Showing posts with label Christology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christology. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 January 2012

Christ as the Faithful Israelite

One of the key underlying concepts in the New Testament is that Jesus Christ is the one faithful Israelite through whom God works to bless the world. That is part of what his mission was to be as the Messiah.

Too often in evangelical theology we have been guilty of downplaying or ignoring the fact that Christ was first and foremost the long-promised and prophesied King of the Jews. And it is precisely because he is the Jewish Messiah that he could be the Saviour of the world and the King of kings.

Instead, we often seem to talk as if God could have chosen to use more-or-less anyone as his appointed Saviour as long as he made sure they were sinless (by virtue of the virgin birth), in order that they could end up an innocent sacrificial victim dying as our substitute to take our sins away and give us his righteousness in return.

Now, of course, nothing in this presentation is wrong. It is true that Christ could only be the Saviour because he was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary and was born sinless. It is true he was an innocent sacrificial victim and that he died as our substitute on the cross to take our sins away and rose again that we might be justified in his righteousness. Yet if the story of Israel is missed out and if we ignore the fact that Jesus came as the Jewish Messiah, then we will miss out a whole lot of biblical nuances from the overall picture presented.

God's plan was always to bless and save the world through the Messiah, through the promised Redeemer. As far back as Genesis 3:15 this is promised. "I will put hostility between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed. He will strike your head, and you will strike his heel." (HCSB).

But it is also clear that the Redeemer would be born not just as a human child, but as one of Abraham's descendants: "I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you." (Genesis 12:3, NIV). "And through your offspring all nations on earth will be blessed." (Genesis 22:18, NIV).

God's purpose was therefore always to choose Israel as a means of bring salvation to the whole world. Yet, there was a problem. Israel as a nation was far from perfect. Israel was chosen to be "light bearers" for the world: "I will make you as a light for the nations, that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth." (Isaiah 49:6, ESV). Yet the people time and again chose darkness rather than light. They always revealed themselves to be "in Adam" - just as sinful at heart as all the rest of humanity.

This is why though Israel was called to be faithful to God, it was going to take an extra special Israelite who would actually be able to fulfil the divine covenant promises and fulfil the divinely appointed mission for Israel. It was going to take the Messiah to do for Israel and for the world what Israel could never do for herself.

Christ's coming as Saviour and Lord was not God's Plan B. He only ever had a Plan A: to save the world through Israel.

How he did it is extraordinary in its sheer scale and wisdom and utterly surprising grace. All the gospels make it clear, but especially Matthew's Gospel, that Christ came to re-enact the failed history of Israel in his own life and person, except that where Israel failed over and over again, the Messiah, Jesus would not fail but would fulfil his divinely appointed destiny - all the way to death, his death on the cross, and right through to his rising from the dead on the third day.

Matthew's Gospel is basically structured to show the parallels between Christ's life and Israel's history. Like Israel, Jesus is called out of Egypt (only Matthew focuses on the Egyptian period of exile when being hunted by Herod). He then goes into the wilderness for 40 days (compared to the nation's 40 years in the wilderness). Like Moses with the Ten Commandments, Christ goes up a mountain to teach the people the truth about God's law in the Sermon on the Mount. And so on. Parallel after parallel until we reach that last passover in which Christ offers himself as the unblemished lamb that takes away sin and breaks the power of death.

Through his life, death and resurrection, the Messiah redefines who the people of God are around himself, so that he becomes their representative and what is true of him, then becomes true of them too. This re-booting of Israel as God's people (if we can use that modern phrase) includes such clues as choosing twelve apostles (the number twelve tying in with the twelve tribes of Israel), talking about Christ's people being the true temple of God - and by implication not the Temple in Jerusalem, and so on.

As people respond to the gospel message in faith they enter into union with Christ, become part of the people of God, and receive all the blessings of salvation that belong to God's people in Christ (Ephesians 1).

N. T. Wright sums it up like this (discussing Romans 3:21-31): "And, beginning in 3.21, he provides a fresh answer to the question, an answer not available to writers like 4 Ezra: God has unveiled his dikaiosyne in the faithful Messiah, Jesus, the one in whom at last we find an Israelite faithful to God’s purpose, the one through whose death sin has been dealt with, the one through whom God has now called into being a renewed people among whom Jews and Gentiles are welcome on equal terms."

So much of the richness of biblical teaching is lost if we neglect or silence the link between Israel, Christ and the saving purposes of God. Nothing is lost, and much is gained when we include the fact that Jesus wasn't just acting as a sinless man in his mission, but as the faithful Israelite whose life was fully and comprehensively in line with God's will for the glory of God and the rescuing and renewing of the entire cosmos.

