The cross And The Resurrection: why cling to the cross?
Why Cling to the Cross?
Date March 24, 2013
scripture reference John 19:1-7, 16-18, 23-24, 28-30
from the series The Cross and the Resurrection
scripture reference John 19:1-7, 16-18, 23-24, 28-30
from the series The Cross and the Resurrection
Scripture
Let us rise to our feet and read together John 19:1-7, 16-18, 23-24,28-30
Let us rise to our feet and read together John 19:1-7, 16-18, 23-24,28-30
John 19:1-7
1 – Then Pilate took Jesus and had Him flogged.2 – The soldiers twisted together a crown of thorns and put it on His head. They clothed Him in a purple robe3 – and went up to Him again and again, saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” And they struck Him in the face.4 – Once more Pilate came out and said to the Jews, “Look, I am bringing Him out to you to let you know that I find no basis for a charge against Him.”5 – When Jesus came out wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe, Pilate said to them, “Here is the Man!”6 – As soon as the chief priests and their officials saw Him, they shouted, “Crucify! Crucify!” But Pilate answered, “You take Him and crucify Him. As for me, I find no basis for a charge against Him.”7 – The Jews insisted, “We have a law, and according to that law He must die, because He claimed to be the Son of God.”
John 19:16-18
16 – Finally Pilate handed Him over to them to be crucified. So the soldiers took charge of Jesus.17 – Carrying His own cross, He went out to the place of the Skull (which in Aramaic is called GOLGOTHA).18 – Here they crucified Him, and with Him two others-one on each side and Jesus in the middle.
John 19:23-24
23 – When the soldiers crucified Jesus, they took His clothes, dividing them into four shares, one for each of them, with the undergarment remaining. This garment was seamless, woven in one piece from top to bottom.24 – Let’s not tear it,” they said to one another. “Let’s decide by lot who will get it.” This happened that the Scripture might be fulfilled which said, “They divided My garments among them and cast lots for My clothing.”
John 19:28-30
28 – Later, knowing that all was not completed, and so that the Scripture would be fulfilled, Jesus said, “I am thirsty.”29 – A jar of wine vinegar was there, so they soaked a sponge in it, put the sponge on a stalk of the hyssop plant, and lifted it to Jesus’ lips.30 – When He had received the drink, Jesus said, “It is finished.” With that, He bowed His head and gave up His spirit.
This is the word of the Lord. Thanks be to our God. May the sweet Holy Spirit add the blessings to our text this morning...Amen! You may be seated in His Presence...
Introduction
Have you ever stopped to ponder the lyrics of the old hymn, “The Old Rugged Cross?” Listen to the words of the familiar chorus:
“So, I’ll CHERISH the Old Rugged Cross, ’til my trophies at last I lay down,I will CLING to the Old Rugged Cross, and exchange it some day for a crown.”
When I
was a little boy I frowned whenever I saw that hymn in the order of
service because it was too slow for my musical tastes.
I liked peppier hymns like “Send the Light” or even better, one of the
“hot” new choruses like “Pass It On” or “He’s Everything to Me.” But I noticed that the older people in my church loved it when we sang, “The Old Rugged Cross.”
I remember wondering back then, why this hymn was so popular with older
people. I puzzled over what it was that elders saw in those words
because to be honest, they seemed kind of odd to me. I mean, think about
it…how could a person CHERISH an apparatus of execution? It’s like singing, “So I’ll cherish the guillotine”or, “So I’ll treasure the electric chair.” And, why would anyone want to CLING to a rugged old splintery beam of blood-soaked wood?
Sermon
Well,
when I became a Christian and began to mature in my walk with Christ I
came to understand why the words to this hymn are so moving. Now I too
am moved when I sing them and as we begin HOLY WEEK this
year I would like us all to remind ourselves why these words are so
accurate in describing the feelings of Christians. I want us to review
why it is that for 2000 years now Christians have indeed CHERISHED and CLUNG to the cross of Jesus Christ. I can think of four reasons.
