"And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he quickened together with him, having forgiven you all trespasses; Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross; [And] having spoiled principalities and powers, he made a shew of them openly, triumphing over them in it." (Col 2:13-15 AV)
During a recent discussion of the relevance of the resurrection with regard to Christ's crucifixion at Calvary, this passage from Paul's epistle to the Colossians came to mind. There is a thought I want to touch on dealing with the sufficiency of Christ's finished work at Calvary.
A pastor of mine from some years ago shared a wonderful teaching with his congregation regarding the proper faith of the Christian saint. We are of one body, crucified with Him, buried with Him in baptism and risen in newness of life as the scriptures teach, all of which is the result of a sinless and perfected sacrifice upon that rugged Cross of Calvary. Knowing this, we can understand our faith as needing both a proper object and as well, a proper focus. Being in Christ, Jesus is our proper object and realizing that the preaching of the Cross is indeed the power of God unto salvation, our focus must always be upon His finished work upon that Cross. It is where not only the power of God is made evident for salvation, it is where the Holy Spirit looks to affect His work of edifying and sanctifying the Body as it matures in faith. It is our Christocentric faith and direction as saints of the LORD. We need look to no other place, trust in no other person or work but that of Jesus of Nazareth.
Now it has been said by some that our salvation is not determined at Calvary but at the resurrection or some other consequential place or act. Of course it must be stated that the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ is essential doctrine in any Christian setting. What could our faith possibly endure had Christ not risen? There could be no Christian church nor Body to withstand the assault of this ungodly world should Jesus remain in the grave to this day. The faith of Christ could not be if such were the case so it is clear the resurrection is vital to our understandings and purpose as saints. However, it is also critical to understand that the resurrection of Jesus Christ was the evidence of Christ's perfection at Calvary and not the cause of it in some other manner. It is the proclamation of Christ's triumph rather than the triumph itself. The ordinances against us were not nailed to the rock blocking the tomb but to the cross. It was not the sunshine of that morning of first fruits that cleansed us but it was the blood of the slain Lamb. Our Word-Faith friends from the Charismatic sects seem to have a lot of trouble with these truths as do some of the full preterist heretical sects. There is a sense among some of these fellows that there was a further work to be performed by Christ after his crucifixion yet the scriptures declare His shed blood to be the basis for all that saves us. We can search the scriptures and become overwhelmed by the glosses of "by blood" or through blood, the blood of Christ etc. We can find nothing concerning through resurrection or by the resurrection.
There is a reason for my comments that I am trying to work out and apply to a direction I see much of the church world moving in. We are a Christocentric church, especially among my Arminian fellows and the manner in which we stay Christocentric is to ensure our faith is Calvary centered. We live in an age when the lyrics of The Old Rugged Cross are an offense to some in the church world and this should never be. There are churches that refuse to sing or talk about Calvary, reject discussions about blood, conviction and sin. A church that has moved from a sure Calvary focus is one that has found a miry clay to stand upon and no church can be sustained on such a foundation. We need voices to stand in the gap and never be moved from our first love, our object and focus being Jesus Christ and His finished work at Calvary.
4 comments:
Well, actually, I must disagree. It is the resurrection that Christ defeats death that we see our hope. We are not fully saved to we experience the resurrection along side of Christ. The cross was the payment, but the resurrection was the gift, and surely the gift is the greater thing.
I think it is wrong to minimalize the atonement. But I also believe that it is the resurrection which should be the greater focus.
JC, we must disagree on this matter. I can think of nothing that Christ needed to do further than Calvary. By that I do not lessen the importance of the resurrection. Instead I am suggesting that the resurrection itself was evidence of Christ's triumph. Consider the following passages ...
1Co 2:2 For I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified.
1Co 1:23 But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness;
Ga 6:14 But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.
Again, I do not want to de-emphasize the resurrection and insist it is essential doctrine but we know that Christ defeated principalities openly. We know the veil to the temple was opened at Calvary when He gave His life. I get passionate about this because I know what victory there is in the cross of Christ in our own lives.
In an event, we must agree to disagree, brother.
JC, I wanted to come back and add another thought on this. Youo noted the resurrection or new life is the gift and I agree. Now, are we saved by trusting in the gift or by trusting in the person and work of Jesus Christ? Keep in mind I realize we must believe in the resurrection of our LORD and savior Jesus.
Amen brother. The cross saves, satisfies, and is our basis for our standing before our holy God. Great post.
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