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

The King of God's Kingdom


The King of God's Kingdom
by David Seccombe
Paternoster Press

David Seccombe's The King of God's Kingdom is a massive tome of over 600 pages, but it was so easy and enjoyable to read that it seemed shorter.

The book's subtitle is "A Solution to the Puzzle of Jesus". Seccombe identifies the "puzzle" in a series of questions at the beginning of the book. Essentially it is what is the relationship between the Jesus of the gospels and his teaching and the Christianity of his followers, the Christ of the letters, and the apostles' teaching. Or to put it another way, how does Jesus' gospel of the Kingdom of God with its historical, social and political implications fit in (if it does) with the apostles' gospel of new birth, salvation by faith, justification and so forth.

Seccombe's solution is not a radical one, but an evangelical one. His conclusion is that Jesus established the Kingdom of God by defeating the powers of this world including sin, death and Satan, but left it to his followers to extend the Kingdom to the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8). He writes (pp. 601-02):

As surely as the backbone of Satan's power was destroyed, God's kingdom was established in the world and the way was clear for men and women of all nations to be drawn to the fellowship of the crucified but victorious King-Messiah. The task of gathering the new age community Jesus gave to his followers. Having defeated the central rebellious power, he sent them out into lands which were still very much in the power of evil - much as a victorious general might divide his forces, sending them into the far reaches of a newly conquered land to declare his victory, offer amnesty, and a place in the new order to all who would lay down their arms and surrender their allegiance to the king.

The book reads in part like a harmony of the gospels, but it is much more than this. It's main concern is to show how what Jesus did during his life is connected with his life's work (including his death and resurrection) of establishing God's Kingdom on earth.

My only real criticism is that because the author has one foot in the camp of the academy and one foot in the camp of the community of faith, he sometimes overstresses the fact that many scholars do not take the gospel accounts of miracles and even Jesus' teachings at face value. Time after time, he announces that many do not accept this or that before then giving for the most part fairly standard conservative reasons why we should, in the end, accept what the gospels say. This was a weakness. Perhaps he could have dealt with this issue in a preliminary chapter or an appendix.

Despite this, I really enjoyed reading this book and would warmly recommend it.

Thursday, 11 September 2008

Jesus is Lord

The following was a series of Bible readings and reflections at the evening service on 7 September 2008.

First Reading: Luke 2:8-16

We probably read this passage every year at Christmas, but probably don’t think much about Jesus’ birth at other times of year. That’s a pity really, because the fact that Jesus came to earth, born as a human being, is something we should celebrate all year round. The verse I want us to focus on tonight is verse 11: “This very day in David's town your Saviour was born—Christ the Lord!”

He was Christ the Lord from his birth. Even as a baby lying in that manger, he was King of kings and Lord of lords. The wise men knew that Jesus’ birth was the birth of a king. After all when they travelled from the east and arrived in Palestine they went to Herod’s palace in Jerusalem and asked “Where is the baby born to be the king of the Jews? We saw his star when it came up in the east, and we have come to worship him.” (Matthew 2:2)

They may have originally been seeking the birth of a "just another" royal baby. But the message of the angels to the shepherds recorded by Luke means more than this. By telling them that the birth is of “your Saviour, Christ the Lord” this means not only that the people’s Saviour has come and he is God’s long promised anointed King, the Messiah, but he is the Lord. I believe that by calling him “Christ the Lord” the angels were saying that this baby is God, the LORD, of the Old Testament, now come to earth in flesh and blood.

You probably know that wherever the covenant name of God, Yahweh, appeared in the Old Testament, the Jews would not pronounce it, but substituted the word “Adonai” which means “Lord” each time the name “Yahweh” appears. When the Hebrew Scriptures were translated into Greek, the Septuagint used the Greek word “Kurios” which also means “Lord”. And this is also what you find in most English translations of the Old Testament. So we usually have “The LORD is my shepherd” rather than “Yahweh is my shepherd”. Anyway, the point is that when Luke wrote his gospel in Greek, he was well aware of the Greek Old Testament, and when he wrote: “Your Saviour is born, Christ the Kurios” – Christ the Lord – I believe he was saying that “the LORD” – Yahweh, the God of Israel – was born in Bethlehem.

That is what the apostles taught about this child when he grew up. That is what they believed and confessed before men. That this king – who lived as a humble carpenter’s son and became an itinerant rabbi – was no less than God, the Creator and ruler of the universe.

But they also taught that he was born as a servant – one who came to help and look after the needs of others. That is part of the glory and strangeness of the Christian gospel.

Jesus is Lord – Yahweh born on earth as a human baby, but born as a Servant to help people.

