A Third Requirement

Jesus listed one more requirement of discipleship to the multitudes that day:

So therefore, no one of you can be My disciple who does not give up all His own possessions (Luke 14:33).

Again, it would seem logical to conclude that Jesus was using hyperbole. We don’t need to give up all of our possessions in the sense that we are left without shelter, clothing and food. We must, however, certainly give up all of our possessions in the sense of turning their ownership over to God, and to the degree that we are no longer serving mammon, but serving God with our mammon. The result could certainly mean giving up many unnecessary possessions and living a simple life of godly stewardship and sharing, as did the early Christians we read about in the book of Acts. Being Christ’s disciple means obeying His commandments, and He commanded His followers to not lay up treasures on earth, but to lay them up in heaven.

In summary, according to Jesus, if I am to be His disciple, I must bear fruit. I must love Him supremely, much more than even my own family members. I must be willing to face the inevitable hardships that will arise as a result of my decision to follow Him. And I must do what He says with my income and possessions. (And many of His commandments have something to say in this regard, so I must not fool myself, as so many do, saying, “If the Lord told me to do something with all my possessions, I would do whatever He said.”)

And these are the kinds of committed followers of Christ that we as ministers are supposed to be making! That is our God-ordained goal! We are called to be disciple-making ministers!

That is a foundational truth that many ministers around the world are completely missing. If they evaluate their ministries, as I did, they will have to conclude, as I did, that they are falling far short of God’s desire and expectation. When I considered the level of commitment to Christ demonstrated by the people of my congregation, I had little doubt that there were many who could not be classified as true disciples.

Pastors, take a look at your congregation. How many of your people does Jesus consider to be His disciples according to His criteria in Luke 14:26-33? Evangelists, is the message you preach producing people who are committing themselves to obey all of Christ’s commandments?

Now is the time to evaluate our ministries, before we stand before Jesus at the final evaluation. If I’m falling short of His goal, I’d rather discover it now than then. Wouldn’t you?

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DMM Chapter 1 » A Third Requirement

Christ’s Incredible Cross, Last Words

There can be only one reason for an anemic church–because she is malnourished. To be strong the church must continually feed upon the Word of God, nourishing herself with a balanced diet. I fear, however, that much of what the church has been consuming is junk food. We must return the cross to the place it deserves–as the main course of every meal.

Respected pastor, Jack Hayford, recently wrote:

I believe that the charismatic movement must chart a fresh course to the central point of Christian truth: the cross of Jesus. The remedy for any imbalance is precisely there, where those two crossbars remind us of the need to balance heaven’s requirements (vertical) with human need (horizontal).80

Only the cross can restore balance. It is the foundational truth of the Bible. We know that if a building’s foundation is faulty, then the whole structure will collapse. Jesus, His person and His work, must be returned as the chief cornerstone. Only then can the church be built properly, “a spiritual house for a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ” (1 Pet. 2:5).

Pastor Hayford went on to write:

One recent study of the content of most charismatic worship music indicated that both Christ’s cross and His blood are scarcely mentioned. Does this drift from the biblical and historical center of Christian faith signal a warning? I think so. It’s hard to synchronize this tendency with the theme song of heaven, both now and eternally; “To Him [the Lamb] who loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood” (Rev. 1:5; see also 5:9).

The cross must command center stage in our lives, ever and always; and as participants in this revival, let us be certain it does in the charismatic movement as well. The cross is the fountainhead of all God’s wisdom, as well as the source of all His power (1 Cor 1:18-25; 2:1-4).

Let’s start singing again, “Jesus, keep me near the cross.” Humility is assured there, which will keep arrogance and pride from gaining ascendance. Holiness is assured there, which will keep presumption and ungodliness at bay. Love abounds there, which will help us to hear each other and to keep the teachable heart of a child. Finally, the power is there–for the fountainhead of all Christ’s glory-workings toward humankind was opened there. We must keep that fountainhead as our foundation–resting all our revelations and blessings on the footings that Calvary provides.81

E.W. Moore, a clergyman in the church of England in the early 1900’s, witnessed firsthand the historic Welsh revival. Upon observation of the amazing ministry of Evan Roberts, the primary human agent in that revival, Moore passionately wrote,

He has had a vision of Calvary….He has seen “One hanging on a tree, in agonies and blood,” and the sight has enthralled him….What we need is a fresh vision of the Cross. And may that mighty, all-embracing love of His be no longer a fitful, wavering influence in our lives, but the ruling passion of our souls.82

This book is only a primer on the greatest subject ever studied–the cross of Christ. My hope is that it will inspire ministers and lay-people alike to reevaluate everything that is done under the banner of Christianity. Let us return to the foundation of our faith. Let us once more place Christ’s cross where it belongs: in the center of everything we say and do. If we will, sermons will change, churches will change, lives will change, cities will change, and for multitudes, eternity will change

Footnotes

80 Jack Hayford, Charisma, Sept. 1990, p. 74

81 Jack Hayford, Charisma, Sept. 1990, p. 76.

82 E.W. Moore, The Story of the Welsh Revival, p. 82.

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Christ’s Incredible Cross, Last Words

A Final Sobering Thought

Clearly, Jesus wants people to become His disciples, as revealed by His Words to the multitudes recorded in Luke 14:26-33. How important is to become His disciple? What if one chooses not to become His disciple? Jesus answered these questions at the close of His discourse in Luke 14:

Therefore, salt is good; but if even salt has become tasteless, with what will it be seasoned? It is useless either for the soil or for the manure pile; it is thrown out. He who has ears to hear, let him hear (Luke 14:34-35)

Notice that this is not an unrelated statement. It begins with the word therefore.

Salt is supposed to be salty. That is what makes it salt. If it loses its flavor, it is useless for anything and “thrown out.”

What does this have to do with being a disciple? Just as salt is expected to be salty, so Jesus expects people to be His disciples. Since He is God, our only reasonable obligation is to love Him with supremely, take up our crosses and give up all our possessions. If we don’t become His disciples, we reject His very reason for our existence. We are good for nothing and destined to be “thrown out.” That doesn’t sound like heaven, does it?

At another time, Jesus said to His disciples (see Matt. 5:1):

You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt has become tasteless, how will it be made salty again? It is good for nothing anymore, except to be thrown out and trampled under foot by men (Matt. 5:13).

These are sobering warnings indeed. First, only those who are salty (an obvious metaphor for “committed obedience”) are of any use to God. The rest are “good for nothing…except to be thrown out and trampled.” Second, it must be possible for one who is “salty” to become “unsalty,” otherwise Jesus would not have seen any need to warn His disciples. How these truths contradict what so many teach today, saying that one can be a heaven-bound believer in Christ but not be a disciple of Christ, or that it is not possible to forfeit one’s salvation status. We’ll consider those erroneous ideas in more detail in later chapters.

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DMM Chapter 1 » A Final Sobering Thought

Chapter Ten – The Cross in Practice

Christ's Incredible Cross, Chapter Ten

Has the cross of Jesus Christ captured your heart? Once we understand the significance of Jesus’ death, our lives can never be the same. The cross enables us for the first time to see things clearly. It reinterprets every situation, colors every view, and rights every wrong perspective. By it we interpret history and predict the future. By it we see every person in a new light. By it our motivations are brought into focus and our hearts are laid bare. The cross opens the eyes of our understanding.

In this final chapter, I want to share five specific ways that the cross alters our former perceptions. To what degree has the cross captured our hearts? Let us examine our lives as we survey the following five indicators.

1. If the cross has truly captured our hearts, we live for a new purpose.

In fact, Jesus and His cross become the only things worth living for. If God became a man, suffered, and died to offer forgiveness to people who are otherwise destined to spend eternity suffering in hell, then those who believe it must live to spread its message.

The saddest thing is not that people refuse to believe in Jesus, but rather that some people have never yet been given an opportunity to make a choice. What could possibly be more important than making certain everyone hears “the word of the cross,” the gospel of Jesus Christ? Nothing.

Those who have been captured by the cross live for one purpose. They may not be pastors or evangelists. They may be flight attendants, construction workers, homemakers, or business executives. Whatever their occupation they are missionaries to their world and seek opportunities to witness of God’s saving grace through Christ.

As we meditate upon the message and revelation of that cross, our supreme prayer request is that the world hears the gospel. Our aspiration is to be used of God as He sees fit and take the gospel to those who have not yet heard it. We live for Christ’s cause.

Today many Christians are caught up in other worthy causes, but none compares to the worthiness of spreading the gospel. Lately, it seems that political involvement is being presented as the Christian’s most sacred duty. But is it? The good that results from political action is immensely inferior to that of preaching the gospel. If all Christians would be as devoted to spreading the gospel as some are in their political involvement, there would be much less need for political activism.

The best way to improve society is by means of the gospel. People who are born again don’t abort their babies; they don’t patronize pornographic theaters; they don’t abuse their children; they don’t sell drugs.

Imagine for a moment a person sitting in a crowded football stadium. Somehow, he learns there is a bomb buried in the middle of the football field that is capable of destroying the stadium and is going to be detonated in thirty minutes.

He thinks to himself, “I must tell these people to evacuate the stadium.” So he dashes from his seat in search of the broadcasting booth to announce the peril of the situation and instruct the spectators to evacuate.

In his search, he accidentally ends up in a public restroom and sees profanity scribbled all over the walls. “Oh!” he says to himself, “I would hate for some child to come in here and see this.” So he diligently begins to scrub down the walls of the restroom for the next thirty minutes to remove the profanity.

No one would argue that the man was involved in a worthy cause as he worked to clean up the restroom. But while he worked with zeal, a stadium full of people was blasted into eternity.

This exemplifies the activities of many Christians today. They are doing good things, but while they work, people are slipping into an eternal hell as the seconds tick off.

To make matters worse, the world often perceives Christians as people who are trying to make the world conform to their morality. The media presents us as religious fanatics whose sole message is one of political conservatism. Unbelievers reject what they think is our message, never hearing the message we are supposed to convey to them.

Why are Christians against abortion, gambling, alcohol, and pornography? Because they have been born again and given a new nature. When they became children of God, their perspective of everything changed. If we want others to see things as we do, then let us use the same means that changed our perspectives. Let us proclaim the gospel! The gospel is the solution to society’s ills.

Am I saying that Christians shouldn’t be involved in the political process? No. In a representative form of government, Christians have an obligation to be involved. May our political involvement, however, never supersede our gospel involvement. Let us work to change unsaved people’s hearts, and then their minds will be changed also.

2. When the cross captures our hearts, our perception of the world changes.

The apostle Paul wrote:

But may it never be that I should boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world (Gal. 6:14, emphasis added).

When Paul understood what happened on the cross, he became a different man–a man of another world. All his former ambitions died. His love of this life and his selfish pursuits died. He viewed the world as something that needed to be redeemed–a world that would one day perish, a world of which he was no longer a part.

Material things become unimportant to those whose eyes are fixed upon the cross. Next to it, diamonds lose their sparkle and gold’s luster fades. Knowing that the things of this world are destined to burn one day, the one who has been captured by the cross invests in things eternal. He would rather win someone to Christ than own a Rolls Royce. If owning a certain object might possibly hinder someone from coming to Christ, he never buys it.

He knows that more possessions cannot bring true joy and fulfillment. By supporting missionaries, by sharing with those less fortunate, by printing gospel tracts and so on, the believer sees his money as simply a tool for bringing the gospel to more people. If he desires to make a lot of money, it is not to buy bigger and better toys. It is because he wants to invest more in the kingdom of God. He loves to give. He obeys his Lord, who commanded His followers to not lay up treasures on earth, but in heaven.

Many have speculated as to why the early Christians in Jerusalem so generously sold homes, lands, and possessions to lay the proceeds at the apostles’ feet. Some have theorized that they were specifically led by the Holy Spirit to do so because He knew their city would be destroyed by the Roman Legions. That, however, is unlikely since they were selling their possessions more than thirty-five years before the Roman siege.

The answer is simply that the early Christians had been captured by the cross. Material things no longer held their hearts. Christ did. They valued their possessions only as a means to show their love for the brethren and win people to Christ.

The one who has been captured by the cross sees himself, not as a citizen of this earth, but as a citizen of heaven where his Savior dwells. The believer is only a sojourner here, and his treasure is being laid up in heaven. Everything of this world is viewed as only temporal and, therefore, of no real value. All personal accomplishments before his salvation are regarded as worthless.

The believer finds it hard to imagine Jesus, looking down from His throne on Judgment Day and saying to the retired executive: “Way to go! I’m impressed! You worked hard at your job and got to the top! You were able to buy anything you wanted!” As for that day, the one who values the cross knows his heavenly reward depends on what he has done to advance God’s kingdom on earth.

3. When the cross captures our hearts, our perspective of the people of this world changes.

We no longer categorize people as rich, poor, black, white, American, or Russian. It no longer makes a difference to us. People are either saved or unsaved; they are either sinners or saints. When our hearts are captured by the cross, the question that comes to our mind when we first meet someone is, “I wonder if he’s saved?”

Because of the cross, we know God loves everyone immensely, regardless of his or her sinfulness. We also know that a way has been provided for them to escape the wrath of God. Now we see people through the eyes of the One who died for them.

Paul wrote it this way:

For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this, that one died for all, therefore all died; and He died for all, that they who live should no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf. Therefore from now on we recognize no man according to the flesh (2 Cor. 5:14-16a, emphasis added).

Now we recognize people spiritually, either as born again or as dead in their trespasses and sins. Now the love of Christ, which He demonstrated so marvelously on the cross, controls us.

We must love our enemies. How can we hate those whom God loves? We who have been shown so much mercy are obligated to show mercy to everyone.

When we are reviled, we do not revile in return, but pity and pray for our persecutors. We know if they don’t repent, they’ll suffer even more in hell for having reviled us. God loves those who harm us and wants them to accept their pardon. He loved them so much He died for them.

We know it was not the nails that held Jesus to the cross, but His love for humanity.

4. When the cross captures our hearts, our perception of the people of God’s kingdom changes.

Before I was saved, I used to make fun of “Jesus freaks.” Who would have believed that one day I would be one! If I could find any of the “Jesus freaks” I used to mock, I’d hug them as my brothers and sisters.

Our fellow believers are our brothers and sisters, members of God’s family. We would rather spend time with them than with many of our own natural relatives (if they are still unsaved). We love our brothers and sisters in Christ and are careful to avoid doing anything that could cause them to stumble. The apostle Paul wrote:

For if because of food your brother is hurt, you are no longer walking according to love. Do not destroy with your food him for whom Christ died (Rom. 14:15, emphasis added).

For through your knowledge he who is weak is ruined, the brother for whose sake Christ died. And thus, by sinning against the brethren and wounding their conscience when it is weak, you sin against Christ. Therefore, if food causes my brother to stumble, I will never eat meat again, that I might not cause my brother to stumble (1 Cor. 8:11-13, emphasis added).

Jesus said,

“This is My commandment, that you love one another, just as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:12-13).

We are commanded to love our brothers, following the example Jesus set before us when He laid down His life for us. Who are we to decide whether to love one of God’s own children? John wrote in his first epistle that it is impossible to hate God’s children and love God at the same time (see 1 John 4:20).

All the fighting and bickering in the body of Christ indicates that our hearts have not been captured by the cross. Our pet doctrines often divide us because we’re all following a few teachers whom we think are infallible. The cross puts an end to all that.

The Corinthian Christians were being divided by their varying preferences of certain teachers, and Paul addressed their carnality by bringing them back to the cross:

Now I mean this, that each one of you is saying, “I am of Paul,” and “I of Apollos” and “I of Cephas,” and “I of Christ.” Has Christ been divided? Paul was not crucified for you, was he? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul? (1 Cor. 1:12-13, emphasis added).

When we are captivated by the one who was crucified for us, we cannot be enamored by any favorite teachers. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to open one of our modern Christian magazines and see, instead of endless promotions of personalities, praise for the one who died for us! Sometimes I wonder if it’s “ministry-anity” instead of Christianity that we espouse.

When the cross has captured our hearts, denominational walls crumble. Now that we love all those for whom Christ died, we can no longer restrict our fellowship to our own exclusive church or group. We may not always agree on certain doctrines, but all of us can join hands around the cross.

To the Methodists, Presbyterians, Pentecostals, Baptists, and Charismatics who have been captured by the cross, our labels elicit more shame than pride, indicting us for our division and lack of love. We would prefer to be known only as Christians.

5. When the cross captures our hearts, our perspective of ourselves changes.

First, the cross brings an end to pride.

As we see Jesus hanging there, suffering for our sins, we begin to realize how debased we are. How foolish we were to think that we could save ourselves or merit our salvation by our good works. Our sin condemned Him. Our selfishness nailed Him to that cross, and the awfulness of our sin is revealed there.

Once we’ve accepted our pardon and received His righteousness, we realize that everything we are and will be is because of Him. Since our gifts and talents originate from His grace, they should only glorify Him. All boasting ceases. The apostle Paul wrote, “But may it never be that I should boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus” (Gal. 6:14a).

The cross is our only boast, for without it we have nothing and are nothing.

Second, the cross ends hatred and bitterness.

How can we, once we realize the price that was paid so we could be forgiven, harbor bitterness against those who have wronged us? In the light of the cross, bitterness is exposed as self-righteousness. By harboring grudges, we are in effect saying, “You have wronged someone who has never wronged another. You are guilty of something of which I’m not.”

You’ll recall Jesus’ parable of the unforgiving servant who was forgiven an astronomical debt by his master but who was unwilling to forgive his fellow servant a small amount by comparison. The message of this parable is obvious: The servant had no right to be merciless when he himself had experienced so much mercy. The Bible says his master was “moved with anger” and “handed him over to the torturers until he should repay all that was owed him” (Matt. 18:34).

Jesus then promised: “So shall My heavenly Father also do to you, if each of you does not forgive his brother from your heart” (Matt. 18:35).

Paul wrote that we are obligated to forgive because we have been forgiven through Christ’s cross:

Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. And be kind to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has forgiven you (Eph. 4:31-32).

Third, the cross ends selfishness.