(1) First of all, we treasure the cross because we know that on it a SUBSTITUTION took place.
In
other words, we believe that Jesus was our substitute. He died in our
place. We know that on that cross Jesus took the punishment that you and
I deserved. The Bible gives us a great example to help us see this
truth…in the unexpected pardon of a convicted criminal named “Barrabas.”
Remember? In an attempt to appease the Jews when they demanded Jesus’
death, Pilate, the Roman Governor, offered to release one prisoner:
Jesus—–or Barrabas, a convicted felon. The people called for Barrabas
and Jesus went to the cross. Imagine how Barrabas felt that first Good
Friday. As he rubbed his wrists-chaffed by being in shackles-and looked
up at the center cross standing atop Golgotha, he must have realized
that Jesus was dying on that cross in his place-that our Lord was
receiving the sentence he deserved.
And, you know, you and I can know exactly how Barrabas felt because Jesus did the same thing for us. He died in OUR place. He paid for OUR sin. He took OUR judgement on Himself. On the cross, Jesus became our SUBSTITUTE
and this is one reason that blood soaked wood is so precious to us. You
see, before Christ died in our place you and I and all people were in a
desperate situation. Due to our sin we were separated from our HOLY God.
In fact the Bible teaches that we were at enmity with Him. R. C. Sproul puts it this way,
“The natural enemy of the sinner is One Who is holy, and not only holy
but powerful, and not only powerful but just, and not only just but
omniscient, not only omniscient but immutably so.” And God is all
these things, so we had a problem. Because of our sin and disobedience
we faced separation from God and death but God had a plan. Jesus would
come and take our punishment on Himself. He would take our separation
from God…our death on Himself…and this is exactly what happened on that
old rugged cross. 2 Cor. 5:21 says, “[God] made Him Who knew no sin, to be sin on our behalf, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.” The Living Bible puts it this way, “God took the sinless Christ and poured our sins into Him.” Galatians 3:13 says, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us.” 1 Peter 3:18 says, “Christ died for our sins, the Righteous for the unrighteous.” All these verses underscore the amazing truth that on the cross Jesus paid the price for our defiance of God’s law. He WAS our substitute.
I
read long ago that General Dwight D. Eisenhower spent the night before
the D-Day invasion with the men of the 101st Airborne Division.
As the men prepared their planes and checked their equipment, Ike went
from soldier to soldier offering words of encouragement. Many of the men
were young enough to be his sons and he treated them as if they were.
One correspondent wrote that as Eisenhower watched the C-47s take off
and disappear into the darkness on their way to their destination behind
enemy lines, his hands were sunk deeply into his pockets and his eyes
were full of tears. Then, when the last plane was no longer visible, the
general went to his quarters and sat at his desk. He took a pen and
paper and wrote a message-one that would be delivered to the WHITE HOUSE in the event of a defeat on the beaches of Normandy. The note was as brief as it was courageous. He wrote, “Our
landings have failed. The troops, the Air, and the Navy did all that
bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches
itself to the attempt, it was mine and mine alone.”
Now,
with this action, General Eisenhower took responsibility for the
actions of those soldiers who were far below him in rank. He modeled a
quality seldom seen in our modern society of lawsuits, dismissals, and
divorces. You see, most of us are willing to take credit for the good we
do. SOME are willing to take the rap for the BAD they do. But few will
assume the responsibilities for the mistakes of others. And even fewer
still will shoulder the blame for mistakes that have not even been
committed yet. But that is what General Eisenhower did.
And to a magnitude that is INFINITELY
greater, this is what Jesus did for us on the cross. Long before time
began in fact, He loved you and me and every human that would ever be
born to the extent that He was willing to take the blame-the punishment
of our sins upon Himself. So, Jesus’ death on the cross was a SUBSTITUTION because He died in our place.
And then, a second reason we cherish the cross of Christ is because….
2. …we know that it has provided us with EMANCIPATION from the power of sin.
