What is the Gospel? (Pt. 15) – “Victory!”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?

I hope you have benefited from out time spent looking at the multi-faceted diamond of the Gospel. We have discovered that God is holy and that our sin has kept us separated from God. We have looked to Jesus as the ultimate remedy for reconciliation with God. We have been confronted with the fact that it is through repentance that salvation is procured. As a result of salvation, we are given a new life, a new purpose, and a new journey. The Gospel is such a wonderful truth if we would just embrace it and live it out to the end. One of the more comforting realities of the Christian faith is that we are provided with the final scene. God inspires hope in His children because He is able to let us take a peek at what awaits us.

Paul in 1 Corinthians provides us with some insight to into what he calls a mystery. A mystery is not something that is unknowable, but something that has not yet been made known. Paul declares a mystery for all that believe: “Behold! I tell you a mystery. …When the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: ‘Death is swallowed up in victory.’ ‘O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?’ The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. [1 Corinthians 15:51, 54–57 ESV] The Gospel’s ultimate goal is to bring Victory over sin; Victory over Death; Victory in Christ! Learn to love the Gospel for it is the power of God unto salvation for all who will believe it [Romans 1:16].

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 14) – “The Death of Death”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

One of the most glorious realities of the Christian faith is that death has been defeated. In the crucifixion and death of Jesus I have the wonderful truth that God has died for my sin. When we couple this remarkable truth to the equally wonderful truth that Jesus was raised from the dead we are confronted with a new reality – Death’s power has been defeated. Paul tells us that it was through sin that death was introduced into the world [Romans 5:12]. It is because of this sin that death brings fear to our hearts and minds and we find our joy melting away. Paul again tells us in Romans 6:23a that “the wages of sin is death.” We have earned the death that we will suffer because of our tendency to do our own will rather than God’s. We have earned the penalty of sin, but God has done something so incomprehensible that most who hear this message don’t believe it.

Even though we have earned death, “the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” [Romans 6:23b]. Because Jesus took upon himself the punishment for sin He had not committed He was able to divert the justified wrath of God away from us. We still have to pass through the dark door of physical death. But through the death of Jesus Christ on the cross death is defeated and we no longer have to fear the destination that lies on the other side. If we follow Jesus He will lead us through death into new life.

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 13) – “Obedience is Greater than Sacrifice”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

Jesus’ final admonition to the disciples has been called the Great Commission. Matthew records it this way for us: “19Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age” [Matthew 28:19-20 NIV]. Jesus said in another place, “And you are my friends, if you obey me” [John 15:14 CEV]. The idea of the word obey is that of a continued process. Jesus is telling us that we are His friends, His faithful servants if “we keep on doing” what He has commanded.

I have often wondered at the meaning of this phrase: Obedience is Greater than Sacrifice. It has not been until now that I understand its meaning. If God makes His will known we are commanded to obey. But what if the result of obedience is death, as it was for Jesus? What will we do then? I think that this is the mystery inherent in the command. God is not asking us to submit to pain, suffering or injustice. God has called us to submit to Him, trusting that the ends that lie outside of my purview will achieve the ultimate will and purposes of God. Sacrifice can be self-serving because it validates us and our motives. But obedience only serves the greater good of the one who commanded us to act. When we obey we are bending our will to that of our King. If we have committed our lives to the service of Jesus, then everything else is just what we do in the line of duty. No more reward will be offered other than the praise of our God, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Is that enough for you?

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 12) – “Submit Yourself Unto The Lord”

This is part of the series”What is the Gospel?”

Several months ago I had a thought about how God desires for us to relate to Him when we are confronted with the Gospel. The line of thought that I followed revolved around two words—Submission and Surrender. While I believe that both are aspects of the Christian journey, the more I thought about it the more I leaned toward submission as the appropriate response to God. God desires for His children to grow in faith and relationship with Him. This process is called Sanctification (which I understand to mean “becoming like Jesus”). Why is sanctification important? It is important because it serves as an indicator of the progress we have made in our walk with God. Are we striving for God’s will? Do we see the world through His eyes?