One cannot understand and believe what happened on the cross and continue to live purely for one’s selfish pursuits. There is no way a person could rightfully react to the cross by saying, “Yes, I believe that the Son of God died for me. Now I’m going to live for what I can get.”

The supreme example of love, demonstrated by Jesus’ agony while He was suspended between heaven and earth, moves us to lay down our lives for those for whom He died. The author of our salvation was selflessness personified. From the cross He calls us to deny ourselves, and He inspires us by His great example. Paul wrote:

Do nothing from selfishness or empty conceit, but with humility of mind let each of you regard one another as more important than himself….Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus, who….humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross (Phil. 2:3-8).

And walk in love, just as Christ also loved you, and gave Himself up for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God as a fragrant aroma (Eph. 5:2).

To what degree has the cross captured our hearts? The answer is revealed by the love we spread.

Carrying Our Cross

It has often been debated as to what Jesus meant when He said, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me” (Luke 9:23).

Some say that God gives each of us some burden to carry. I’ve met people who claim their sickness is their cross; others say their job or their spouse is their cross.

The cross of which Jesus spoke, however, is something we voluntarily take up, not something God, or the devil, or circumstances force upon us. In order to take up our cross, Jesus said we must deny ourselves. Our cross is something we must carry daily if we are to follow Jesus.

Some have pointed out that Jesus was speaking here not of His cross but our cross, thereby concluding they must be two different crosses. The New Testament, however, teaches that Christ’s cross is our cross. We have been crucified with Him. When one learns that Christ’s cross is his cross, he has heard the gospel. When we take up our cross daily, it is Christ’s cross that we carry.

Jesus, of course, knew that His cross should be the center of all true theology, the hub of all heavenly revelation, the heart of the message that God wants conveyed to all humanity. He knew it should be the standard by which everything is measured, the key to all of God’s blessings, and the banner that marks the true church. He knew the gospel would be known as “the word of the cross.”

Jesus must have meant that His cross, our cross, should dominate our daily lives. Through it we should view every person, situation, circumstance, and opportunity. By it we should judge ourselves and show others mercy. It represents the message we are called to proclaim and the life we are called to live. True disciples have had their hearts captured by the cross. Has your heart been captured?

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Chapter Ten – The Cross in Practice

Christ’s Incredible Cross, Introduction

Recently a friend of mine innocently asked the pastor of a growing church if he ever preached about the cross of Christ. The pastor replied that he never preached about the cross; to him the subject seemed “too negative.”

His remark stunned my friend. Especially when he considered that this man was not pastoring an “enlightened” liberal congregation nor a dead church embalmed in the rotting wraps of orthodoxy. This man was pastoring a young church that prided itself on being evangelical and charismatic. His church was full of born-again Christians, or at least he thought it was.

How could this be? I wondered. How could someone preach from the Bible and yet miss the central theme of Scripture?

How could a trained minister preach from the Old Testament and overlook the fact that so much of its law, history, and prophecy all point to an event that would take place on the cross of Calvary?

How could a pastor preach from the four Gospels and miss their most obvious theme–the subject that dominates more chapters than any other? How could he fail to notice that Jesus viewed His death as the most important event of His ministry, in fact, the reason for His incarnation?

How could a minister of the gospel preach from the Pauline epistles and overlook statements such as, “For I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified,” and “may it never be that I should boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Cor. 2:2; Gal. 6:14a)?

How could a Christian leader think the subject of the cross is too negative a topic to mention in his church, when it was on the cross that salvation was purchased and Satan’s power was broken (see Heb. 2:14)?

I sincerely hope that particular pastor is one of a kind. Yet I’m concerned that he is an immoderate representative of many contemporary Christians, preachers and lay people alike, who fails to understand that Jesus’ cross is central to all Christian faith and practice. Too often the contemporary gospel message is either proclaimed from the pulpit or shared with a neighbor without mention of the cross. Our audience is simply invited to “accept Jesus,” the One who will give them peace of mind and a more fulfilling life.

But that is not the gospel of the Bible. If we haven’t spoken of the cross, we haven’t communicated the gospel. Without the cross there is no gospel. Paul, in fact, stated that the gospel is “the word of the cross” (1 Cor. 1:17-18).

We can, of course, only expect biblical results if we proclaim a biblical gospel–a gospel in which the cross of Christ is central. Without a true gospel, there will be no true revivals or great awakenings. As long as the “word of the cross” is neglected, the church is akin to a hamster running on its wheel–very busy but making no real progress.

The Authentic Gospel

As Paul declared in his letter to the Romans, the authentic gospel is “the power of God unto salvation” (Rom. 1:16 ). The primary reason for a powerless church is due to the fact that the true gospel, “the power of God,” is not being proclaimed as it should. When people are being “born again” by means of a message that does not mention the cross of Christ, is it any wonder that those kind of converts are indistinguishable from the unregenerate?

The only remedy, then, is a re-examination of the necessity, significance, and centrality of the cross of Christ. When the cross once more regains its rightful place at the center of the gospel and our teaching, then the power of God will be manifested in life-transforming salvation.

In the pages that follow, we will survey an event preordained before the foundation of the world and predicted for centuries before it occurred: the culminating focus of all human history, the wondrous episode that revealed God’s righteousness and His love as nothing before or after, the moment when our redemption was accomplished, and the time when Satan’s power was crushed. Together we’ll probe the preeminent theme of Scripture, the hope of the entire world, the gospel of God–the incredible cross of Jesus Christ.

David Servant

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Christ’s Incredible Cross, Introduction

Chapter Eight – The Cross Preeminent

Christ's Incredible Cross, Chapter Eight

It’s a fact: The cross of Jesus Christ and the topics directly related to it dominate the epistles of the New Testament. George Smeaton, observing this fact in the writings of the apostles and church leaders to the early Christians, notes how often they refer to Christ’s atoning death:

The numerous explanations they [the epistles] contain as to the Lord’s atoning death, suffice to prove that there is not a spiritual blessing which does not stand in immediate or mediate connection with it, not a duty which is not enforced by it as a motive. How wide the influence of this great article is on doctrine and practice, at once appears from the place which it occupies in the epistles. The entire range of Scripture truth takes a tincture from it, and its influence is felt even where it may not be expressly named.49

Of the 2,767 sentences in the epistles,50 we find that ninety contain a direct reference to Christ’s death, crucifixion, blood, or cross. That amounts to one out of every thirty-one sentences.51

If we then add to our list other uncounted sentences that speak of “the gospel” (which is “the word of the cross”52) and those mentioning Jesus as “the Lamb” (an obvious reference to His sacrificial death on the cross), then one out of every sixteen sentences makes reference to Christ’s death on the cross.53

Finally, if we add further uncounted sentences that make some direct reference to Jesus’ death in words other than those mentioned above–in such phrases as “He offered Himself,” “laid down His life,” “gave Himself,” or “sacrifice of Himself,” and so on–then one out of every thirteen sentences in the epistles makes some reference to Jesus’ death on the cross.54

It would be well for those of us who preach God’s Word to compare our preaching and teaching with that of the apostles. How many of us could claim that in our sermons one out of every thirteen sentences refers in some way to Jesus’ death on the cross?

The Central Theme

Beyond this, as Smeaton observed, there is hardly a topic contained in the epistles that is not in some way connected to the doctrine of Christ’s atoning sacrifice on the cross. How would it be possible to preach properly on the subjects of righteousness, justification, reconciliation, sanctification, redemption, forgiveness, sonship, faith, sin, peace with God, the new birth, our future resurrection, the Lord’s Supper, baptism, future judgment, heaven, hell, the rapture of the church, the new covenant, God’s grace, love, mercy, justice, holiness, in-Christ realities, Christ’s ministry as our High Priest and Advocate, victory over sin, or Satan’s defeat, without mention of Jesus’ death on the cross?

Furthermore, how could we properly teach about such subjects as the love of the brethren, our obligation to forgive others, marriage, humility, or enduring hardship and persecution, without relating them, as did the apostles, to Jesus’ great example on the cross?55

In light of the above facts, it is certainly an indictment upon our preaching when we feel we must make a choice between either evangelistic preaching or feeding the Christians on Sunday mornings. There are very few topics contained in the New Testament epistles that are not built upon the foundation of Christ’s sacrificial death; thus, it should always be an easy matter to naturally blend the “word of the cross” into our sermons.

If a preacher is finding it hard to include Jesus’ vicarious death naturally into his sermons, he ought to re-examine what he is preaching. Quite possibly, either he is teaching something that none of the apostles would be caught teaching, or he is presenting something in a way that the apostles would never have presented it.

Keeping Our Message Balanced

Modern American Christianity offers, through its many teachers and counselors, unlimited seminars on numerous topics. While many of these teachings are related to the Bible, I have found they are often mixed with a dose of psychology and human conjecture.

Presently it seems that marriage seminars are in vogue. I thank God for the marriages that have been helped and healed by this means, but can you imagine the apostle Paul (or any of the apostles) visiting a local church to host a four-day marriage seminar? Can you imagine the listing of his sermon topics, such as “How to Understand Your Mate,” and “How to Handle Disputes About Finances,” and “How to Meet the Psychological Needs of Your Wife”?

For those who know the New Testament, the thought of such a scene is laughable. Of course, we know that Paul certainly did instruct his converts concerning marriage, and his counsel was short, to the point, and profound. He told husbands to love their wives just as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her, and he told wives to submit to their husbands as the church is subject to Christ.

Paul’s instructions are only understandable to those who understand the cross. Following the inspiration and example of the cross, those who believe in the message of the cross have God-glorifying marriages. If Christian husbands and wives would obey Paul’s simple instructions, their marital problems would end.

Is it possible that the fundamental reason why marriage seminars are so necessary in the church today is because so few Christians have a true revelation of the cross of Jesus Christ? Once the cross has truly captured one’s heart, he sees and treats others differently, including his mate. That man or woman you are married to is one for whom Christ died.

Of course, I’m not saying that we should no longer teach about Christian marriage. I am saying, however, that all our teaching should be Christ-centered and, thus, cross-centered. Those of us who call ourselves ministers would be wise to follow Paul’s admonition to Timothy: “Preach the word” (2 Tim 4:2). If we do, God will anoint our preaching. If we don’t, our preaching won’t be anointed. It may be entertaining, it may be enlightening, it may even be somewhat helpful, but it won’t be anointed.

I could go much further with an analysis of many modern trends in the church, but I’m afraid that perhaps the wrath of a sizeable portion of evangelical Christianity would fall upon me. May I say, however, with as much restraint as possible, that those of us who teach and instruct others in Christ’s body need to ask ourselves, “Where in Scripture can I find an apostolic precedent for what I preach and teach?” When the teaching in the church becomes nothing more than a series of self-help and success-motivation seminars sanctified by a few out-of-context scriptures, something is definitely wrong.

Have you ever wondered why the early Christians displayed such a high level of commitment when compared to modern believers? Peter, James, and John did not have the book of Acts to preach from in order to motivate their flock to act like the people of the book of Acts (as we often try to do).

They had a simple message of one who died for our sins, which effected a change in those who believed it. They were truly born-again–not just “converted,” not just “Christian hobbyists.” That message motivated people to truly repent of their sins and obediently live for the one who died for them. That message was not man-centered but cross-centered and Christ-centered.

Are we emphasizing what the New Testament emphasizes? Is our message as balanced as the New Testament?

Why Preach the Cross?

Although examining every reference to Christ’s atoning death in the epistles would be profitable, it would require a lengthy commentary far beyond the scope of this book. Just a preliminary study of primary references would necessitate a perusal of 212 verses (listed in footnotes number 51, 53 and 54*) and would not include the numerous indirect and related references to the cross. Therefore, our study will be limited to a few passages from the writings of the apostle Paul.

In this chapter, we will examine specific passages in 1 Corinthians, Galatians, and finally Romans. In particular, we will be investigating the centrality of the cross in Paul’s preaching and examine his explanation of how Christ’s death saves us. In subsequent chapters, we will examine scriptures that concern themselves with the accomplishments and implications of the cross.

No other epistle so clearly discloses the centrality of the cross as does Paul’s letter to the Corinthians. Although I’ve previously mentioned the following verses, they are worthy of a second examination:

For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to preach the gospel, not in cleverness of speech, that the cross of Christ should not be made void. For the word of the cross is to those who are perishing foolishness, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God (1 Cor. 1:17-18, emphasis added).

Quite obviously, according to Paul’s statement, “the gospel” and “the word of the cross” are synonymous terms. Paul told us that “the word of the cross” is the power of God to us who are being saved. He used the identical expression in His letter to the Romans, calling “the gospel” the power of God for salvation (Rom. 1:16). The gospel is “the word of the cross.” If the cross has not been mentioned, the gospel has not been preached.

Because the word of the cross is the power of God, Paul told us that he was careful to let nothing diminish its simple message; thus he resisted the temptation to use “cleverness of speech,” lest the “cross of Christ should be made void.”

How we need to recapture his viewpoint today. Too often, the cross of Christ is voided by our pathetic attempts to make the gospel more appetizing to the world. Not convinced that the cross can be left to stand as it is, we obscure it behind the dust-clouds of human reasoning. Or we attempt to smooth its roughness through our eloquent sermons and clever methods of evangelism, while, in reality, we insult it. Once smoothed, we may refinish it, trying to make it “relevant” by presenting the cross as a panacea for psychological ills or a way to the good life. In every case, the cross is being voided.

No Compromise

Just a few verses later, Paul again affirmed that the cross was central to his message:

For indeed Jews ask for signs, and Greeks search for wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block, and to Gentiles foolishness….And when I came to you, brethren, I did not come with superiority of speech or of wisdom, proclaiming to you the testimony of God. For I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified. (1 Cor. 1:22-23; 2:1-2, emphasis added).

Although Paul was careful to avoid offending his audiences because of cultural peculiarities, he never compromised his message for the sake of gaining more converts. We must see that the gospel does not need to be made relevant–it already is relevant–because it provides the answer to humanity’s greatest need: the forgiveness of sins.

Some have reasoned, “So many people want to get rich, so let’s tell them that if they accept Jesus, God will prosper them financially. That will attract them.”

Rather than telling the unsaved that greed is one of the sins that will send them to hell, some preachers actually fuel their listeners’ greed by means of a “gospel”! The biblical gospel calls people to repent of greed (as well as other sins) because they cannot serve God and money, as Jesus told us.

Later in his letter to the Corinthians, Paul’s gospel is unveiled further. He did not preach just the historical fact of Christ’s death but also its significance. He preached that Christ died for our sins:

Now I make known to you, brethren, the gospel which I preached to you, which also you received, in which also you stand, by which you are saved, if you hold fast the word I preached to you….For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve (1 Cor. 15:1-5, emphasis added).

When Paul first preached the gospel to the Corinthians, he told them that Jesus had died as their substitute, suffering God’s wrath for their sins according to the Old Testament predictions. No doubt the 53rd chapter of Isaiah was a well-used text.

The Authentic Gospel

Paul did not reserve these truths solely for Corinthian ears–it was his consistent message. He wrote to the Galatians:

I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son God, who loved me and delivered Himself up for me. I do not nullify the grace of God; for if righteousness comes through the law, then Christ died needlessly. You foolish Galatians, who has bewitched you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified? (Gal. 2:20 – 3:1, emphasis added).

Paul’s preaching of the gospel was so cross-centered that he could describe it as a public portrayal of Christ’s crucifixion. Jesus was portrayed as one who “delivered Himself up for” us, and thus satisfied the claims of God’s righteousness. We have been crucified with Him since He was our substitute. Through His sacrifice, the gift of righteousness is offered to all. That is the good news.

In the book of Romans, we find the clearest exposition of the gospel offered in the epistles. In the lengthy introduction of the first chapter, where Paul used the words the gospel four times, he prepared his readers for an explanation of how Christ’s death saves us. His explanation in the chapters that follow establishes a standard by which all gospel preaching should be measured. The mark of the authentic gospel, as Paul stated in his introduction, is that it reveals “the righteousness of God”:

For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith; as it is written, “But the righteous man shall live by faith” (Rom. 1:16-17, emphasis added).

How is God’s righteousness revealed in the gospel? Paul began to explain in his very next sentence:

For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who suppress the truth in unrighteousness” (Rom. 1:18).

Two fundamental concepts are introduced in this sentence: humanity’s unrighteousness and God’s wrath against humanity’s unrighteousness. These two truths are axioms upon which the gospel is built. Without them, Christ’s death is meaningless.

Because God is righteous and all people are unrighteous, all people deserve God’s wrath. If God, the moral Judge of the universe, did not inflict wrath upon unrighteousness, then He Himself would be unrighteous. He must punish the guilty.

How could a loving God offer sinful humanity forgiveness–when they deserved nothing other than His wrath–and at the same time maintain His righteousness? It was, as Martin Luther described it, “a problem worthy of God,” and one that was solved by Jesus’ death.

The authentic gospel reveals God’s righteousness. God is shown righteously offering all people forgiveness because His wrath was poured out upon Jesus. God did not compromise His righteousness; our sins were punished in Christ, and because of it, God’s righteousness can be imputed to us.

The authentic gospel will always reveal God’s righteousness because it proclaims that Jesus died for our sins, suffering as our substitute. By His death, the gift of righteousness is freely offered to all who will believe. Using this criteria we can discern what is the true gospel and what is not. A gospel that does not reveal God’s righteousness is not the gospel.

For this reason, we should beware of any gospel that disregards or neglects the foundational axioms of humanity’s guilt and God’s wrath. Both truths have been attacked from various quarters, and it will do us well to take a moment and shore up these twin pillars of truth.

The Sinfulness of Humanity

One would think that humanity’s sinfulness is a self-evident fact against which none would argue. Yet it has been questioned, not only by those outside the church, but even by some within it. The very fact that some argue against it, however, only serves to undergird its veracity; only a proud sinner would dream that he is not a sinner.

Is humanity sinful? That question is best answered with a few other questions: Why is there a need for laws in every society? Why are there courts in session and a backlog of people waiting for trials? Why are the jails overcrowded? Why do the yellow pages contain such long listings of lawyers? Why do we need police? Why do we need an army? Why must we lock our doors?

