>>624428
This >>624459 except it is Psalm 21 by the Septuagint reckoning.
Since He took on our nature, Jesus experiences our alienation from God in His humanity, knowing our suffering and distress, yet He does not despair. He speaks these words in the name of humanity, completely identifying with us in our condition, for in His divinity, He is never forsaken by the Father.
Remember the basics of Christology, the Mystery by which He is both fully human and fully divine, with mixing or sublimation of either, and by which His divinity is a separate personage from the Father and the Holy Spirit, but yet all three share a single essence.
Psalm 21 foretells the details of the Crucifixion in the first half and discusses the Church in the second half. Compare verse 9 (v8 in the KJV) to Matthew 27:43 or verse 19 (v20 in the KJV) to Matthew 27:35. See also Hebrews 2:12 and compare it to verse 23 (v24 in the KJV).
>>624471
I like it and find it both funny and accurate.