"Not School Already"!

We all have ‘Not...Already!’ moments. They begin early in life. There’s ‘Not Bedtime Already!’ when we plead for ‘Just five more minutes’ to finish playing football or see the end of a TV programme, and ‘Not Exams Already!’ when there’s still some revision to do, and all the other ‘Not...Alreadys!’ which you can fill in from your own experience.
Unfortunately, growing up does not solve the problem. It reappears as the ‘Monday morning feeling’ when you have to go to work after the weekend off, and in homes when the regular domestic jobs like ironing, cleaning and mowing the lawn come round – things which can’t be put off because it only makes them harder to deal with next time.
One man, at the age of thirty-three, had perhaps the greatest ‘Not...Already!’ to deal with.
I imagine that Jesus would have enjoyed much of the time of His ministry - the discussions with His disciples and teaching them new ways of thinking and of looking at things, giving them God’s view of life. I’m sure He delighted in His healing ministry and the help He could give to the poorest and the disadvantaged in the communities He went through (Mark 3.1-6; Luke 7.11-17; 17.11-19).
But there were also the ‘Not...Already!’ moments. There was so much He had to do but always ahead of Him was the Cross. He could have opted for more time and an easier life by avoiding conflict with the authorities and keeping away from Jerusalem but He knew what He had to do and that He had to meet God’s timing (Luke 9.51).
When Jesus began His last visit to Jerusalem, it must have been a ‘Not...Already!’ moment. With only days left of His life, He spoke to His disciples about what would happen (Luke 18.31,33), but they did not understand what He was telling them (v.34). He had so little time left in which to do so much.
However, the hardest ‘Not...Already!’ moment for Jesus must have been in the Garden of Gethsemane (Mark 14.32-41). There was no time left. The deadline, for that was what it really was for Jesus, was right in front of Him - like ‘It’s school tomorrow’ or ‘It’s time for bed’ or any other time when we don’t want to face the reality of the moment. The armed crowd were already drawing near to arrest Jesus when Judas would identify Him with the kiss of betrayal (v.43-44).
The prayer which Jesus made to God, His Father, ‘Take this cup (of suffering and death for Jesus) from Me’ (v.36), was similar to our requests in ‘Not...Already!’ situations - ‘Five more minutes, please’, ‘Just a little more time’, ‘Can’t it wait?’ For Jesus, His deadline couldn’t wait and, if it was God’s will, He was ready to meet it. ‘Yet not what I will, but what You will’ (v.36) was His affirmation. So He was arrested, tried, beaten and crucified for our salvation.