Submission and Surrender are a part of this unfolding drama in that it reveals to God the inclination of our Heart. What is the difference you may be asking? I would have to say that it is choice. When I submit I am voluntarily ceasing from pursuing my own program. I have decided to defer, to consent to the will of God. Surrender is different in that it implies the end of a valiant, yet fruitless attempt to win against the opponent. Surrender is the need to back down under compulsion. Many may hear the gospel and it goads them into rejecting its message. For this person the option chosen is that of surrender. They have to be made to give in. The Gospel will feel like a battle to be won, and yet they will never overcome. The bible says that every knee will bow. Then there are those that hear the gospel and rejoice because it is Good News to their heart. Submit yourself unto the Lord and allow God to order your steps.

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 11) – “A New Journey”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

The salvation that the Gospels herald produces new life in us as we are born again; it fulfills the purpose of God by re-creating us into a new creation, and finally it puts us on the road of a new journey. We are on a journey to a new land. The writer of Hebrews captures the beauty of this when they tell us that “by faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place that he was to receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was going. … For he was looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God” [Hebrews 11:8-10, ESV]. By faith, we believe and live and journey with God. We are not called to know the destination.

All that God gives to us is the assurance that on this journey we will walk with Him through the trials and triumphs that life will hurl our way. Even Peter spoke of the transient nature of the people of God in this world [1 Peter 2:11]. This world is not our home. The quicker we realize that our faith in Christ has altered our trajectory from eternal suffering to eternal joy the more we will prize and participate in the process of growing in our understanding that “for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose” [Romans 8:28, ESV]. God is calling us to join Him. He still desires to walk with His people, if they would but come [Genesis 3:8].

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 10) – “You are a New Creation”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

As we have looked at what the Gospel is we have not touched on one key question regarding the Gospel’s ultimate purpose. Some may say that it is the salvation of the world. Others may say that it is to appease the wrath of God. Still others might say that it is because of God’s love and grace that the gospel was and continues to be given. But I find Paul’s declaration in 2 Corinthians 5:17 to be interesting. Paul says, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” It speaks to a reality of what God desires for all of creation. In Colossians 1:16 Paul tells us that “[Jesus] is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation.” The idea here is that in Jesus we find that the creation was to have an existence similar to that of Jesus Himself. Jesus is not the first creation but is before creation.

The word “firstborn” speaks to his primacy over all things. He comes to us because God has sent Him. The importance of this to the Gospel is that in Jesus we find the purpose of creation—it is for Jesus [Colossians 1:16]. But there is a problem; the creation has fallen because of sin. The presence of the Gospel is God’s remedy in and through Jesus to correct the wrong of sin. The only way for that remedy to take effect is for there to be a new creation, not only in the world [Revelation 21:1], but also in the inhabitants of the creation. The Gospel’s ultimate purpose is re-creation.

The Problem with Pluralism

The Elephant Problem

I was reading an article by Dr. Timothy Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, New York. In the article, Dr. Keller explains why Christians need to be clear that Christianity is not one option among many. Pluralism is the belief that there is more than one way of looking at something. This can also be made more specific within a religious context, hence – Religious Pluralism. Religious Pluralism is a loosely defined expression concerning acceptance of different religions. The problem with this idea is that it assumes that all religions and points of view are equally valid even if they contradict one another. This simply cannot be the case.

The point that Dr. Keller highlights is that people resort to pluralism for the sake of tolerance and inclusion. This leads to weak critical thinking about the real differences that all religions have with other religions. Dr. Keller gives an analogy that is commonly used to undermine the unique claims of Christianity.

A common analogy is cited—the blind men trying to describe an elephant. One feels the tail and reports that an elephant is thin and flexible. Another feels a leg and claims the animal is thick as a tree. Another touches its side and reports the elephant is like a wall. This is supposed to represent how the various religions only understand part of God, while no one can truly see the whole picture. To claim full knowledge of God, pluralists contend, is arrogance.

