#25 UNDERSTANDING CHRIST: HIS TRIUMPHANT CRUCIFIXION PART 2

     Many Christians see Christ’s crucifixion in terms of his death purchasing the forgiveness of our sins. The transaction for forgiveness did happen on the cross, but it happened fairly early on in the day. Luke was the only one of the Gospel writers who recorded the words that dealt with the unbelief that had enslaved the human race since Satan’s deception in the Garden of Eden. Listen to Christ’s words found in Luke 23:34, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.” Christ hit the nail on the head. From the time that Adam and Eve were conned into letting go of God–they did not know what they were doing–to the crucifixion, the human race was separated from the truth of God’s absolute love by the dividing wall Satan had constructed through his deception. All the sin, all the evil that the human race has participated in, came because humans did not understand God’s absolute love and thus, did not understand their own actions.

     Since Christ asked God to forgive the human race, the question becomes did God answer Christ’s prayer? Back when Christ was at the tomb of Mary and Martha’s brother, Christ spoke these words to God, “Father, I thank thee that thou hast heard me. And I know that thou hearest me always…” (John 11:41-42). On the basis of Christ’s assertion that led to the raising of Lazarus, we can indeed infer that God did answer Christ as he hung on the cross and that the human race was forgiven at that point.

     Somehow, the Christian faith has given the impression that we, as the “sinners,” determine whether God forgives us or not by accepting the gift of salvation. The ones who have sinned have no say in the matter of forgiveness–it is totally in the purview of the one who is sinned against. When God answered Christ’s prayer, the human race was forgiven of its unbelief , period. Through Christ’s prayer for forgiveness for the human race, God took care of the unbelief that would prohibit them from benefitting from what was about to happen next.

     Let’s look at Proverbs 12:28  again, “In the way of righteousness is life; and in the pathway thereof there is no death.” Christ had the spirit of his Father–the spirit of righteousness–within his physical body. Because he had never let go of God, his righteousness was in full-force and it kept him from death. In fact, the only way Christ could die was if he let go of God and let go of life. That was the something that was about to happen. Let’s watch the action.

     When the time was right and he was ready to die, Christ spoke, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit” (Luke 23:46). At that point, Christ gave back to God the righteousness that made him the Son of God. Now, the question becomes what happened then? Remember when we talked about God creating an alternative to Himself? Since that point, only two choices have existed–life, good, love, light, and spirit or death, evil, hate, darkness, and physicality. Christ had lived his earthly life in the first choice, so if he let go of that choice, wouldn’t the second choice rush in? Or, to put in simpler terms, wouldn’t sin rush in? Listen to his cry after he gave up his righteousness, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46). That, my friends, was the cry of unbelief, of sin. As II Corinthians 5:21 says, the one who knew no sin became sin. God did not turn from Christ–in fact, Christ did exactly what God wanted him to do. Christ let go of God and he let go of life, good, love, light, and spirit.

     Hebrews 12:3 encourages us to “…consider him (Christ) that endured such contradiction of sinners against himself…” The one whose joy was to be one with his Father had to let go of his Father and in doing so pleased his Father. What a contradiction! Not only that, but also the one, who spoke of being the Living Water that would totally quench the thirst of the human race (John 4:14) , thirsted and was given sour vinegar to drink (John 19:28). What a contradiction!

     Now, while Christ was dying, Satan and his kingdom were watching and seeing the result of their conniving–the light of the world was being extinguished and darkness was overtaking the surroundings. Then, Christ finally physically died as he spoke the words, “It is finished,” (John 19:30), and behind Satan’s back, a tremendous noise shook the foundations of the kingdom of evil. The veil in the temple was ripped from top to bottom, or to put it in the analogy I’ve been using, the dividing wall was obliterated. When Christ died, unbelief (sin) died, too! It was as if Christ took the hugest sledgehammer ever and bashed the wall into smithereens. Satan’s ability to keep the human race from cleaving to God was forever destroyed (Hebrews 2:14).

     God’s absolute love won! This is the good news–nothing stands between us and God, nothing! Through Christ, we have the right that God’s forgiveness and Christ’s triumphant crucifixion has given us–we have the right and the power to cleave to God and to have life! As we proceed on, we are going to dig into the outcomes and the benefits that Christ’s crucifixion has brought to the human race.

    As always, please feel free to comment–just be respectful!

 

     ©2009-2010 by Patricia Zell. All rights reserved.

#4 THE ORIGINAL SIN

     When we think about sin entering the world, we look at the account of Adam and Eve eating the “forbidden fruit” in the Garden of Eden (Genesis 3:1-19, Romans 5:12). However, although the pair was the conduit for the force of unbelief to enter into our world, they were not the creators of sin.  In fact, sin existed before our world was even created. In this post, I am going to pull the last three posts–God’s absolute love, the creation of evil, and truth and freedom–together to explain how evil became active and how sin came into being.

     Sometime after God created the alternative to Himself–the Wrath of God–He established the angelic realm. Although there is not a specific biblical account of how God created these spiritual beings, mentions of what happened in that process are sprinkled through the scriptures. By putting some of these together with what we have already discovered about God’s character, we can build inferences that will help us understand where sin came from.

     First, because God is the One who created the angels, we can surmise that the angels were created in the Secret Place of the Most High and that they existed in life, light, love, good, spirit, and truth. And, since the Wrath of God had already been created (as indicated in Jude 6) and since God does not demand His own way, we can also infer that every angel was free to choose between the Secret Place of the Most High and the Wrath of God. Think about this for a while–at the point of his creation, each of the angels knew truth and had  freedom of choice. This concept can be hard for us to understand because none of us have ever had access to complete truth nor have we ever had unrestrained freedom. (We are born without any knowledge of truth and are born totally dependent on other people who are there to take care of us.) Nevertheless, I think we can be confident that God created the angels with minds and wills of their own and with an understanding of the choice they had.

     Now, let’s look at one particular angel who changed the course of eternity through the free choices he made. Lucifer is described in Isaiah 14:12-17 and is symbolized by the king of Tyre in Ezekiel 28:12-19. Again, not getting hung up with verb tenses, we can work out what happened in these passages along with those in Jude 6 and Revelation 12:4:

–Lucifer was one of the most beautiful angels created by God–he was perfect and considered to be the “morning star.”

–He began looking at his own beauty and began desiring to be like God in that he wanted to rule over his peers.

–He knew he could never rule over God in the Secret Place of the Most High, so he began looking at the Wrath of God and decided he could set up his kingdom there.

–Lucifer let go of God (and of light, life, love, good, spirit, and truth) and moved into the Wrath of God. One third of the angelic realm freely moved with him. From that point on, these angels existed in darkness, death, hate, evil, physicality, and deception. Every one of those angels knew exactly what he was doing by making this choice.

     By letting go of God, Lucifer created sin which is simply unbelief or not holding onto God (John 16:9, Romans 14:23). Let me repeat, Lucifer created sin–he was the one who took the first step away from God. And, make no mistake about it, God had absolutely nothing to do with Lucifer’s choice–the angel himself conceived of the plan to set up his own kingdom and acted on that plan. By the way, through this process, Lucifer became Satan and became an enemy of God in that he hated God with everything he had.

     So, after Satan’s move and after one-third of the angels followed him, the alternative to God became inhabited. The Wrath of God was no longer inactive, and Satan set up a kingdom that he alone dominated. Now, in my next post, we are going to see how Satan’s kingdom became the launching pad for God’s next creation.

 

     Please feel free to comment on this post. Any comments that are disrespectful to anyone will be deleted.

 

     ©2009 by Patricia Zell. All rights reserved.