Why must we purchase tickets for a baseball game rather than abide by an honor system? Why are business contracts necessary? Why must department stores hire detectives? Why do our employers withhold taxes from our paychecks? Why must we produce identification when we write out checks? Why do we have racial violence, a fifty-percent divorce rate, rampant use of illegal drugs, a billion-dollar pornography industry? All of these questions indict us as transgressors of God’s moral law.

In his letter to the Romans, Paul lays a foundation for the good news of Jesus’ sacrifice by repeatedly asserting humanity’s guilt before God. Here is a sample:

Being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful (Rom. 1:29-31).

Over the past few years, the contemporary self-esteem psychology has infiltrated the church, and we now hear some preachers telling us that man’s greatest problem is that he doesn’t love himself as he should. He is not a sinner–he just has a poor self-image. If he will open his heart to God, however, who truly loves him for what he is, then his damaged self-esteem can be repaired and he’ll discover true fulfillment.

But this is not what the Bible teaches or the gospel reveals. God does love everyone, but God loves humans in spite of what they do. Unregenerate man has no real basis for possessing a good self-image. Man feels guilty because man is guilty. His conduct should shame him as his God-given conscience condemns him.

Only one who has believed in Jesus and been born again has any true basis for a good self-image. But his view of himself should rest solely on his worth through the cross by which he has been reconciled to God. There is no room for pride in the Christian. All his worth stems from God.

Guilty or Not Guilty?

Not only does Paul affirm humanity’s sinfulness, but he also declares that every person knows he is guilty and is therefore without excuse. Guilt is an acquaintance universally known by the human race because God has given each person a conscience endorsing His moral law. Our conscience testifies that we will one day give account of ourselves before God:

For when the Gentiles who do not have the [Mosaic] Law do instinctively the things of the Law, these, not having the Law, are a law to themselves, in that they show the work of the Law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness, and their thoughts alternately accusing or else defending them, on the day when, according to my gospel, God will judge the secrets of men through Jesus Christ (Rom. 2:14-16).

Paul also contended that we all stand self-condemned because all of us have condemned others for doing what we ourselves have done:

Therefore you are without excuse, every man of you who passes judgment, for in that you judge another, you condemn yourself; for you who judge practice the same things. And we know that the judgment of God rightly falls upon those who practice such things. And do you suppose this, O man, when you pass judgment upon those who practice such things and do the same yourself, that you will escape the judgment of God? (Rom. 2:1-3).

The sins we commit against others can all be placed under one category: selfishness. When we criticize others for their selfishness, we are openly testifying before the court of heaven that we know what is right and what is wrong. By our judgments of others, we condemn ourselves because we are just as guilty as those we condemn.

The greatest single affirmation of humanity’s sinfulness is Jesus’ death itself. Martyn Lloyd-Jones wrote:

The cross thus proclaims the holiness of God, the heinousness of sin, the terrible problem of sin, the terrible seriousness of man’s rebellion against God.”56

If humanity is not sinful, Jesus would not have needed to suffer on our behalf. The Scripture says He “bore our sins in His body on the cross” (1 Pet. 2:24) and was thus punished in our stead. This is why the doctrine of humanity’s sinfulness is so vital to the gospel.

If humanity is not sinful, then Christ’s death was meaningless for two reasons. First, if people are not sinful, they don’t need to be saved; they need not fear God’s wrath. Second, if people are not sinful, then our sins were not laid on Jesus because there were none to lay upon Him.

The true gospel cannot be preached without mention of humanity’s sin because the gospel offers people forgiveness of sins. A.W. Tozer expressed this truth in his book, The Knowledge of the Holy:

When the man’s laboring conscience tells him that he…has from childhood been guilty of foul revolt against the Majesty in heavens, the inner pressure of self-accusation may become too heavy to bear. The gospel can lift this destroying burden from the mind….But unless the weight of the burden is felt the gospel can mean nothing to the man (italics mine).57

Does God Get Angry?

Even more undermined than humanity’s sinfulness is the doctrine of God’s wrath, which is equally foundational to the biblical gospel.

Some have looked at wrath as an attribute unbefitting of God, but their error has been in equating God’s wrath with human wrath. God does not become angry as people do. As the apostle James wrote, “the anger of man does not achieve the righteousness of God” (Jas. 1:20). God’s anger is always perfect in righteousness. We should never imagine Him as an impetuous dictator overcome by some fit of rage. J.I. Packer has said it well:

God’s wrath in the Bible is never the capricious, self-indulgent, irritable, morally ignoble thing that human anger often is. It is, instead, a right and necessary reaction to objective moral evil. God is only angry where anger is called for. Even among men, there is such a thing as righteous indignation, though it is, perhaps, rarely found. But all of God’s indignation is righteous. Would a God who took as much pleasure in evil as He did good be a good God? Would a God who did not react adversely to evil in His world be morally perfect? Surely not.58

The typical shallow argument against God’s wrath is that He is love, and “surely a loving God would never punish anyone.” As Packer states, however, a morally perfect being cannot look on evil and good with the same response.

What would we think of a parent who, under the guise of love, never punished his son who repeatedly harms his other son? The parent’s love demands that he love them equally, and thus he must treat them with fairness.

Love demands that wrongdoing be punished. Because God is perfect love, He acts with perfect justice, favoring no person above another. If He did not react against the selfish deeds of people, He would not be perfect in love. Therefore, if God is love, then He must also be wrathful.

God’s wrath is hardly an obscure subject in the Bible. In fact, there are approximately 168 direct references where the word wrath is used in Scripture.

Is God’s wrath only an Old Testament concept, as some have claimed? No, the New Testament comprises 23% of the Bible and claims 20% of the direct references to God’s wrath.

If we add direct references to God’s anger, fury, and indignation, our total climbs to at least 465 Bible references. And we still aren’t taking into account the passages that convey God’s anger and wrath without specifically calling it such, or the many references concerning future punishment and hell, many of which fell directly from the lips of Jesus. If God is not a God of wrath, then we should throw our Bibles out with the garbage.

Opening the Door to God’s Wrath

One of the subtlest assaults on God’s wrath is the idea swallowed by many charismatic Christians that “God doesn’t punish anyone–they just open the door to the devil.” The whole concept is designed to defend God’s loving character, but it actually defames His character when compared to biblical revelation. It is comparable to the idea held by those liberal theologians who try to explain God’s wrath as only the natural consequences for wrongdoing, consequences in which God is not personally involved.

Although it is certainly true that God may send His wrath upon the wicked by permitting Satan to afflict them,59 God is still very much involved; Satan is only acting by His permission. God’s wrath is not something that operates independently of His being; repeatedly He refers to it as “My wrath” and “My anger.”60

If God is not involved in bringing wrath on wrongdoing and people are only “opening the door to Satan,” then Satan has become God. If Satan is the sole punisher of wrongdoing, then God has become Satan, immoral and unjust.

The truth is that people open the door to God’s wrath through sin. God’s wrath may be discharged by permitting Satan to afflict wrongdoers, although it can come directly from God Himself (as the Bible so clearly indicates).61

Why is the doctrine of God’s wrath so vital? If God is not a God of wrath, then, again, Christ’s death is meaningless for two reasons.

First, if there is no such thing as God’s wrath, then people have no reason to be concerned. There is no need to be saved because there is nothing from which to be saved. God will never punish anyone; there is no hell to fear.

Second, if God’s wrath doesn’t exist, then Jesus didn’t suffer God’s wrath on the cross, He just died as a martyr. That means His death has no ability to save anyone because He didn’t die in our place.

As Paul explained the gospel in the first chapters of his Roman epistle, God’s wrath is a predominant theme, and no wonder. He asserted that God’s wrath is not only something people will experience some day, but it is a present reality. God’s wrath is not just going to be revealed; Paul stated that it is being revealed.

Of course, those who have read the Old Testament know that many of the wars, tragedies, and calamities of human history were a result of God’s sovereign judgment upon evildoers. But Paul went even further, stating three times in the first chapter that God is actively judging people at present by “turning them over” to practice increasing decadence along with its consequent suffering.

Putting God’s Kindness in Perspective

In the second chapter of Romans, Paul takes an even stronger stand for God’s wrath:

And we know that the judgment of God rightly falls upon those who practice such things. And do you suppose this, O man, when you pass judgment upon those who practice such things and do the same yourself, that you will escape the judgment of God? [Of course, the thought is preposterous.] Or do you think lightly of the riches of His kindness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that the kindness of God leads you to repentance? But because of your stubbornness and unrepentant heart you are storing up wrath for yourself in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God, who will render to every man according to his deeds: to those who by perseverance in doing good seek for glory and honor and immortality, eternal life; but to those who are selfishly ambitious and do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousness, wrath and indignation. There will be tribulation and distress for every soul of man who does evil” (Rom. 2:2-9, emphasis added).

It is incredible that some have taken Paul’s statement, “the kindness of God leads you to repentance,” as a proof that we should never mention God’s wrath, hell, or judgment when preaching the gospel. “Just tell them about God’s love,” they say, “because it’s the kindness of God that leads people to repentance.”

But that very statement (“the kindness of God”) is found nested among several other sentences that repeatedly declare God’s wrath and the terrible fate that awaits the unrepentant! God’s kindness is best seen in the light of His holiness, wrath, and judgment. God’s kindness is revealed by His sending Jesus to suffer His wrath in our stead, so that we could escape His wrath. Truly, the greater revelation one gains of humanity’s sinfulness and God’s wrath, the greater revelation one gains of God’s amazing love displayed in Christ.

Notice also that God’s kindness is said to lead people to repentance. When people respond to the true gospel, they are naturally led to repent because they understand that their sins are what separate them from God. Then they comprehend why Jesus suffered and died.

Just telling people that God is kind provides no stimulus to repentance. People must hear the “word of the cross,” which means they will hear about humanity’s sin, God’s wrath, and Jesus the sin-bearer. If their hearts are soft, they’ll repent and receive Jesus as Lord and Savior.

Safe from God’s Wrath

After using fifty-nine sentences to lay a foundation of two truths–namely humanity’s guilt and God’s holy wrath–Paul then arrives at the climax of his gospel. In Romans 3:21-28, he explains how Jesus saves us from God’s wrath. Let’s examine this passage, piece by piece:

But now apart from the Law the righteousness of God has been manifested (Rom. 3:21a).

Paul had previously stated that the gospel reveals God’s righteousness. Here we read that God’s righteousness is manifested by something other than the Law. Of course, he must be speaking of the gospel of Christ’s substitutionary death. Through its many commandments and promised punishments, the Law revealed that God is righteous. The gospel also reveals it because Jesus died for sins–our sins.

I might add that if Jesus was not crucified for our sins, then His death would prove that God is unrighteous, due to the fact that Jesus was an innocent man.

Paul went on to write that God’s righteousness was

witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, even the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all those who believe; for there is no distinction; for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, being justified as a gift by His grace (Rom. 3:21b-24a).

Just as our sins were imputed to Christ, God’s righteousness is imputed to us once we believe the gospel. It comes through Jesus as a gift of God’s grace, that is, His undeserved favor.

Through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God displayed publicly as a propitiation in His blood through faith (Rom. 3:24b-25a).

The word propitiate means “to appease or to turn away anger.” Paul points out that when Jesus was shedding His blood on the cross, God was publicly displaying Him as the one who would avert God’s anger against us.

This was to demonstrate His righteousness, because in the forbearance of God He passed over the sins previously committed; for the demonstration, I say, of His righteousness at the present time, that He might be just [righteous] and the justifier [the One who makes people righteous] of the one who has faith in Jesus (Rom 25b-26; italics are NASB).

As Paul stated in his introduction and here explained, the gospel of Jesus’ death reveals God’s righteousness.

Leon Morris elucidates this passage:

The fact that God had not always punished sin with full severity in the past, but had “passed over” such sin, gave rise to the danger that He might not appear to men to be completely righteous. But now, in the cross, He has forever removed that danger. He has shown Himself to be completely righteous.62

Finally, we read verses 27-28:

Where then is boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith. For we maintain that a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law (Rom. 3:27-28).

The message of Christ’s substitutionary death eradicates the idea that our good works could save us. In fact, His death reveals the magnitude of our debt of sin. If it were possible for us to be saved by works, then there would have been no need for the Son of God to suffer and die. Righteousness cannot be earned–it is offered freely because of Jesus’ sacrifice. He earned it for us.

In Roman’s chapter 5, Paul listed the primary blessing that we receive because of Jesus’ death–escape from God’s wrath:

But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him (Rom. 5:8-9).

It would be unjust for God to punish the same sin twice. Therefore, because Christ was punished, those of us who have believed the gospel need not fear God’s wrath. Praise God!

Two Commonly Asked Questions

In reference to the above-quoted scripture and others like it, a question often arises: How can Christ’s blood be said to save us? Does Paul mean that we are saved by Jesus’ red and white blood cells, His platelets, glucose, amino acids, carbon dioxide, urea, and plasma? No. Leon Morris in his book, The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, has very thoroughly and convincingly proven that the word “blood”–as it is most often used in Scripture–simply refers to violent death.63

We say that Christ’s blood saves us just as we might say that the cross saves us. Obviously two beams of wood are not what saves us, but what happened upon those beams. J. Behm wrote, “Like the cross…the ‘blood of Christ’ is simply another and even more graphic phrase for the death of Christ in its soteriological [salvation] significance.”64

Another commonly asked question is, How could Jesus’ brief suffering on the cross serve as payment for people who were condemned to suffer eternally in hell?

The answer lies in the fact of who did the suffering. It wasn’t an ordinary man hanging on the cross–it was God. Whether we fully understand it or not, in the court of heaven, Jesus’ suffering was declared sufficient to atone for the sins of humanity. Of that, we can be sure.

An illustration, although perhaps a poor one, may be helpful. Imagine that your German shepherd attacks and kills your neighbor’s poodle. For justice to be done, you would be required to pay the man for the loss of his dog.

If he demands absolute justice, then he might ask that your dog be killed so that you would suffer just as he has. In that case, not only would you suffer for the irresponsibility of letting your German shepherd loose, but your dog would also suffer, reaping exactly what he had sown.

But imagine your neighbor, rather than demanding your dog’s death, demands your death! You would certainly object, knowing that you have infinitely more value than your neighbor’s poodle. Even if your German shepherd killed every other dog in your city, it would still not require your execution.65

Because it was the divine Son of God who suffered, His sufferings had infinite value, certainly sufficient to atone for the sins of humanity.

We can speculate that if God could have found one sinless human being who would have been willing to die as a substitute, then that substitute would have had to spend an eternity in hell. Such suffering, however, would have only been sufficient to atone for one other human being. However, the Person who did suffer on the cross for us had infinitely greater value than all humans combined, as they are just a creation, and He is their Creator.

Although we know Jesus’ suffering was of a short duration (relative to eternity), we really have no comprehension as to the degree He actually suffered. It’s impossible for us to imagine the agony Jesus endured when God’s full cup of wrath was poured out on Him. At the end of it all, however, God saw “the anguish of His soul” as Isaiah said,66 and was satisfied. Justice had been meted out to the human race in the person of the Son of God.

Footnotes

49 George Smeaton, The Doctrine of the Atonement According to the Apostles, p. 100.

50. This is based upon the New American Standard version.

51. See Rom. 1:4; 3:25; 4:4; 5:6, 8, 9, 10; 6:3, 4, 5-6, 8-9, 10; 7:4; 8:11, 34; 10:7, 9; 14:9, 15; 1 Cor. 1:17, 18, 23; 2:2, 8; 8:11; 10:16; 11:25, 26, 27; 15:3, 20; 2 Cor. 4:10; 5:14-15; 13:4; Gal. 1:1; 2:20, 21; 3:1; 5:11; 6:12, 14; Eph. 1:7, 20; 2:13, 16; Phil. 2:8; 3:10; Col. 1:18, 20, 22; 2:12, 14, 20; 1 Thes. 1:10; 2:15; 4:14; 5:10; 2 Tim. 2:8, 11, Heb. 2:9, 14; 5:7; 6:6; 9:12, 14, 15; 10:19, 29; 12:2, 24; 13:12, 20; 1 Pet. 1:2, 3, 19, 21; 2:24; 3:18; 1 John 1:7; 5:6, 8; Rev. 1:5, 5, 18; 2:8; 5:9; 7:14; 11:8; 12:11; 19:13.

52. Today, “the gospel” is a loosely-used term in many circles, unfortunately used to label any kind of positive preaching. But the phrase “the gospel” in the New Testament refers strictly to the message of Christ’s atoning death on the cross, His burial, and His resurrection; see 1 Cor. 15:1-5.

53. See Rom. 1:4, 9, 15, 16; 2:16; 11:28; 15:16, 19, 20; 16:25; I Cor. 4:15; 9:12, 14, 16, 18, 23; 15:1; 2 Cor. 2:12; 4:3; 8:18; 9:13; 10:14; 11:4, 7; Gal. 1:6, 8, 9, 11; 2:2, 5, 7, 14; 3:8; 4:13; Eph. 1:13; 3:6; 6:15, 19; Phil. 1:5, 12, 16, 27; 2:22; 4:3, 15; Col. 1:5; 1 Th. 1:5; 2:4, 8, 9; 3:2; 2 Th. 1:8; 2:14; 1 Tim. 1:11; 2 Tim. 1:8; Plm. 13; 1 Pet. 1:12; 4:6, 7; Rev. 5:6, 8, 12, 13; 6:1, 9, 10, 17; 13:8; 14:1, 4, 4, 6; 15:3; 17:14; 19:7, 9; 21:9, 14, 22, 23, 27; 22:1, 3

54. Christ as an offering: Rom. 8:3; Eph. 5:2; Heb. 7:27; 9:25, 28; 10:10, 12, 14; as delivered up for us: Rom. 4:25; 8:32; as suffering for us: Rom. 8:17; 2 Cor. 1:5; Heb. 2:10, 18; 5:8; 9:26; 1 Pet. 1:11; 4:1, 13; 5:1; as a propitiation for our sins: Heb. 2:17; 1 John 2:2; 4:10; as purchasing us: 1 Cor. 6:20; 2 Pet. 2:1; as a sacrifice: 1 Cor. 5:7; as having His body broken for us: 1 Cor. 11:24; as becoming sin for us: 2 Cor. 5:21; as becoming a curse for us: Gal. 3:13; as coming to save sinners: 1 Tim. 1:15; as ransoming us: 1 Tim. 2:6; as giving Himself: Gal. 1:4; Eph. 5:25; Tit. 2:14; as taking away sins: 1 John 3:5; as laying down His life: 1 John 3:16; as sent to be the Savior: 1 John 4:14; as pierced for us; Rev. 1:7; as making purification for our sins: Heb. 1:3.