I occasionally tell this parable, and I can almost see the people nodding their heads in agreement. But then I remind them, “The only way this parable makes any sense, however, is if you’ve seen a whole elephant. Therefore, the minute you say, ‘All religions only see part of the truth,’ you are claiming the very knowledge you say no one else has. And you are demonstrating the same spiritual arrogance you accuse Christians of.” [emphasis added]

One of the reasons that this analogy “makes sense” is because it appeals to our own ignorance. We don’t know everything, so how can any religion claim to have an exclusive claim on religious truth. But the problem with this is that when we start with humans we will always get flawed results. It is when we start with God that truth and freedom come [John 8:32].

The heart of pluralism and the analogy of the elephant hinges on the idea that it is more intellectually honest and social generous to give room for all points of view. This, in the end, can only lead to chaos. Pluralism claims in an absolute way that all points of view are valid, but it is itself an outright rejection of any absolute standard of truth. So pluralism has to accept as a valid point the rejection of pluralism as a standard of evaluating truth claims. What happens is that the caveat of tolerance is attached to keep people who believe in absolute truth from defending that position.

The Christian Response to Pluralism

So how does Christianity answer the claims of Pluralism? The Doctrine of the Incarnation is the challenge that the God of the Bible levies against every religion. When we talk about Jesus of Nazareth we have to recognize that we are talking about God in the flesh. We are talking about God who was, and is, and is to come; that God has come down out of His holy heaven and chosen to live among us. John 1:14 says that the Word “dwelt” among us. That word literally means that God has pitched His tent with us.

God, for the first time in God’s existence, understood the human experience. That is why the writer of Hebrews does not say that God empathizes with us, as someone looking in, but that in Jesus God sympathizes with us, as someone looking out [Hebrews 4:15]. Look at Paul’s inclusion of an early hymn of the church to the believers at Philippi to help future believers understand what Jesus did in coming to Earth:

5Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, 6who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, 7but made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. 8And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. [Philippians 2:5-8 ESV, emphasis added]

Then in Colossi Paul makes this remarkable statement about what God was doing in the person of Jesus.

9For in him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily, 10and you have been filled in him, who is the head of all rule and authority. [Colossians 2:9-10 ESV, emphasis added]

In the Doctrine of the Incarnation Jesus Christ, the God-man is fulfilling the law which God gave the world [Matthew 5:17]. Peter also contributes to the discussion of the ministry that Christ achieved in the Incarnation.

21For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you might follow in his steps. 22He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth. 23When he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly. 24He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds, you have been healed. [1 Peter 2:21-24 ESV, emphasis added]

Every Religion has Points of Exclusion

So how do we counter the challenge that is brought against Jesus and the exclusive claims of Christianity? The difficulty with pluralistic thinking, as it relates to religion, is that it lends itself to the assumption that all religions are trying to achieve the same goal. The religions of Christianity, Judaism and Islam do, in a sense, strive for a paradise of some kind. This they share. But Buddhism, does not. Buddhism is a means of escaping from this world through enlightenment. And that is just one example. This and similar eastern religions seek to escape this world of toil not for a paradise, but into nothingness; to be absorbed into the ultimate.

What we, as Christians, must contend with is that every religion has a point of exclusion. That is, there is a point at which the ultimate purpose of the religion deviates from all others. Every philosophy, ideology, and system of thought have these points of exclusion. This is the point where two systems collide and are irreconcilable. It is at these points, and not at those where some commonality is shared that religions must be evaluated.

When compared to other religions Christianity is the only one that does not seek to make man into a divine being. Will man be transformed to reflect Jesus Christ? Yes, but we will not become of the same essence as God. In Christ, we find that God has condescended from heaven and entered into the human drama. In doing so, the unthinkable has happened. God has become one of us. Because of this exclusive assertion, Christianity stands alone. Also, the implicit absurdity of the Incarnation lends itself to legitimacy because it requires the very faith that the Scriptures expects as the means to eternal life.

