Luke 23:26-43 · The Crucifixion
The Significance Of An Insignificant Man
Luke 23:26-43
Sermon
by Erskine White
Loading...

They seized one Simon of Cyrene ... and laid on him the cross, to carry it behind Jesus. (Luke 23:26)

We might call Simon of Cyrene a rather insignificant man in the larger sweep and sway of scripture. He's not a major figure; in fact, the Bible mentions him just once, almost in passing: "They seized one Simon of Cyrene, who was coming in from the country, and laid on him the cross, to carry it behind Jesus."

It is worth noting that Simon was an African, from the city of Cyrene in what is now northern Libya. He was probably a Jew, since there was a large Jewish community in Cyrene, and he had two sons who later became well-known Christians (cf. Mark 15:21). That's all we know about him, a rather insignificant man.

But this insignificant man happened to be in Jerusalem on the day Jesus was crucified. Against his will, Simon of Cyrene became a part of Jesus' life, and Jesus a part of his. What do you think Simon saw, and how do you think he felt on that day of days as he witnessed the most important event in the history of the world? Come with me now and try to imagine.

Imagine this visitor from Africa making his way through the narrow, crowded streets of the city. Merchants are hawking their wares as people scurry by. Children are racing after one another across the paving stones. There is all the hustle and bustle one would expect in a great city like Jerusalem.

Suddenly, at the intersection ahead of him, Simon hears a loud commotion. Some women are crying and wailing in grief, but other bystanders are cheering. People rush by as Simon presses up against the wall by the side of the street and watches.

Now he sees the Roman soldiers coming around the corner, heading his way. One soldier carries a banner which flutters in the breeze, another wears a sword which glistens in the sunlight. A third is holding a whip, cursing the crowd and ordering them to stand back. The soldiers are marching someone to his death.

As the procession makes its way toward Simon, he sees a Man with a heavy crossbeam tied to His shoulders. The Man is a gruesome sight. His body is covered with welts and bruises. His hair is matted with blood from a crown of thorns which has been driven into His scalp. People who line the sides of the street are jeering at Him. Every so often, someone breaks out from the crowd to spit in His face. Simon shudders silently. He has never seen such hatred in a crowd of people before.

The Man carrying the cross stumbles and falls and a soldier starts whipping Him: "Get up, You pathetic King of the Jews! Get up and don't make me waste any more of my time on You!"

The man rises slowly to His feet and staggers a few more steps, but then He falls again. Suddenly Simon freezes and time stands still: "You there! You foreigner! Come here and carry this cross!" A Roman soldier is pointing at him! Before Simon can move, he is grabbed by the arm and thrown back to the ground. The soldiers are tying the cross to his back.

Now Simon of Cyrene is closer to this Man than anyone else, and he looks into His eyes. What powerful, penetrating eyes! The kind of eyes that see below the surface right to the soul. The Man's eyes are filled with pain and sorrow, but He seems to feel pity for the people who are putting Him to death.

The Man opens his mouth to speak. "Thank you," He says softly as Simon is pulled to his feet. The Man says nothing to the people who mock and jeer Him but speaks to the women who are shedding their tears for Him:

Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for Me,but weep for yourselves, and for your children,"For behold, the days are coming when they will say,Blessed are the barren, and the wombs thatnever bore, and the breast that never gave suck!"

What a strange thing, Simon thinks, that this Man would say nothing to His enemies and prophesy against His friends.

Maybe Simon was afraid as he was pulled from the crowd. Maybe he was afraid the Romans would crucify him, too, because Romans didn't respect Africans any more than Israelites.

Maybe Simon was angry and resented being made part of another Man's execution. Maybe he felt pity for Jesus and was glad to relieve Him of His burden. Maybe Simon was simply too exhausted to feel anything as he dragged that heavy cross through the streets of Jerusalem and outside the city wall and up the hill to the place of the skull.

We will never know. But someone must have asked him his name and where he was from, because scripture records it for all posterity: Simon of Cyrene carried Jesus' cross to Calvary.

This was an insignificant man who did a very significant thing. He brought Jesus' words to life, for Jesus had said to His disciples, "If any would come after Me, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow Me" (Matthew 16:24). And Jesus was also to tell them, "Truly I say to you ... you will stretch out your hands, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish to go" (John 21:18). The very first one to do this - the very first one to pick up a cross and follow Jesus Christ - was an African who happened to be passing by, an ordinary man named Simon of Cyrene.

You and I are rather ordinary people like Simon, so perhaps we can see ourselves in his place today. Perhaps there is an important lesson in his story for the living of our own lives.

It's true, isn't it, that the burdens we carry in life are often thrust upon us involuntarily. Like Simon of Cyrene, we are passing by through the days of our lives when suddenly, we are seized against our will and given a cross to bear.