Second Reading: Matthew 27:11-14, 27-31

The King grew up, lived the life God called him to live as a teacher, a healer, a prophet, a royal Son obedient to his Father. But then it all seems to go wrong, doesn’t it? His words and actions challenge the religious leaders of Israel. His message of truth and love, salvation by grace through faith, and living a peaceful life of love and caring for others is radical and challenging to the hypocrisy and legalism of the religious leaders. So, the king is rejected by the people who should be loyal to him. He is put on trial by officials of an earthly empire with blasphemous emperors as its head who claimed to be gods. And he is put to death for crimes he did not commit. The crucifixion of Christ is no less than regicide – the murder of a king. The notice that the Roman soldiers put above his head was true though they didn’t know it: “This is Jesus, the King of the Jews”.

The wonderful thing is that it is through his death, through the King laying down his life because he loves his people so much, that the salvation he proclaimed and the destruction of evil that he stood for are actually accomplished. The Lord sacrifices himself, he becomes the suffering servant portrayed in Isaiah 53 (reading from verses 3 to 10):

“We despised him and rejected him; he endured suffering and pain. No one would even look at him – we ignored him as if he were nothing. But he endured the suffering that should have been ours, the pain that we should have borne. All the while we thought that his suffering was punishment sent by God. But because of our sins he was wounded, beaten because of the evil we did. We are healed by the punishment he suffered, made whole by the blows he received. All of us were like sheep that were lost, each of us going his own way. But the LORD made the punishment fall on him, the punishment all of us deserved. He was treated harshly, but endured it humbly; he never said a word. Like a lamb about to be slaughtered, like a sheep about to be sheared, he never said a word. He was arrested and sentenced and led off to die, and no one cared about his fate. He was put to death for the sins of our people. He was placed in a grave with those who are evil, he was buried with the rich, even though he had never committed a crime or ever told a lie. The LORD says, ‘It was my will that he should suffer; his death was a sacrifice to bring forgiveness. And so he will see his descendants; he will live a long life, and through him my purpose will succeed’."

Jesus is Lord – the Lord who became a sacrificial lamb to take away the sins of the world and saves his people through his death on the cross.

Third Reading: John 20:24-29

Sometimes I think that we glory so much in the cross of Christ that we are in danger of downplaying the importance of the resurrection. But the truth is that without the resurrection, the cross doesn’t have any good news in it. It is once Christ is risen that we can really know that his sacrifice was accepted by God the Father and our sins have been taken away.

And I think it is in the resurrection that Christ reveals more clearly than anywhere else that the claims that he is indeed the Son of God are true. Who else but God can rise from the dead? The disciples seem to have grasped this very quickly. Once they encounter the risen Christ, they are changed men. Before the crucifixion they ran away in fear and hid themselves. After the resurrection, they know absolutely in their hearts that Jesus is the Lord and so they preach him fearlessly and in public, facing persecution, imprisonment and martyrdom with courage. The risen Jesus changes people.

This is particularly true of the apostle Thomas in this passage we read. Thomas is a fascinating character. From what we read of him in the gospels he seems to be a bit of an enigma, he was a pessimistic man and a skeptic, but he was also one of the most loyal followers of Christ. When Christ decided to go to Jerusalem for the last time, Thomas showed both sides of his character in his remark to the other disciples: “Let us go along with the Teacher, so that we may die with him.”

But he is changed when he meets the risen Christ face-to-face. He changes from doubting the resurrection to confessing Christ as his Lord and his God.

Jesus is Lord – our King has conquered death and lives forever, able to change our lives and help us grow in faith, hope and love.

Fourth Reading: Philippians 2:5-11

Today, Christians all over the world proclaim that Jesus is Lord. But we’re the only ones who do – even though there are millions of us. But most people deny Jesus is Lord. Paul tells us in this passage that it will not always be so. One day, everyone will have to confess that Jesus is Lord, even those who have to acknowledge it only when he comes again to judge them.

The fact is that Jesus is Lord, whether we know it or not, whether we accept it or not, whether we like it or not. Jesus is Lord, and for two thousand years the world has hated, mocked and derided that proclamation. Christ is King, higher than any earthly monarch, higher than any spiritual teacher or religion, higher than Satan and the powers of evil.

This was the message that shook imperial Rome to its foundations. This is the message that godless dictators down through the years have tried to stamp out. Jesus is Lord and so no man or woman is Lord. No one else has the same authority. He is higher than anyone else.

He is Lord of all and that means as his followers, he is Lord of our lives. Lord of our time and money, Lord of our friendships and relationships, Lord of our work and leisure, Lord of our pleasures and dislikes. If we are to be faithful to our King, we must obey our King. And I know how hard that can be. I find it hard in my own life certainly. But I know in my heart that Jesus is Lord and deep down I want him to be in charge. I fail him, but I don’t reject him. I think that’s what living as a Christian is like.

