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    The Two Beams of the Cross

    Posted on Sunday 12 April 2009 by Greg @ 7:19 am
    Filed under: Rants

    A generation ago one theologian gave this commentary on those who embraced the feel good kind of Christianity of his day. He said they peddled the idea that “a God without wrath brought men without sin into a kingdom without judgment through the ministrations of a Christ without a cross.”

    Wow. This sounds strangely and sadly familiar.

    I honestly don’t think that God’s wrath gets enough publicity in this pop culture of happy, sappy Christianity. But God’s wrath demonstrates itself in two powerful ways: the eternality of a terrible place called hell and Christ being crushed in our place on the cross.

    Now you may be thinking that the cross was a demonstration of God’s love and you’d be right. Romans 5:8 makes it clear that, “God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

    But it may surprise you that God’s hatred toward sin (aka “thirst for justice”) was another driving motivation for what happened on the cross. Referring to Jesus Paul writes, “God presented him as a sacrifice of atonement, through faith in his blood. He did this to demonstrate his justice….” Romans 3:25.

    Think of the two beams of the cross as two beams of God’s character that come together in one powerful, transformational and beautifully horrific event. One beam is His love for you and me. The other beam is His just character. His justice demands payment for sin. His love offers the life of His own Son as payment for that sin.

    Let us preach the wrath and justice of God with broken and humble hearts. Let the souls of those we preach too be filled with trepidation before a God who lit the fires of hell with His sheer hatred of sin. Let us then unveil the love of God with joy and hope, revealing a God who loved us so much that He was willing to pour out all His wrath on His own Son so that we could be rescued from the demise we deserve.

    The two beams of the cross bring together the character of God in a visceral way. The tension of these two extremes is what makes Christianity unparalleled among world religions. To be honest I am in awe. The collision of God’s characteristics at the cross is at the same time weird and wonderful. How could anybody make this stuff up? Nobody would. Nobody could.

    P.S. He rose again. Happy Easter.

    Signed, Greg Stier
    8 Comments

    8 Comments for 'The Two Beams of the Cross'

    1. On April 12, 2009 @ 1:43 pm Becky said:
      • Happy Easter and great reminder.

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    2. On April 12, 2009 @ 6:51 pm Scott Eaton said:
      • Well, my brother, this is one preacher that proclaimed sin, condemnation, wrath, death, and hell this Easter. This was followed by the gloriously good news that Christ died for our sins and rose again the third day to save you from all of those bad things. This is, as our beloved brother Paul said, of first importance! Then through the Scripture I further expounded upon the resurrection showing that it insures that we can be born again (1 Peter 1:3), be made right with God (Romans 4:25), receive resurrection bodies of our own (2 Cor. 4:14; Phil. 3:20-21), be filled with the same supernatural power that raised Christ from the dead (Eph. 1:19-20), and live as more than conquerors never to be separated from the love of Christ (Romans 8:31-39)! According to the text each of these realities is possible because God raised Christ from the dead! Alleluia!!!

        I’m still pumped!! Woo Hoo!

        All that to say, be encouraged Greg. There are still pulpits preaching the truth.

        Happy Easter!

        By the way, sorry we missed you in Chicago.

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    3. On April 12, 2009 @ 7:39 pm tlc said:
      • Weird and Wonderful….well said!

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    4. On April 13, 2009 @ 8:32 am Jon Forrest said:
      • you nailed it. sorry about the pun. i cannont begin to tell you how much i respect your committment to the truth of the Gospel. my buddy was going to attend the conference at Ed Young’s church and he told me you would be there. i told him if Greg is there, it will be good. can’t wait to hear your take on the guy posing as a christian at Liberty U. btw we had 5 kids saved yesterday. Justice met mercy. thanks bro.

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    5. On April 13, 2009 @ 11:27 am Melanie said:
      • Greg,
        I shared this with my husband and we were both in extreme agreement with your rant. Thank you for your challenge, your theological insight, and your connection with the Holy One.

        In Him,
        Melanie

        ps. just so you might put a face to the name, I introduced myself as Dale Kaufman’s youth pastor during the youth leader session at the Chicago D2S. :D

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    6. On April 16, 2009 @ 8:45 am Toni DePaoli said:
      • I actually saw this article posted on Christian Post. In our ministry, we attempt to realign people’s lives with God’s Word through intensive discipleship training after they’ve stumbled over obstacles in life or have had their flesh get the best of them. One of the most difficult principles to get into people’s minds is that our God is just and, in addition to His love for us, He doesn’t tolerate a heart prone to disobedience. I actually had someone tell me recently that when scripture says, “Every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,” means that everyone will be accepted by God. Uh…no! Lamenations 3:32-33 says that if He (God) causes us grief (enacting justice) He will follow it hot on the heels with compassion according to His abundant loving kindness. Isaiah 38:17 tells us that He loved us out of the pit of destruction and cast all of our sins behind His back. Both are true, but we have to remember that we were in the pit of destruction and what gets us out is to love Him with all our heart, all our soul, all our mind and all our strength. The word for strength in both the Hebrew and Greek means to the best of our ability. The best. That means that my walk will look different than someone else’s, but I’m giving it all I’ve got to make sure I am on God’s path and not my own. The analogy of the two beams is excellent!

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    7. On April 16, 2009 @ 11:56 pm Leyaenet said:
      • God is just awesome!
        God always loves us and always going to protect us no matter what.
        we need to glory the lord all the time.
        sorry iM in love with god!

        I love god! i want him! i NEED HIM! ALL THE TIME!

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