Now, think about that…what POWER does sin have? Well, first of all, sin has the power to kill us. As Romans 6:23 says, “The wages of sin-the consequence of sin-is death.”
And since we all sin, we all die. As someone once said, “The statistics
on death are quite impressive. One out of one people die.”
As
pastors, whenever we conduct a funeral, the undertaker always gives us a
little card. It’s about three inches wide and six inches long. It’s
called the CLERGYMAN’S RECORD
and it lists the basic facts about the person who has died. It tells if
they were married, how many children and grandchildren they had. It
records the place and time of the funeral and burial and it also
includes the individual’s birth date and their DEATH DATE.
Well, the fact is some day an undertaker will hand a card with your
death date on it to a clergyman like me. I know that is not a pleasant
thing to contemplate. I mean death is something all sinners dread. In
fact, we do all we can to avoid it.
Our culture invests billions of rupees in vain attempts to extend life because we are enslaved by this fear of death.
But
Christians know that the Bible teaches a wonderful thing. It says that
on the cross Jesus died so that we can live. It teaches that because of
Jesus’ death on the cross and His resurrection three days later, we need
not fear death. God’s Word proclaims the wonderful, EMANCIPATING truth that whoever puts his or her faith in Jesus Christ, “…will not perish but have everlasting life.” ( John 3:16 ) 1 Corinthians 15:21 says, “For
since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also
through a Man. For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made
alive.” This understanding is what inspired Paul to write, “Death
where is your victory? Death, where is your sting? Thanks be to God Who
gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!” (1 Cor.
15:55) You see, the cross forever freed us from the fear of death. From
the perspective the cross gives us, death is only gain.
A
prominent citizen in town was dying. As he lay in his lovely home, the
best doctors surrounding him, he whispered, with a note of despair, “I’m
leaving home, I’m leaving home.” Across town there lay another person
who was also on her deathbed. Her modest home was just a shack. She had
no doctors tending to her as she faced death. But, in her eye there was a
gleam. Before she died she was heard to say, “I’m going home. I’m going
home.”
The difference between these two perspectives was of course that the poor woman was a Christian. Long ago she had “clung” to the Cross of Christ. We do the same because what happened on that cross 2000 years ago frees us from the fear of death.
But it frees us from something else. It also frees us from the fear of life. You see before Jesus died on the cross of Calvary,
mankind was in bondage to sin-a truly terrifying way to live. Before we
became Christians every moment of every day we were powerless when it
came to withstanding the temptations that come with living in a fallen
world. But the cross changed all that. As Paul writes in Romans 6 Paul, “For
we know that our old self was crucified with Him so that the body of
sin might be rendered powerless, that we should no longer be slaves to
sin because anyone who has died had been freed from sin. Sin is no
longer your master, for you are no longer subject to the law, which
enslaves you to sin. Instead, you are free by God’s grace.” ( Romans 6:6-7, 14 )
As
this text and dozens of others like it say, thanks to the cross of
Christ we have access to God’s power…power that enables us to say NO to
sin. Through His death Jesus freed us from its tyranny and made it
possible for us to pursue holiness and righteousness. We can at last be
all that God intends us to be. We can now experience “…life in all its fullness.” ( John 10:10 )
Charles Swindoll puts it this way, “Each
moment of every day we choose whom we wish to follow. If it’s the
Savior, the benefits are many. If it is sin, the consequences are
destructive and miserable. Before Christ, we had no choice. Sin was our
one and only route. All of life was marked by unrighteousness. But once
we came to the Cross and gave the Lord Jesus the right to rule our
lives, we were granted a choice we never had before. Grace freed us from
the requirement to serve sin, allowing us the opportunity to follow
Christ’s directives voluntarily.”
In
his book, Fresh Faith, Jim Cymbala shares the testimony of CALVIN HUNT,
one of the lead tenors in their world famous Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir.
