THE COLLISION OF GOD AND SIN
Today
is Good Friday and I trust you will take some time today to rehearse and remember
what our Savior did for you on the cross of Calvary. Oswald Chambers’
devotional for today is piercing to the heart as he explains about the “Collision
of God and Sin …” -- Bill Welte is President and CEO of America's Keswick
“. . . who Himself bore our sins in His own body on
the tree . . . .” 1 Peter 2:24
The Cross of Christ is
the revealed truth of God’s judgment on sin. Never associate the idea of
martyrdom with the Cross of Christ. It was the supreme triumph, and it shook
the very foundations of hell. There is nothing in time or eternity more
absolutely certain and irrefutable than what Jesus Christ accomplished on the
Cross—He made it possible for the entire human race to be brought back into a
right-standing relationship with God. He made redemption the foundation of
human life; that is, He made a way for every person to have fellowship with
God.
The Cross was not
something that happened to Jesus—He came to die; the Cross was His purpose
in coming. He is “the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world” (Revelation
13:8). The incarnation of Christ would have no meaning without the Cross.
Beware of separating “God was manifested in the flesh . . . ” from “. .
. He made Him . . . to be sin for us . . . ” (1 Timothy 3:16; 2
Corinthians 5:21).
The purpose of the
incarnation was redemption. God came in the flesh to take sin away, not accomplish
something for Himself. The Cross is the central event in time and eternity, and
the answer to all the problems of both.
The Cross is not the
cross of a man, but the Cross of God, and it can never be fully comprehended
through human experience. The Cross is God exhibiting His nature. It is the
gate through which any and every individual can enter into oneness with God.
But it is not a gate we pass right through; it is one where we abide in the
life that is found there.
The heart of salvation
is the Cross of Christ. The reason salvation is so easy to obtain is that it
cost God so much. The Cross was the place where God and sinful man merged with
a tremendous collision and where the way to life was opened. But all the cost
and pain of the collision was absorbed by the heart of God.
Chambers, Oswald (2010-10-22). My
Utmost for His Highest, Updated Edition (p. 97). Discovery House Publishers.
Kindle Edition.
Team YOU: 1 Samuel 4-6; Proverbs 6; Luke 9:1-17
Motivations: The way pride works in remorse is
through a distorted self-righteousness which must pay for its own sin or which
must exonerate the self through putting the blame elsewhere...Remorse may lead
to despair or else back into the victim response of blame, but repentance leads
to life. Judas died in remorse, but Peter was restored through repentance. Deidre
Bobgan
Practice to Remember:
Level 1:Ephesians
4:25; Level 2: Ephesians
4:11-16
Powered Up: Not just pray about the work. Prayer is the
work. Armin Gesswein
No comments:
Post a Comment