Jesus is Lord – one day everyone will acknowledge him. Until then it is our duty and delight as Christians to follow him in faith and obedience.

Fifth Reading: Revelation 19:11-21

I have to admit that I find the Book of Revelation both to be one of the most difficult books of the Bible to understand and one of the most encouraging in the bits I do understand. And I think this passage in Revelation 19 falls into the latter category. It is a glorious picture of Christ as a warrior king, mighty in battle, defeating his enemies and securing victory for his kingdom and the children of his kingdom. He leads a mighty army of heaven’s angels in this vision, riding on a white horse. Everything about this vision says majesty, glory, power and victory for Christ, who is given various titles here that tell us about him.

He is called “Faithful and True” because he has always been faithful both to his Father and to his people. Never disappointing us, never leaving us or failing to do what we need him to do for us. And he is true because he only speaks the truth. He never lies or deceives. He is the greatest prophet who communicates God’s will to us in his teaching.

His eyes are like fire because he sees everything and knows everything. He wears many crowns because he is Lord of all things, all peoples and all times. His robe is covered in blood to show he is the sacrificial lamb, the Saviour of the world.

He is the Word of God. He is the divine Word through which God creates and sustains the universe.

And he is King of kings and Lord of lords. He is the overlord of every other earthly or heavenly or spiritual power. He is the supreme lord and master of all of creation.

And he is the victorious leader of the forces of righteousness which do battle with Satan and his forces and destroy them.

Jesus is Lord – he is Lord of all things, the King to whom everyone and everything else must bow down in worship and one day render total obedience. The amazing thing is that he is also our brother and our friend, the humble carpenter from Nazareth is no less than King of kings and Lord of lords forever.

Monday, 22 January 2007

The Centrality of the Cross

This is the text of a sermon preached to a Guild meeting on 16th January 2007.

The most famous skyscraper in New York City is probably the Empire State Building, which stands in the heart of midtown Manhattan, on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th Street. It was designed by an architect called William Lamb and was built during a single year during the Great Depression, giving work to a great many hard-pressed New Yorkers. The excavation of the foundations started on 22nd January 1930 and the building rose at an average rate of four and half stories each week until it was finished on 13 November 1930. The building stands 1454 feet high. When it was finished, it was the tallest building in the world, and it remained the tallest building until 1974 when the Sears Tower in Chicago was built. In November 1932, a searchlight shining from the top of the Empire State Building was used to signal that Franklin D Roosevelt had won the Presidential election. It could be seen by people up to fifty miles away. Even today, the Empire State Building is still the 9th tallest building in the World, and only the Sears Tower has more than the Empire State Building’s 102 stories.

The building dominates the city skyline. People can see it from all over New York City. It’s so big and so famous, so quintessentially New York that it would be hard to imagine the city without the Empire State Building.

That’s what the cross should be like in our lives. It should be something that so much part of who we are, what we are and what we do. It should be harder for us to imagine life without the cross being part of it than it is for New Yorkers to imagine their city without the Empire State Building or the Statue of Liberty.

The cross is absolutely central to everything we do, from when we first became Christians, right through our lives – our Christian lives and our daily lives, and all the way through to when we end our days. In heaven we will see Jesus Christ and he will still have the nail prints in the palms of his hands.

Our passage tells us why the cross is so important. If you have your bible’s open at the passage in Colossians chapter 1 you can see how the passage can be divided into three distinct sections.
The first section tell us, in verses 15 to 19, that the cross is central to our faith and our life because of who the man who died on the cross really was.

The second section tells us, in verses 20 to 22, that the cross is central to our faith and our life because of what Christ’s death on the cross achieved and for whom it was achieved.

The third section, in verse 23, tells us that the cross is central because of the place it should have in our lives, in our thoughts, our actions, our hearts and minds, especially in the light of the first two sections about who He was and what He’s done for us.

I just want to take a bit of time looking at these three sections and trying to bring out what they mean for us as Christians.

We start with the clear teaching of the first section in verses 15 to 19: one of the reasons the cross is of such significance to us is that the person who died on the cross, Jesus Christ, is none other than the Son of God.

If we truly grasp what this passage says about Jesus Christ, never again will we be satisfied with seeing him as just a great teacher, or a prophet, or a brave martyr for a cause, or a revolutionary, or a tragic failure of history who was so misunderstood he paid for it with his life. All of these man-made idols of Christ are shattered by what Paul says here. This passage in Colossians is Paul’s equivalent of John’s great testimony to the deity of Christ at the start of his Gospel. There John writes:

"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. All things were made through him and without him nothing was made that has been made." And of course later John makes it very clear the "Word" he talks about is Jesus. "The Word became a human being and, full of grace and truth, lived among us. We saw his glory, the glory which he received as the Father’s only Son."