55. Christ’s death as our example in loving the brethren: Rom. 14:15; 15:1-3; 1 John 4:10-11; in forgiving others: Eph. 4:32; Col. 3:12-13; Matt. 18:21-35; in marriage: Eph. 5:22-33; in humility: Phil. 2:5-8; in enduring hardship and persecution: Heb. 12:3; 1 Pet. 2:21-23.

56. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, The Cross, p. 159.

57. A.W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy, p. 11, italics mine.

58. J.I. Packer, Knowing God, p. 136.

59. See Judg. 9:22-24; 1 Sam. 16:14-23; Mal. 3:8-11; Matt. 18:21-35; 1 Cor. 5:1-5.

60. For a thorough treatment of this subject, see Leon Morris’ The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, pp. 177-84.

61. For New Testament examples of God’s wrath being administered by God Himself, see Luke 12:4-5; Acts 12:23; 13:11; 1 Cor. 3:17; Jas. 4:12; Rev. 2:21-23; 22:18-19. The Old Testament has too many examples to list.

62. Leon Morris, The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, p. 278.

63. See Leon Morris, The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, pp. 112-26.

64. G. Kittel (ed.), Theological Dictionary of the New Testament Vol. 1, p. 174.

65. The reason this illustration is imperfect is because dogs are not held morally responsible for their actions, as men are. God is not responsible for the immoral actions of man, as the owner is responsible for his dog’s misconduct. However, God the Son voluntarily took the liability for man’s sin, suffering on behalf of lesser persons.

66. Is. 53:11

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Chapter Eight – The Cross Preeminent

Chapter Nine – The Profuse Blessings of the Cross

Christ's Incredible Cross, Chapter Nine

The New Testament authors, in explaining the gospel, used various terms to describe the benefits that are ours because of Christ’s sacrificial death. Each one underscores some blessing that the atonement brings, and together they give us a complete picture of what Christ accomplished for us. The biblical terms we will briefly survey are propitiation, justification, reconciliation, redemption, and finally, salvation.

Propitiation: Turning Away God’s Wrath

Those who have difficulty believing that God is wrathful have great difficulty with propitiation because propitiate means “to turn away wrath.” Although the word is found only four times in the New Testament, it succinctly embodies a truth often repeated in Scripture. This truth brings us directly to the heart of the gospel: Jesus’ death turned away God’s wrath against us.

If hell is a real place where people dwell eternally after death, and if Jesus’ death saves believers from that place, then propitiation is the best word to describe the preeminent accomplishment of the cross. Jesus “delivers us from the wrath to come” (1 Thes. 1:10).

In the previous chapter, we learned that God is indeed a God who cannot wink at disobedience, but who is, as the Bible states, “a God who has indignation every day” (Ps 7:11). If He is a “righteous judge” as the Bible says He is, then His anger should not surprise us. If God remained passive while witnessing the selfish acts of humanity, then He would be unjust. Furthermore, He would be a hypocrite for He has commanded us to act always with fairness.

Those proponents of the all-loving, never-angered God should read the apostle John’s first letter. There he writes that God’s love was demonstrated by Jesus’ act of propitiating God’s wrath:

In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins (1 John 4:10, emphasis added).

God has proven His love by sending His own Son to appease His wrath against us. If we are going to discard the concept of propitiation, we must also discard God’s love. In fact, we must reject the very gospel itself.

Earlier in his first epistle, John wrote,

And He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world (1 John 2:2, emphasis added).

John says plainly that Jesus’ saving act was not only the propitiation for the sins of believers but also for unbelievers. Of course, each unbeliever must repent and believe the gospel before Christ’s saving work becomes effectual in his life.

Through the offering of Christ, God has been propitiated. His anger against us has been turned away. But as we consider the meaning of propitiation, it is important that we not equate the crude pagan notions of propitiation with that of biblical Christianity. The two are worlds apart.

First, in pagan religions, the worshiper falls prey to the wrath of his god for arbitrary, often unpredictable and whimsical reasons. God’s anger, however, is always predictable because it is only aroused by sin. His anger is always perfectly righteous.

Second, the pagan propitiates his angry god by means of some sacrifice he himself offers. The Bible teaches us that we could never hope to pacify God’s wrath by any effort or sacrifice of our own. God has appeased Himself by the offering of a sacrifice of infinite value, His very own Son who merited salvation for us.

This puts Christian propitiation on an infinitely higher plane than pagan religion’s meager offerings. It was not some incense, some coins, or some animal that was placed on an altar. It was God Himself who was the sacrifice.

Leon Morris has summed up these two points nicely:

The Bible writers have nothing to do with pagan conceptions of a capricious and vindictive deity, inflicting arbitrary punishments on offending worshippers, who then must bribe him back to a good mood by the appropriate offerings.67

We must also not think that Jesus was the “nice guy” who laid down His life to appease “the mean guy.” It was “God in Christ” who gave Himself for our sins. As Jesus Himself declared, He was and is one with the Father (see John 10:30, 38; 17:11, 21-22).

God loved us and propitiated His own wrath by giving Himself. Jesus’ sacrifice is not what made God love us; He already loved us, which is why He gave His Son.

Justification: Declared Innocent

Justification is a legal term signifying a verdict of acquittal. One who is justified is declared innocent or righteous. In fact, the New Testament words translated justified, justification, righteous, and righteousness are all derived from the same root word in the original Greek language. If you are justified, or possess justification, then you are righteous and possess righteousness. So as we study justification, we should also include those scriptures which refer to the righteousness we possess through Christ.

Being justified implies more than just being forgiven. When a person is justified in court, it means he is declared innocent of all charges against him.

In Christ, we are found “not guilty”! Thus God will treat us as if we’ve never sinned. God no longer views us as guilt-stained sinners; nor does He view us as pardoned criminals; He views us as never having been guilty!

Even more incredible, righteousness is not something that is earned; the New Testament calls it a gift from God. I realize this may sound too good to be true, but it is true. Just as our sin was imputed to Christ, so His righteousness has been imputed to us:

He [God] made Him [Jesus] who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him (2 Cor. 5:21; italics NASB).

Christ was and is perfect in righteousness. He never sinned, and now His righteousness is ours! God now treats us as if we had never sinned!

If you are a Christian, you’ll never have a more righteous standing, legally speaking, with God than you do now. The above scripture said we have become God’s own righteousness. You can’t become more righteous than that.

The benefits of being justified are manifold. Being justified means we not only have the peace of God–we have peace with God and have no reason to fear His wrath:

Therefore having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ….Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him (Rom. 5:1, 9, emphasis added).

Continuing in faith, and thus continuing in justification, assures us that we will one day be glorified with Christ and that we need not fear being condemned:

And whom He called, these He also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified. What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us? He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things? Who will bring a charge against God’s elect? God is the one who justifies; who is the one who condemns? (Rom. 8:30b-34a, emphasis added).

Reconciliation: Enemies Become Friends

Before our new birth, we were at enmity with God and He was at enmity with us. Some wonder how God could love us and yet at the same time be our enemy. But the answer is simply that God loves His enemies. Christians should understand this because we are commanded to love our enemies by following God’s example. This doesn’t mean that God expects us to say of our enemies, “They are really wonderful people.” It means that we are to show them mercy, do good to them even when they don’t deserve it, and desire the best for them. They may hate us, and we may hate what they do, but we should love them.

Obviously, this kind of love is of a different realm than the selfish, feeling-oriented emotion that the world calls love. God’s love transcends feelings and is a willful decision to treat undeserving people with kindness.

The good news of the gospel is that Jesus’ saving act on the cross has provided the means of our reconciliation with God. We are no longer enemies–but friends–because Jesus bore the penalty for sins and satisfied the claims of divine justice.

The references to our reconciliation in the epistles are not nearly as numerous as those to our justification (or being made righteous). There are five passages, and I can’t resist showing four of them to you. I begin with a few verses from Romans:

For if while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. And not only this, but we also exult in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received the reconciliation (Rom. 5:10-11, emphasis added).

We note that although God has reconciled the world to Himself, it remains for each individual to receive his reconciliation. Notice, too, that it was Christ’s death that effected our reconciliation, not any supposed sufferings in hell.

Now all these things are from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ, and gave us the ministry of reconciliation, namely, that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and He has committed to us the word of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were entreating through us; we beg you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God. He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him (2 Cor. 5:18-21, emphasis added).

All of us, like Paul, have been given a ministry of reconciliation. We can tell the world that God was in Christ and that He has reconciled the world to Himself through Jesus, who bore their sins on the cross. Now, through us, He is entreating them to be reconciled to God and receive forgiveness of their sins.

But now in Christ Jesus you [Gentiles] who formerly were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For He Himself is our peace, who made both groups into one [Jews and Gentiles], and broke down the barrier of the dividing wall, by abolishing in His flesh the enmity, which is the Law of commandments contained in ordinances, that in Himself He might make the two into one new man, thus establishing peace, and might reconcile them both in one body to God through the cross, by it having put to death the enmity….for through Him we both have our access in one Spirit to the Father (Eph. 2:13-16, 18; italics are mine on the word “reconcile”).

Here it is affirmed that the Mosaic Law, given solely to the Jews and a barrier between them and Gentiles, has been broken down. Now believing Jews and Gentiles are under the Law of Christ, and there is nothing to separate them. Both are reconciled to God through Jesus.

For it was the Father’s good pleasure for all the fullness to dwell in Him, and through Him to reconcile all things to Himself, having made peace through the blood of His cross….And although you were formerly alienated and hostile in mind, engaged in evil deeds, yet He has now reconciled you in His fleshly body through death, in order to present you before Him holy and blameless and beyond reproach–if indeed you continue in the faith firmly established and steadfast, and not moved away from the hope of the gospel (Col. 1:19-23a, emphasis added).

Again it’s clear that we were reconciled in Christ’s fleshly body through death and not by any supposed sufferings He experienced in hell.

Consequently, we are now holy and blameless and beyond reproach if we continue to believe the gospel. Not only can we declare that we are righteous, but we can also proclaim that we are holy and blameless–in Christ!

Redemption: Purchased from Slavery

To many of us, redemption has become a generic phrase for salvation. The biblical term, however, carries certain implications that unveil specific blessings we possess because of the cross.

The biblical meaning of the word redeem is “to deliver from slavery or from the captivity of an enemy by payment of a ransom.”

The Bible states that because of our disobedience, we became slaves of sin, death, and Satan.68 Jesus liberated us from that terrible triplet through His death. The New Testament states that “we have redemption through His blood,” and that we “were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold…but with precious blood…the blood of Christ” (Eph. 1:7; 1 Pet. 1:18-19, emphasis added).

Other New Testament expressions, such as ransom and deliverance, are closely correlated with redemption. We’ll look at them together because all of them denote a freedom from former bondage. (Redeem and ransom always imply a price paid for release, whereas deliverance does not.)

How exactly does Jesus’ death free us?

Before we can answer that question, we must first learn something about Satan. It was Satan who enticed man to sin, who then gained “the power of death” as the book of Hebrews teaches us (see Heb. 2:14), and who now holds unregenerate humanity captive to do his will. Sin and death are both related to Satan somewhat because death entered the world because of sin (see Rom. 5:12), and Satan is the one who tempted Adam and Eve to sin in the first place.

The apostle John wrote, “the whole world lies in the power of the evil one” (1 John 5:19), an obvious reference to Satan’s dominion over unsaved people. Jesus referred to Satan as “the ruler of this world” at least three times (John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11), and Paul once called him “the god of this world” (2 Cor. 4:4). A more accurate title would be “god of this world’s system.”

Some have mistakenly thought that Satan has sovereign control over every earthly event, including governments, weather, volcanoes, and so on. The Bible, however, repeatedly affirms God is sovereign over the universe and our planet. Jesus referred to His Father as “Lord of heaven and earth” (Matt. 11:25). Satan is only ruling the kingdom of darkness, of which all unsaved people are citizens. He is the “god of this world” because the people of this world are serving him whether they realize it or not.

How did Satan obtain his position? We are not told in the Bible as much as we might like to know concerning Satan’s past, but at least we know that Satan rebelled in heaven and was cast down to earth long ago (see Ezek. 28:12-19; Luke 10:17-18). In the first pages of the Bible we find him tempting Eve in the Garden of Eden, and when Eve, and then Adam, yielded to Satan’s temptation, God’s judgment fell upon them.

Since they were free moral agents, God permitted Satan to tempt the first humans for the purpose of testing them. Had they not been offered a choice of obedience or disobedience, then they would have functioned as robots by virtue of their environment.

God’s Purpose for Satan

Certainly, the all-powerful God could have banished Satan, at his fall, to some other place in the universe, but He didn’t. Satan was banished to earth for a purpose. His temptations would not only serve to test humans, but if they yielded to his temptations, Satan would be given some degree of authority to administer the punishment for their transgressions, namely by inflicting them with death.

God had told Adam that in the day he ate the forbidden fruit, he would die. Specifically, God was speaking of spiritual death because Adam and Eve did not die physically the day they ate the fruit–they died spiritually. At that time, Satan gained what the New Testament calls “the power of death” (Heb. 2:14). He was given permission, as an agent of God’s wrath, to inflict sinners with spiritual and physical death.

Spiritual death is a term used to describe the spiritual disease that invades the spirits of humans who are in rebellion against God. It could be called the nature of sin, selfishness, or Satan, which infects the spirit of sinful individuals.

We are told in the book of Hebrews that Jesus, “through death…render[ed] powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil; and might deliver those who through fear of death were subject to slavery all their lives” (Heb. 2:14b-15).

How did Jesus’ death effect our release from Satan’s captivity, sin, and death?

Stated simply, Jesus’ death satisfied the claims of justice, making us no longer deserving of God’s wrath. Thus sin, death, and Satan have no rightful hold over us. Satan can only afflict and hold in bondage those who are rightfully under God’s condemnation. God has now “delivered us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son” (Col. 1:13).

Now allow me to address the possible objections to what I’ve just stated. Some have surmised that somehow Satan got his authority illegally–that he is operating independently of God’s purposes. That, however, is an impossibility.

God is the Creator and Lord over the universe, as Jesus Himself said,69 and nothing can occur beyond His control. It was God who cast Satan from heaven after he rebelled, and obviously, He permitted him access to the earth. Otherwise Satan wouldn’t have been there to tempt the first humans.

If God cast Satan out of heaven, He could have easily kept him off the earth as well. Satan is operating within God’s parameters. Satan would not have been able to afflict people with spiritual death unless God permitted it, which He obviously did.

Because Satan is bringing God’s punishment upon evildoers, am I saying that God and Satan are co-workers?

No, God and Satan are not working together. God, who is all knowing and all wise, has obviously used Satan for His own purposes. There are very clear, specific examples in the Bible of God using Satan to deliver His judgments upon evildoers (see Judg. 9:22-24; 1 Sam. 16:14-23; Matt. 18:21-35; 1 Cor. 5:1-5).

However, God and Satan have different agendas. Satan is full of hatred. He wants people to sin. He wants them to suffer. He wants them to spend eternity in hell. God loves everyone. He doesn’t want anyone to sin. He doesn’t want anyone to suffer. He doesn’t want anyone to spend eternity in hell.

God, however, must punish unrighteousness. The Bible makes that perfectly clear. The cross makes that perfectly clear. That’s why God gave Satan the right to afflict sinners with “spiritual death,” making it possible for Satan to hold them in captivity. This fact of life is a foreshadowing to humanity of the ultimate wrath of God they will experience in hell. During this time of “earthly wrath,” God is mercifully giving them time to repent and believe in Jesus and thus escape His full eternal wrath.

Some have swallowed a very simplistic theology that says that every bad thing that happens is from the devil, even things that the Bible often refers to as judgment from God. They unfortunately believe that God exercises no sovereign control over our earth, thus eliminating His holiness, wrath, and judgment with one fell swoop.

This whole theory comes very close to dualism, that is, the idea that there are two equal and opposing powers in the universe fighting each other. Satan is supposedly operating outside the realm of God’s authority. That, however, is absurd! God could instantly banish Satan to hell at this moment if He desired. Satan can do nothing other than what God permits. He is like a dog on a leash. That is what the Bible teaches.70

Breaking the Curse of Death

Obviously, the curse of Satan’s dominion and death came because of God’s judgment. God had forewarned Adam that he would die if he ate the forbidden fruit. Death came because of judgment, and the Bible says it was Satan who had the power of death. Only God could have given him that authority. T. J. Crawford correctly wrote:

Our captivity to Satan is judicial, and is only a secondary consequence of our subjection to the wrath of God. Our enslaving foe is but, as it were, the subordinate instrument or executioner of God’s righteous judgment. The grand requisite to our deliverance from his thralldom is, that the sovereign Judge should cancel or revoke our sentence.71

Through the curse of spiritual death and Satan’s rule, God hopes that miserable sinners will come to their senses and believe the gospel. Contrariwise, Satan hopes they will continue rebelling against God, foolishly refusing Christ’s pardon, so they will suffer everything they deserve in hell. The “power of death,” however, has been broken over those who believe in the Lord Jesus. We are not under Satan’s dominion, and spiritual death has been removed from our spirits and replaced with God’s divine life and nature. As Jesus promised, our spirits have been born again, and we have “passed out of death into life” (John 5:24).

Moreover, we have no need to fear physical death because it promises better things for Christians. In addition, we can hope that we will be in that blessed group who will never face physical death–those who will be alive at Jesus’ return. Then, as the apostle Paul wrote, our bodies will experience redemption (see Rom. 8:23).

