GOD AND SINNERS RECONCILED
2 Corinthians 5:18&19 "All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself
through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: that God was
reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men's sins against
them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation"
We are told that after a husband or a wife has filed for a divorce only one
couple in eight make any attempt at reconciliation. But of those who do as
many as a half of them in fact manage to get their marriage back together
again. To try to be reconciled is worth while at all sorts of levels. Some
people live estranged from others for years because neither party attempt
to speak or show affection to the other. Families, friendships and churches
suffer as a consequence. The great model for reconciling grace is God
himself, the "God who reconciled us to himself through Christ" who has also
given to us "the ministry of reconciliation." The word 'reconciliation'
means to change or exchange, a change of relations, an exchange of
antagonism for amity. The word means to restore to friendship, or to make
up after a quarrel. It presumes that affection and peace once existed, but
something has happened to end it. Today there is what is known as
'alienation.' That is a very 20th century word. The Marxist has made much
of economic alienation - the farmer who struggles to grow a product sees a
gulf between the money which he is gets and the price at which it is sold
in the supermarket. Others speak of political alienation, a sense of
powerlessness to improve health care and education, and to reduce the
burden of taxation on ordinary people which constrains some parents to both
be at work. Yet others have even deeper feelings of alienation from the
whole maelstrom of modern life, its materialism, emptiness and
superficiality. They are feeling unfulfilled and disorientated. They have
discovered that many of our civilisation's promises are null and void, and
that what they have been given is fluff.
The Times recently interviewed numbers of young men and women in the city
of London. Most of them were depressed with life. Raj Pabla is 26 and a
solicitor from Putney in West London. He said, "I am really frustrated and
have become very cynical about my life. I was really looking forward to
starting my job, but I have found out that success is only about targets
you reach. This is depressing. Sometimes I feel like a robot completing
tasks, rather than a person. I have lost my enthusiasm because of the way
that things fail to fall into place. I thought I would be a high-flyer with
a great love life. When it does not work out the way you expect, it hits
you hard, I have become so cynical that I just want to make my fortune.
Money is the only thing that drives me and keep me going." (Times, 23 May
2001). Six other people in their twenties all spoke of their angst in that
way. All of them were alienated from that full rich life which had been
promised them even though they had attained everything they had been
encouraged to believe in ten years earlier. But none of this gloomy seven
were a Christian. Let those believers who are tempted to look at their
non-Christian friends and begin to itch for their imagined freedom, see how
alienated and unhappy most of them are. Let not your heart envy sinners.
Men without God are strangers in his world, without hope and peace. Our
greatest need is to be reconciled to the Creator God.
How important that alienation be ended and that the world experiences the
joy of a reconciled God. Dr Leon Morris points out that reconciliation "is
not a word to describe good relations in general. It means good relations
which follow when an enmity has been overcome. Imagine that I were visiting
you in your home and while I was there your friend Mr Brown dropped in. If
your Mr Brown and I got along well you wouldn't say to your friends next
day, 'Last night Mr Brown and Dr Morris were reconciled at my home.'
'Reconciled' would be quite the wrong word. This is the first time that
your Mr Brown and I had met. It is impossible for us to be 'reconciled'. Of
course, if this were not in fact our first meeting, and if we had known one
another in the past and had had a thundering great row and if you were able
to bring us to be of one mind, then reconciliation would be exactly the
right word. That is the way we use the term. It means bringing people into
a state of friendship again after they had been at loggerheads. It means
turning people from being enemies into being friends. It means replacing
enmity with friendship. It means ending the quarrel" (Leon Morris, "The
Atonement: Its Meaning and Its Significance", IVP, 1983, p.132). So the
word 'reconciliation' implies three states, first friendship, then a
quarrel, then friendship again.
Then how is it between God and man? And if there is alienation, how can
peace be restored?
1. THERE IS AN ESTRANGEMENT BETWEEN GOD AND MAN.
Last year was a bad time for a fellow pastor and friend of mine called
Tom. He experienced an estrangement with one of his closest friends in the
congregation. They had been fellow members and had worked together in
their fine church for decades, but last year something happened, I know not
what, and now there is a state of coolness between them. No matter what he
and others have sought to do the friendship at the present time is over.
The man has left the congregation. Friendship is a wonderful thing, but
when it is destroyed what regrets it brings. There has to be a right
attitude on both sides for reconciliation, or there will just be an uneasy
stalemate. Friendship means that each is displaying trust, warmth and good
will.