Although there are different emphases and ways of putting things between the different New Testament writers (for example Paul in talking about the Gospel loved to use the picture of a law court and believers being found "Not guilty" – which we call justification; whereas John liked to use the picture of being born again to describe the change in people’s lives when they become Christians), in fact in all the essential things the New Testament writers like Paul and John are absolutely in agreement.

In Colossians 1, Paul’s words echo those of John. "Christ is the visible likeness of the invisible God. He is the first-born Son. superior to all created things [notice not superior to all other created things – he is an uncreated being, as eternal as God the Father]. For through him God created everything...God created the whole universe through him and for him."

Let’s look at what is said here in a little more detail.

Verse 15 puts is in no uncertain terms: "Christ is the visible likeness of the invisible God."
Do you know that saying "Oh, he’s his father’s son all right". I’m usually on the receiving end when I do something my mother doesn’t approve of. But basically it means that there’s no doubt that the two men are father and son because the son thinks and acts just like his dad. That’s really the same thing that’s being said here between God and Jesus. "Christ is the visible likeness of the invisible God." And of course this is not just Paul’s view, this was Jesus’ own view as well. In John 14. Jesus makes the amazing claim: "I am the way, the truth and the life; no one comes to Father except by me. Now that you have known me, he said to them, you will know my Father also, and from now on you do know him and you have seen him." At which point the apostle Philip pipes up with what he must think is a helpful comment: "Lord, show us the Father; that is all we need," he says.

And then Jesus tells him of before continuing with these amazing words: "Whoever has seen me has seen the Father...I am in the Father and the Father is in me."

You see the holy Trinity consists of three persons in one essential unity. They always act together and in agreement with each other, even though they don’t exactly do the same things. There’s a tremendous mystery here. From eternity God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit existed together, but they were invisible. God is a Spirit. That was, until Jesus Christ came to earth that first Christmas, to show us God in a visible form, in the presence of a human body and with a human as well as a divine nature.

And because Christ is God and not a creature of God, he is superior to all created things as verse 15 says.

In the light of the cross especially, how amazing are those words in verses 16 to 19? This Christ is God. He is the creator of all things. God the Father planned the universe, but the Son built it. "God created the whole universe through him" verse 16 says. This ties in with what the Psalms teach. Psalm 33 says that God created the heavens and earth by his Word. Genesis 1 tells us that too. Each time something was created, it happened as soon as God said it. "Let there be light" and there was light and so on. And from John’s Gospel we know that Jesus is the Word of God. So through Jesus, God created everything, by the power of his Word, his Son. But the bit of this verse that really blows my mind is the last three words of verse 16. Not only did God created the whole universe – everything that exists or ever existed outside of God – not only did God create that through Christ, he created it for Christ.

It really is amazing to think about that. Things don’t just exist for no reason. There’s nothing chance about anything in our universe. It’s all here for a reason – and here the Scriptures actually say what the reason is: it all exists because Jesus built it and it all exists for Jesus’ pleasure and purposes. It’s not here primarily for us, although in his grace, God does give us the use of the world and its resources for our pleasure and enjoyment. But it’s really for him.
This is why in verse 17, Paul can make a claim that is either supremely profound or completely outrageous. He says that everything in the universe can only be seen in its true perspective and in its proper place to the extent that we grasp its relationship with Jesus Christ. The example he gives is the church in verse 18. Jesus is the head of the church, not any human leader or any church office, such as popes, archbishops or even earthly monarchs.

Okay, now let’s come back to our focus this evening: the cross. The first reason the cross should be of profound interest to us, and why it should influence every part of our life, is because it was on the cross that this Christ – the true Christ of the Bible, the visible image of God, God himself become a human being, the Creator of the world and the one for whom the world was made – this Christ, died on the cross.

Imagine it. The one for whom the world was made. The one who fashioned the blueprints of the very trees themselves finds himself nailed to a wooden cross and left to die by the creatures he made. It is like a horror story. Frankenstein maybe. The creatures turns against their creator and kills him. It also says a lot about human nature and human sin, that we could turn against our maker and slay him. It is hard to imagine anything more ungrateful, more perverse than that.

But of course, unlike any human equivalents, the events of the cross came as no surprise to God. He knew that it would be necessary for Christ to die in order to accomplish his plans for the world.

It would have done us no good had Peter or John or Paul been crucified rather than Christ. It was precisely because Christ is God, a being of infinite value and worth, and a being without sin himself, that his death can save a multitude of sinners, people like you and I.

And this brings us on to the second part of the reading. The cross of Christ is central to our lives because of what Christ achieved for us on the cross.