Can you see that the curse of spiritual death, the grip of sin, and the dominion of Satan were all a result of God’s judgment upon sinners? Therefore, when atonement was made for sin through Jesus’ death, those in Christ are no longer deserving of God’s judgment.

Now notice how Paul, in his Colossian letter, couples the forgiveness of our sins through the cross with our deliverance from the devil through the cross:

And when you were [spiritually] dead in your transgressions…He made you alive together with Him, having forgiven us all our transgressions, having cancelled out the certificate of debt consisting of decrees against us and which was hostile to us; and He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross. When He had disarmed the rulers and authorities, He made a public display of them, having triumphed over them through Him [some translations, rather then saying “through Him,” make a direct reference to the cross, i.e. “on the cross”]” (Col. 2:13-15).

Paul is clearly writing metaphorically in this passage. Because of breaking God’s law, we were like debtors, destined to spend an eternity in “debtor’s prison,” hell itself. In Christ, however, our “certificate of debt” was nailed to the cross because Jesus bore our penalty, and across that certificate was stamped “paid in full.”

On that same cross, Satan, who ruled us by the lesser evil spirits referred to as “rulers and authorities,” had his power broken by Christ. Paul metaphorically speaks of Christ’s victory over Satan using the imagery of a practice in ancient warfare, when the returning, victorious army would parade their defeated captors in chains through the streets, publicly humiliating them.

Just as the cross was a revelation of God’s righteousness, so, too, it demonstrated the end of Satan’s rule over all those in Christ.

John Stott wrote concerning this passage:

The bond [certificate of debt] he nailed to the cross; the powers he defeated by the cross….both happened together. Is not his payment of our debts the way in which Christ has overthrown the powers? By liberating us from these, he has liberated us from them.72

By God’s righteous permission, Satan only has a right to dominate transgressors, and those who are in Christ are no longer transgressors but righteous new creations! That is how Jesus’ death frees us from sin, Satan, and spiritual death. “If therefore the Son shall make you free, you shall be free indeed” (John 8:36).

Redeemed to be God’s Children

We must not forget, however, that because we have been “purchased with His own blood,” we are now considered “Christ’s slaves”(Acts. 20:28b; 1 Cor. 7:22).

Two important scriptures that speak of redemption are found in Paul’s letter to the Galatians:

Christ redeemed us from the curse of the Law, having become a curse for us–for it is written, “Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree”–in order that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith (Gal. 3:13-14, emphasis added).

All of us were under God’s curse because all of us have broken the laws He has written in our consciences. Jesus has redeemed us from that curse by becoming cursed in our place on the cross. Because of it, Gentiles can receive the promise that God made to Abraham, namely, God’s promise that all the families of the earth (not just the Jews) would be blessed through Abraham’s seed, which Paul, a few verses later, explains was Christ.

In the fourth chapter of the same letter, Paul wrote:

But when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law, in order that He might redeem those who were under the Law, that we might receive the adoption as sons….Therefore you are no longer a slave, but a son; and if a son, then an heir through God (Gal. 4:4-5, 7, emphasis added).

Redemption opens the door for adoption into God’s family. Now we relate to God as His very own, full-grown sons. I can’t think of a more blessed truth than that. We are God’s own children, born of His Spirit. We are heirs of God!

Salvation: Deliverance from Sin and Sickness

The word salvation is an all-inclusive word that combines the ideas of propitiation, justification, reconciliation, redemption, as well as other New Testament expressions.

As it is used in the New Testament, the word salvation simply means deliverance, implying that we have been taken from an undesirable situation to a desirable one, which is certainly the case. We have been delivered from God’s wrath (propitiation), from His condemnation (justification), from our mutual enmity (reconciliation), and from sin and the curse of the Law (redemption). When we survey the combined images these words depict, we can understand why the apostle described our deliverance as “so great a salvation” (Heb. 2:3).

Virtually all evangelicals agree as to the constituent benefits of salvation; however, there has always been some tension concerning exactly when one certain benefit is to be experienced. That benefit is physical healing.

All agree that when we experience what Paul calls “the redemption of our body,” sickness will no longer be a part of human experience. Disease will have no dominion over our imperishable, glorified bodies. The question before us is: Have we any right to pray with faith, knowing that God desires our health in this present life?

From examining the New Testament, there is sufficient evidence to answer that question in the affirmative. The biblical usage of the word salvation is only one of many proofs that deliverance from sickness is not something we must wait until the next life to experience.

The Greek word used for salvation in the New Testament is soteria, derived from the word sozo, which is most often translated “saved.” Sozo is also frequently translated “made well” when used in the context of cases of physical healing. It is clear from Jesus’ own usage of the word that it not only implied forgiveness of sins but also healing of sickness.

In the New American Standard version of the New Testament, the word sozo is translated “made well” nine times. Three times it is translated “get well,” and once it is translated “cured.”73 In every instance a physical healing was performed by Jesus. For example, when the woman with the issue of blood was healed, Matthew describes the incident by thrice using sozo within two verses:

For she was saying to herself, “If I only touch His garment, I shall get well [sozo].” But Jesus turning and seeing her said, “Daughter, take courage; your faith has made you well [sozo].” And at once the woman was made well [sozo] (Matt. 9:21-22).

I encourage you to look up in a concordance the other references where sozo is used to speak of physical healing. The important point is that this same word is translated “saved” fifty times in the New Testament. It is obvious that the people of Jesus’ day used sozo to mean deliverance from sin and deliverance from sickness and disease. Often we find forgiveness of sins and deliverance from sickness coupled in the Bible.74

I realize that this in itself doesn’t necessarily prove that God wants to heal everyone’s sickness. However, if we can prove that sickness is a product of God’s wrath or of Satan’s evil doing (or both), then it is reasonable to believe that deliverance from sickness must be included in our salvation. We already know that on the cross Jesus delivered us from God’s wrath and from Satan’s dominion.

Who or What Causes Sickness?

In briefly searching the Scriptures, I’ve found at least twenty-seven clear references that prove sickness is often a manifestation of God’s wrath against sin.75 For example, a brief glance at the 28th chapter of Deuteronomy leaves no doubt that God uses sickness as a punishment for disobedience.

Furthermore, there are four clear references indicating that Satan afflicts people with sickness and disease (often as the agent of God’s wrath or discipline).76

Therefore, if Jesus has saved us from God’s wrath and from Satan’s dominion, then why would we ever think that God wants us to remain sick? I realize some have reasoned that God wants us to remain sick to teach us some lesson or develop character in us, but you won’t find such logic in the Bible. Jesus never told anyone who came to Him for healing, “I want you to remain sick so you’ll learn a lesson and develop character.” No, Jesus healed all who came to Him seeking physical healing.

Yes, God may permit sickness to attack a Christian in order to bring him to repentance (see 1 Cor. 11:30-32), but it is not God’s will for him to remain sick. If he repents, he can be healed.

In addition, the Bible certainly teaches that we can grow during trials and adversity, but sickness is in a different category. The apostle James wrote:

Is anyone among you suffering? Let him pray….Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord; and the prayer offered in faith will restore the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up, and if he has committed any sins, they will be forgiven him (Jas. 5:13-15, emphasis added).

Notice that James had different instructions for one who is sick compared to one who is suffering in other ways.

Also notice that James did not qualify his healing promise as being only for certain individuals. It is for anyone who is sick. The Lord will raise him up in response to the prayer of faith. If sin is the reason he is sick, forgiveness is promised as well.

According to James, it is only the prayer of faith that brings healing. Prayers of hope don’t bring spiritual salvation and neither do they bring physical salvation. Therefore, the one praying must be convinced it is God’s will for him to be healed, just as he had to be convinced that it was God’s will for him to have his sins forgiven in order to be saved.

Healing in the Atonement?

Has physical healing been provided for us in Christ’s atonement? Absolutely yes. It amazes me that many say healing has not been provided for us by Christ’s death, yet at the same time they affirm that one day we will all live without sickness or disease in heaven. How has that future deliverance from sickness been provided? Those same people who deny that healing is provided in the atonement will have to say that our future health has been provided by the atonement. We’re not going to be sick in heaven because Jesus died for our sins. Jesus, on the cross, merited the redemption of our bodies. Thus, those who say that healing is not provided for us in the atonement are contradicting themselves.

The question then is: Should we expect to experience now, or only later, the healing Jesus has provided for us? Of course, some want to push it off to the future. It is certainly true that there are benefits of salvation that we won’t experience until the future, such as life in heaven, seeing Jesus face to face, and so on. However, there are benefits we can experience right now, such as forgiveness, adoption, rebirth, and the baptism in the Holy Spirit. Into which category does healing fall, present or future?

The answer is that healing is something provided for us now. Under the Old Covenant, physical healing was often provided for the people by means of an atoning sacrifice, and it was provided, not for some future day, but for the present (see Lev. 14:1-32; Num. 16:46-50; 21:5-9 with John 3:14-15).

The Old Testament sacrifices only prefigured Christ’s atonement, which provides healing, not just for the future, but also in the present.

Jesus never said to anyone who came to Him requesting healing, “No, you can’t be healed now, but you’ll be healthy in heaven.”

During His earthly ministry, Jesus forgave sins and healed the sick. He also sent His disciples out to heal the sick (see Matt. 10:8; Luke 10:9) and said one of the signs that should follow believers is that they will lay hands upon the sick and they will recover (see Mark 16:17-18).

In the early church, many people were healed as recorded in the book of Acts. In addition, the healing promise found in the book of James reflects the apostles’ teachings on this matter.

Obviously, healing is a present benefit.

Some may object, saying, “Just because God healed others doesn’t guarantee He’ll heal me.”

They don’t realize that they’ve just assaulted the love and justice of God. God loves all equally. He is, as the Bible says, “no respecter of persons.” If God will forgive the sins of one who repents and believes, He’ll forgive the sins of all who repent and believe. If God healed one in response to his faith, God will heal all who pray to Him believing.

The Healing Gospel

The “healing gospel” is not some new idea that originated with the Pentecostals early in this century. In fact, it predates even the New Testament by centuries. Isaiah wrote of the healing benefit of Christ’s atonement at least 700 years before any of the New Testament was written. His great 53rd chapter plainly tells us that healing would belong to us because of Jesus’ sacrifice:

Surely our griefs He Himself bore [the margin indicates that griefs could also be translated “sickness,” and anyone who studies the Hebrew will agree that “sickness” is a much more accurate translation77], and our sorrows He carried [the margin indicates that sorrows could be (and should be) translated “pains”78]. Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, smitten of God and afflicted. But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are healed (Is. 53:4-5).

There is absolutely no doubt that this passage refers to physical healing. Matthew confirmed this when he stated that the healing of many people at Peter’s house was a fulfillment of what Isaiah wrote:

And He touched her [Peter’s mother-in-law’s] hand, and the fever left her; and she arose, and waited on Him. And when evening had come, they brought to Him many who were demon-possessed; and He cast out the spirits with a word, and healed all who were ill in order that what was spoken through Isaiah the prophet might be fulfilled, saying, “He Himself took our infirmities, and carried away our diseases” (Matt. 8:15-17).

Some have argued that the healings Jesus performed during His earthly ministry completely fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecy. Yet why don’t they also say Jesus completely fulfilled the portions of Isaiah’s 53rd chapter promising forgiveness of sins when He forgave people during His earthly ministry?

Obviously, if we maintain that we can be forgiven because Jesus bore our sins according to Isaiah 53, then we can also maintain that we can be healed because Jesus bore our sickness according to the same chapter.

Healing cannot be classified as only a future heavenly benefit of salvation because it has been experienced by so many here on earth. We don’t find Jesus passing out crowns, giving people glorified bodies, or letting them walk on golden streets during His earthly ministry, but we constantly find Him healing sick bodies. In fact, one-tenth of all that has been written about Jesus in the four Gospels concerns His healing ministry. Healing is a benefit for the present age.

That is why the crippled man in Acts 14 was healed while listening to Paul preach the gospel. It is obvious that the salvation (sozo) of which Paul preached included deliverance from sickness as well as from sin:

And there they [Paul and Barnabas] continued to preach the gospel. And at Lystra there was sitting a certain man, without strength in his feet, lame from his mother’s womb, who had never walked. This man was listening to Paul as he spoke, who, when he had fixed his gaze upon him, and had seen that he had faith to be made well, said with a loud voice, “Stand upright on your feet.” And he leaped up and began to walk (Acts 14:7-10, emphasis added).

How did this man acquire faith to be healed? The Bible says faith comes from hearing the word of Christ (see Rom. 10:17). His faith came from hearing Paul preach the gospel, and so Paul’s message must have included physical healing.

What would happen if that same gospel were preached today? We don’t have to speculate because some are preaching that gospel today, including myself. When it is preached, people are delivered from sin and sickness. I know from personal experience, however, that people in non-western nations are more likely to have faith for healing because they have not been brainwashed (or better, “brain-dirtied”) against divine healing by the usual theological arguments. Anyone, however, east or west, can receive what Jesus purchased for him. It is only a matter of faith.

Some object to the healing portion of salvation by claiming that if it were true, then everyone who is saved would also automatically be healed. That, however, is not true. The constituent benefits of salvation must be individually appropriated. A person can be saved but remain sick just as he can be saved and remain guilt-filled or fearful. The Bible tells us that although Israel possessed most of the promised land, they still left unconquered areas that belonged to them by God’s promise (see Judg. 1:27 – 2:2). So too, healing is for every Christian to individually possess.

How to Get Well

If you are sick, how can you get well?

First, make certain that God has not permitted your sickness because of your disobedience (see 1 Cor. 11:28-32). Don’t try to drag something up to condemn yourself, but if you know you’ve been disobedient, then confess your sins. God promises to forgive you, so there will be no hindrance to your healing (see Jas. 5:14-15; 1 John 1:9). Look particularly in your heart for unforgiveness because unforgiveness is listed in Scripture as something that can open the door to God’s discipline (see Matt. 18: 34-35).

Second, make certain you are not violating any of the natural laws of health. If you are not taking proper care of God’s temple (your body), you can’t expect Him to heal it. Your body must have enough sleep, and it must have the sufficient vitamins and minerals to work properly. Many Christians aren’t sick so much as they are malnourished or even poisoned. Humanism dominates American cuisine, and we suffer for it, thinking we can improve upon God-given foods. You wouldn’t pour paint into your car’s gas tank, and neither should you put something into your body that isn’t designed by the one who created your body.

Third, make sure you truly believe that it is God’s will for you to be healed. If you’re not convinced, your doubts will stop your healing. Spend time reading and meditating upon the healing promises in the Bible. It might take some time for your faith to grow.

Perhaps you have been “brain-dirtied” by unbelieving theological reasoning. I recommend that you read Christ the Healer, by F.F. Bosworth. It is an excellent faith builder for anyone seeking healing, and the author answers the common faith-destroying arguments against divine healing.79

Fourth, pray in faith, believing that God has heard and answered your prayer according to His promises and Mark 11:24. If you believe, then begin thanking God for healing you. He will see to it that His promise comes to pass in your body!

“Bless the Lord, O my soul; and all that is within me, bless His holy name. Bless the Lord O my soul, and forget none of His benefits; who pardons all your iniquities; who heals all your diseases” (Ps. 103:1-3, emphasis added).

So Great a Salvation

The study of the achievement of the cross is so broad that this chapter could easily grow into volumes. In fact, a pastor could spend his entire ministry expounding upon this one subject. Thank God for our full salvation provided for us by our wonderful Savior when He suffered for us on the cross, bearing our penalty!

Footnotes

67. Leon Morris, The Apostolic Preaching of the Cross, p. 148.

68. See John 8:31-36; Rom. 6:6; Heb. 2:14-15; Eph. 2:1-3; 2 Tim. 2:24-26.

69. See Matt. 12:25.

70. For example, see Deut. 13:1-3; Job 1:9-12; Mal. 3:10-11; Luke 22:31-32; 1 Cor. 10:13; 2 Thes. 2:8-12; Rev. 20:1-3, 7-10.

71. Thomas J. Crawford, The Doctrine of the Holy Scripture Respecting the Atonement, p. 63.

72. John Stott, The Cross of Christ, pp. 234-244.

73. “made well”: Matt. 9:22,22; Mark 5:34; 10:52; Luke 8:36,48,50; 17:19; 18:42; “get well”: Matt. 9:21; Mark 5:23,28; “cured”: Mark 6:56

74. i.e. Ps. 103:2-3; Matt. 9:2-8; Mark 16:16-18; Jas. 5:15

75. See Gen. 20:17-18; Ex. 7:26; 23:25; Num. 12:1-15; 16:46-50; Deut. 7:15; 28:1-63; 1 Sam. 5:9; 2 Sam. 12:15; 1 Kin. 8:37; 2 Chron. 21:12-18; 30:18-20; Ps. 38:3; 106:15; 107:17-22; Is. 10:16; 33:24; Jer. 16:4; Mic. 6:13; Matt. 9:2; 13:15; John 5:14; 12:40; Acts 28:27; 1 Cor. 11:30; Jas. 5:15; Rev. 2:22.

76. Job 2:6-7; Luke 13:10-16; Acts 10:38; 1 Cor. 5:5

77. The word translated “griefs” is the Hebrew word kholee, which is translated “sicknesses” in Deut. 7:15; 28:61; 1 Kin. 17:17; 2 Kin. 1:2; 8:8; 2 Chron. 16:12; 21:15.

78. The word translated “sorrows” is the Hebrew word makob. It is translated “pain” in Job 14:22; 33:19 and Jer 51:8.

79. I do not believe that it is wrong to seek the help of doctors or medication when one is sick. Divine healing is a superior means of healing, however, since there is nothing God can’t heal, and He charges nothing for His service!

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Chapter Nine – The Profuse Blessings of the Cross

Chapter Six – The Preachers Prepared

Christ's Incredible Cross, Chapter Six

As you may have suspected, in this second part we will primarily be investigating the book of Acts and the epistles. It is there that we discover the full revelation of all that was accomplished through Jesus’ death.