Think of David and Jonathan, and how nothing ever came between them. What
enlargement was brought into both their lives by their affection for one
another. There would be the added interest of their wives and families.
Though Jonathan's father hated David and wanted to kill him Jonathan stuck
by his friend. There was never any need of their being reconciled because
they never drifted apart. At Jonathan's death David cried, "I grieve for
you, Jonathan my brother; you were very dear to me. Your love for me was
wonderful, more wonderful than that of women" (2 Sam. 1:26). David also
honoured Saul in that same lament and said, "Saul and Jonathan - in life
they were loved and gracious" (2 Sam. 1:23). But nothing David tried to do
could achieve reconciliation with King Saul. There was hatred in Saul's
heart for David to the grave. The relationship which had begun so well,
with Saul loving David and giving him the hand of his daughter in marriage,
ended so ill.
Wherever an estrangement occurs between two people there is the offending
party - who has behaved badly, and there is the offended party. Think of
Cain murdering Abel, or Judas betraying Jesus, or all the congregations in
Asia turning against Paul. One hurting and the hurt, and the result is
alienation. So it is between God and ourselves, is there not a distance
between the world and him? Are men not strangers and aliens to God? What
has caused this? Who has been the guilty party? Could it have been the
Shepherd of Israel? The God who is love? Gentle Jesus, meek and mild? The
Holy Spirit? Does God at times choose to behave like Baal, and separate
himself, and give no reason? You say, "No way. God is always righteous and
his purposes are that we lead rich and full lives." The reason for the
estrangement is ours. It is man who has offended him.
You know the history of our first parents, placed in the Garden of Eden,
and living in perfect harmony with God. There was friendship between the
Creator and Adam. They walked together in the cool of the day in the most
sweet fellowship. The days went by and nothing came between them. One can
compare them to two chairs in a pulpit facing one another, open to one
another, in loving dialogue. But throughout this period before the fall
Adam and Eve were under probation, being tested concerning their trust in
God. Their condition was happy, yet mutable. Adam was capable of falling.
The key to their future was focused on one single prohibition, "You are
free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely
die" (Gen. 2:17). While they obeyed God they were acknowledging that he
alone was the all-wise Creator and they were creatures, living and moving
and having their being in him. Then one day the serpent suddenly speaks to
Eve saying, "Did God really say, 'You must not eat from any tree in the
garden'?" (Gen. 3:1). He plants the seeds of alienation in her mind, and
soon Eve is ogling the tree, and she is stretching out her hand to take,
and she is giving it to her husband and he is also eating it. Then their
eyes are opened and they realise they are naked. They sew fig leaves
together, make their own coverings for themselves, and go into hiding. They
had a new disposition, a carnal mind, at enmity with God. What has
happened? Man turned himself away from God to trust the serpent and also
trust in himself. So one chair now turns right away from the other. Man has
turned his back on a wise and loving Lord. He had become alienated and an
enemy in his mind by his wicked works. Then, because of this wicked stance,
God also turns his face away from man, and the other chair is facing the
opposite way. "They rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit: therefore he was
turned to be their enemy, and he fought against them" (Isa. 63:10). The
chairs have been reversed and stand back to back.
Two changes are needed to bring them back into accord. Firstly, God needs
to change. His anger at man's terrible sin needs to be removed. God must be
reconciled to man. Secondly, man needs to change. His heart and whole
disposition needs to be altered, to face up to what he has done, bow his
head, ask for forgiveness, and to put his whole trust in God's remedy, the
uplifted Christ. That change is called regeneration and its fruits are
repentance and confession of sin and a longing to please God.
Many religious people have claimed that in the New Testament when the
language of reconciliation is being used Paul speaks about man as the one
being reconciled, never God. They say that we are not to think of any
attitude on the part of God needing to be changed. God is love, they say,
and he is always prepared for men to return to him. It is in our own minds,
they claim, that the hostility arises. Of course there is truth in all
that. God is love, and so he will receive repentant sinners, but that
concept by itself is erroneous because God is light. God is a consuming
fire, and the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness
and unrighteousness of man. In other words, we may say that sin is a
problem to God. Think of a human analogy: the more a father loves his son,
the more he hates in him the drunkard, the liar, the thief. God loves what
he has made of us. God hates what we have made of ourselves. Love is not
sentimental. Love suffers long and is costly. So the loving God holds the
key to turning these two chairs so that they face one another again. If God
can become a reconciled God then it would be possible for men to be
reconciled to him. The gospel message is that that great reconciling event
has actually taken place on this same earth as the great divorce has taken
place, and it has cosmic ramifications, so, man, "be reconciled to God!"