In verse 20, "Through the Son, God decided to bring the whole universe back to himself."
After Adam and Eve sinned, the universe started to go wrong. Not just human beings, although it is true that we do "go wrong" from birth. It’s what the Bible calls sin. It’s because we are sinners – because there’s something bad inside us – that we do the things we call sins. This is what Paul is talking about in verse 21: "At one time you were far away from God, and were his enemies because of the evil things you did and thought."

But the entrance of sin into God’s perfect creation, had other knock-on effects. Death entered the world. The physical world began to go wrong causing everything from disease and disabilities, to the extinction of many animals and plants, natural disasters like earthquakes and volcanoes, and a hundred other things. From Eden onwards, the whole universe has been going off the rails.

But God has decided it won’t always be this way. Through his Son, he’s going to undo all the wrong things and restore the universe to its original condition.

I don’t know if any of you are familiar with computers. When a computer is brand new, just out the box, it works perfectly. But as time passes, it begins to go wrong. As more information is added to it, files start to corrupt. Maybe it picks up viruses from the Internet. Eventually it wears out. Well what God’s going to do with the universe is like a computer engineer taking an old computer full of bad memory space, corrupt files, viruses and all the other junk programs running on the computer and completely cleaning out the hard drive, resetting the computer back to it was when it was new. That’s God’s purpose for the universe.

And the way he’s going to do it is through the cross. Verse 20: "God made peace through his Son’s physical death on the cross and so brought back to himself all things, both on earth and in heaven."

In other words, although the greatest thing the cross achieved is the salvation of God’s people, this is not the only thing it achieves. Now, we mustn’t take a verse like this out of context and try to claim that this means that God won’t condemn anyone to hell. The Bible says very clearly on dozens of occasions that those who do not accept Christ will go to hell.

So here, when Paul talks about God bringing all things to himself, he means the whole universe – the physical and spiritual realms, the animals and plants, the planets and stars, and of course humanity. All of it can only be renewed and will be renewed in the new heavens and new earth because of the cross. Without the cross, the only thing God could do with the universe and still be true to his own holy and just nature, would be to condemn it to hell. Because of the cross, God can not only redeem people to populate the new heaven and earth for all eternity, he can actually bring the whole of creation back together in peace and harmony with Christ as its head, and restore creation to the way it was in the beginning.

Christ’s achievement on the cross is central to our lives because it was there, on the cross, that he dealt with sin once and for all. He took the punishment that sin deserves from a just God upon his own shoulders. That was why on the cross he cried out before he died, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" Because he felt cut off from God by the weight of human sin.

Like a sacrificial lamb, he took our sins away. He died that we might have eternal life, and where once we were God’s enemies, by taking sin away, the relationship between God and human beings can be restored and renewed, and we can be God’s friends. Verse 22: "But now, by means of the physical death of his Son, God has made you his friends, in order to bring you, holy, pure, and faultless, into his presence."

We can never let the cross drift towards the edges of our life if we remember this one simple fact. It is only because of the cross that we can actually be friends with the almighty God! And if we have come to Christ by way of the cross, then he is our God and we are his in the eternal covenant of grace. Psalm 25:14 says: "The friendship of the LORD is for those who fear him, and he makes known to them his covenant." God’s covenant with his people is essentially a bond of love and friendship with them. That bond cannot exist between a holy God and a sinful people. It can exist, even for a God of love and grace, only where the problem of sin has been dealt with. It can exist and thank God it does exist between a holy God and a redeemed people (in other words a sinful people who have had their sins paid for by the blood of Christ). And the only way sin can be dealt with is through the cross. There is no other way. You cannot sort out the problem of sin for yourself. You don’t have the right to say your sins don’t matter. That’s God’s place. And God says sin does matter. It matters so much that only by sending his own Son to die for sinners, could the problem be sorted out. Think of it for a second. If there was another way to save us, why did Christ have to die? Why did God not just tell us the other way and not allow his beloved Son to suffer? There was no other way: only the way of the cross. "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life."

And so we come to the third section of this passage in verse 23. And the point being made here by Paul is the main one I wanted to focus on tonight. The cross matters supremely because of who died on it, and what that death achieved, and the cross must remain the supremely important thing in our Christian lives always. In other words, we must never make the mistake of thinking that we need the cross to become Christians, or even that we need the cross to get to heaven, but in between those two events, we can forget the cross and get on with living some other way. It doesn’t matter what that other way is. For some people, it might be a way doesn’t pay much attention to what we do is right or wrong. It might be the free-and-easy life whereby we tell ourselves that anything goes because we’ll be all right in the end. At the other extreme, the way we want to go might be to live by exact conformity to certain moral laws or standards. That everything we do must be right and correct. That although we might need the cross to become a Christian and once we’re trying to get into heaven, for the rest of the time, I’ll please and win his approval by good works and all my outward show of being a "good person". Yet another, unfortunately a way that many Christians in pentecostal and charismatic churches go, is to seek to go beyond the experience of the cross to some deeper, more "spiritual", more exciting, more dramatic experience of the Holy Spirit.

