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Jesus cried out to God. You must see what all was going on during that time. Jesus has been walking with God for 33 years. At the moment before his death, he was taking on the sins of all man (past present and future). At that point, he was as far away from God as he has ever been before. That's when he cried out to God, because he didn't feel God's presence. He did this for you.

2007-02-19 06:59:56 · answer #1 · answered by se-ke 3 · 0 0

Jesus cried with a loud voice and then died. This passage is a paraphrase from the Gospel of Matthew.

God turned His head because He did not want to see the collective sin that Jesus took upon Himself to be the Salvation to the world.

2007-02-19 07:04:43 · answer #2 · answered by floydbeme 2 · 0 0

some of these answers..sheesh..
Jesus was in agony. Thorns in his head, nails driven through his hands and feet, the position on the cross makes it hard to breathe. He was beaten before then with wips with pieces of glass in them.
Jesus cried out to God the father, 'Father father why have you forsaken me?" Jesus had the sins of the world on him and God could not look upon him! Then Jesus cried out, 'It is finished" then he died. So tears? I'm sure he had many! The God of love I'm sure he also had many.

2007-02-19 07:01:38 · answer #3 · answered by Jeanmarie 7 · 0 0

God the Son, through fact the 2d guy or woman of the trinity, assumed human nature. He did no longer lose His equivalent proportion interior the Divine Nature purely through this act. And He did no longer soak up human nature which remained no longer so good as God. Jesus is the two God and actual guy. His inferior human nature grow to be difficulty to all human frailities, which contain death, different than sin. His crying out to God grow to be an acknowledgement of His human nature as no longer so good as God. His human nature did no longer own endless understanding. lower back, he's the two actual God and actual guy. that's the secret of the incarnation that's preceded via the secret of the trinity.

2016-10-16 00:51:08 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Don't forget Jesus IS God.

The Bible only says that Jesus cried out loudly:
Matthew 27:50
And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice, and yielded up His spirit.

2007-02-19 07:05:47 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Did God have the ability to save " his son " ??
i think YES
So why God didn't save Jesus when he was " dying on the cross " ???

Don't tell me that Jesus died to make Christians sins be forgived

I think God have tha ability to save both " his son " & forgive Christians sins

the whole matter doesn't require a sacrifies from God or " his son "

God told us in the Qur'an that Jesus didn't DIE, he was RAISED

2007-02-19 07:02:30 · answer #6 · answered by Kevin 5 · 0 0

Praise be to Allaah.

There is nothing strange about the Muslims rejecting this idea, because the Qur’aan in which they believe and accept what it tells them definitively states that that did not happen, as Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):

“And because of their saying (in boast), ‘We killed Messiah ‘Eesa (Jesus), son of Maryam (Mary), the Messenger of Allaah,’ — but they killed him not, nor crucified him, but it appeared so to them the resemblance of ‘Eesa (Jesus) was put over another man (and they killed that man)], and those who differ therein are full of doubts. They have no (certain) knowledge, they follow nothing but conjecture. For surely; they killed him not [i.e. ‘Eesa (Jesus), son of Maryam (Mary)]”

[al-Nisa’ 4:157]

Rather the problem rests with the Christians for whom the doctrine of the crucifixion and redemption has become a central issue, so much so that the cross is the symbol of their religion.

It is strange that they differ concerning the form of this cross which indicates their confusion about this fabrication.

There are differences between their Gospels and their historians regarding everything that has to do with the story of the crucifixion.

They differ concerning the timing of the Last Supper, which according to them was one of the events in the lead-up to the crucifixion. They differ concerning the traitor who led (the Romans) to Christ – did that happen at least one day before the Last Supper, as narrated by Luke, or during it, after Christ gave him the piece of bread, as narrated by John?

Was Christ the one who carried his cross, as John says, as was customary with one who was going to be crucified, according to Nottingham, or was it Simon of Cyrene, as the other three Gospels state?

They say that two thieves were crucified alongside Christ, one on his right and one on his left, so what was the attitude of these two towards the Messiah who was being crucified, as they claim?

Did the thieves scorn him for being crucified, and say that his Lord had abandoned him and left him to his enemies? Or did only one of them scorn him, and did the other rebuke the one who scorned him?

At what hour did this crucifixion take place – was it in the third hour, as Mark says, or in the sixth as John says?

What happened after the so-called crucifixion?

Mark says that the veil of the Temple was torn from top to bottom. Matthew adds that the earth shook and rocks crumbled, and many of the saints rose from their graves and entered the holy city, appearing to many. Luke says that the sun turned dark, and the veil of the Temple was torn in the middle, and when the centurion saw what had happened, he glorified God and said, “Truly this man was righteous.”

But John does not know anything about all that!

These are not the only weak elements and indications of falseness in the story of the crucifixion, as narrated in the gospels. Rather the one who studies the details of the gospel narratives of this story will, with the least effort, notice the great differences in the details of this story, which are such that it is impossible to believe it all or even any part of it!

How desperate are the failed attempts to fill this gap and conceal the faults of this distorted book. Allaah indeed spoke the truth when He said in His Book which He has preserved (interpretation of the meaning):

“Do they not then consider the Qur’aan carefully? Had it been from other than Allaah, they would surely, have found therein many a contradiction”

[al-Nisa’ 4:82]

2007-02-19 07:25:30 · answer #7 · answered by Khalid H 4 · 0 0

It is not recorded that either cried. It is recorded that God turned his back on Jesus during the crucifixion.

2007-02-19 07:05:52 · answer #8 · answered by tjg1987 2 · 0 0

Jesus made an aroma pleasing to the Lord.

2007-02-19 06:58:32 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The only time I heard of Jesus crying, is in the bible , Jesus wept, at Lazarus tomb.

2007-02-19 07:10:34 · answer #10 · answered by ? 7 · 0 0

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