3This is good, and it is pleasing in the sight of God our Savior, 4 who desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. 5For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 6who gave himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the proper time. [1Timothy 2:3-6 ESV, emphasis added]

The Problem with Pluralism is that it seeks to undermine the truth of God’s word. The solution will be found only in the person and work of Jesus the Christ.

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 9) – “What does it Mean to Be Born Again?”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

This is the question that Nicodemas asked Jesus one night when he came to see Jesus [John 3:1-15]. Jesus has retreated to pray and here comes a member of the Pharisees, a ruler in the Jewish community. Nicodemas wants to know what it is that Jesus is teaching and asking of those that choose to follow Him. Jesus, in answering the question, points to an unusual moment in the history of the Jewish people. Because of the peoples impatience God sends “fiery serpents” among the people of Israel and because of these serpents many died [Numbers 21:6]. God instructs Moses to make a serpent of bronze and set it on a pole. This is the very image that is used in the medical profession today.

The instruction by God was that anyone that looked upon the serpent would be healed. Being “born again” is the process of looking upon Jesus, believing that in that act, in putting our trust in the instrument of the cross and in Jesus the Crucified the benefit and healing and salvation that God has promised will be transferred to us. Salvation is a leap, but it is not a leap over a cliff into the unknown. Salvation is a leap into the promises of God. The question that God forces us to answer is this, “Will we look to Jesus and receive the redemption that has already been offered?” [Hebrews 10:1-12]

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 8) – “Commit to Repentance”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

One of the key aspects of the Gospel is that repentance is not a one-time thing. We must commit ourselves to repentance. I mentioned previously that repentance is the turning away from sin. But many times we mistakenly believe that our lives will only require one course correction. Sin is always around us, tempting and tricking us into believing that we have arrived. There is no arriving while we walk this earth. We are on a journey. We are constantly moving towards God’s presence. It is because of this striving that we must commit to turning away from sin. Paul said, “For I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate” [Romans 7:15].

Paul was familiar with the Olympic games of his day and used an athletics illustration to help the Corinthians understand that the life of faith should be run as if to win the prize—eternal fellowship with God. Repentance, I believe, is the means by which God adjusts our course in life to run the race of faith well. Look at what Paul says,

25Every athlete exercises self-control in all things. They do it to receive a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable. 26So I do not run aimlessly; I do not box as one beating the air. 27But I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified” [1 Corinthians 9:25-27]

Paul desires to remain qualified; therefore, he must be constantly evaluating what he does in light of Scripture and God’s character to finish the race well. We should emulate Paul’s example as we live the Gospel out in our lives.

What is the Gospel? (Pt. 7) – “The Challenge of Repentance”

This is part of the series “What is the Gospel?”

Jesus tells the story of a young man that had many possessions. He is commonly called the Rich Young Ruler. This young man comes to Jesus and asks him, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” [Mark 10:17] Jesus replies that he must keep all of the commandments. This young ruler confesses that he had done so since the time of his youth. Jesus then drops the bombshell. Jesus tells him that there is only one thing that is left wanting in the young man’s life. All of the possessions that the ruler has must be given away to the power and then he would have the eternal life he sought. This is the challenge of repentance.

Jesus does not call us to only charity, but sacrificial charity. Jesus does not command service at our convenience, but total submission to his will. Jesus is not asking us to modify our behavior; he is calling us to crucify our flesh. Repentance literally means to turn around or away from. But how can we turn away from sin if opportunities for sinning surround us on every side? The answer is that we must turn to Jesus. We must look to Him and no longer look to anyone or anything else. This young man was depending on his “great possessions” [Mark 10:22] to get him through when only God in and through Jesus by the power of the Holy Spirit could do it. The gospel tells us that this man went away “sorrowful”. God is calling us to accept His challenge to repent, to turn away from the entanglements of the world and totally rely upon Him [1 John 3:7]. The Gospel life that Jesus proclaimed is not easy, but it is worth the cost.

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