Consider again what happened in Eden when our first parents defied God
(John Calvin said that a preacher would often be in Genesis chapter 3, John
chapter 3 and Romans chapter 3 as key chapters describing our relationship
with God and God's great answer). In Eden God comes to Adam to affirm that
an enormous breakdown has taken place in the relationship since man did
what God told him not to do. Chilly winds are blowing through Eden. The
Lord searches for Adam who is hiding in the woods from him, and what the
Lord does first is to interrogate and condemn pointing out to man that a
tense relationship now exists between the Holy Judge and sinners. But God
also makes a gracious promise of deliverance and a way of reconciliation.
You remember God asks four questions which serve to draw Adam and Eve into
their plight. Where are you? Who told you that you were naked? Have you
eaten from the tree that I commanded you not to eat from? What is this that
you have done? Then God pronounces a curse on the serpent, and on the
woman, and on the man for the unending consequences of their wickedness.
Now there is specified estrangement between them which has been caused
exclusively by man. Things are not as they were, and God is saying "We
can't pretend that they are. You were under probation. The test was this:
would you trust and love me more than anything else. You have failed the
test, and taking the fruit was just the first definitive action for a whole
different way of life." Yet God also came in mercy and he promised that one
day someone would come of the seed of the woman who would bruise the
serpent's head. God also made garments of skin for them and clothed them.
Now these promises and actions indicate that there was going to be a way of
reconciliation which God himself would accomplish. Then the offended Lord
drove the offending ones out of the Garden, banishing them from his
presence, setting cherubim as sentries preventing their return. God has
been alienated and estranged by man's sin, so man too has become separated
from God. Paul writes to the Colossians and he reminds them of what they
were before the grace of God saved them: "Once you were alienated from God
and were enemies in your minds because of your evil behaviour" (Cols.
1:21). That is how it is with all men.
Do you see the problem? The two chairs have been turned around back to
back. On your side, you have been content to live without God, and you sin
against him in many ways. Consider the ten commandments, summed up in the
two great commandment, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart
and with all thy soul and with all thy mind and with all thy strength, and
thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. There is the need to be obedient
to God's law from your very heart. But not only are there outward acts
there are inward transgressions of imagination and desire and omission. Do
we do what our conscience tells us is right? The Bible tells us that not
one person does. There is none righteous, no, not one. So, all have sinned
and come short of the glory of God. That is an immense problem, of human
sinfulness. Because of this all the world lies guilty before God. We hurt
those whom we love, even those who depend upon us the most. That is the
reality of mankind's great problem.
But there is this other chair, and it is the throne of the universe. There
is a turning away on God's side - the wrath of a sin-hating God. Do you not
see it? Sin has affected God. There are the cherubim and a flaming sword.
There is an inevitable reaction in God against all that contradicts his
nature. There were angels that rebelled against him, and God turned his
back. He cast them into eternal darkness. There was the world at the time
of Noah when every imagination of the thoughts of man's heart was only evil
continually, and God turned his back. He drowned it. There were the foul
cities of Sodom and Gomorrah and God turned his back. He destroyed the
cities with fire from heaven. There were the plagues God sent on
recalcitrant Egypt, and even when his own people Israel were complaining,
disobeying and rebelling, God turned his back and they all perished in the
wilderness. There is all the teaching of Jesus about hell. That is God's
assessment of what his creatures' wickedness deserves. Doesn't this tell us
that our sin causes God to turn his back? Is there not a hostility in the
Lord to every evil thing and every evil person? Let me bring together these
two problems of our alienation from God and his alienation from us by an
illustration:
Suppose a person went to a blacksmith and said to him, "I wonder would you
make me a long and heavy chain? Could you have it ready by such a time and
I will pay you in cash - no cheque, no credit card." The blacksmith was
pressed with many other jobs but for the sake of the large amount of cash
promised he drops everything and gives all his energy to making the chain.