I’d just like to say one thing about all of these positions – they’re all equally and totally wrong. The Christian life is neither a licence to sin, nor is it living under the burden of laws in fear that if we don’t do enough good, God will stop loving us, and nor is it a quest to seek one mystical experience after another. The cross of Christ – the gospel of Christ and him crucified - remains at the heart of the Christian life throughout all our time on this earth. This is surely what Paul is referring to in verse 23 when he writes: "You must of course continue faithful on a firm and sure foundation, and must not be shaken from the hope you gained when you heard the gospel." And what is this firm and sure foundation? What are they to continue faithful in? It can only be the magnificent truth laid out in the previous verse, where the cross of Christ is lifted high as the one and only way of salvation, the way whereby God’s enemies are changed into his friends and made pure and holy to live forever in God’s presence.

The cross remains the focal point of our lives, and must remain so if we are not to go astray. It was because many in the Galatian church turning aside from the gospel of the cross to other teachings that the apostle Paul came down harder on them in Galatians chapter 1 than he does at any other point in his letters. Listen to Paul’s words in that chapter: "I am surprised at you! In no time at all you are deserting the one who called you by the grace of Christ and are accepting another gospel. Actually, there is no other gospel, but I say this because there are some people who are upsetting you and trying to change the gospel of Christ. But even if we, or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel that is different from the one we preached to you, may he be condemned to hell."

And what is this gospel that Paul wants to protect so fiercely? He tells us: "In order to set us free from this present evil age, Christ gave himself for our sins, in obedience to the will of our God and Father. To God be the glory for ever and ever!"

So instead of thinking it doesn’t matter how we live, the cross stands to tell us that sin is very real and very costly. Rather than thinking it doesn’t matter if we sin, the cross tells us the price that was paid for our sins, our past sins, our present sins and our future sins. And when we stand in its shadow, and see how much sin does matter, surely we are less inclined to take a cavalier attitude to how we live.

Or maybe at the other extreme, we’re caught up in thinking we have to obey perfectly every law and commandment otherwise God won’t accept us. This time the cross stands as an emblem of God’s grace and God’s love. It was not because of our own efforts that we were first saved, and it is not because of anything we do that we will end up in heaven, so our lives here on earth need not be burdened down by guilt and the hard effort of trying to be perfect and failing all the time. We need to look at the cross here and remember that when Christ said "It is finished!" on the cross, everything that would contribute one iota to our salvation was already right then and there complete and perfect. Paradoxically, we can actually do more for God, and live better lives, when we stop trying to be good in our own strength, acknowledge we are sinners saved only by grace, and then live in thankfulness for what God has done for us, rather than fear of what God will do to us, if we aren’t obedient enough.

And to those who want to go beyond the cross to something more exciting and dramatic, the warning to the Galatians comes most strongly of all. To think that there’s something better than the cross out there to discover or experience only shows you haven’t understood the wonder of the cross properly at all.

That’s why the cross, rather than the manger, or the empty tomb, became the universal symbol of Christianity. Because it is the most important thing that ever happened. And it’s entirely right that the cross should be at the heart of the Guild badge. But much more than that, it must be at the very heart of our lives, at that secret place deep inside where we treasure what is dearest and closest to our hearts.

If the cross isn’t there for you tonight – perhaps because you’ve never come to Christ at the foot of the cross and looked up and saw the Son of God crucified for you, then that same Christ, now risen to glory and with all authority in heaven and on earth is saying to you right now, "Come to me, believe in me, trust in me and I will save you. I can do it because I died on the cross."

And if you have already come to Christ, but have maybe been stuck in a rut in your faith, or if you’ve got caught up in other things and put the cross to one side, then now’s the time to come back to the very heart of the faith, and acknowledge again the central and abiding place the cross deserves in your life.

In another letter, Paul put it this way: "As for me, however, I will boast only about the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ."

Later in Colossians he writes: "God has now brought you to life with Christ. God forgave us all our sins; he crucified the unfavourable record of our debts with its binding rules and did away with it completely by nailing it to the cross."

And in this passage, Paul ends up with this simple confession: "It is of this gospel that I, Paul, became a servant – this gospel which has been preached to everybody in the world." May we all be servants of this gospel, and keep the cross of Christ central to everything we do.

