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Because all of those things, as important as they may be, don’t belong
at the center. But if that’s the case, then what does? What is the part that
really matters? And I’m confident that the apostle Paul would point us to the
cross.
And it’s not that Paul didn’t ever talk about anything else but the
cross. But he wanted them to know that that the cross of Jesus Christ was
constantly at the center of his message. And in chapter 15, Paul said,:
Paul defines for us here what the gospel is, and I think we need to be
reminded. Jesus said to go into all the world and preach the gospel to every
creature, and that’s what we need to do. But what is the gospel? I’m sure
you know that the word “gospel” means “good news”, but what is the good
news? Paul tells us here exactly what the good news is.
He says, “When I came to you, I preached the gospel, and here’s what
I preached – that Jesus Christ died for our sins, that he was buried, and that
he was raised on the third day.” Folks, that’s what the gospel is, and if
you’re not sharing that message with people, then you’re not sharing the
gospel.
Paul goes one step further, though. He says that when he preached
about the death and resurrection of Jesus, he was preaching “what was most
important”. Paul says, “Of all the things that I preached about, of all the
things I talked about when I was with you, this is the most important. This is
what belongs at the center of our faith. This is the part that really matters –
Jesus died on a cross and he rose again on the third day
And so, this morning, I want us to focus our attention on the most
important part of what we do. Let me begin by raising this question:
Every major religion has a symbol that represents it. Modern Judaism
has a six-pointed star of David, Islam has a crescent moon, Buddhism has a
lotus blossom. But the universally known visual symbol for Christianity is a
cross.
The Greek word for “fish”, “ichthus”, was an acronym for “Iesous
Christus theos huios sotare” (Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior). Just like a
modern company uses AT&T to stand for American Telephone & Telegraph or
GEICO to stand for Government Employee Insurance Company, the word
“ichtus” (fish) meant something special.
But the word “ichthus” only works in one language. In English, the
outline of a fish is just that — the outline of a fish. The word f-i-s-h just
doesn’t work very well as an acronym for anything distinctly Christian. First
in serving humanity? Faithful in sharing help?
From the second century forward, Christians used the cross as the
symbol of their faith. But why does Christianity have a cross? Why has this
visual image remained central to the identity of Jesus’ followers? Why
preserve the memory of so awful an event as crucifixion? Why is our faith
focused on the death of Jesus of Nazareth?
There are several significant things about the cross that serve as
reasons for putting it at the center of our faith.
But, if we’re not careful, that can be a misguided approach. It’s true
that the entire Bible is God’s special revelation to man, but the purpose and
climax of scripture is the Creator’s redemption of a lost humanity.
Adam and Eve being forced out of the Garden of Eden tells us that
God cannot live peaceably with sin. Sin came in, and immediately fellowship
was disrupted. Sin entered and so did ugliness and lies and shifting of
blame.
Throughout history, we have the words of the prophets that God hates
sin. And throughout history, we have a record of nations being destroyed
because of their rebellion against God. The flood that destroyed the world in
Noah’s day, and the fire and brimstone that wiped two cities off the face of
the map tell us of God’s hatred for sin.
But why did God have to make such a big deal about sin? Why
couldn’t he have just rebuked people and let them go their way? So they lied
and cheated and murdered. So they gossiped and stole and lusted and were
ungrateful. Why should such things matter to a God who is immensely higher
and above this tiny little globe? Why doesn’t he just let them go their way
and do what they want?
Part of the answer is that God loves men more than he is able to say.
And part of the answer is that God made us for fellowship with him, and his
holiness won’t permit rebellion to exist peacefully in fellowship with him. I
believe too that we don’t appreciate how just terrible sin is.
All you have to do is to pick up a newspaper and read about what sin
can cause a person to do. Sin will lead a man to steal, and rape and murder.
But sin will do more than that — sin will even attack God and seek to destroy
him.
And that’s exactly what happened. God came into our world and sin
took hold of him and tried to exterminate him. Sin is open rebellion against
God himself. Sin is man setting himself up as his own authority. Sin is a war
waged against God’s right to rule and reign over us. It’s the repudiation of
his law and the setting up of our own desires as the standard of conduct.
And yet, there’s still the feeling within us, isn’t there, that God takes
sin too seriously? Maybe it’s because we’ve lived with sin for so long that we
don’t smell the rottenness; we’ve become used to the stench. Sin has such a
deadening power. The alcoholic sees nothing wrong with the liquor
industry. The fellow who goes to X-rated movies sees nothing wrong with
pornography. And the sinner wants to know why God makes such a big deal
out of transgression. We’re too close to it.
God loves this world so much that he cannot and will not let man go
into eternal darkness without doing everything in his power to stop it. And
nothing can prevent God from loving us. Not even sin! A preacher named J.