After many days this enormous chain is complete and he calls the man and
tells him it is ready. "That is a fine chain," he says, "but I can see that
it is not long enough." "But it is the length you ordered," the blacksmith
protests. "Yes, I know, but I have decided to make it longer. Work on this
for another week and I will pay you." So very reluctantly, but encouraged
by the praise, and the promise of full payment in a week the blacksmith
sets to work, heating up his furnace with the bellows, beating the red hot
metal on his anvil, and steadily adding link to link, with tongs and hammer
beating the metal upon his anvil. The customer is as good as his word
returning in a week, and as before, he praises the chain, but again insists
that it is too short and he needs more links. "Then you must pay me," said
the blacksmith, "I can do no more. I have used virtually all my iron and
all my charcoal, and I am weary of this work. I need you to pay me for what
I have done, and I will not add a link until you do so." "Just a few more
links and it will be perfect," says the purchaser. "I cannot pay you now,
but in a week's time when you have completed the work to the proper length
you shall be paid in full." With that he walked out of the smithy. The
blacksmith sat back and groaned, but he had done so much. He had committed
such time and strength and materials into making this chain. He had to
finish it and get his money. So, scraping everything together, and with his
last ounces of energy he toiled on for another week and then the buyer
arrived. He examined the chain in detail, saying, "That is excellent. You
have worked hard and long in making it. All your skill is evident in this
great chain. You can do no more. Now you shall have your wages." But
instead of taking a roll of notes out of his pocket he suddenly motioned to
his men who took up the chain and overpowered the blacksmith, wrapping the
chain round and round him and throwing him into his own furnace.
Such is the course of sin! It promises much, and it makes demand after
demand - just a bit more, a few pounds more, some more effort and
dedication, another week, another few months, another year ... but its
reward is death, and each sin is another link in that chain which will keep
you in the prison house of hell. You serve sin, and you pay the penalty.
Think of the parable of the talents and the alienated Lord Jesus saying of
the wicked servant, "Throw that worthless servant outside, into the
darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth" (Matt. 25:30).
Consider how Isaiah cried to the people of his day, "Now stop your mocking,
or your chains will become heavier" (Isa. 28:22). Sin destroys us, and the
just and holy One will see to it that the sinner perishes. Isn't that the
warning built into the most well-known of all the texts of the Bible, John
3:16, "For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that
whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life."
Some need not perish, because they have believed in the Lord Jesus Christ,
but some will perish! So sin has created alienation between God and man.
2. FOR RECONCILIATION THE CAUSE OF THE ENMITY MUST BE REMOVED.
Consider the response of the Lord Christ to the Pharisees, his scorn and
his fierce denunciations: "Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees,
you hypocrites! You clean the outside of the cup and dish, but inside they
are full of greed and self-indulgence. Blind Pharisee! ... You are like
white-washed tombs, which look beautiful on the outside but on the inside
are full of dead men's bones and everything unclean ... You snakes, you
brood of vipers! How will you escape being condemned to hell?" (Matt. 23:
25, 27, 33). These men were particularly evil in their influence, pointing
men away from the promises of the Messiah and his mercy to their own
schemes of rules and regulations which they themselves had failed to keep.
The Lord Christ denounces them thoroughly. He doesn't flutter his eyelids
sighing, Tut tut, or, Boys will be boys. He pronounces seven woes against
them, that is, the fulness of divine woe is to fall upon them. Now how can
reconciliation be accomplished between the one who is the way and the truth
and the life and these false guides? You say, "They just say sorry, and
stop doing it." But what of all the damage they have done, the thousands of
ruined lives, the many in hell through being pointed at the traditions of
men? Is it enough to say sorry? Here is a man who bludgeons to death his
wife and children and later in a fit of remorse says, "I am sorry I did
it." Does that mean men say, "Then that's OK. You can walk around and carry
on with your life?" Does not human justice demand more than that? What of
divine justice for so reprehensible an act? Does not God hear the pleadings
for pity of those being murdered? What can change God's anger with the
cruel murderer? What can satisfy his justice against the wickedness of the
Pharisees and murderers - even if they cry, "We are sorry that we did it"?
God has to do something.
There is an anonymous woman and an anonymous man mentioned in the New
Testament. There is a woman mentioned in the first letter of Paul to the
Corinthians chapter 7 and verse 11. There is some alienation between
herself and her man, and Paul urges her to "be reconciled to her husband".
Something has happened, and she must put it right, not by thinking sweet
thoughts about her husband, but by doing something to end the alienation.
"Go to your husband and deal with it.'" She has been involved in a
separation and now by an action on her part a reconciliation must also be
accomplished. Then there is the man mentioned by Jesus in the Sermon on the
Mount in Matthew chapter 5 and verses 23 and 24. This man is about to lay
his offering on the altar in the temple when he is reminded, "Your brother
has something against you." It may be purely in his brother's imagination,
but whether it is or not, there is some grievance in his brother making him
troubled with this worshipper. Jesus tell the worshipper what to do, that
when you "remember that your brother has something against you, leave your
gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled with your
brother; then come and offer your gift." Go to him and sort things out.