One might ask why Jesus didn’t reveal all that His death would accomplish before He died. The answer is that He did reveal, somewhat, the significance of His death, and no doubt would have liked to explain more than He did. His closest friends, however, had a difficult time even accepting that He would die, much less accepting any facts about what His death would accomplish.

As we survey the Gospels, it is clear that no one believed Jesus would rise from the dead,37 in spite of the fact He had promised His disciples on several occasions He would be resurrected after three days.38 Therefore, Jesus could only feed His disciples as much truth as they could digest, and was obliged to wait until after His resurrection to reveal, through His post-resurrection appearances and the teaching ministry of the Holy Spirit, everything He desired. As Jesus said to His disciples during the Last Supper,

“I have many more things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. But when He, the Spirit of truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth; for He will not speak on His own initiative, but whatever He hears, He will speak; and He will disclose to you what is to come” (John 16:12-13).

As we survey Acts and the apostles’ letters, we will continue our quest to uncover the necessity, significance, and centrality of the cross. It is inevitable that we will compare the modern gospel message with the original one that was proclaimed by the apostles. First, let’s consider the events of Jesus’ resurrection.

Bad Friday

As Jesus’ body was taken down from the cross, no one would have ever suspected that eventually that day would be commemorated by Christians worldwide as “Good Friday.” There hardly seemed to be anything good in what had transpired.

The amazing miracle-working man, the one who seemed to be Israel’s long-awaited Messiah, was dead and gone. Fear, despair, and perplexity filled the hearts of the disciples. Mark tells us that they were “mourning and weeping” (Mark 16:10). The man they had faithfully followed for three years had been executed as a criminal. Incredibly, He had walked right into it. Now all hope of establishing the long-awaited kingdom of God was dashed to pieces.

Those of us who know the end of the story can hardly appreciate the drama portrayed in the Gospels. When Jesus rose from the grave on Sunday morning, first appearing at His tomb to Mary and a few other women, and later that day to Peter and the disciples, the world became a much different place. Sorrow turned to joy.

Jesus made some very significant statements during His post-resurrection appearances, many of which were designed to unveil the significance of His death and resurrection. Some of those to whom Jesus spoke probably didn’t initially grasp the full significance of what He said–they were just glad He was alive–but eventually the pieces began to fit together.

Christ’s First Appearance

The first person to whom Jesus spoke on Sunday morning was Mary Magdalene. She was the first to discover the empty tomb but assumed Jesus’ body had been stolen, adding sorrow to her sorrow. However, as she stood weeping at the entrance to the tomb, suddenly Jesus appeared behind her inquiring why she was weeping and for whom she was looking (as if He didn’t know!)

Never dreaming it was Jesus speaking, Mary initially thought He was the gardener. When He called her name, however, Mary looked again. Realizing who He was, she cried out, “Teacher!” and fell at His feet, worshiping Him, now with tears of joy.

Jesus spoke:

“Stop clinging to Me; for I have not yet ascended to the Father; but go to My brethren, and say to them, ‘I ascend to My Father and your Father, and My God and your God'” (John 20:17).

It seems that Mary had a grip on Jesus’ feet and did not intend to let go!

Notice that Jesus referred to His disciples as His brethren and to His Father as their Father. Something had taken place in the past three days that had given the disciples a new relationship with God. Unknown to them, they had been crucified with Christ, died with Christ, buried with Christ, and now raised from the dead with Christ. Their sins had been cancelled out on the cross; their debt had been paid in full; they had died in Christ and now were born again in Him. They had become God’s very own children, members of His family. Jesus was literally their spiritual Brother, and God was actually their spiritual Father.

This is brought out fully in the epistles. Jesus identified Himself with us, and we are vitally united with Him in His death, burial, and resurrection. He took our sin that we might have imputed to us His righteousness:

Having concluded this, that one died for all, therefore all died….He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him (2 Cor. 5:14, 21).

I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me, and delivered Himself up for me (Gal. 2:20).

But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly places (Eph. 2:4-6).

And in Him you have been made complete…having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were also raised up with Him through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the dead. And when you were dead in your transgressions…He made you alive together with Him, having forgiven us all our transgressions, having cancelled out the certificate of debt consisting of decrees against us and which was hostile to us; and He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross (Col. 2:10a, 12-14).

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His great mercy has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to obtain an inheritance which is imperishable and undefiled and will not fade away, reserved in heaven for you (1 Pet. 1:3-4).

I heard a well-known radio Bible teacher relate an incident he experienced while once touring Jerusalem with a group of Christians. They were visiting the site of the garden tomb, and their guide asked if anyone had ever been there before. This Bible teacher spoke out, “I have!” The guide then proceeded to ask him when, and he replied, “About two thousand years ago!”

Now there was a Bible teacher who understood his Bible! You’ve been there too, if you are “in Christ.” It was through Christ’s death that our forgiveness was made possible, and all the other blessings we’ve inherited. That includes our spiritual rebirth, which in God’s mind was consummated at Jesus’ resurrection.

The cross was the starting place for every blessing we have in Christ. That’s why they call the day He died Good Friday.

Explaining Things Concerning Himself

When we combine the Gospel accounts of the resurrection, we find that Mary Magdalene, upon discovering the empty tomb, ran to inform Peter and John of her discovery. She returned to the tomb once more with Peter and John, who, upon entering, saw the empty wrappings of Jesus’ body. All of them departed, but Mary lingered behind. That is when Jesus made His first appearance.39

His second appearance seems to have been to the other women who arrived shortly after Mary had run to inform Peter and John. Jesus appeared to them after their angelic vision at the tomb, on their way back to the city. All we know of Jesus’ conversation then is that He commanded them to instruct His disciples to leave for Galilee, promising to appear to them there.40

Jesus’ third appearance that day was to Peter, sometime after Peter had inspected the empty tomb. However, the Bible doesn’t tell us anything Jesus said during that third appearance (see Luke 24:34; 1 Cor. 15:5).

His fourth Sunday appearance was sometime in the afternoon when He joined two disciples who were walking to the nearby village of Emmaus. In a miraculous way, they were prevented from initially recognizing Him. As they conversed, Jesus pretended to be ignorant of the events of the last three days:

And one of them, named Cleopas, answered and said to Him, “Are you the only one visiting Jerusalem and unaware of the things which have happened here in these days?” And He said to them, “What things?” And they said to Him, “The things about Jesus the Nazarene, who was a prophet mighty in deed and word in the sight of God and all the people, and how the chief priests and our rulers delivered Him up to the sentence of death, and crucified Him. But we were hoping that it was He who was going to redeem Israel. Indeed, besides all this, it is the third day since these things happened. But also some women among us amazed us. When they were at the tomb early in the morning, and did not find His body, they came, saying that they had also seen a vision of angels, who said that He was alive. And some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just exactly as the women also had said; but Him they did not see” (Luke 24:18-24).

These men should have been rejoicing that the Old Testament predictions of the Messiah’s sufferings and resurrection had been fulfilled, but unfortunately, their knowledge of those predictions was sorely deficient. Jesus then responded to their perplexity:

“O foolish men and slow of heart to believe in all that the prophets have spoken! Was it not necessary for the Christ to suffer these things and to enter into His glory?” And beginning with Moses and with all the prophets, He explained to them the things concerning Himself in all the Scriptures (Luke 24:25-27).

What a sensational Bible study that must have been! The two disciples later reminisced, “Were not our hearts burning within us while He was speaking to us on the road, while He was explaining the Scriptures to us?” (Luke 24:32).

How their faces must have lit up as it gradually dawned on them that Jesus’ death and resurrection was God’s predetermined plan. When their “eyes were opened” to recognize that it was Jesus who was speaking to them, He suddenly vanished. They immediately hurried back to Jerusalem to tell the other disciples.

This fourth appearance is very significant because it was then that Jesus began His post-resurrection teaching ministry. These two disciples were privileged to learn of numerous messianic references in the Old Testament. In fact, Jesus was particularly interested in enlightening them to scriptures that predicted His sufferings and resurrection. Jesus was preparing His disciples to preach the gospel, and those scriptures would be the basis of their preaching.

According to the Scriptures

Jesus’ final Sunday appearance was that evening when He suddenly stood in the midst of the disciples who were hiding “for fear of the Jews” (John 20:19).

He greeted their surprise by saying, “Peace to you,” and then “reproached them for their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they had not believed those who had seen Him after He had risen ” (Mark 16:14).

Again we find Jesus making reference to the prophecies He fulfilled in His death and resurrection:

Now He said to them, “These are My words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things which are written about Me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled.” Then He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures, and He said to them, “Thus it is written, that the Christ should suffer and rise again from the dead the third day; and that repentance for forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in His name to all the nations, beginning from Jerusalem” (Luke 24:44-47).

The phrase, “Then He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures,” is certainly intriguing. Either Jesus supernaturally gave them instant understanding of the Old Testament messianic types and prophecies, or, more likely, He went through all the Scriptures, explaining them, just as He had done with the two disciples on the road to Emmaus.

Regardless, more than anything else, Jesus wanted His disciples to understand that His death and resurrection were foreordained by God and that now repentance for forgiveness of sins could be proclaimed in His name. Within a few weeks, Jesus would commission His disciples to take the gospel to the entire world, and, of necessity, they must have a clear understanding of what that gospel is.

It is of equal importance that we understand these fundamental truths as well. I’m concerned, however, that many people, and even many pastors, have forgotten or neglected these foundational truths. When a preacher invites people to accept Jesus with the enticement of a better life and some peace of mind but never mentions Christ’s death, resurrection, or the forgiveness of sins, then he has not, according to biblical standards, preached the gospel. Unless he preaches the authentic gospel, how can people be authentically saved?

As we survey the book of Acts, we will notice repeatedly that the core of the apostles’ message was Christ’s death and resurrection. In addition, we will see how they repeatedly appealed to the Old Testament scriptures that predicted Jesus’ death and resurrection as proof that Jesus was indeed the Savior. This is the foundation of our faith, just as the apostle Paul wrote:

For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures (1 Cor. 15:3-4, emphasis added).

Notice Paul appealed to the Scriptures twice: once for the death and once for the resurrection of Christ.

The Great Commission

Jesus made a number of other appearances after the initial five on the day of His resurrection. We are told by Luke (in the book of Acts) that Jesus appeared to the apostles “over a period of forty days…speaking of the things concerning the kingdom of God” (Acts 1:3).

It was sometime during those appearances that Jesus commissioned His disciples to take the gospel to every nation. Significantly, on at least two occasions, Jesus commanded the apostles to baptize their converts (see Matt. 28:19; Mark 16:16).

When we read through the book of Acts, we find that the apostles consistently obeyed Jesus’ instruction, immediately baptizing anyone who professed genuine faith in Christ. This is much more important than many today realize, which is why so many ministers don’t quickly baptize new believers, and why some never do.

Why did Jesus command the baptism of new believers? There are several reasons, but one often overlooked is that baptism should insure that preachers will preach the true gospel, and that converts will understand the true message of the gospel.

Baptism is representative of the believer’s identification with Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection (see Col. 2:10-14; Rom. 6:3-11). In hearing the gospel, a person should hear about Christ’s death and resurrection and that Jesus was his substitute, identifying Himself with sinners so they might be justly forgiven. Baptism then provides the new believer a “corresponding action” to express his faith in the message he has heard. Through baptism, he is saying, “I believe that Jesus identified with me, and from now on I identify myself with Him.”

Why is it that so many who preach “the gospel” don’t invite those who say they believe in Christ to be baptized immediately? Simply because baptism isn’t a logical end to their message. It would make no sense to the new “convert” because he hasn’t heard the true gospel of Jesus’ substitutionary death and His resurrection.

When we proclaim the true gospel, it should come as no surprise if those who want to be saved respond with the words (as did the Ethiopian eunuch of Acts 8 who heard the gospel from Philip’s lips): “Look! Water! What prevents me from being baptized?” (Acts 8:36). How many of our new converts, if we instructed them to be baptized, would respond, “Whatever for?”

Only when the authentic gospel is proclaimed will they understand why they should be baptized, because only then will they understand the significance of Jesus’ death and resurrection.

In the next chapter, we’ll further compare our modern methods with those of the apostles whom Christ commissioned.

Footnotes

37 For example, see Mark 16:10-14; John 20:9.

38 See Matt. 16:21; 17:22-23; 20:18-19; 26:32.

39 See John 20:1-18.

40 See Matt. 28:9-10.

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Chapter Six – The Preachers Prepared

Chapter Seven – The Cross Proclaimed

Christ's Incredible Cross, Chapter Seven

The apostles proclaimed a message radically different from the so-called gospel message prevalent in many Evangelical41 churches today. Too often, the biblical gospel has been replaced by a modern gospel that is void of practically every essential biblical element.

This modern gospel proclaims, “Accept Jesus and get a better life.” The listeners are reminded of their temporal problems and then offered peace of mind and a relationship with God. They are promised that God will begin to do things for them if they will only “invite Jesus into their hearts.”

No mention is made of sin or of the necessity and accomplishment of the cross; whereas the authentic gospel is, as Paul stated, “the word of the cross” (1 Cor. 1:18).

No invitation to be baptized is made because it would make no sense. Baptism is something for Christians to consider only when the annual baptismal service takes place.

No one is told to repent of sin simply because it doesn’t fit into the message. “God is love–invite Him into your life and things will start getting better.”

Whatever Happened to Repentance?

I well remember the first time I did a word study, using a concordance, of repentance in the New Testament. How surprised I was to discover that repentance is essential for salvation and part of the gospel message. It was then that I began to realize how defective my own gospel really was.

When the true gospel is proclaimed, repentance naturally makes sense to the hearers. If Jesus suffered incomprehensible agony on the cross, being punished in my place for my sins, then it stands to reason that if I’m going to begin a relationship with God, I cannot continue sinning as I always have. Sin is abhorrent to God.

The concept of repentance is foreign to the “accept Jesus and get a better life” gospel. The listener is told that God wants to bless him and fulfill his every desire. God will make him wealthy and give him joy and peace in the midst of a troubled world. He doesn’t need to repent of greed, which the Bible says is idolatry,42 because God wants to give him more success and bigger cars and homes. God will make him happy and give him greater self-esteem.

That, however, is not the gospel of the New Testament. Although God certainly does want to supply the needs of and even prosper His children, a person can only become one of God’s children if he repents and believes in the Lord Jesus who died for his sins. That is what the Bible teaches.

Did the apostles preach the gospel by telling the unsaved that God wanted to bless them? Peter once did, at the end of his second sermon recorded in the third chapter of Acts. But listen to how he said it:

“For you, first, God raised up His Servant, and sent Him to bless you by turning every one of you from your wicked ways.” (Acts 3:26).

God wants to bless everyone, but His blessings begin with each individual’s repentance. God wants people to “turn from their wicked ways.”

What has ever happened to repentance being essential to salvation? I remember an evangelist who once visited our city and brought with him the vice president of a major midwestern beer brewery. He introduced his guest as a “Spirit-filled Christian who was a missionary to his beer company.”

Here was a man who made his living producing a product responsible for thousands of broken marriages and homes, thousands of innocent deaths, birth defects and permanent disabilities, untold suffering and disease, sins of all kinds, from murder to child abuse, and higher insurance rates for everyone, yet he claims to be a believer in Jesus Christ! All under the guise of being a missionary to the other hell-bound people who worked for the same company!

Should a man who runs a house of prostitution keep his place open for business-as-usual once he believes in Jesus so he can be a missionary to prostitutes and those who pay for their services?

Should a drug lord, once he believes in Jesus, continue to smuggle drugs, extort politicians, and “rub-out” his competitors in order to be a missionary to the drug pushers?

If the vice president of that brewery was truly saved and wanted to reach his employees for Christ, he should have sent them all a memo saying, “I’ve decided to follow Jesus who died for me, a wicked sinner. My job at this brewery is not compatible with what is right, as we all know, and so I resign, effective immediately.”

The Church’s First Sermon

The book of Acts contains material crucial to our study of the cross. By examining the content of the gospel messages proclaimed by the early church, we can compare the gospel we read with the gospel we have heard (or preached). For the most part, we will only study incidents where actual portions of gospel sermons are recorded for us. There are other cases in the book of Acts where we are simply told that so-and-so “preached the gospel,” but the actual content of the message is not recorded.

The apostle Peter preached the first gospel sermon of the church on the day of Pentecost. Did he tell his listeners that God would begin to solve their temporal problems if they would only invite Jesus into their hearts? No, Peter had listened well to Jesus’ post-resurrection instructions because he preached that all people are sinners (2:38,40), that Jesus died on the cross (2:23, 36), that Jesus’ death was predetermined by God (2:23), and that Jesus had been resurrected according to the Scripture (2:24-32). Also included in his message was the necessity of repentance (2:38), the need to be baptized (2:38), and that the primary benefit of salvation was the forgiveness of sins (2:38).

Peter quoted from Psalm 16:8-11 to prove that the resurrection of the Messiah had been prophetically predicted. Undoubtedly, this was one of the scriptures Jesus had identified to the Emmaus Road disciples (and probably to the other disciples as well).

Peter argued that David (the author of Psalm 16) could not be referring to himself as the “holy one” whom God did not allow to “undergo decay,” because David had died and was buried, and his tomb was with them “until this day” (Acts 2:27-29). David must have been prophesying concerning the resurrection of Christ.

Peter also quoted a portion of Psalm 110 (also authored by David) as referring to Jesus’ ascension to the right hand of God the Father.

It is notable that Peter’s listeners were “pierced to the heart” when they heard his sermon. This should be normal when the gospel is preached. The Holy Spirit, Jesus promised, would “convict the world concerning sin” (John 16:8). If our gospel has no convicting power, then it isn’t the authentic gospel.

The Essential Elements

We must question whether Luke recorded every word of the sermons he reported in the book of Acts. More than likely, he did not and instead only recorded the main points. If, then, we find an essential element of the gospel missing in one of the sermons, there is no need to conclude it was not part of the original message.

Peter’s second sermon, after the healing of the cripple at the Beautiful Gate, included the elements of humanity’s guilt (3:13-15, 19, 26), God’s wrath (3:23), the death of Christ (3:15), the prediction of His sufferings by the prophets (3:18, 24), His resurrection (3:15, 26), the necessity of repentance for salvation (3:19), and the fact that the forgiveness of sins was now being offered through Christ (3:19). Of the seven essential elements contained in Peter’s first sermon, only baptism is not included in his second sermon (or more likely, not recorded by Luke).