Thursday, 1 December 2005

Christ is for Life, Not Just for Christmas

This is my editorial from our parish magazine for December

I thought it would be a real challenge to write something for the magazine that comes out in December without using the "C" word. After all (I told myself) this magazine takes us right through to the end of February. Who wants it all to be about you know what once we get into the new year? But then I realised what a foolish train of thought that is. If I took that approach I realised I would be guilty of following the mindset that produces the rampant commercialism we see at this time of year: pile them high, sell them dear, get it by and forget about it as quickly as possible. No sooner will the great day arrive than they'll start trying to sell us more stuff in the sales and then there will be the holiday offers, and then the DIY stuff, and then gardening equipment, and then...you know how it is...on and on until they start again in September for next December 25th!

But why should we, who know what it's really about, want to get it over with and then move on? I want to savour every bit of it and rejoice, taking in all it means.

So I changed my mind and decided to write about Christmas after all, because the truth is this: Christmas is for life, not just for Christmas. Doesn't matter if we think about it in February, or July, or October. Of course I don't mean the false, worldly, pagan Christmas. That really has no meaning. I mean the real Christmas: the birth of Jesus Christ. Its meaning is for all year round because Christ is for life, not just for Christmas!

As the angels sang, His birth really is "good tidings of great joy" (Luke 2:10). The fact that God came down to earth in the Lord Jesus Christ changed everything forever. That's why Jesus is also known as "Immanuel," because He is "God with us" (Matthew 1:23). It shows that rather than being a distant maker who now has little or nothing to do with ordinary people like us and cares nothing for all the ups and downs of our lives, our God is right there with us through it all. He identifies with His people so completely that even though He is eternally "Spirit" (John 4:24), He was willing to be "manifested in the flesh" (1 Timothy 3:16) and "became flesh and dwelt among us" (John 1:14) so that He can "sympathise with our weaknesses" (Hebrews 4:15) in the person of His Son.

But even great news though that is, it doesn't even begin to exhaust the riches of God's grace to us in sending Jesus to be born in Bethlehem that first Christmas. The wonderful "glad tidings" -- the Christian gospel -- is that Jesus came not just to sympathise with us but to save us.

He came to save us from all our selfishness, all our pride, all our pettiness, all our prejudices and hatreds, all our failures, and all our wickedness. The only to adequately explain why it took God Himself to come to earth to rescue us is first to acknowledge that we were in need of being rescued! And then to recognise we needed to be rescued by God Himself because our situation was so bad that no one else could do it.

The reason for stressing the seriousness of sin is not to drive us to despair or depression, but to drive us into the saving arms of God! The Bible goes on about sin so you can see the dangerous spiritual position you are in if you are not in Christ; it stresses the sinner's helplessness so that you will abandon any attempt to rescue yourself. We just can't do it: "There is none righteous, no, not one." (Romans 3:10). "No one is justified by the law in the sight of God" (Galatians 3:11). In other words, we can never please God by trying to be "good enough" or "do enough good".

But the glad tidings of Christmas is that salvation is by God's grace, not by our works. We are saved by what Jesus has done for us. Trying to do enough good to earn our way to heaven is impossible, but the hope of Christmas is that by instead trusting only in the Lord Jesus we shall be saved (Acts 16:31). Through His work -- in His coming as God and Man, living a perfect life, obeying all God's laws, bearing the punishment for our sins on the cross, and showing His victory over death by His resurrection -- Christ has done it all for us. Even his very name tells us this. Before He was born the angel said to Joseph: "You shall call His name JESUS, for He will save His people from their sins." (Matthew 1:21)

So what do you have to do? Actually you don't have to do anything. You just need to rely on God and His promises. You just need to believe Christ can and will save you. Trust in Him and acknowledge that He is Lord: the master and guide of your life. That's all. For it is through faith, through reliance and trust, in Him that Christ's saving work of taking our sins away and giving us His perfect righteousness will change from just being true in the pages of Scripture, or being true for someone else, to being true for you.

Paul wrote: "I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them as rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in Him, not having my own righteousness, which is from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is from God by faith." (Philippians 3:8-9).

This Christmas God is calling those of us who already know His saving love and grace in Christ to celebrate and give thanks for all the blessings He has lavished on us. But God is also calling everyone who has not yet turned away from their sins and embraced Christ as their Lord and Saviour to do so now. God Himself is calling you: "Look unto Me, and be saved," He says (Isaiah 45:22). What better invitation could there be than the call of Almighty God Himself? What better promise could there be than that made by God to all who respond: "Whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved." (Romans 10:13).

No wonder the writer of Hebrews asks: "How shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation?" (Heb 2:3).

Will you, from this Christmas on, know the real joy of Christmas for the rest of your days, or will you let another year pass by, knowing only the outward show?

I'm praying that if haven't already done so, this Christmas you will make the right choice, because "He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God." (John 3:18).