H. Jowett once made this observation about the love of God:
“I know how I have loved my sin. I know how I have clung to it. I
know how I have yearned after it….I know how I have pursued it at any cost.
And now,…My Master takes up this, my overwhelming passion for sin, and
contrasts it….with his passion for me. (He says): ‘I love thee more than thou
hast loved thy sin.'”
Have you ever felt your sin weigh you down like that? Then measure
your love of sin with God’s love for you. If you adore your sin, God loves you
even more. If you confess your sin loudly, Jesus shouts even louder by his
hanging on the cross. You can refuse to love God, but you can’t stop him
from loving you. And he wants you to know that!
And although God’s deepest desire is that we live the holy life that he
lives, he didn’t tell us to get rid of our vileness and our filth and then he
would embrace us. No, he loved us first and we can’t help but love him in
return.
During his ministry, Jesus said, “Greater love has no one than
this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13). Then
Jesus proceeded to show that there actually was a greater love. The love
that is greater than dying for your friends is the love that motivates you to
sacrifice your life for your enemies. And Christianity has a cross to remind
us of a love so incredibly great.
4. The cross shows us how involved God is in our humanity
In Matthew 1, Matthew said of Jesus when he was born, “ And they
shall call His name Immanuel,’ which is translated, ‘God with us.’” (Matthew
1:23). Jesus Christ is “God with us” in our human predicament of pain and
mortality.
In the 19 century, Queen Victoria had a daughter by the name of
th
Princess Alice. She had a four-year-old son who was the apple of her eye.
When he came down with the disease known as “black diphtheria,” Alice was
overwhelmed with anxiety. This disease was highly contagious and very
deadly. Because of her own frail health, nurses took care of the child and
repeatedly warned the princess to stay away from her son.
But, one day as Princess Alice stood in a corner of her son’s room to
weep and pray for him, she heard him whisper to the nurse, “Why doesn’t my
mother kiss me anymore?” The princess-mother couldn’t stand such a
thought in the mind of her dying child, so she raced to his bed, she held him
in her arms, and smothered him with kisses. Unfortunately, they turned out
to be kisses of death. Alice herself contracted the awful disease, and within
a few days both mother and son were buried.
You might say that what she did was a foolish thing to do. You might
say that she should she have known the likely outcome. But even if that’s
the case, who would ever say that the expression of love is sensible? God
loved us so deeply that he was required — not by any external compulsion
but compelled by love alone — to become God with us. To embrace us in our
mortality. To be infected with our disease. To die and be buried with us.
God did not insulate himself from our predicament but came among
us, took our sin to himself, and died for our redemption. The cross shows us
how involved God is in our humanity.
You can’t undo sin! You can’t turn back the clock. You can’t re-make
a bad decision. You can’t not do something you’ve wished a million times
you hadn’t done! And in one sense, at least, it doesn’t even matter that you
promise never to do it again. The window pane to our souls is already
cracked — in some cases, it’s shattered! — and the only cure is a new
replacement. Paul described it this way:
The cross tells us how our sin problem is overcome. We don’t have to
fix things; God has taken the initiative and fixed them for us — in Christ. Our
problem has been taken care of in full at the cross. Jesus did everything
necessary to make us new creations before God. We simply need to die, be
buried and be raised again, as through our faith we recognize what Jesus did
for us on the cross.
The New Testament uses a number of images of salvation.
It’s like being in court and the cross is what justifies us, it’s what allows
us to be found “not guilty”
It’s like having a sacrifice offered on the altar to atone for our sins.
It’s like a father welcoming back a wayward child and being reconciled.
It’s like a child in an orphanage who is adopted into a new family.
It’s like being on a battlefield and winning our freedom.
It’s like being a slave and having someone redeem us, pay the price to
set us free.
All of those are images that are used throughout the New Testament
to help us to understand what atonement is. All of them point to the central
theme of Scripture that God has come down to save sinners. He is the
justifier of the guilty, the liberator of slaves, and the adopted Father of
spiritual orphans. He pays our ransom, redeems us of our sins, and
reconciles us to Himself. And all of that takes place by way of the cross.
The only saving Christ is a dying one. The only living Christian is a
crucified one.
Conclusion:
I don’t know if you’ve ever noticed this or not, but most of the great
cathedrals are “cruciform”; that is, they are built in the shape of a cross. But
God is not so much concerned with whether our church building is cross-
shaped as he is with whether or not our lives are cross-shaped. Do we allow
the cross of Jesus to shape who we are? Do we allow his example of
sacrifice, submission and service to define who we are? We are truly called
to be a group of people “shaped by the cross into the shape of the cross.”
Paul made it clear that the cross is what belongs at the center of our
lives. The question is, is that’s what’s at the center of your life?
* * * *
So, this morning, I want to know – Is the cross at the center of your
life? Have you been broken by the cross? Have you bowed down before the
cross? Have you been changed by the cross? Are you living a cruciform life?
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