Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Is The Gospel a Message of Balance? part lll

Some teaching I had received concerning our position in Christ seemed to be contradictory. One emphasized being seated in heavenly places with Christ while others stress the necessity to embrace the cross daily. In my confusion one day, I asked the Lord where I was to be. Was I to embrace the cross or be seated with Him in the heavens? I was rather surprised at the answer I received. Those of different persuasions on the subject spoke as if one was right and the other was wrong, but the Lord said both are right. My eternal spirit man is seated with Christ in heavenly places while my temporary flesh man must embrace the cross. We leave our old identity as slaves to sin at the cross and accept our new identity as a child of God.

Jesus said we must take up our cross daily and follow Him to become His disciple. Why did He not say we must take our heavenly seat to become His disciple? I believe the one must come before the other. Jesus was our example. He went to the cross trusting His Father to raise Him up. It was because He willingly gave up His own life that He was raised up by promise. In the same way we receive a heavenly seat as a result of willingly embracing the cross. The way up is down. It is our job to go down and His job to raise us up.

Let us take a closer look at the cross to determine if we are doing our part. First, and maybe the most important thing to remember, is that the suffering of Christ was not for His own debt of sin, but for others. He was totally innocent of all charges. He also suffered just because He was righteous. He, who knew no sin, became sin for us. Jesus willingly went to the cross. No man took His life: He freely gave it up for the sins of many. He could have called ten thousand angels to fight His enemies but He chose another way. His payment for sin on the cross exceeded that of the Old Covenant sacrificial system. It was an extreme payment containing more than enough to cover all sin for all time.

Jesus said we must take up our cross, daily, and follow Him in order to become His disciples. He gives us a choice and a daily one at that. Our cross also has to be defined by our willingness to bear it. It has to be something we can choose and not be put on us as a legal requirement. The cross is total submission of love to love. If we place a requirement on love, then love is lost and spilled like the new wine in old wineskins. Love has to be given freely from the heart. The cross was and is the greatest expression of unconditional love. It was undeserved favor toward the unlovely.

The cross we bear has to be our choice and it has to include a more than enough payment, an undeserved payment. When Jesus said turn the other cheek or go the second mile, He was describing the cross. If a court of law required my coat so that justice would be served, I would have no choice but to give. But if I follow Jesus’ directions I would, by choice, add to the payment something I did not owe, an undeserved bonus, if you will. If I only give what is required then I am operating in the realm of law. If I want to escape the realm of law, with its guilt, condemnation and shame, I have to embrace the cross, adding to the legal requirement an undeserved portion. Paul says in Galatians 3:11 No man is justified by the law in the sight of God; it is evident: for the just shall live by faith. KJV

In order to escape the law’s domain we enter into faith by exceeding the law’s requirements. One major strategy of our enemy is to keep God’s people living under the influence of the law using a counterfeit cross. Religion says we gain favor with God through works and suffering. A religious cross leads to self punishment, false humility and striving to please God by our own efforts. The devil’s domain is in the law and our escape is through the cross.

For much of my Christian experience I suffered much guilt, condemnation and shame and struggled to understand why. I believed with out a doubt that Jesus died for my sins on the cross and I trusted in His finished work. I believed nothing I could do would add to what He had completed. But I had problems I could not resolve. One day, the light went on for me concerning the cross. I realized I was not experiencing the full benefit of the cross; I had been deceived by religion. I thought I had taken up my cross and had been following Jesus, as one of His disciples, but, in reality, I had unwittingly avoided embracing it. My problems were the result of walking in legal territory where the devil is empowered to harass and condemn God’s people over past failures. Even though I would pray, and claim the power of the blood of Christ, it had a very short term effect.

I realized that I had not been enjoying the full benefits of the cross because I had avoided it. I had chosen rather to be satisfied with legal requirements. I had not blessed those who had cursed me. I had failed to do good to those who had wronged me. I did not give to those who did not deserve it. I forgave others their debt of sin toward me but I did not add the undeserved portion spoken of by Jesus. I came to realize taking up the cross was not just mental agreement but action.

I had not lost my salvation but my experience more resembled that of the Old Covenant saints than what is described in the new. I was not experiencing the wonderful presence of God because of guilt and shame. I had a hard time believing God was pleased because of my own feelings. I had poured the new wine into the old wineskin and it was spilled.

The same religious spirits that hoodwinked the Galatian church are still alive and active today. They promote mixing the requirements of the old law system in with the new to cause the new to be of no effect. Even though the cross brought an end to the requirements of the law, religion tries to sell the church a counterfeit cross and a powerless gospel. Even though Jesus dealt a death blow to the devil, the only way we can walk in that victory is through embracing the cross. Jesus provided a way for us to escape enemy dominated territory. We must find our identity in Christ. He has proclaimed us innocent and has given us authority over all the power of the enemy.

No one is justified by the works of the law but by the faith of Jesus Christ. The just shall live by faith. The cross walk is a faith walk. The only way I can stay in the faith is to surpass the law. Faith always exceeds the requirements of the law. I can only walk in the authority of my new identity through faith. Mixing the law with faith always produces an Ishmael. Ishmael could not receive the inheritance of God’s promise to Abraham’s descendants because he was not born of the free woman. Hagar was a type of the law and brought forth children in bondage to the requirements of slavery. Those who are free have a choice. They suffer or give unmerited favor to the undeserving as a mater of choice. Those in bondage to the law are not working by choice but by requirement.

Whenever we choose to act like slaves and focus only on what is required, we choose to take on that identity. If I want to walk and live under the blessing of my new Father I have to choose to act like Him. He is the one who is generous and gives unmerited favor to sinners. I must refuse to walk in my old identity lest I fall again to bondage of slavery and the law. God never takes away our choice, but He always says “This is the way, walk ye in it” (Isaiah 30:21)
From my own, past experience and from what I observe in the body of Christ, I conclude that many are living at the level of Old Covenant believers. We struggle to keep our joy. We fight off memories of past failures and abuses against us. We have trouble maintaining intimacy with God and even think He is against us at times. These are symptoms of trying to walk out a balanced and moderate gospel having removed the extreme from the cross. The Gospel calls for us to move to the extreme, to the cutting edge, always pressing into new territory. The Gospel of Christ calls for us to be hot or cold, not lukewarm. The fruit of the Spirit in our lives should be extreme, like the fruit of the promise land. The gospel I read promises indescribable joy, a peace that surpasses our understanding, and a rest that is not disturbed by storms. Though the cross involves suffering it causes rejoicing not gloom and depression.

I see a generation of young people today who are looking for the extreme. Extreme sports are more popular than ever. I always cringe when I see the dangerous stunts performed by some and shake my head wondering why they would live on the edge like that. I do not believe that the church, as it is today, will reach an extreme generation with a balanced and moderate gospel message. They are hungry for the extreme and are ripe for the true gospel message.

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