It happens so often that it's hard to know where to begin listing the examples of the "Simon situations" in life.

A young child or a young adult is suddenly struck by a fatal, incurable disease. Now, at a too-young age, he must come to terms with life and death, and he must learn courage in the living of whatever time he has left. Maybe you've heard of the seven-year-old boy who got AIDS through the transfusion of tainted blood. What a cross to bear! He didn't ask for that- no AIDS victim does - it was thrust upon him against his will. What a cross to bear.

A young mother is left alone to raise children that the father can't be bothered with. She didn't ask for this abandonment and abuse; it was thrust upon her against her will. Now she must struggle to be both a breadwinner and a mother. That is her cross to bear.

A father is unemployed, or forced to take a lower wage job, because the company wants higher profits and cheaper labor overseas. Now he must find a way to keep his self-respect and keep his family fed. He didn't ask for this hardship. He is not responsible for the callousness of mammon's marketplace. It was thrust upon him against his will, and this is his cross to bear.

Finally, I can't even begin to count all the families which patiently struggle with the failing health of their elder loved ones. Children care for aging parents; husbands and wives help an ailing spouse. No one asks to be in such situations, but this is a cross most of us bear in one way or another.

It seems we receive most of our burdens in life the way Simon of Cyrene received his - unexpectedly and against our will. This is a fact of life we cannot change. But we can decide how we will respond to our burdens. We can grow bitter and curse God or the fates for thrusting these injustices upon us, or we can accept our crosses as part of the fabric of life, and find through Christ the strength to carry on. One is a defeat while the other is a victory over the circumstances of life.

Earlier, when I was telling you Simon's story, you remember how I said that when Simon picked up Jesus' cross, he was closer to our Lord than anyone else on earth. Simon was just inches away from the Master's face when they threw him down and tied the cross to his back, and when he followed Christ to Calvary.

This is the secret to all the "Simon situations" we face in life. We must know that like Simon, we are truly closest to Jesus when we bend down and pick up the cross which lies before us. We are most like Christ when we sacrifice for someone else, when we bear each other's burdens with dignity and grace.

This is how He turns our burdens into blessings, He who has "surely borne our griefs and carried our sorrows" (Isaiah 53:4). He allows us to join Him in our afflictions. Pick up your cross in life and bear it willingly, and you will find that Christ is more real to you than ever before, and you are more alive in Him.

If you are looking for the path to new life in Jesus Christ this Lenten season, you won't find it with the "Christian industries" today - with the big business Christian broadcasters and religious trinket-makers. You won't find it in the way they market our Lord for profit. You see, they probably won't tell you about things like denying yourself and picking up a cross because that is bad for ratings and profits. They fear they won't survive unless they offer what the public will buy and wants to hear.

Instead, look for the truth you seek in Jesus Christ, and in Jesus Christ alone. He has already told us and shown us all we need to know. His words and deeds are plain and true.

Lose your life in order to gain it. Give to others and don't worry about receiving. Don't gain the world and lose your soul. Love your enemies, and pray for those who hurt you.

Don't live for this world or the things of this world, but seek first the Kingdom of God. Seek greatness by being a servant. Most of all, if you would live with Jesus Christ today- if you want Him to be real and Lord of your life - deny yourself and pick up your cross, and follow Him to Calvary.

Simon of Cyrene came along to show us explicitly what Jesus was talking about. Simon was just an ordinary person like you or me, but remember his story today, and make it your own.

God was watching as this insignificant man did something eternally significant, as he picked up the cross of Jesus Christ. And Simon of Cyrene lives even now to hear Jesus thank him in heaven. Amen.

Pastoral Prayer

Most Holy and Faithful God, whose Son, Jesus, is bearing His cross for us even today, we pray for courage, humor and grace in meeting the trials and tribulations of life. Help us not to complain too much, or impose our sorrows on others. Help us to save tomorrow's troubles for tomorrow, so we may live better and more cheerfully today.

Most of all, dear God, help us to see our Savior beside us when we stumble and fall. Help us to lose ourselves in Him when we have our crosses to bear, that He might give us renewed hope and strength for the living of these days.

Finally, Most Righteous and Loving Lord, we pray that as we walk along the highways and byways of life, we will be moved by Your Spirit to help bear the burdens of others in need. Move us quickly to aid the aged and infirm, the poor and oppressed, the lonely and discouraged. Lead us to help, and like Simon of Cyrene, even to pick up their cross from the blood-soaked street and carry it up the hill to Calvary. O Precious Lord and Savior, don't leave us too timid or afraid to heal the wounds around us. You have carried our cross and borne our burdens. Now help us to do the same for others. Through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, THE VICTORY OF THE CROSS, by Erskine White