Thursday 23 July 2009

Christ on the road to Calvary

I've been quiet for a while. There have been a number of reasons for this, which I won't go into but here is a new train of thought which hopefully will help some.

The cross of Christ is central to every Christian. There we see the great act of salvation accomplished as Jesus takes upon himself our curse and dies for the sins of the world. For us therefore the fulcrum of history is the cross and resurrection of Jesus. We boast in it, and we never move far from it. And there are so many aspects of the cross which speak to us. As Evangelical or rather as Biblical Christians we believe it tells us about the wickedness of sin, the fulness of the atonement, the justice of God, the greatness of salvation, and supremely about the love of God the Father and God the Son towards us in accomplishing such a gracious redemption.
One other aspect which I have been thinking about recently is the example of the cross. Peter tells us that “Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you might follow in his steps.” (1 Peter 2:21) Or to put it another way, the cross is a path for us to tread, as Jesus himself taught us that to follow Him means to take up our cross and follow Him. (Mathew 16:24.)


The danger here is that we can think of following Christ and telling others about Him as a duty rather than a delight. How many times have preachers felt that they are whipping their people into action, rather than encouraging them. Here is where meditating on Christ as he proceeds to Calvary can help – or at least it has helped me. So over the next few blogs I’ll be looking at Luke 23:26 – 43, especially thinking about the attitude of us Christians towards those who do not know Christ as their Saviour.

And we begin with the compassion of Christ.
We can all have some idea of the horror of the situation. Jesus had been in public ministry for three years. He’d been in the public eye, working and giving out to people day after day, often ministering late into the night. There were times when he often spent the whole night in prayer. At other times when he was tired, people came to him seeking help and he never turned them away. He must have been emotionally and physically tired. Then had come the betrayal, and although he knew it was coming, it could not have lessened the hurt. He’d given so much to the disciples, and then Judas betrayed him, the disciples fled and Peter denied that he knew the Lord. What emotional grief this must have been. Then he was taken and tried before a kangaroo court , lied about and condemned. He’d been humiliated by Pilate, Herod and the soldiers. He’d been cruellyu scourged, and often these whipping would be enough to kill the sufferer as the metal pieces tied into the leather thongs ripped the flesh apart.


Then there was the shame. How did this young man from Nazareth, with such godly parents, end up like this – “for a hanged man is cursed by God.” (Deuteronomy 21:23)? And as he is dragged naked through the streets of Jerusalem, women there weep as they take pity on him.

But Jesus’ response is truly amazing: But turning to them Jesus said, "Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for your children. (Luke 23:28) He tells them that their perspective is all wrong. “You look at me and think that I am worthy of pity, but this is a path that I have chosen. There is purpose to my suffering. But what about the path that you, and Jerusalem have chosen?” He compares the green with the dead dried wood. We have all seen what happened in Australia earlier this year when a spark from a carelessly dropped cigarette would set a forest on fire, enough to burn whole towns and communities. So he says that if God, who is merciful and loves his Son with an eternal love, yet pours out his wrath in such a way when Jesus clothes himself in our sin, what will happen to those who reject Him. Jesus wept over Jerusalem when he entered the city (Luke 19:41) knowing what would happen when Rome finally lost patience with the Jews in about 40 years from that time. The story of the destruction of Jerusalem is terrible. But that was only a shadow of the destruction that would come in the judgement at the end of time. “do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for your children.” He had compassion for them.

What is our concern most often. We are so full of our own problems. We don’t see things as Jesus saw them. We think of the difficulties we face, rather than the eternal judgement which awaits those who would reject Christ. Often we secretly even envy those who are rich in the things which this world offers. We do not see them as Jesus sees them. No one is as blessed as those who know Christ as a Saviour and Redeemer. And no one is to be more pities than those who are without Christ. I recently heard of a converted Muslim, a week after his conversion to Christianity undertook his first missionary journey. He went to tell his friends about his new found Saviour and Friend. They hung him up by his hair until his hair fell out, and he now has great bald patches on his head. But he knew that he had no choice but to try to save his lost friends.

O teach me, Saviour, teach me
The value of a soul
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