Calvin has a powerful voice and in fact has recorded two CD’s of his
own. He has a loving wife a great job a son and three lovely daughters
but things were not always this wonderful for Calvin. You see, years ago
both he and his wife Miriam were addicted to crack cocaine. Every week
they would spend his entire paycheck financing their habit. Eventually,
due to the influence of her brothers, who were Christians, Miriam gave
up her habit and put her faith in Christ. But Calvin refused to do so
and continued his life of bondage to this powerful addiction. His drug
use eventually caused him to lose his job. He would spend long periods
on binges away from the family.
In
spite of this Miriam’s faith grew and as it did she dedicated herself
to praying for her husband. In fact the entire church prayed that Calvin
would come to Christ and be freed from the power of sin in his life.
Miriam said, “I knew Calvin was in a prison. Being an ex-addict myself-I
had done heroin before I ever met him-I knew the unbelievable power of
this kind of substance. That’s why I prayed so hard, crying out to God
to set him free, and got all my friends to pray with me. Every mealtime
prayer with my kids, every bedtime prayer included, ‘O God, please set
Daddy free!’”
Three
years passed and Calvin got worse instead of better. At one point he
was actually sleeping in a large dog house in somebody’s backyard. It
became Calvin’s practice to sneak into their apartment on the nights
that he knew Miriam and the girls were at church to get food and
clothing or to find things to sell to finance his habit. On one such
night, he heard someone weeping. He thought that perhaps someone was
home after all but he looked and found no one. He started to lie down
for a nap but something inside him seemed to say, “If you go to sleep
tonight, you’ll never wake up again.” This caused him to panic and he
ran from the apartment to the subway where he caught the train that
would take him to the church so he could find his family. When he
finally arrived at the church he burst through the back doors and when
he did he heard the same sounds of weeping he had heard in the apartment
earlier, only much louder. He discovered that the sound of weeping was
coming from the entire congregation. All of them were in earnest prayer,
calling out HIS name to God in faith! He was thunderstruck as he slowly
moved down the aisle, gazing at the tears running down the faces of the
people as they bowed and prayed, “O God, wherever Calvin Hunt is, bring
him to this building! Don’t let this family go through this horror
another day. Lord, You are able! Set him free from his bondage once and
for all!”
Soon
Calvin found himself at the front, directly before the pulpit. The
pastor in charge opened his eyes, took one glance and then gazed upward
toward heaven as he said into the microphone, “Thank you Lord! Thank you
Jesus! Here he is!” With that, the congregation opened their eyes and
saw Calvin and when they did, they went absolutely crazy. Think about
it! They had been calling upon the Lord to bring Calvin to himself and
it was happening right before their eyes! Falling on his knees, Calvin
burst into uncontrollable sobs. Miriam and the girls came to huddle
around him as he prayed, “O God, I don’t want to be this way. Please
come into my life and set me free. O Jesus I need You so much!” That
night was the turning point for Calvin because that was the night that
he clung to the precious Cross of Christ. It hasn’t always been easy for
him. He went through a very difficult six month treatment program and
there have been numerous times that he was tempted but he has found that
every time he has faced temptation, when he turned to Jesus for
strength, he found it.
And
down through the centuries all who have turned to Christ have
discovered what Calvin did that through the cross God gives us the power
to be free from the bondage of sin. Thanks to Calvary when we are
tempted to sin we can, “…approach the throne of grace with confidence, and receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need…” ( Hebrews 4:16 ) For this reason we cling to that wood as someone clings to a life preserver after falling overboard!
And then, a third reason we cherish the cross is because…
3. …we have found it to be the clearest REVELATION of God’s great love for us all.
I think many people know John 3:16 by heart, “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.”
But if you have ever wondered if those familiar words were really
true…if you have ever questioned whether or not God really did love
humanity that much, then you need only look at the cross. For the cross
leaves no room for doubt. He DOES love us! The cross is the tangible,
historical evidence of this fact! It does not say WHY God loves us, but
it does answer “How much?” I love the way the Contemporary English
Version translates Romans 5:8 . It says, “God showed HOW MUCH He loved us by having Christ die for us, even though we were sinful.”
