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    in Judea and therefore no such usswpo - a weapon unique to Roman legionary troops- would

    have been available to stretch the sponge to the lips of Jesus.56

    Scholars are eager to dismiss the literal uJsswpw on practical terms in that a short branch of

    hyssop would seem a most inappropriate means of delivering satiation for Jesus thirst. As Bultmann

    states and others agree, hyssop would not be particularly suitable for the purpose since it is assumed that

    the Cross would be too high for a meager branch of hyssop to reach Jesus mouth. 57 Historical

    research, however, has demonstrated the fact that a Roman cross could very well have been low to the

    ground: Since crucified people were not raised very high off the ground, the soldiers would have had to

    merely lift the stalk barely above their own heads.58

    Hence, with this clear allusion to the purifying

    blood of the sacrificial lamb spread by hyssop to mark the doorpost of the gateway to salvation, John is

    once again pointing to Jesus as the Lamb of God, the Door to redemption.

    Finally, the Lamb of the Passover had to be consecrated by a priest, and ultimately in the temple

    it was the high priest who offered the sacrifice to God. John presents one last unique piece of evidence

    in his Gospel confirming that the lamb of the new covenant was offered not only by a priest, but the high

    priest: Jesus Christ. Only John mentions that Jesus was stripped before his crucifixion of one garment in

    particular, a seamless linen tunic, which he calls in the Greek the "citwna". This is the exact word

    used for the official tunic worn by the High Priest in the Passover sacrifice.59 When the High Priest

    offered a holy sacrifice, he was to take off the beautiful outer garment of the priesthood and simply wear

    this linen "citwna" which is what Jesus was wearing moments before he offered himself up as the

    sacrifice on the Cross. John is reminding faithful readers that Jesus is the true priest, as well as the true

    victim.60 As Caiphus tears his garment, Jesus becomes the one true high priest to offer the final Paschal

    56GD Kilpatrick, cited by Bruce, FF. The Gospel of John. Cambridge: Pickering & Inglis, 1983: 373.

    57Bultmann, 674.

    58Kostenberger, Andreas J. Commentary on the New Testament: John. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2004: 550.

    59Exodus 28, Leviticus 16

    60Bultmann footnotes the Rabinnic tradition depicting Adam receiving an unstitched garment from God, likewise after him Moses,

    which was also applied to the Redeemer to come after Moses. Still, he argues it not at all possible John was depicting Jesus as priest!

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    sacrifice. Thus, we have come full circle from Browns suggestion that Jesus words from the Cross

    seem to connote sacrificial overtones. Indeed. Now through the lens of this Johannine Passover

    context, the questions this paper set out to address can clearly be answered.

    Why does Jesus thirst? While not discounting every literal and mystical interpretations brought

    out through centuries of scholarship, it seems now indubitably clear that John intended to show Jesus as

    thirsting to drink that final fourth cup, the Cup of Redemption, of the Passover celebration that began in

    the Upper Room at the Last Supper and ends on the Cross. As the Lamb of God, the perfect Paschal

    Sacrifice, Jesus the high priest thirsts to present himself to the Father as the perfect and eternal offering:

    the Lamb of God, that takes away the sin of the world.61

    Thus diyw -the shortest of all words

    spoken from the Cross- are truly the sweetest, as in response to this single word the bitterness of all

    human suffering is made sweet in that single drink of bitter wine where the blood of the Paschal Lamb

    completes the Old Covenant Passover! Thus the new and eternal Passover, offering the Cup of

    Redemption for all, commences at the Cross.62

    What is finished? As noted above in the Haggadah, after drinking from the Fourth Cup the

    leader of the Passover feast would proclaim it is finished to conclude the celebration. These are the

    very words of Jesus, and this is what was finished on the Cross: the Passover feast. Thus the Gospel

    that began with the wedding feast in Cana as Jesus transformed water into wine (the blood of the grape)

    now ends with the eschatological banquet celebrating the wedding feast of the bridegroom with the wine

    of the New Covenant: the blood of the lamb. The final time these exact words repeated in Scripture is in

    Revelation, at the marriage supper of the lamb where John looks and beholds "a Lamb standing, as

    though it had been slain"63 Thus Jesus, our celebrant priest and reigning king in the eternal worship of

    the heavenly assembly, also appears continually as the Passover Lamb of the New Covenant. His

    61John 1:29

    62New Covenant theology explanation is beyond the scope of this paper but as Jesus brings the Old Covenant Passover to an end, the

    blood that was symbolized is now the true blood of the New Covenant effects what is signifies: metaphor now becomes metaphysical.

    Remembering becomes recapitulation. Symbol becomes Sacrament.63

    Rev. 5:5-6

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    sacrificial offering continues until Jesus wish expressed at the Last Supper is at last fulfilled that they

    may all be one: thus the at-one-ment -the hope and promise of the Cup of Redemption- are realized.

    The Gospel of John is resplendent with layers of meaning, powerful allusions, and various

    typologies. Many scholars over the years have done well to draw these out from the lines of the text and

    certainly others have developed deep and beautiful meditations from the words of the Beloved Disciple.

    However, traditional scholarship has failed to consider the final words of Jesus within the whole of

    Johns primary context and thus have failed to offer satisfactory answers to the questions of John 19:28-

    30. Once the entirety of Johns Passover mosaic is understood, and the elements of the great Paschal

    feast are pieced together, it becomes clear that the two missing tessarae are the very ones that Jesus

    provides from the Cross: Jesus calls for the fourth cup of the Passover celebration, and after drinking

    proclaims at last that the feast is finished.

    End Note

    This paper uses cites the Synoptic Gospel accounts of the Last Supper in order to establish a

    foundational premise of this paper, that this was a Passover celebration. Two explanations are thus in

    order. First, the author subscribes to the theory that since John wrote last his primary aim was to fill in

    the gaps where the Synoptic writers left out details John felt critical the last five words of Jesus is case

    in point. Where the details were given in the Synoptics, rarely does John repeat the stories. It follows,

    then, that Johns lack of inclusion of the Last Supper should not be a surprise or indication of omission:

    he was aware of the other Gospel accounts of this event and found them sufficient.

    Secondly, up until recent scholarship from the Dead Sea scrolls, there was a problem attempting

    to reconcile Johns timing of the Passover feast with event of the Last Supper in the Synoptics. Whereas

    the former takes place before the Day of Preparation, the other Gospel writers indicate their feast was on

    the eve of Passover. This has now been resolved, as the words of Pope Benedict confirm:

    This contradiction seemed unsolvable until a few years ago. The majority of

    exegetes were of the opinion that John was reluctant to tell us the true historical

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    date of Jesus' death, but rather chose a symbolic date to highlight the deeper truth:

    Jesus is the new, true Lamb who poured out his Blood for us all. In the meantime,

    the discovery of the [Dead Sea] Scrolls at Qumran has led us to a possible and

    convincing solution which, although it is not yet accepted by everyone, is a highly

    plausible hypothesis. We can now say that John's account is historically precise.

    Jesus truly shed his blood on the eve of Easter at the time of the immolation of thelambs. In all likelihood, however, he celebrated the Passover with his disciples in

    accordance with the Qumran calendar, hence, at least one day earlier; he celebrated

    it without a Iamb, like the Qumran community which did not recognize Herod's

    temple and was waiting for the new temple.64

    The following book by Annie Jaubert provides detailed evidence in support of this argument: The Date

    of the Last Supper, Staten Island: Alba House, 1965.

    64Pope Benedict XVI, Homily of April 5, 2007.