Sunday, May 29, 2011

The Cross and The Line: Crucified with Christ

By Bill Lilley

The Lord Christ stopped at nothing to make us forgivable. He went to the most extravagant lengths possible, even to the point of death, the death of the Cross. He, the Son of God, learned obedience through the things which He suffered and by so doing became the perfect sacrifice for the once-for-all propitiation for our sins.

We are never more like Christ than when we erase all lines that separates us from loving and forgiving. The popular phrases, "I draw the line at…", or "She crossed the line…" are the opposite of this for the most part. There were no barriers between Jesus and the work that the Father sent Him to complete.

It is rightfully said that there is only one thing you can do to earn your way into Hell, and that thing is not really a doing, it is an undoing - it is the purposeful refusal to exercise the gift of faith all have been given. You have to work hard for a long time to traverse the distance between everlasting life and eternal death. And you have to trample the Son of God underfoot to get there.

To be crucified with Christ means, at least in part, to have no lines that others can cross. By this I don't mean being a squish, or not standing up for what is right. What I do mean is that if someone reaches the point of true repentance and remorse in regard to some offense he or she has done to you, there will be no refusal of forgiveness based on the pitiful notion of that person having "gone too far." Gone too far for whom? You?

Christ went to the Cross for you, and you can't swallow some hurt and pride to forgive someone else of far less an offense? Please!

Salvation is a miracle of the grace of God, but part and parcel of that miracle is true repentance. To have a broken and contrite spirit that leads you to The Cross is a gift of God. He will by no means cast you out. Can you yourself justifiably do anything less when someone who has hurt you or broken your heart, however often or for however long, seeks your forgiveness?

Suffering for your own idiocy is not commendable. It is only just.

Suffering unjustly on behalf of someone else makes you like Christ.

He set His face like flint toward Jerusalem and excruciation. In like manner, can we cement our resolve to put away pride and be a standing offer of forgiveness to those who truly desire it?

Hurt and betrayal are human emotions precisely because we are made in the image of God. We feel because He does.

It would be a horrible thing indeed if the Sovereign of Existence was an unfeeling force. It would be a life without meaning, a journey without destination, and all suffering would be the cruelest travesty imaginable. Better not to be alive at all if such is true.

But it is not true. Even the most militant atheist knows deep down inside that there is more to life than can be experienced through sense and mind. Else why would he care so much to fight for his point of view? What possible difference could it make in the long run if he converted the entire planet to godlessness? Would it change one iota of the ultimate futility of life?

There is only one thing that gives hope and makes free: the truth of God. Anything else is at best a mere guess, or wishful thinking, or at worse, a murderous lie.

Becoming like Christ is why we are alive. When we have gone as far as we may in that direction in this life, the Lord will bring us Home.

Until then, swallow pride and surrender to Him.

Freedom from personal offense is freedom indeed, as is freedom from the misery of self.

Don't think that what we try to hide won't be uncovered. Don't think that the lies we tell ourselves to justify the hardness of our own heart afford any refuge from the truth.

These things will all be shouted from the rooftops one day, and the unquenchable regret of wasted opportunity and irrevocable time will weigh us down like anchor chains.

Erase the lines and be like Him. Open your heart to the Lord God. He does not want what you can do, He wants you. The doing of anything for Him comes after your becoming a living sacrifice.

Rest and Comfort in Christ

Dear Suzanne, Rebecca, Anna and Mikayla,


Then the LORD said to Noah, "Come into the ark, you and all your household, because I have seen that you are righteous before Me in this generation.

The gracious invitation of our Lord...come—the gracious gospel invitation: "Come into the ark of safety." The ark is a picture of Christ. The flood  depicts  judgment. The ark was the only way of salvation. When the flood came, only those who were inside were saved.  Those on the outside perished. Christ is our ark.  He is the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father but through Him.  In Him is eternal life...outside of Him is eternal punishment and death.

Noah believed God.  He had manifested this belief before God and man by being obedient in the building of the ark and in the preaching of the message of the judgment to come. Noah had done all that God had commanded.  God invited him and his family to come in....the idea being that He would be in the ark with them and would keep them safe.


So those that entered, male and female of all flesh, went in as God had commanded him; and the LORD shut him in.

You know what...I love the mercy God showed Noah here and the mercy He shows us.  Our job is to be obedient and leave the results to Him. Scripture tells us that God shut the door.  He kept it open as long as possible but in the end it was God who shut the door. Noah was not given the responsibility of anyone's salvation.  While the door was open, Noah preached.  When it closed, Noah had the comfort of knowing he had been obedient.  The saving of souls is not in our hands.  The ark for Noah was the place of safety...of salvation.  For those that remained on the outside, however, it represented condemnation.  Once the door was shut, their doom was sealed.  There were no second chances.

Then God remembered Noah, and every living thing, and all the animals that were with him in the ark. And God made a wind to pass over the earth, and the waters subsided....


 In judgment God always remembers mercy.  David Guzik says this is an anthropomorphism (a non-literal picture of God in human terms we can understand).  God never forgot Noah, but at this point God again turned His active attention towards Noah.  

I liked what Matthew Henry says here:


"The whole race of mankind, except Noah and his family, were now dead, so that God's remembering Noah, was the return of his mercy to mankind, of whom he would not make a full end. The demands of Divine justice had been answered by the ruin of sinners. God sent his wind to dry the earth, and seal up his waters. The same hand that brings the desolation, must bring the deliverance; to that hand, therefore, we must ever look. When afflictions have done the work for which they are sent, whether killing work or curing work, they will be taken away. As the earth was not drowned in a day, so it was not dried in a day. God usually works deliverance for his people gradually, that the day of small things may not be despised, nor the day of great things despaired of."

Then the ark rested in the seventh month, the seventeenth day of the month, on the mountains of Ararat. 

The passover took place on the fourteenth day of the seventh month on the Jewish calendar....Jesus was in the tomb three days and three nights.  He rose from the dead on the seventeenth day of the seventh month on the Jewish calendar.  ...the same day the ark rested on Mount Ararat...only 4500 years earlier.   Jesus is our rest...He is our peace...He is our new beginning.  Such a beautiful picture of God's mercy, grace, love  and the sure and certain hope we have in Him.

Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.  Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”--Matthew 11:28-30

Love
Mom