Remove the grounds of the estrangement by an action. Put things right with
him. Then, when you have done that, return to the temple, pick up the gift
from before the altar and put it on the altar. Those are two examples of
reconciliation from the New Testament. By actions which people take
reconciliation is effected. It has little to do with changing our own
feelings towards the other party. For the alienation of the husband or the
alienation of the brother to be removed one has to go and do something! See
them and attempt a change.
Leon Morris has a fine description of this process: "let us suppose you
have had a quarrel with a friend. In the heat of the moment strong words
were spoken and the friendship you have so valued has been strained.
Perhaps when you cool down you say to yourself: 'I was a fool to quarrel
with him. He is a wonderful person and a valued friend.' Then you think,
'I'd love to be friends again. I'd like to have things as they used to be.'
You decide that you will try to repair the damage. You will take the
initiative. Then what are you to do? You take steps to deal with the root
cause of the quarrel. If it were a matter of harsh words spoken you go
along to your friend and say, 'I am very sorry about what I said. I
apologize sincerely. I withdraw that statement entirely.' As far as you can
you remove the cause of the enmity. You take it out of the way. If any
action is required you perform that action. If it was a matter of a letter
that had to be written you write it. If it was a document to be signed you
sign it. If it was money that had to be paid you pay it. You give thought
to what the root cause of the trouble was and take it out of the way. It is
only when the root cause is identified and dealt with that there can be
genuine reconciliation. Without that it is possible to have no more than an
uneasy, patched up truce. But not peace, not reconciliation ... People
concentrate on the symptoms and do not get to grips with the deep-seated
causes of the trouble. This can never lead to long-lasting peace" (Leon
Morris, "The Atonement", IVP, 1983, pp.138&139).
So the barrier that sin has erected between man and God has to be
dismantled. That problem which is keeping God's chair turned against us
must be completely removed. It will not go away by our wishful thinking.
Religious meditation won't remove it. Filling our lives with kind deeds to
others won't take it away. Sitting quietly and waiting and forgetting will
not make it disappear. That does not happen in the ordinary course of
affairs in life, and it does not happen in our relation with God. The woman
had to act to be reconciled
to her husband. The brother had to act and go to see his offended brother.
Because of our sin, God is the offended God. Consider how God sees sin. It
is like a man covered in disease: "Your whole head is injured, your whole
heart afflicted. From the sole of your foot to the top of your head there
is no soundness - only wounds and welts and open sores, not cleansed or
bandaged or soothed with oil" (Isa. 1:5&6). If you were with your children
you would avert their eyes from the sight, drawing their attention to
something else. Multiply by infinity! Our God is of purer eyes than to
behold wickedness. What offence he takes at our behaviour. How does God see
sin? It is like a herd of pigs wallowing in a pool of mud. It is like a
pack of dogs returning to eat their own vomit. It is like a brood of
vipers. It is like a white-washed tomb full of rotting flesh. Aren't those
pictures horrible? But it was not Jonathan Edwards who said that. Neither
was it John Calvin. It was the Lord Jesus who said it. Before him the
cherubim hide their eyes and feet and sigh to one another, "Holy! Holy!
Holy! Isn't he holy!" He humbles himself to consider the affairs of heaven
let alone this fallen world. When men see his glory they cry, "Woe to me! I
am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips!" (Isa. 6:5).
Eternal light! Eternal light!
How pure the soul must be
When, placed within thy searching sight,
It shrinks not but with calm delight
May live and look on Thee. (Thomas Binney).
God has to take action against the reprehensible actions of men that have
caused God to be angry with us. That must be done before man can rise to
that sublime abode where God dwells. The very cause of the enmity must be
dealt with before there can be reconciliation.
3. GOD HAS ACCOMPLISHED THE RECONCILIATION THROUGH CHRIST.
The staggering message of the New Testament is that reconciliation is a
work of God. Here he is, the offended and injured party, the one sinned
against, and yet he sets up the whole machinery of reconciliation. God
dedicates himself to the healing of the breach. We never read in the Bible
of man reconciling God and thus God being reconciled. God is the Sovereign
Reconciler. It begins with God and it is accomplished by God. It is a work
that does not draw within its scope human action. It does not enlist the
assistance of men. It does not depend upon the activity of men. Paul says
in our text, "All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through
Christ ... God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ" (vv. 18&19).
