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Jesus Became Sin for Us

By Jeremy Myers
10 Comments

Jesus Became Sin for Us

became sin for us2 Corinthians 5:21 may be the most horrifying verse in Scripture, for it reveals the fact that Jesus, who was holy, righteous, and perfectly sinless, became sin for us. God made Him who knew no sin, to be sin for us.

The Horror of the Cross

Can you imagine the horror, the shame, and the guilt that poured upon Jesus while He hung upon the cross?

We, who are born in sin and who are accustomed to sinโ€™s constant presence within us, still feel shame and guilt when we sin. Imagine then how it would feel for God in the flesh, who is perfectly holy and righteous, and for whom sin is the exact antithesis and opposite of everything about His being, to not just take on a few sins, but to actually become sin for the entire world? It is shocking and horrifying to think about.

The Love of the Cross

But it is also incredibly loving, for God, who alone knows the full ramifications and consequences of sin, knew that only in this way could He have the relationship and fellowship with us that He so desires. Only by taking sin upon Himself could He finally, ultimately, and completely defeat sin, death, and the devil. So He did it.

Jesus became sin for us and gave us His righteousness.

Jesus accepted our sin into Himself.

He breathed it in, soaked it up, and allowed it to consume Him from within.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: When God Pled Guilty

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The Love and Horror of the Cross

By Jeremy Myers
11 Comments

The Love and Horror of the Cross

We have come a long way in trying to explain the violence of God in the Old Testament (See the list of posts at the bottom.) I am nearly ready to offer my proposal… But there is one more piece of the puzzle to lay on the table before we start putting all the pieces together.

Jesus Became Sin for Us

the horror of the crossThe final piece of the puzzle about how to understand the violence of God in the Old Testament in light of life, ministry, and death of Jesus Christ is found in 2 Corinthians 5:21.

In this text we read that Jesus became sin for us. Paul writes that God made Jesus โ€œwho knew no sin to be sin for us.โ€ We must not try to soften the implications or significance of what Paul writes.

It is not just that Jesus took our sin upon Himself on the cross. No, He became sin.

He took His righteousness and swapped it with our sinfulness. Every sin we have ever committed was not just โ€œcreditedโ€ to the account of Jesus, but He was actually made to be that sin!

The horror of this must not be missed. But neither should the love.

The horror and the love of what Jesus did on the cross helps us understand what God was doing in the Old Testament. I will explain in future posts.

But this post will simply relate a dream I had as a boy which I think shows both the horror and the love of the cross.

A Dream About the Love and Horror of the Cross

When I was about ten years old, I had a nightmare about Jesus dying the cross. I vividly remember seeing His broken and bleeding body hanging upon the cross. As I watched, I noticed a few black ants coming up out of the ground and climbing up the cross toward Jesus. As they climbed, more and more ants swarmed up out of the ground so that by the time the first few ants had reached the bloody feet of Jesus, all the ground around the cross and the lower portion of the beam was a roiling mass of blackness. This swarm of ants scurried up the cross and over the body of Jesus.

swarm of antsI could tell by the way Jesus twitched and squirmed that the ants were not just climbing over His body, but were biting Him as well. I was surprised that Jesus did not cry out in pain, but I knew that if He did, they would enter His mouth and eat Him alive from the inside out. As soon as I had this horrifying thought, Jesus looked me in the eyes and then opened His mouth wide. As expected, the mass of ants swarmed in and they ate Jesus alive. Soon, there was nothing left of Jesus, only a black mass of ants.

I woke trembling, with tears in my eyes.

I knew, of course, what the ants were. They were my sins. Each tiny ant represented one of my sins. And there were millions upon millions of them. At first I thought that there was no way all those sins were mine; they had to have been the sins of the whole world. But that look from Jesus told the whole story. They were my sins, and mine alone. There were so many, they were beyond counting, but He took them all on, every single one.

And I knew that this is what He had done for the entire world, for each and every person.

Most surprisingly, however, I felt no accusation from Jesus. No anger. No condemnation.

Just love.

Strangely, and most vividly of all, there was not even a sense that He wanted me to try to sin less. When He looked me in the eyes, it was as if He said, โ€œLook at me. I am already covered with millions upon millions of biting black ants. What difference will ten more or ten less really make? If you want to stop sinning, it is for your benefit, not mine. No matter how much you sin, I will take it all on. And whether you sin or donโ€™t sin, I will continue to love you just the same.โ€

I have often thought about that dream. But recently, as I have sought to view God in light of what Jesus tells us about Him, I have begun to see that the dream not only reflects what Jesus did for all people on the cross, but also reflects what God has always been doing for the sins of the whole world.

God of the Old Testament and JesusHow can a God who says "Love your enemies" (Matthew 5:44) be the same God who instructs His people in the Old Testament to kill their enemies?

These are the sorts of questions we discuss and (try to) answer in my online discipleship group. Members of the group can also take ALL of my online courses (Valued at over $1000) at no charge. Learn more here: Join the RedeemingGod.com Discipleship Group I can't wait to hear what you have to say, and how we can help you better understand God and learn to live like Him in this world!

God is Redeeming Theology Bible & Theology Topics: 2 Corinthians 5:21, crucifixion, cruciform, crucivision, death of Jesus, sin, Theology of Jesus, When God Pled Guilty

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Cruciform God

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

Cruciform God

The greatest expression of what God is truly like is found in Jesus when He died on the cross.

Jesus on the Cross

While most Christians affirm the centrality of the cross for the mission and work of Jesus in bringing reconciliation and redemption to this world, it is relatively rare in Christian circles (but thankfully, becoming more common!) to state that of all the ways which Jesus reveals God to us, it is on the cross where God is most clearly seen.