And
you know, not only does the cross provide undeniable proof of God’s
great love. It also shows us HOW LONG He has loved us. As I inferred
earlier, Jesus’ death on Golgotha was part of the plan all along. Acts 2
records that on Pentecost Sunday the Apostle Peter included this fact
in his sermon by saying, “Jesus was
given to you and you put Him to death by nailing Him to a cross. But
this was God’s plan which He had made long ago; He knew this would
happen.”
Lucado puts it this way, “The journey to Jerusalem didn’t begin in Jericho. It didn’t begin in Galilee. It didn’t begin in Nazareth. It didn’t even begin in Bethlehem. The journey to the cross began long before. As the echo of the crunching of the fruit was still sounding in the Garden of Eden, Jesus was leaving for Calvary.” This truth is seen in the fact that Jesus’ death on the cross had been prophesied for hundreds of years. Later in his sermon Peter said, “But the things which God announced beforehand by the mouth of the prophets, that His Christ should suffer, He has thus fulfilled.” ( Acts 3:18 )
Search
the Old Testament Scriptures and you will find that Peter was right.
For, there are numerous prophecies, inescapable references to the death
of the Savior. Some date as far back as nine centuries before the birth
of Christ, a time in which crucifixion was not even known and yet they
describe the death Jesus was to die in stark detail. For example in
Psalm 22 David gives us this description of the Savior’s death: “For
dogs have surrounded Me; a band of evildoers has encompassed Me; They
pierced My hands and My feet. I can count all My bones. They look, they
stare at Me; They divide My garments among them, and for My clothing
they cast lots.” ( Psalm 22:16-18 ) So, the cross shows that God
has loved each of us from the dawn of time. That cross beam helps us to
understand what Jeremiah 31:3 means when it says that God has, “…..loved us with an everlasting love!”
So,
we cling to-we cherish-the cross because we know that Jesus died there
as our substitute and because through the cross Jesus freed us from the
power of sin and because it is the clearest revelation of God’s love…
4. …but perhaps the most important reason the cross of Christ is so highly valued is because we see it as God’s INVITATION to all to enter into relationship with Him.
Through the cross God says to all people, “Turn
from your sin and return to Me. I want to walk with you through life,
just as I walked through the garden with Adam and Eve. I want to guide
you when you face tough decisions. I want to bear your burdens and share
your joys. I want you to know Me. I want things to be as they were
before sin came into the world.”
This is what God said through the prophet Isaiah, “Come
let us reason together…though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as
white as snow. Though they be read like crimson, they shall be as wool.”
( Isaiah 1:18 ) Jesus Himself spoke of the cross as God’s invitation when He said,
“Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of man
must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in Him may have eternal
life. When I am lifted up from the earth, [WHEN I AM LIFTED ONTO THE
CROSS] I will draw all men to Myself. [In so doing I will invite all men
into relationship with God.]” ( John 3:14-15, 12 ;32)
Invitation and Final Challenge
This
morning I invite you to respond to God’s invitation. If you have never
accepted Jesus as YOUR substitute. If you are still in bondage bound by
your fear of death, enslaved by the power of sin, then I challenge you
to respond to God’s great love in sending His Son to die on that OLD RUGGED CROSS.
I believe that right now God’s spirit is inviting you that Jesus is
knocking on your heart’s door and if that is true…then I urge you to
open the door and let Him come in to your heart and life. If you are
here and are a Christian in search of a good church home, and if you
feel that God is inviting you to become a part of our church family then
I urge you to come as well…join us as we lift high the cross of Christ
in this community. However it is that God is leading you to respond, we
invite you to do so right now as we stand and sing by walking forward
and sharing your decision with me.
The Rev. Lenin Kumar
The Potter's Home International Church
The Christian Living
The Potter's Home International Church
The Christian Living

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