We took the forbidden fruit and hid from God, but he comes to seek and save
us. We created the barrier, but God is going to destroy it. The cause of
the alienation was an action of man. The cause of the reconciliation was
God's action. It has to be a divine work because man is so wrapped up in
himself and his sin. Man has no natural desire to leave his playthings,
and, anyway, the task is too much for him. It is beyond a Samson, but it is
not beyond the Lord Sabaoth's Son, and he will win the battle of
reconciliation. His glory is seen in the accomplishment of this great task,
"God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ." It is a finished
work. Reconciliation is not a process. It is not being continuously done by
God. It has been accomplished. The tenses of reconciliation in the New
Testament are all past tense. The action has been perfected.
"All this is from God," (v.18) says Paul. In other words, reconciliation is
a work of sovereign grace from beginning to end. One version of the New
Testament translates it, "From first to last this has been the work of God"
(New English Bible). The conception was his, the continuance was his, and
the consumation. The initiative for reconciliation was certainly not ours.
We have nothing to offer, to contribute, to plead. What did you have to
give to God? The only thing of your very own which you contributed to God
to accomplish reconciliation was your sin and need. That is all. The plan
and its accomplishment was from God. If today you and God are friends then
you owe all that to him alone.
But you must not think that you owe it to his omnipotence. Reconciliation
is not merely a work of almighty power. It is all from God to us because he
has loved us. I am affirming that there is a warm, fervent, passionate
affection in the very heart of God himself to every single individual
believer with whom he has become reconciled. He loves us with all the
longing of his holy nature. He hates to see our chairs turned against him.
Think of the very first mention of this reconciliation between God and man
in the New Testament. It is in Romans 5, where Paul says this, "But God
demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners,
Christ died for us. Since we have now been justified by his blood, how much
more shall we be saved from God's wrath through him! For if, when we were
God's enemies, we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son, how
much more, having been reconciled, shall we be saved through his life!"
(Roms. 5:9&10). Paul mentions God's love and immediately he goes on to
speak of free justification and reconciliation. The love and the
reconciliation go together. The reconciliation is achieved by the love.
"God is love. This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and
only Son into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not
that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning
sacrifice for our sins" (I John 4:8-10). Jesus Christ the great Reconciler
did not die to make God loving, but he died because God is loving.
'Twas not to make Jehovah's love
Toward His people flame,
That Jesus from the throne above
A suffering man became.
'Twas not the death which he endured,
Nor all the pangs he bore,
That God's eternal love procured,
For God was love before.
There were reservoirs of oil and natural gas in the rocks under the North
Sea long before anyone knew of their existence. So the immeasurable fulness
of love in God existed long before Jesus, the incarnation of love, revealed
to the world its unsearchable riches. He loved us in Christ before the
foundation of the world. "Always Thou lovest me." The work of
reconciliation in Christ did not alter God's fundamental character. It
simply revealed his character in a new relationship to his people. But let
me add this, that the sin of man did not suddenly make God a sin hating
God. That hatred existed before the foundation of the world. When angels
rebelled against him and were swept out of heaven and into judgment it was
not their rebellion that made him act like that. God is eternally a
consuming fire, and light in which is no darkness at all, and one who
cannot behold iniquity. It wasn't man's sin that made him the holy and just
God. He is eternal holiness and justice.
God loves men whom he has created, yet he is also offended by them because
of their daring and presumptuous sins. He will maintain his honour in his
own universe. He will not lightly give it over to the dominion of sin. He
will blaze in his steady indignation against it. Yet he loves favoured men
and women with a love that can never forget them, and so what God does to
achieve a reconciliation with us is this - he sends his only begotten Son,
his beloved holy child Jesus to deal with the cause of the alienation, that
is, with our sin. God cries, "Let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot
against them, and that I may consume them" (Ex. 32:10). But God in Christ
also cries, "I will bear that wrath. I will be consumed in their place."
