Father, Into Thy Hands

A dying man's last words. And they were a child's bedtime prayer.

Luke 23:46 · KJV

Every panel below is a frame from the finished film, in order. Scripture is in red. The video version is coming to YouTube.

Panel 1: A dying man's last words
A dying man's last words
Panel 2: Words a child could learn for the dark
Words a child could learn for the dark
Panel 3: Into thine hand I commit my spirit: thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth.
DAVID - PSALM 31:5  "Into thine hand I commit my spirit: thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth."
Panel 4: The three hours of darkness have passed
The three hours of darkness have passed
Panel 5: With his last breath, he prays those evening words
With his last breath, he prays those evening words
Panel 6: Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.
JESUS - LUKE 23:46b  "Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit."
Panel 7: He begins with a word the Psalm does not have
He begins with a word the Psalm does not have
Panel 8: Not judge. Not stranger. Father
Not judge. Not stranger. Father
Panel 9: On that cross, he was buying that redemption
On that cross, he was buying that redemption
Panel 10: He dies like a child falling asleep in his father's arms
He dies like a child falling asleep in his father's arms
Panel 11: On the third day, morning came
On the third day, morning came
Panel 12: Death loses its last word over everyone who is his
Death loses its last word over everyone who is his
Panel 13: Not because death is small. Because the hands are strong
Not because death is small. Because the hands are strong
Panel 14: Commend your spirit to the Father. He keeps the morning
Commend your spirit to the Father. He keeps the morning

The narration

A dying man's last words. And they were a child's prayer. Jewish tradition made these words an evening prayer. Words a child could learn for the dark. Into thine hand I commit my spirit: thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth. On the cross, the three hours of darkness have passed. With his last breath, he prays those evening words. Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit. He begins with a word the Psalm does not have. Father. Not judge. Not stranger. Father. The Psalm he prayed says, thou hast redeemed me. On that cross, he was buying that redemption. He dies like a child falling asleep in his father's arms. On the third day, morning came. Because he rose, death loses its last word over everyone who is his. You can close your eyes in those same hands. Not because death is small. Because the hands are strong. Commend your spirit to the Father, tonight and every night. He keeps the morning.