Peter also quoted two Old Testament passages as being fulfilled by Jesus: Moses’ prediction that God would raise up a prophet like himself (Deut. 18:15), and God’s promise to Abraham that all the families of the earth would be blessed through his seed (Gen. 22:18).

Jesus must have mentioned these two scriptures during His discourse with the Emmaus Road disciples and probably with the others later. Naturally, the Old Testament scripture quotations were the most effective when the gospel was being proclaimed to Jews rather than Gentiles.

Peter’s sermon obviously had an impact on his listeners because “many of those who had heard the message believed; and the number of the men came to be about five thousand” (Acts 4:4). Imagine that!

How to Preach the Gospel

Unlike Peter, some preachers today consider it inappropriate to mention humanity’s sinfulness, God’s wrath, or the necessity of repentance when they proclaim the gospel. I remember once speaking to a group of pastors in a foreign country who had swallowed this kind of unbiblical thinking. They had been told by their “apostle” never to mention sin or God’s wrath when preaching the gospel because it would “turn people off” to Christianity. (These were full-gospel, charismatic, evangelical pastors!)

If humanity is not sinful, however, Christ’s death is meaningless, seeing that He died for our sins. The true gospel cannot be preached without mention of humanity’s guilt.

If you will take the time to study great revivals of the past, you will soon see that the preachers of the gospel during those awakenings expounded a message that first convicted people of their sins.

The successful Methodist evangelist and circuit rider of the “Second Great Awakening,” Francis Asbury, along with Bishop Coke, in the 1798 Methodist Discipline, encouraged their fellow-preachers to:

Convince the sinner of his dangerous condition….He must set forth the depth of original sin, and shew the sinner how far he is gone from original righteousness; he must describe the vices of the world in their just and most striking colors, and enter into all the sinner’s pleas and excuses for sin, and drive him from all his subterfuges and strongholds.43

In his landmark book, Revivals of Religion, in a chapter entitled How to Preach the Gospel, anointed revivalist Charles Finney wrote:

It is of great importance that the sinner should be made to feel his guilt….Sinners ought to be made to feel that they have something to do, and that is, to repent….Sinners should be made to feel that if they now grieve away the Spirit of God, it is very probable that they will be lost forever.”44

Legendary Baptist preacher, C. H. Spurgeon, told those preparing for ministry:

The preaching of the cross is to them that are saved the wisdom of God and the power of God. The Christian minister should preach all the truths which cluster around the person and work of the Lord Jesus, and hence he must declare very earnestly and pointedly the evil of sin, which created the need of a Savior. Let him show that sin is a breach of the law, that it necessitates punishment, and that the wrath of God is revealed against it….Open up the spirituality of the law as our Lord did, and show how it is broken by evil thoughts, intents, and imaginations. By this means sinners will be pricked in their hearts.

Old Robbie Flockhart used to say, “It is of no use trying to sew with the silken thread of the gospel unless we pierce a way for it with the sharp needle of the law.” The law goes first, like the needle, and draws the gospel thread after it; therefore preach concerning sin, righteousness, and the judgment to come….Aim at the heart. Probe the wound and touch the very quick of the soul. Spare not the sterner themes, for men must be wounded before they can be healed, and slain before they can be made alive. No man will ever put on the robe of Christ’s righteousness till he is stripped of his fig leaves, nor will he wash in the fount of mercy till he perceives his filthiness….We must also set before our hearers the justice of God and the certainty that every transgression will be punished.45

As Spurgeon declared, not only must we preach humanity’s guilt, but also God’s wrath against sin. If God is not wrathful, then, again, Christ’s death is meaningless on two counts.

First, if God is not wrathful, then there was no reason for Jesus to die because there is no hell, there is nothing for people to be saved from, and no one need be concerned about future punishment.

As R.W. Dale succinctly wrote, “One of the chief reasons why men do not trust in Christ to save them, is that they do not believe that there is anything from which they need to be saved.”46

Second, if God is not wrathful, then Jesus did not suffer God’s wrath on the cross. He was not humanity’s substitute, and no atonement took place for our sins. If God is not a God of wrath, then the gospel of the New Testament is simply not true.

Today we are often told that there is no need to tell people that they are sinners because they already know that. I ask, “If they already know it, why aren’t they acting guilty or showing a desire to repent?”

Proclaiming Christ

As we continue to survey Acts, let us look not only for the preaching of the death and resurrection of Christ but also for the proclamation of humanity’s guilt and God’s holiness and wrath. The very fact that forgiveness of sins is offered through the gospel makes it obvious to any intelligent listener that humanity is guilty and God is wrathful, otherwise forgiveness of sins is irrelevant. When we say we have been “saved” or have experienced “salvation,” we are affirming both our guilt and God’s wrath, as it is God’s just wrath from which we have been saved (see Rom. 5:9).

In Peter and John’s short defense before the Sanhedrin (see Acts 4:1-22), Peter, speaking by the Holy Spirit, proclaimed Christ’s death, His resurrection, and that salvation could come only through Him (Acts 4:10-12).

Peter again appealed to Scripture, quoting Psalm 118:22, saying that Jesus was the stone whom the builders rejected, but which became the very corner stone. Again, he most likely learned this Old Testament reference from Jesus.

In Peter and the apostles’ four-sentence defense before the Sanhedrin in Acts 5, they were able to include Christ’s death on the cross, His resurrection, the need for repentance, and the benefit of forgiveness of sins (Acts 5:29-32).

After the persecution of the church following the martyrdom of Stephen, Philip journeyed thirty-five miles north of Jerusalem to preach the gospel to the people of Samaria. Luke didn’t record any of his actual sermons but simply wrote that Philip was “proclaiming Christ to them” (Acts 8:5).

I don’t think that Philip stood and just repeated, “Christ! Christ! Christ! Christ!” No, he proclaimed that Jesus had died on the cross, was resurrected, and that, through Him, forgiveness of sins was available to all who repented and believed. This must have been the case because Philip immediately baptized all his converts (Acts 8:12-13). The believers wanted to identify with the one who had identified Himself with them.

After his “Samaria crusade,” Philip was instructed by an angel to journey to the road that descends from Jerusalem to Gaza, where he crossed paths with an Ethiopian eunuch traveling in his chariot. Providentially, the eunuch was reading from the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah when he met Philip, and he asked him to explain what he had been reading.

There could have been no better scripture in the Old Testament from which to preach the gospel. Isaiah 53 includes the truths of humanity’s guilt (53:5-6, 11-12), God’s wrath (53:4-6, 10), Christ’s atoning death (53:4-12), (obviously) the preordination of Christ’s death, and His resurrection (53:10, 12).

Luke recorded Philip’s response to the eunuch’s question: “And Philip opened his mouth, and beginning from this Scripture he preached Jesus to him” (Acts 8:35).

Philip evidently presented the message of the cross so effectively that the eunuch himself asked to be baptized when he spotted water along the road. He had heard the good news that Jesus had died for his sins on the cross and wanted to identify with the one who had identified with him. The eunuch confessed he believed that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and then Philip immediately baptized him (see Acts 8:36-38).

Why Mention Judgment?

In the tenth chapter of Acts, we find the narrative of the first preaching of the gospel to the Gentiles. Having been supernaturally directed to journey to Caesarea to the home of Cornelius, Peter found this Roman centurion “who feared God with all his household” (Acts 10:2).

Speaking to Cornelius and his family and servants, Peter proclaimed that Jesus had performed miracles by the power of God (10:38), that He had died on a cross (10:39), that He had risen on the third day and had been seen by many people (10:40-41), that He had been appointed by God “as Judge of the living and the dead” (10:42), that the prophets had spoken of Him (10:43), and that everyone who believes in Him receives forgiveness of sins (10:43).

Obviously the truths of humanity’s guilt and God’s wrath were implied in Peter’s sermon as he mentioned that Jesus had been appointed by God as Judge of the living and the dead and that He was now offering forgiveness of sins.

Interestingly, we learn in this passage of Scripture something that Jesus commanded His apostles to proclaim, which heretofore had not been revealed. Peter stated that Jesus “ordered us to preach to the people, and solemnly to testify that this is the One who has been appointed by God as Judge of the living and the dead” (Acts 10:42).

Thus we can confidently say that the proclamation that “Jesus is God’s appointed Judge” is a part of the gospel. The clear implication is that there is a future judgment coming when all people will be judged. If people are going to be judged, then obviously there are rewards and punishments, otherwise judgment is meaningless.

Can you see that if there is no future judgment, then Christ’s death, again, is meaningless? If there is no future judgment, then there was no reason for Jesus to die because there is no hell to escape or heaven to gain. Proclaiming the future judgment is a part of proclaiming the gospel. The apostle Paul affirmed this in his letter to the Romans:

On the day when, according to my gospel, God will judge the secrets of men through Christ Jesus (Rom. 2:16, emphasis added).

The future judgment is something we can and should mention when we proclaim the gospel.

Can you see how this gospel differs dramatically from the “accept Jesus and get a better life” gospel? The primary reason that people should come to Jesus is because they understand that they desperately need their sins forgiven and that forgiveness is only possible through Jesus and His atoning sacrifice. Thus, people need to be aware of their need before they will respond to the gospel. Our preaching should help people see their need for a Savior.

The only thing people believe when they hear the “accept Jesus and get a better life gospel” is that if they invite Jesus into their hearts, they will get a better life. This is why many of those “converts” stop attending church and fall away from God once their life improves (or doesn’t improve).

For years I wondered why some of my converts were so unfaithful and seemed uninterested in growing in God. The reason was because they initially came to God to improve their situation in life–to make more money, to repair their marriage, to develop good friendships, and so on. Certainly God will provide those things for His children, but people should come to God to have their sins forgiven and to escape the wrath they deserve, which Jesus endured in their place on the cross. That is the starting place.

Preaching Christ Crucified

In addition to Peter’s sermons, Luke recorded several of the apostle Paul’s gospel messages. In Acts 13, we read about Paul’s preaching to the Jews in a synagogue in Pisidian Antioch. His sermon (as I’m sure you expected by now) included the mention of Jesus’ death on the cross (13:27-30), His resurrection and appearance to many witnesses (13:30-37), His fulfillment of the predictions of the prophets (particularly in His resurrection) (13:23, 27, 33-37), and that through Him forgiveness of sins is offered (13:38). Paul concluded his sermon by quoting from the prophet Habakkuk a warning of God’s judgment that is directed at those who will not believe in God’s amazing work (13:41).

In his sermon, Paul quoted portions of Psalms 2 and 16, and Isaiah 55, to prove that the Messiah’s resurrection had been predicted by the prophets.

In Acts 17 we read of Paul’s preaching to Jews in Thessalonica, and although Luke did not record Paul’s sermons there, he does mention their general content:

And according to Paul’s custom, he went to them, and for three Sabbaths reasoned with them from the Scriptures, explaining and giving evidence that the Christ had to suffer and rise again from the dead, and saying, “This Jesus whom I am proclaiming to you is the Christ” (Acts 17:2-3, emphasis added).

Paul concentrated on proving from the Old Testament (as we call it) that the Messiah had to suffer, die, and rise from the dead.

In Athens we find Paul speaking to Gentiles, “preaching Jesus and the resurrection” (Acts 17:18). Paul did alter his message somewhat. He first laid a foundation about God that would be unnecessary for a Jewish audience. Then he noticeably excluded any reference to Old Testament messianic predictions that would have been all but meaningless to his Gentile hearers. Still, Paul included the essential elements of the gospel:

“Therefore having overlooked the times of ignorance, God is now declaring to men that all everywhere should repent, because He has fixed a day in which He will judge the world in righteousness through a Man whom He has appointed, having furnished proof to all men by raising Him from the dead” (Acts 17:30-31, emphasis added).

I wonder, if he were alive today, if Paul would be criticized by some modern ministers for preaching such a negative message. They might tell him not to mention God’s future judgment and that repentance is not a requirement to be saved–it is only a doctrine preached by legalists!

Paul, on many occasions, did face opposition to his “narrow-minded” message, but that never deterred him from preaching the truth. In the next chapter of Acts (chapter 18) we read of Paul journeying to Corinth, where he remained for eighteen months. Again, we have no record of Paul’s actual sermons, but we do know what he preached there from reading his later letter to the Christians in Corinth:

For I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified (1 Cor. 2:2).

He also testified in the same letter,

For indeed Jews ask for signs, and Greeks search for wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, to Jews a stumbling block, and to Gentiles foolishness, but to those who are the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the Wisdom of God (1 Cor. 1:22-24, emphasis added).

And reminding them of his initial message, Paul said,

Now I make known to you, brethren, the gospel which I preached to you….For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures (1 Cor. 15:1, 3-4, emphasis added).

The content of Paul’s messages in Corinth underscores his conviction to proclaim the true gospel without wavering.

A Convicting Message

Paul’s imprisonment in Caesarea provided opportunities for him to personally share the gospel. His meetings with Felix, governor of Judea, and King Herod Agrippa II are recorded by Luke in the final chapters of Acts.

Paul discussed four subjects with Felix, a man whom history records as “indulging in every kind of barbarity and lust, [who] exercised the power of a king in the spirit of a slave.”47

The four topics Paul discussed with him were (1) faith in Jesus Christ, (2) righteousness, (3) self-control, and (4) the judgment to come (see Acts 24:24-25). Even before this, the Bible tells us that Felix had a knowledge of “the Way” and therefore had already been exposed to the gospel (see Acts 24:22).

Paul discussed “faith in Jesus Christ” because that is how a person is saved.

He discussed “righteousness” because all people are unrighteous in God’s eyes, and the gospel reveals God’s righteousness (see Rom. 1:17). God righteously punished the sins of the world in Christ. When people believe in the Lord Jesus, they are made righteous.

Third, Paul discussed “self-control.” Was Paul advising Felix how to lose weight if he’d only exercise self-control? No, he was discussing the fact that all people are out-of-control sinners who need a Savior.

Fourth, Paul discussed “the judgment to come.” That is, all people will have to stand before God’s judgment seat one day, and if they have not received on earth the pardon God offered them through Christ, then they will be eternally confined to hell. All these things Paul shared with an unsaved person.

The result was that Felix “became frightened” (Acts 24:25) and dismissed Paul from his presence.

Why was Felix so frightened? I think it is safe to say that the Holy Spirit convicted him. Of what does the Holy Spirit convict people? Read what Jesus said:

“And He [the Holy Spirit], when He comes, will convict the world concerning sin, and righteousness, and judgment; concerning sin, because they do not believe in Me” (John 16:8-9, emphasis added).

Is it any wonder that Paul spoke to Felix about the very things Jesus had promised the Holy Spirit would convict people?

If the Holy Spirit will convict people of sin, righteousness, and judgment, then we ought to be speaking of those things to unbelievers. It is obvious that the Holy Spirit does not do our work for us–He helps us do our work. He will only convict people of those things when we speak of them.

I’ve seen unsaved people come under so much conviction when they heard the authentic gospel preached that they literally shook. And they should have! I can guarantee, however, that you won’t find anyone shaking in his seat when he hears the “accept Jesus and get a better life” gospel!

Again, I can’t help but wonder how Paul might have been criticized if he were alive today and shared the gospel in the same manner as he did with Felix. How many would call him too negative or a “hell-fire and brimstone” or “gloom and doom” preacher?

Lastly, Paul was given opportunity to defend himself before King Agrippa, the grandson of the man who ordered the slaughter of Bethlehem’s babies, and the son of the man who had martyred the apostle James.

In Paul’s defense before this ungodly king, he mentions humanity’s guilt (26:18), Christ’s sufferings and death (26:23), His resurrection (26:8, 15-16, 23), the prediction by the prophets of Christ’s sufferings (26:22, 27), the forgiveness of sins made possible through Christ (26:18), and the necessity of repentance and faith for salvation (26:18, 20). Did you expect anything less?

The Importance of the Resurrection

It has been observed by many that the apostles seemed to emphasize Christ’s resurrection above all else in their proclamation of the gospel. The resurrection is certainly emphasized as much as Christ’s death on the cross. (And of course, if Jesus hadn’t died, He could not have been raised.) Why is the resurrection so important?

The resurrection is vital for several reasons. Most importantly, Jesus’ resurrection proved that the penalty for our sin had been paid in full because Jesus was no longer under the wrath of God. God’s justice had been satisfied; thus death could no longer hold Him. As Paul also wrote in his letter to the Romans:

He [Jesus] who was delivered up because of our transgressions, and was raised because of our justification (Rom. 4:25).

Thomas J. Crawford (quoting a Mr. Horsley), wrote concerning this passage:

We had sinned–therefore the Savior died; our justification was secured by His obedience unto death–therefore He was raised again from the dead. I may add, that this interpretation of the latter clause throws light on an otherwise obscure statement of the same apostle, 1 Cor. 15:17, “If Christ be not raised, your faith is vain, ye are yet in your sins;” that is to say, “If Christ be not raised, you have no ground for trusting that His death has been accepted as an effectual atonement for you.”48

Second, the doctrine of the resurrection is important simply because the message of Jesus’ substitutionary death on the cross is not very convincing if Jesus remained dead. When we hear of criminals who are executed in the electric chair or gas chamber, we don’t normally think of them as dying for our sins, but for their own.

Can you imagine the reaction of people in that day if they heard someone saying that Jesus had been executed by the Roman authorities, and now He, though dead, was offering them forgiveness for their sins? How can a dead criminal save anyone?

But if we proclaim that Jesus was raised from the dead on the third day and was seen by many witnesses, then obviously His death on the cross had some significance. This person who died on the cross must be somebody special.

Unfortunately, our culture has become numb to the message of Christ’s resurrection, due partly to the fact that practically everyone has heard the Easter story repeatedly or been exposed in some way to what is commemorated on Easter Sunday. People never stop to think about how incredible it was that Jesus repeatedly predicted His death by crucifixion and His resurrection after three days, and then actually pulled it off.

