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- WHAT WAS THE COST OF YOUR SALVATION?
-
- . When you think of God, what kind of image comes to mind? Far too
- many people have a severely distorted image of God and it adversely
- effects the way they relate to Him. Many see the Father as some kind
- of old tyrant sitting on his big throne making tough laws that nobody
- can obey perfectly and then getting angry over our failure, ready to
- kill us any moment. When we envision Jesus, he is seen like a kind of
- Jewish mother with chicken soup, always ready to protect us from the
- ole' meanie and his bonger. Then there is the Holy Spirit, something
- that is just kind of hovering around like a vapor doing something, but
- few know quite what.
- . While such confusing images are common to the world, it is
- surprising how much of this kind of thinking is in the church.
- Failure to properly discern the person of God is one of the basic
- causes for failure to understand the nature and problem of sin. I
- want to take a moment here to examine sin from God's perspective as
- revealed in the Word of God.
- . Jesus said that a wise man counts the cost of a thing before he
- decides to proceed so that he will not look like the fool when he
- comes up short. It is important to count the true cost of sin! We
- have all heard the basic redemption story told from the angle of
- Christ's suffering at the hands of the Sanhedrin and Romans.
- Crucifixion was a Phoenician invention that the Romans perfected into
- a fine science to make death as painful and slow as possible. Like
- Gaius Caesar used to say, "make him feel like he is dying." After the
- body is ripped to a bloody mass by the Roman lash, the convicted man
- will be forced to carry his own cross-bar to the place of execution.
- . There, the proficient executioners will secure the arms in place
- and feel for the space between the bones just below the wrist. There
- is a pain nerve that crosses this area, and it is here that the large
- spike is driven through the wrist and fastened by the nail head to the
- crossbar. Once the arms are secure, the feet are then also fastened
- with a single spike so that the knees are slightly bent. The cross is
- then lowered with a jolt into the hole, often causing the joints in
- the body to be dislocated in places.
- . The stress of the weight of the body on the chest with the arms
- secured in this way is such that one cannot breathe. To breathe, one
- must stand on the nail pinned feet to push the body up and relieve the
- pressure on the diaphragm. Thus, survival is lengthened as the victim
- repeatedly rises and falls in order to breathe. This is why breaking
- the legs speeds up the death process.
- . Friend, whenever you pull out your calculator and add up the cost
- of sin, I dare you estimate the agony of Jesus. Yet it was your sin
- that cost Him that pain and death. Our Father has made forgiveness so
- easy and available that we have entered a "take it for granted" type
- of attitude toward it. We seem to think that we can be lax on sin,
- lax in prayer, diligence and holiness, reckless with our spiritual
- walk and the only price we have to pay is taking the time to ask
- forgiveness. Salvation may have been free for you, but it was not
- cheap. Let's look a bit deeper here.
- . Is there any doubt in your mind that the Father loved His Son?
- What father doesn't, except the debased? How intensely the Father
- loved His only begotten Son who was perfect in every sense of the
- word. He NEVER disobeyed. Yet, "God so loved the world that He gave
- His only begotten Son...", not just to let Him come to earth, but God
- gave Him to the cross. The pain that must have been in God's heart is
- unknowable. Not only did the Father allow Jesus to suffer a
- horrendous physical death, but he also was forced by the law of
- righteousness to turn His back on Jesus at His time of supreme need.
- . On the cross Jesus quoted David's Psalm (22:1) when He said, "My
- God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" The verse goes on to say,
- "Why are you so far from saving me, so far from the words of my
- groaning?" The penalty for sin is not only physical death, it
- includes banishment from the presence of God. God must turn His back
- on sin, and in eternity, turn away from the sinner that has not
- forsaken his sin. On the cross, Jesus was dying as our substitute so
- He had to experience the full impact of sin's penalty. When they
- offered Jesus a pain killer he refused for He knew that He must
- experience the full blast of God's wrath. He must not only drink the
- bitter cup, He must drain it to the dregs.
- . I can not imagine how it must have anguished the Father to so
- turn His back on His Son. Why did He do it? Because, my friend, He
- loved you! He saw you dead in your sin and there could only be one
- substitute. The price for sin was either your life or His, and He
- chose to give His for you. Jesus died for the sin of adultery because
- it was the sin of adultery that drove those nails home. He died for
- the sin of lying and bitterness, because those sins drove the Roman
- lash. He died for your selfishness and rebellion, because man's
- rebellion brought the curse of thorns into the world and forced a
- crown of thorns into His precious brow.
- . Get out your calculator and add it up! Before the sum reads
- "Freebee Grace", remember the price somebody had to pay. Calculate it
- out, friend, before you curse your circumstances, treat a brother
- rudely, cop an attitude, or sleep with someone you should not be with.
- If you can proceed with sin, knowing the cost Jesus and the Father had
- to pay, then you lie when you say you love Him. Nobody would put
- somebody they loved through that just to please the lusts of the
- flesh. Sin is a reproach and deserving of eternal hell, especially if
- it is persisted in in light of the cross.
- . Finally, we have the command of Jesus Himself when He says that
- we should forgive just as we have been forgiven. Before you cop an
- attitude or embrace a bitter or unforgiving attitude in your heart
- toward someone, remember the debt you were released from. If what
- they did to you comes anywhere close to what your sins inflicted on
- Jesus, then I suppose you are now dead and this message doesn't even
- matter. If you are still alive, then you must forgive.
- . I assure you, forgiveness is still just a repentant heart away,
- but I pray that the knowledge of the weight of what it cost will cause
- you to consider your ways and rush to an altar of prayer, not just for
- forgiveness, but also for His delivering power. "Come near to God and
- He will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify
- your hearts, you double-minded. Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your
- laughter to mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before
- the Lord and he will lift you up" (James 4:8-10).
-
- J.Jefferson (John J. Clark II)
-
- Computers for Christ - Chicago
-