If you ask the average Christians how God is most clearly revealed in Jesus Christ, they may talk about His teachings, His miracles, or maybe even His resurrection from the dead, but few would point to the cross. The cross is critical to the Gospel, people would say, and essential for accomplishing the mission of Jesus in the world, but it is not usually thought of as the primary way in which Jesus shows us what God is truly like.

Key Text: Philippians 2:5-11

Philippians 2:5-11 is one of the most well-known passages in the Bible about what Jesus did in leaving heaven to come to earth.

Many read this passage as a description of the downward spiral into humility and death which Jesus undertook for the sake of humanity, so that this downward spiral eventually resulted in the worst of all possible humiliations, death on a cross (Php 2:5-8). As a result, God raised Him and reversed this downward spiral of humiliation by giving Jesus an upward descent into glory and honor (Php 2:9-11).

There is nothing wrong with this interpretation, and Paul is certainly placing great emphasis on the sacrifice of Jesus in taking on sin and shame. But what is often overlooked is that this downward spiral into humiliation and then the resulting upward spiral into glorification is only a secondary point for Paul in this text.

The primary point is the fact that in everything Jesus did, He was revealing the very nature and character of God.He came, says Paul, in the “form of God” (Php 2:6).

Now again, when most Christians read verse 6 (and some Bible translations even help in this regard), we often add the word โ€œthoughโ€ or โ€œalthoughโ€ to the first part of verse 6 (cf. NAS, NRSV). In this way, the reader is led to believe that the following description of Christโ€™s actions are contrary to the character and nature of God: That although Jesus was God, He turned His back on His divinity, and gave it all up to come to earth. Read this way, the ultimate humiliation of Jesus comes in verse 8 where Jesus became obedient to death, even to death on a cross.

Many teachers and Bible scholars have noted, however, that a better way of reading this text is not to say that although Jesus was God He came to earth to suffer and die, but rather, since Jesus was God He came to earth to suffer and die. When read this way, the cross is not the ultimate humiliation of Jesus, but the ultimate manifestation of the divinity of God in Jesus. This “position” in theology is known as “cruciform” theology. It emphasizes the cruciform nature of God, that God is most fully revealed through the suffering and death of Jesus on the cross.

This helps make sense of verse 8 as well, so that rather than it saying that Jesusโ€™ ultimate humiliation was โ€œeven death on a crossโ€ (NAS), the text should read โ€œespecially death on a cross.โ€

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: When God Pled Guilty

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Destroy the Devil’s Work

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Destroy the Devil’s Work

Since Jesus perfectly reveals the Father to us, we must view Godโ€™s actions in the Old Testament within the light of Jesusโ€™ goal to destroy the devilโ€™s work (1 John 3:8).

In other words, since Jesus shows us what God is like and how God functions within this world, and one of the primary tasks of Jesus in all He did and said was to destroy the devilโ€™s work, then whatever God was doing in the Old Testament, we can be certain that He was seeking to destroy the devilโ€™s work.

fire from JesusMost Christians would voice no objection to this idea. The violence of God in the Old Testament is often interpreted in exactly this light. In many churches throughout most of history, the violence of God in the Old Testament was interpreted as Godโ€™s retributive actions toward evil people. The message is often presented this way: When people sin greatly, God steps in to punish them, and maybe even kill them.

The problem with this interpretation is that we never see Jesus doing this sort of thing in the Gospels. (Yes, the book of Revelation seems to portray something different, but weโ€™ll get to that in a later post.)

Quite to the contrary, every time Jesus has the opportunity to pour out vengeance and retribution upon other people, He not only turns away from such actions, but pointedly condemns and rebukes this behavior instead.

For example, in Luke 9:51-56, the Samaritans reject Jesus, the disciples want to call down fire from heaven to incinerate them. Where did they get such an idea? From some of the violent actions of God in the Old Testament! People who reject God are frequently incinerated by fire in the Old Testament (Lev 10:1-2; 2 Kings 1:9-12). The disciples were simply trying to follow suit with what they saw God doing in the Old Testament. But what does Jesus do? He rebukes His disciples for even having such thoughts, and tells that that these thoughts do not come from God but from some other spirit, and that He did not come to destroy menโ€™s lives (for that is what the devil does) but to save them instead.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: When God Pled Guilty

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Why did Jesus come to earth?

By Jeremy Myers
2 Comments

Why did Jesus come to earth?

One of the key things we see throughout Scripture is that we are surrounded by malevolent forces which seek only one thing: the destruction of mankind.

Calming the StormThese forces are presented in different ways throughout Scripture, but the common theme remains the same: these powers seek to destroy humanity. They seek to ruin our lives here and now, and they seek to destroy our future lives in eternity. There is a whole system of theology inherent within this point which will summarized in future posts.

For now, note that according to the New Testament, one of the primary reasons Jesus came to earth was to stop the destruction.

First John 3:8 says that Jesus came so that He might destroy the devilโ€™s work. Since Satan is sometimes referred to in Scripture as โ€œthe destroyerโ€ this is somewhat a play on words by John in that Jesus is here to destroy the work of the destroyer.

To Destroy the Works of the Destroyer

And indeed, this is one of the things we see throughout the ministry of Jesus.

Jesus did not come to earth just to die on the cross for our sins and rise again from the dead. If that were the case, there would have been little need for Him to be born as a human, and minister for three years through teaching, performing miracles, and casting out demons. He could have simply shown up, died on the cross, risen from the dead, and been done with it.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: When God Pled Guilty

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