If Jesus really did rise from the dead, then we ought to listen to everything He had to say, before and after His resurrection. The resurrection was in a class by itself compared to other miracles–it authenticated Christ’s deity like nothing else. Just as the apostle Paul wrote in the introduction to his letter to the Romans:

Christ Jesus…who was declared the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead… (Rom. 1:1a, 4a).

Third, the fact of the resurrection was also essential to validate the apostles’ claim that God had appointed Jesus as Judge of the living and the dead (which is something Jesus ordered the apostles to preach–see Acts 10:42). How could a dead man judge anyone?

How’s Your Gospel?

When we began our survey of Acts, I realized it might become tedious to repeatedly read that the same consistent message was proclaimed by the early apostles. But I wanted you to see that the true gospel message contains several essential elements–some of which have been edited from the gospel we so often hear today.

We must never forget, as Jesus Himself said, that His blood was shed for the forgiveness of sins (Matt. 26:28). Our gospel, above all else, offers people forgiveness for their sins. Therefore, we should not think that mentioning humanity’s sinfulness, God’s wrath, or the future judgment is incompatible with preaching the gospel. Yes, God has an inheritance for those who are saved, and we can receive more from God than forgiveness. Forgiveness, however, is the starting place. Only one who is forgiven can receive God’s other blessings.

Of course, there are those who only preach about humanity’s sins and God’s judgment, never offering anyone the solution, which is the message of Jesus’ death on the cross. That, too, is a terrible extreme. We should preach a balanced gospel, emphasizing certain aspects as the Holy Spirit directs us to tailor our message to certain audiences but never completely excluding any essential element.

So here is a summary of the gospel presented in Acts:

“Jesus was a man sent by God, attested by the many miracles He performed. Yet He was condemned and crucified by evil men, but in so doing, He fulfilled the preordained plan of God, because the ancient prophets predicted His sufferings and death. After three days, He rose from the dead and was seen by many witnesses; this, too, was predicted by the prophets. Now He has commanded us to preach that men everywhere should repent, because He will one day judge every person. He is offering to all the forgiveness of their sins. So repent, believe in Him, and be baptized in His name!”

How does your gospel square up with that?

Footnotes

41. By “Evangelical” I’m referring to any church where people claim to be “born again.”

42. Col. 3:5

43. Francis Asbury, as quoted by L.C. Rudolph in Francis Asbury, p. 154.

44. Charles G. Finney, Revivals of Religion, pp. 205-7.

45. C.H. Spurgeon, Lectures to My Students, p. 181.

46. R.W. Dale, The Atonement, p. 348.

47. As so said the Roman historian Tacitus in his Histories V, 9.

48. Thomas J. Crawford, The Doctrine of the Holy Scripture Respecting the Atonement, pp. 27-28.

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Chapter Seven – The Cross Proclaimed

Chapter Four – The Savior Presented

Christ's Incredible Cross, Chapter Four

Thus far we’ve learned that the death of Christ was preordained from the foundation of the world, prefigured by millions of animal sacrifices spanning thousands of years, and predicted by the prophets for centuries. There was no halfhearted preparation for the event that would make it possible for God to justly offer a free and full pardon to billions of sinners!

Finally, God’s chosen time out of all eternity arrived–the time for the fulfillment of His eternal plan; the time when God would become a man. The apostle Paul refers to that very special period of history as “the fullness of the time”:

But when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law, in order that He might redeem those who were under the Law, that we might receive adoption as sons (Gal. 4:4-5).

The birth of Jesus in Bethlehem of Judea was not the beginning of a new life, as in the case of every other human birth, but was the continuation of an eternal life. The Son of God did not begin His existence in a stable but existed from eternity past. He became a man but was still fully God. As the prophet Isaiah said, “For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us”(Is. 9:6). The human child was born, but the divine Son was given.

Why the Incarnation?

Why did Jesus become a man? The simple answer is that He had to become a human being in order to die for humanity’s sins. As the above quoted scripture states, Jesus was “born of a woman.” That is another way of saying that He became a human being. His purpose in becoming a man, as Paul stated, was to redeem us. Of course, our redemption was accomplished by His sacrificial death, but unless He had lived as a man, He could not have died as a man.

Jesus was born to die. Certainly, Jesus did many wonderful things during His earthly ministry, but those were not the primary reason for His incarnation. As He Himself proclaimed, He came “to give His life a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45).

The primary purpose of the incarnation was so that the God-man could suffer and die. This truth is contained in other scriptures as well. For example, we read in the book of Hebrews:

Since then the children [those of us who would believe in Him] share in flesh and blood [we have human bodies], He Himself likewise also partook of the same [a human body], that through death He might render powerless him who had the power of death, that is, the devil…”(Heb. 2:14-15, emphasis added).

Jesus “partook of flesh and blood” so that He could physically die. Through His death, Satan was rendered powerless. (We will study Satan’s demise in a later chapter.)

His Birth a Revelation

Even the story of Christ’s conception helps us understand the purpose for His incarnation.

We read that an angel appeared in a dream to Joseph and instructed him to name Mary’s Child Jesus, or the Hebrew Yehoshua, which means “Jehovah saves.” The angel gave the reason for this name when he explained, “It is He who will save His people from their sins” (Matt. 1:21).

Looking back, we realize that it was only through Jesus’ death that we have been saved from our sins. It’s easy for us to see the prediction of the death of Christ even in the disclosure of His miraculous conception. The angel didn’t say, “Jesus will heal and teach and deliver people from demons.” All of those things were significant in themselves, but none compares with the primary purpose of His incarnation–to die for our sins as a man.

On the night of Jesus’ birth, an angel also appeared to some shepherds and once again proclaimed the reason for the Messiah’s birth:

“For today in the city of David there has been born for you a Savior, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11, emphasis added).

Notice the angel said Jesus had been born for them. In addition, notice He had been born for them a Savior–the one who would accomplish salvation. Again, we realize that salvation was accomplished through His death. For that reason, Jesus became a man.

The apostles Paul and John respectively add their testimonies to this fact:

It is a trustworthy statement, deserving full acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners (1 Tim. 1:15, emphasis added).

And you know that He appeared in order to take away sins (1 John 3:5, emphasis added).

According to Scripture, the incarnation was essential for our salvation. Unless God became a man, there would be no way we could hope to escape the punishment we deserved.

Fully Tested

Not only was it essential that God become a man, but it was also crucial for that God-man to live for an extended period of time on earth. He had to be proven sinless in order to qualify as our substitute. The only way He could be declared sinless was to be tempted with the temptations that all other people have faced.

Only one without guilt could justly serve as our substitute, otherwise He would be deserving of the same condemnation as we. If a man on death row volunteered to die in place of his friend who was also on death row, his offer would be unacceptable for the simple reason that he is under sentence of death for his own offense. It would take someone who was without sin to redeem us.

If it had only been necessary for God to become a man and then die, without living a life full of temptation, Jesus could very well have completed His mission by dying with the other babies of Bethlehem who were killed by Herod’s cruel decree. It was necessary, however, for Jesus to be fully tested and proven sinless before dying.

As we examine Scripture, it seems safe to say that God does not consider a man to have been sufficiently tested until he has reached at least the age of thirty. For example, Joseph, after many trials, was exalted in Egypt at age thirty.20 David, after years of difficulties, was exalted to kingship at age thirty.21 The Levites entered their priestly responsibilities at age thirty.22 Very possibly, Ezekiel began his ministry at age thirty.23 Jesus entered His ministry at about age thirty after first being led by the Holy Spirit into the wilderness to be severely tempted by the devil.24

Moreover, we must not think that the wilderness temptation was the first and last time Jesus ever faced temptation. Scripture plainly states that after Jesus’ temptation episode in the wilderness, the devil “departed from Him until an opportune time” (Luke 4:13). It is clear that Jesus was further tempted later.

Jesus had also been tempted prior to His episode with Satan in the wilderness. The writer of Hebrews stated that Jesus was “tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin” (Heb. 4:15b). Jesus was tempted in every way, all through His life, just as we are. We have been tempted as children, as teenagers, and as adults. So was Jesus.

No doubt He was tempted to perform slipshod work in His father’s carpentry business or to cheat a customer in some other way. Jesus was tempted to lie, to lust, to hate, but He never yielded. In so doing, He proved Himself sinless. He demonstrated His qualification to die for humanity as the sinless substitute, which God’s righteousness required if anyone was to be saved.

Think about it: If Jesus had yielded to a single temptation during His lifetime it would have meant that none of us could be saved. Praise God that Jesus never sinned!

Why Was Jesus Water Baptized?

After thirty years of living the life of a human being, after thirty years of facing daily temptation, after thirty years of sinless submission to God’s will, Jesus entered into His ministry. It seems strange, however, that His first act was to be baptized by John in the Jordan River.

John initially objected to Jesus’ request for baptism, saying, “I have need to be baptized by You, and do You come to me?” (Matt. 3:14). At that point in time, John didn’t know that Jesus was the Messiah (see John 1:33). Thus his remark reveals that he knew how perfect Jesus was. John, a holy man, felt unworthy because Jesus was much holier.

Jesus answered John’s objection by stating, “Permit it at this time; for in this way it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness” (Matt. 3:15).

If sinless Jesus had nothing of which to repent, why did He insist on being baptized? There can be only one reason: He was identifying Himself with sinners–a foreshadowing of the primary purpose of His coming, which would be fulfilled on the cross when He would bear every person’s sins. His death would truly “fulfill all righteousness” by providing the means whereby God could righteously forgive undeserving sinners.

Concerning Christ’ baptism, James Denney wrote:

Here in the baptism we see…Jesus numbering Himself with the transgressors, submitting to be baptized with their baptism, identifying Himself with them in their relation to God as sinners, making all their responsibilities His own….It was no accident that now, and not at some other hour, the Father’s voice declared Him the beloved Son, the chosen One in whom His soul delighted. For in so identifying Himself with sinful men, in so making their last and most dreadful responsibilities His own, Jesus approved Himself the true Son of the Father, the true Servant and Representative of Him whose name from of old is Redeemer.25

The foreshadowing of the cross at Jesus’ baptism is further substantiated by a later statement Jesus made concerning His death, which He metaphorically referred to as a baptism:

“But I have a baptism to undergo, and how distressed I am until it is accomplished!” (Luke 12:50).

� It seems quite reasonable to surmise that Jesus was referring here to His death. This becomes especially clear in light of a later statement in which He used the same metaphor (baptism) as a reference to the sufferings He would shortly endure on the cross (see Mark 10:36-40).

We therefore see that not only was the purpose of Christ’s incarnation revealed at His conception and birth, but also His sacrificial death for sinners was foreshadowed at the inauguration of His ministry. It was then that John the Baptist introduced Him as “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29b).

“I Lay Down My Life”

Throughout the three years of His ministry, Jesus made numerous references to His death. In fact, such statements became more frequent as the final day approached. Many of the early references were purposely vague, but nevertheless, are clear to those of us who read them from a post-crucifixion view.

For example, in His discourse with Nicodemus, Jesus predicted both His crucifixion and its accomplishment: “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up; that whoever believes may in Him have eternal life” (John 3:14-15).

When the Pharisees complained to Jesus that His disciples never fasted, He replied that the bridegroom’s attendants do not fast as long as the bridegroom is with them. Jesus went on to predict that one day the bridegroom would be taken away; then the attendants would fast (see Luke 5:33-35).

When the scribes and Pharisees requested a sign from Him, Jesus replied that there would be no sign given but the sign of Jonah. What did that mean? He would spend three days and nights in the heart of the earth just as Jonah did in the belly of the fish (see Matt. 12:38-40).

In John 6 we read of Jesus telling His Jewish audience, “I am the living bread that came down out of heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he shall live forever; and the bread also which I shall give for the life of the world is My flesh” (John 6:51).

Later in John’s Gospel, Jesus proclaimed, “I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep….For this reason the Father loves Me, because I lay down My life that I may take it again” (John 10:11,17).

These statements alone make it clear that Jesus viewed His death as His most significant work.

Predicting His Own Death

Anyone who surveys the four Gospels can’t help but notice what seems to be a disproportionately large amount of space devoted to Christ’s final days and crucifixion. Of a combined total of eighty-nine chapters, twenty-six concern themselves with the events of Jesus’ final week. Potentially, the Gospel writers could have recorded incidents of any of the twelve thousand days of Jesus’ life, yet they were inspired to devote almost one-third of their writings to reporting the final six or seven days of His earthly life. Obviously, the Holy Spirit wants to draw our attention to Jesus’ death.

As the culminating day of history drew closer, Jesus predicted His death much more frequently and plainly than any time previously, underscoring its necessity. It would be no accident that He would die a horrible death. It was God’s preordained plan. It was the primary purpose for His coming.

Mark’s Gospel records eight separate occasions when Jesus predicted His death.26

The first, recorded in chapter eight, occurred directly after Peter had made his impressive confession of Jesus’ messiahship and divinity. Now that His disciples knew who He was, it was important that they understand what He came to accomplish.

After commending Peter and then warning His disciples not to reveal His identity, Jesus “began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again” (Mark 8:31).

The Scripture goes on to say that “He was stating the matter plainly,” with the result that “Peter took Him aside and began to rebuke Him” (Mark 8:32). That the divine Son of God, the Messiah of Israel, should die was unthinkable to Peter. Surely, Jesus had made a misstatement. Peter was so certain that the death of Jesus could not possibly be God’s will that he boldly rebuked the Master, first taking Him aside so as not to embarrass Him!

But Jesus’ response surely must have shocked Peter. Having been commended just a minute before for his divinely-given understanding of Jesus’ identity, now Peter finds himself being rebuked for adopting a humanistic perspective of God’s ultimate purpose in sending Christ:

But turning around and seeing His disciples, He rebuked Peter, and said, “Get behind Me, Satan; for you are not setting your mind on God’s interests, but man’s” (Mark 8:33, emphasis added).

It is clear that Jesus wanted to leave a lasting impression upon Peter and the disciples’ minds concerning God’s viewpoint of His imminent death: It was God’s intention for Him to die. Any other perspective was unacceptable.

And why was it God’s intention that Jesus die? Because only then could the holy God, the Judge of the universe, justly offer a free pardon to the human beings He loved so much.

“The Hour Has Come”

John’s Gospel, although not recording Jesus’ specific predictions of His death, does include a repeated use of what is first a cryptic phrase, but which later is revealed as an obvious reference to the hour of His crucifixion. I list the first four references below:

And Jesus said to her, “Woman what do I have to do with you? My hour has not yet come” (John 2:4, emphasis added).

“Go up to the feast yourselves; I do not go up to this feast because My time has not yet fully come” (John 7:8, emphasis added).

They were seeking therefore to seize Him; and no man laid his hand on Him, because His hour had not yet come (John 7:30, emphasis added).

These words He spoke in the treasury, as He taught in the temple; and no one seized him, because His hour had not yet come (John 8:20, emphasis added).

It becomes clear in the third and fourth references that “the hour” of which John wrote had something to do with Jesus falling into the hands of men. The fifth, sixth, and seventh references listed below all occurred during the final few days of His earthly life, and “the hour” becomes obvious as a reference to His death:

Now before the Feast of the Passover, Jesus knowing that His hour had come that He should depart out of this world to the Father… (John 13:1, emphasis added).

These things Jesus spoke; and lifting up His eyes to heaven, He said, “Father, the hour has come; glorify Thy Son, that the Son may glorify Thee…” (John 17:1, italics mine).

And Jesus answered them, saying, “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains by itself alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit” (John 12:23-24, emphasis added).

“The hour” cannot be anything but the time of Jesus’ death. It would be “the hour” He had spoken about for three years and which none of His disciples understood.

In the seventh-listed saying above, Jesus quietly lifted the edge of the shroud that hid the unimaginable results of His dying: Just as the planting of a dead grain of wheat insures a harvest of grain, so the death of the Son of God would produce a harvest of sons. We would be born again.

And how significant was that “hour” of which John repeatedly wrote and to which Jesus referred? Jesus continued:

“Now My soul has become troubled; and what shall I say, ‘Father, save Me from this hour’? But for this purpose I came to this hour. Father, glorify Thy name” (John 12:27-28a, emphasis added).

The hour of His death was the purpose for His coming.

The synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) all record one very important event that occurred just a few days before Jesus’ crucifixion. We read that Peter, James, and John climbed an unnamed mountain with Jesus. There He was transfigured before them, and Matthew tells us that “His face shone like the sun, and His garments became as white as light” (Matt. 17:2).

At the same time, Moses and Elijah appeared, apparently having been taken from paradise for this special occasion. Mark tells us only that they were conversing with Jesus, but Luke tells us the subject of their conversation:

Moses and Elijah, who, appearing in glory, were speaking of His departure which He was about to accomplish at Jerusalem (Luke 9:30b-31, emphasis added).

Their topic comes as no surprise, as certainly Moses and Elijah would be supremely interested in the event that would make possible the forgiveness of the sins of the world. Indeed, it would be the event that made it possible for their own sins to be forgiven during their lives “on credit” for that which Jesus would achieve.

It is also interesting that Luke speaks of Jesus’ departure as an accomplishment. His death was much more than an exodus from this world.

If the reason for Jesus’ conception and birth was to save people from their sins; if the purpose of His incarnation and earthly life was primarily to qualify Him to be our sinless substitute; if the Holy Spirit obviously inspired the Gospel writers to spotlight the final week of Jesus’ life and the events surrounding His crucifixion; and if Jesus Himself repeatedly predicted His sufferings and death, going so far as to proclaim that they were the reason He came into the world, should not we then view Christ’s death as the most significant aspect of His earthly life?

Footnotes

20. See Gen. 41:46.

21. See 2 Sam. 5:4.

22. See Num. 4:2-3, 22-23, 29-30, 46-47.

23. See Ezek. 1:1.

24. See Matt. 4:1.

25. James Denney, The Death of Christ, p. 15.

26. Mark 8:31-33; 9:12; 9:31; 10:32-34; 10:45; 12:1-8; 14:7-8; 14:22-28

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Christ’s Incredible Cross » Chapter Four – The Savior Presented