Aceldama
"And it was known unto all the dwellers at Jerusalem; insomuch as
that field is called in their proper tongue, Aceldama, that is to say,
The field of blood." (Acts 1:19)
Never was a tract of land more fittingly named than Aceldama, an
Aramaic word meaning "field of blood," for it had been purchased with
blood money, "the price of blood" (Matthew 27:6). The
purchaser had been Judas (through the "executors" of his estate, as it
were, following his suicide), but the blood he sold, to acquire the
price of the field, he had deemed "innocent blood." The
miserable thirty shekels of silver which consummated this transaction
was the price of a slave in ancient Israel (Exodus 21:32),
but this slave was none other than God incarnate, so the
thirty pieces of silver—the price set by the religious leaders of
Israel—was the price for the sale of God. The prophet
Zechariah, more than 500 years before, had acted out a prophecy of these
strange events: "So they weighed for my price thirty pieces of silver .
. . a goodly price that I was prised at of them" (Zechariah
11:12-13). Next, according to both prophecy and fulfillment, this
blood money was cast down in the temple and then used to buy the
potter’s field (Zechariah 11:13; Matthew
27:5, 7-8). These and many other such details in these
accounts constitute a remarkable type and fulfillment of prophecy, and
thus a testimony of both divine inspiration and divine foreordination.
But, more than that, it is a striking picture of the price of our
salvation, for the "field of blood" typifies that great field is the
world (Matthew 13:38) and
Christ is the man who, searching for "treasure hid in a field . . .
selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field" (Matthew
13:44). All that He had—the very blood of His life—was willingly
shed that we, dead in sins and hidden in the world, might be "purchased
with his own blood" (Acts 20:28).




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