Sunday, April 19, 2009

The Wrath of God and the Death of Christ

Tim Keller, in The Reason for God, lays out an incredible picture of the spiritual suffering that Christ had to endure on the cross for our redemption. This excerpt is from the third chapter on how a good God could allow suffering and evil.

"The Son of God was not created but took part in creation and has lived throughout all eternity 'in the bosom of the father' (John 1:18)-- that is, in a relationship of absolute intimacy and love. But at the end of his life he was cut off from the Father.

There may be no great inner agony than the loss of a relationship we desperately want. If a mild acquaintance turns on you, condemns and criticizes you, and says she never wants to see you again, it is painful. If someone you're dating does the same thing, it is qualitatively more painful. But if your spouse does this to you, or if one of your parents does this to you when you're still a child, the psychological damage is infinitely worse.

We cannot fathom, however, what it would be like to lose not just a spousal love or parental love that has lasted several years, but the infinite love of teh Father that Jesus had from all eternity. Jesus's sufferings would have been eternally unbearable. Christian theology has always recongized that Jesus bore, as the subsitute in our place, the endless exclusion from God that he human race has merited. . . . The death of Jesus was qualititatively different form any other death. The physical pain was nothing comared to the spiritual experience of cosmin abandonment. . . . On the Cross he went beyond even the worst human suffering and experienced cosmic rejection and pain that exceeds ours as infintely as his knowledge and power exceeds ours. . . . The Bible says that Jesus came on a rescue mission for creation. He has to pay for our sins so taht someday he can end evil suffering without ending us" (Keller 29-30).

Friday, April 10, 2009

Approaching Easter with a renewed passion

As I approach this easter, God has graciously given me a refreshed vision for the importance of the passion week. Easter has been a time to look forward to the newest church production, dress up in your best spring outfit, or gather with extended family after a bi-annual church visit.  As the gospel becomes sweeter to me through reading of the Word of God,  the remembrance of the atoning death of Christ on the cross becomes a fresh renewing of my purpose in life.  

"[He] was numbered with the transgressors, yet he bore the sins of many, and makes intercessions for the intercessors" Isaiah 53:12.

2,000 years ago our Saviour became our sacrifice and took on the Father's wrath. The weight of the whole world's sin on a sinless Christ was much worse than the brutal and bloody death on the cross. We know that the pain that Christ endured is abundantly worse than any pain that we will face because we are not holy and we have never felt the entire sin of the whole world.

When we approach Easter, are we reflecting on the wrath Jesus Christ absorbed for us? Are we reflecting on the selfless act of love Christ exhibited while enduring physical abuse?  Are we reflecting on God's holiness and our unworthiness? Are we reflecting on a Jesus Christ who is alive and interceding for us today?

Thank you Jesus.