That anger of God's at everything that contradicts his nature is borne by
the Lamb of God on Golgotha. He who becomes their substitute is also their
judge. The punished one is also the punisher himself. Reconciliation
requires the removal of the cause of the divorce. Divine justice against
our sinfulness demands satisfaction for that sin in order for there to be
reconciliation. The divine compassion provides the satisfaction, indeed, it
becomes the satisfaction. So God the Son is extracting the abscess of our
wickedness on Golgotha. He is becoming the great alienated one, the
scapegoat who is departing out of the universe of the divine love into
outer darkness far away in the extra-cosmic wilderness bearing our
rebellion. That is why he is crying out to God the Father who has turned
his back on him, in other words, God has turned his throne of love away
from his Son, and forsaken him. Jesus, there, is experiencing the
alienation as something utterly new to him. The chair of Father and the
chair of the Son have always been facing one another. They are virtually
one chair, one throne, one sovereign love. But now Jesus cries, "My God, my
God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" God has done that because the Son is
bearing everything that alienates God. A full and proper satisfaction has
been offered by Christ to the violated law and offended justice of God.
Thomas Erskine illustrates this with the story of a king called Zaleucis of
the Locrians. He wanted to stamp down on immorality in his kingdom and so
he decreed that everyone guilty of a certain offence should have both his
eyes put out. One of the first men to be convicted of this sin was his own
beloved son. If he were only a father then he could forgive and then
forget. If he were only a king then he could inflict the punishment and
then forget. But he was a father who loved his son and he was also a king
who must maintain justice. The king solved the problem in this way. He had
just one of his son's eyes put out, and then one of his own put out. Always
after that the eyeless socket in the face of the king testified to everyone
who looked at him that this king loved his son, and this king also loved
justice and righteousness. Now that story is only a story, and when we are
thinking of the atonement there is no adequate illustration of it in the
whole creation. In reality God in the person of his Son took our whole
penalty, and when we look at him in the midst of the throne we do not see a
one eyed King but a slaughtered sacrificial lamb. He comprehensively bears
the costly marks of his love for us and of how much our sin cost him. We
bear nothing!
We return to this, that for reconciliation the cause of the alienation
between ourselves and God has to be put away. Imagine it to be like some
vast angry boil, unlanced, ugly, full of disease, throbbing with pain, a
carbuncle as big as Everest. That is our sin, and because of that, God has
turned his back on us, yet in his love for us he takes up that sin of ours,
he handles this mass of noxious defilement and he does not count it against
us. He counts it against his own Son. He puts it all upon Christ. He lays
all our sin to Christ's account. That is the cross and the meaning of the
death of Christ. Our text says that God, "reconciled us to himself through
Christ ... God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting
men's sins against them" (vv. 18&19). In other words, because of Christ,
God can turn his own chair around and now he can look in love at man
because in Christ our alienation has all gone. God has no more demands to
make. His own love, at immeasurable cost, has accomplished the change, and
this act of divine grace brings us back to himself. The blood of Jesus has
washed away our sin and created peace with God. Then regeneration, the gift
of the Holy Spirit, a new heart and a new nature that loves and obeys him -
all that succeeds in 'turning our chair around.' God and man face each
other once again as they did in Eden, but no longer are we under probation.
Christ has passed the test for us and God and ourselves are friends for
ever.
There are the most wonderful words that affirm this very clearly in the
letter to the Colossians chapter 1 and verses 19 and 20: "For God was
pleased to have all his fulness dwell in [Christ], and through him to
reconcile to himself all things whether things on earth or things in
heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross." The word
'blood' refers to the thought of sacrifice. In the Old Testament the sinner
brought a lamb or a goat and it was sacrificed, its blood was shed, in
order for the sacrificer to be forgiven. Peace with heaven through the
blood of the lamb. Without the shedding of blood there was no remission of
sins. That was the message of the Old Testament, and we pour into it all
the new light of the words of John the Baptist as he points men to Jesus -
"Look! The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world" (John 1:29).
O Christ, what burdens bowed thy head!
Our load was laid on Thee;
Thou stoodest in the sinner's stead,
Didst bear all ill for me.
A victim led, thy blood was shed,
Now there's no load for me.
There are also other great words which explain the reconciliation through
Christ and they are found in Paul's letter to the Ephesians, chapter 2 and
verses 13 and 14: "But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far away have
been brought near through the blood of Christ. For he himself is our
peace." See Adam and Eve driven out from Eden far away from God, living in
alienation from him. Then the Lord Jesus Christ comes and reconciles God to
us so that we may be brought near to him, through the blood of Christ, for
he himself is our peace. On the first day of resurrection the Lord Jesus
suddenly appears in that upper room in the midst of men who had all run
away and left him to die, and he says, "Peace be unto you." He does not
come to condemn them but to bless. Today the good Shepherd comes to us to
seek and to save his lost sheep, and he preaches to us and smiles at every
one of his people and he says, "Shalom! Peace to all of you." Our deepest
needs are satisfied in Christ. We have peace with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ.
4. GOD HAS GIVEN US THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION.
Notice how insistent Paul is on this, that God "gave us the ministry of
reconciliation" (v.18) and again, "And he has committed to us the message
of reconciliation" (v.19). In other words, peace with God has happened.
Reconciliation has taken place - before the first New Testament gospel was
ever preached. Because of the work of Christ consumated on the cross our
God is reconciled. It has been done, once and for all. This is my ministry.
This is the ministry of every Christian, whether we are teaching children
in a Holiday Bible Club, or talking to a friend at work the very best way
we can serve our neighbours is to tell them of the great Reconciler, Jesus
Christ. Because of his singular divine achievement, sinner - be reconciled
to God! Avail yourself of what Christ has done. Receive the reconciliation.
There is peace with God - accept the terms God lays down. They are
non-negotiable. All you can do is accept them. Nothing else! Nothing more
remains to be done, because nothing is lacking. God's chair is turned back
towards you in love. You now have to turn your chair around and accept that
love of God. You must, we beseech you, turn it round! Don't go on living
with your back turned to God.
If you will, you may come to him and enter into his love and forgiveness.
You may freely take the reconciliation of God, even though you have sinned
greatly against him. One thing he insists on, and that is to acknowledge
that you have been living with your back turned on God. This thing he
requires, if you are going to know God's blessing on your life you have to
accept the work Jesus Christ has done on the cross. Nothing else will
avail. Nothing else can turn away the just anger of God at your sin than
the death of the Lord Jesus. Take the reconciliation God is offering. There
is not the slightest reason why you should not be a reconciled sinner
today. I believe I speak on behalf of the mighty God and I am saying that
his throne is turned towards you now. He wouldn't have allowed you to hear
these words of the gospel of reconciliation if it were not to give you this
sincere opportunity of salvation. If you go on with your back to God
through life then that is your decision. You have chosen an angry God for
ever, and an angry God for ever is what you will get! From that throne,
which now is turned towards you in love, he will one day speak and say,
"Depart from me, unreconciled sinner." I tell you that he is the
ever-blessed God today when he is offering you his friendship, and he will
be the ever-blessed God on that tremendous day when he will be offering you
his wrath. He is happy within himself without our love and without our
service. It is we who are undone if we are not reconciled to him.
Think! Please consider the love of God, we beseech you, who sent his Son to
Golgotha. Think of all he has done that sinners should be reconciled to
himself. Our text tells that he has not counted our sins against us! We do!
We pitiful sinners will not let men forget that we do count their sins
against them. "I won't forget what you did to me," is our attitude. We
ignore men. We turn our eyes away from them. We will not smile at them. We
will not speak to them. We want them to know that we are counting their
sins against them. Thank God that he is not like us! Your theft - but he
has not counted it against you! Your lust - but he has not counted it
against you! Your cold and stubborn and loveless heart - but he has not
counted it against you. Consider what he has done for you, in bringing you
here to hear this message. Millions live and die never hearing of Jesus
Christ. You have heard of him many times, but you are still unreconciled.
Say to yourself, "Why should I go on one day longer alienated from God, a
stranger to the Creator?" Turn the chair around! Be contented with your sin
no longer, and as you do you will manifest his regenerating grace has saved
you. We beseech you, be reconciled to God! Cry to yourself,
Arise, my soul, arise, Shake off thy guilty fears,
The perfect Sacrifice In my behalf appears.
Before the throne my Surety stands,
My name is written in His hands.
My God is reconciled, His pardoning voice I hear;
He owns me for His child, I can no longer fear;
With confidence I now draw nigh,
And Father, Abba, Father! cry.
The real living Christ can produce in you this new disposition to constrain
you to return to God. Everyone is converted in a different way, and over
differing spans of time. Many cannot tell the year they were converted.
Others of us know the day. Richard Baxter said, "God doesn't break all
men's hearts alike." But there is one point at which all the roads to
Christ converge, and that is when we realise that our backs are turned to
God, and our whole lives are heading away from him, and that there is no
hope for us except in the reconciliation that Jesus Christ himself brings.
You will each express that in different ways, but the sentiment is always
the same. You have been out of step with the holy living Creator God, but
now you are trusting Jesus Christ, and all your hope of peace with heaven
is because of what he did on the cross and what he is doing on the throne.
3rd June, 2001 GEOFF THOMAS
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