(I gave this message at Pines Baptist Church in Pembroke Pines Florida on June 22, 2014.)
We live
in a "pluralistic" society. Just look around the sanctuary! A
pluralistic society is a society where people of different cultures, religious
and ethnic backgrounds and social class live together, preferably in an
atmosphere of mutual respect, harmony and cooperation.
When it
comes to religion, America has historically been the envy of the world with regard
to religious freedom. For over two hundred years now it has stood as the
quintessential example of a nation that constitutionally guarantees its
citizens freedom of religion. An individual is free to exercise his or her
religious beliefs as long as it does not violate the law of the land.
Unfortunately
that has begun to change in recent years as the Federal government, in particular,
has tried to force Christians and Christian institutions to violate their conscience
and core beliefs in subservience to mandates of the state.
With
regard to the Gospel, "pluralism" has taken on new meaning. As Dr.
John Stott pointed out over ten years ago,
"Pluralism
is not just the recognition that there is a plurality of faiths in the world
today. That is an obvious fact. No, pluralism is itself an ideology. It affirms
the independent validity of all faiths."
("Why Don't The Listen," C.T. 09/2003, p. 50)
This has
implications for our understanding of the gospel and evangelism. Stott, continues,
this kind of pluralism "therefore rejects as arrogant and wholly unacceptable every
attempt to convert anybody (let alone everybody) to our opinions."
Dr. Stott
cites the book The Myth of God Incarnate
edited by John Hicks in 1977, a symposium in which a group of contributing
theologians, "asks whether the idea of the incarnate God is not another of
those patristic doctrines which need to be criticized and interpreted afresh in
the modern world." In other words they embraced T.S. Eliot's words, "Christianity
is always adapting itself into something which can be believed."
Ten years
later, another book The Myth of Christian
Uniqueness: Toward a Pluralistic Theology of Religions was published. In it the
contributors moved "from insistence on the superiority or finality of
Christ and Christianity towards a recognition of the independent validity of other
religious approaches." In other words they have crossed the
Rubicon of Biblical orthodoxy moving from the exclusivity of Christ and Christianity
to a pluralism, that apparently acknowledges the validity of all religions. In
other words, Christianity has no corner on the truth.
Against
this backdrop of religious pluralism let me begin with a question. Is the
historic, biblical message of salvation through faith alone in the person and
work of Jesus Christ on the cross the only way man can be reconciled to God?
Perhaps
some, including the theologians just cited, would question or deny the premise of
that question and prefer to ask, "Is there even a need for man to be
reconciled to God?" You see, my question presumes that man in some way is at
odds with God. Man's relationship with God is broken in some way compromised.
The
Apostle Paul answers both of these questions in the text before us this morning.
Three weeks ago, in our message, "The Supremacy of Jesus Christ," we
looked at the Apostle Paul's case for the Deity of Jesus Christ and Jesus
Christ the Creator in Colossians 1:15-20.
In verse
18, which we skipped over, the discussion moves from Jesus Christ and creation,
to Jesus Christ and the Church, and then in verses 19 and following, reconciliation
to God through Jesus Christ. Before we consider reconciliation briefly note
three things in verse 18 about Christ and the church.
First, Paul
says Christ "is the head of the body, the church." In other words, He
has supreme authority over the church. Bishop Nicholson, (Oneness
with Christ 81)
"Jesus
Christ is the sovereign Lord of all creation, and as such He does and will
govern for the benefit of His Church; but additionally, He is the Head of it as
His own body; the seat of its life, the source of its activity, the center of
its unity, the inspiring, ruling, guiding, sustaining power of its spiritual
being and blessedness. Thus His relation to the Church is the exact parallel of
that which He sustains to the universe."
In other
words, He is preeminent over the Church as He is preeminent over all of creation.
If you are born again this morning, you are a member of body of Jesus Christ, the
church, of which He is the head. In other words, you are organically connected
to Jesus Christ. He is therefore your Sovereign and Master, and as you remain connected
to Him, He is the very source of your spiritual life.
Secondly,
Paul says, verse 18, "He is the beginning, the firstborn from the
dead." Implicit in that statement is the incarnation of Jesus Christ. He
became a man, a claim rejected by John Hicks and company as we just noted. As God
in the flesh he died a physical death on a Roman cross.
As "the
firstborn from the dead." Paul makes the explicit claim that Jesus Christ
was the first to be resurrected from the grave never to taste death again. A
harbinger of what awaits every believer and member of His body.
Thirdly,
still in verse 18, he writes, "that in everything he might be preeminent"
or have "first place" (NASB). As we noted several weeks ago, first
place in creation, and now first place in the church and therefore first place in
our lives as members of His body.
Now previously
we looked carefully at the Deity of Jesus Christ. Notice that verses 19 and 20
are one sentence. In other words, the deity of Christ is linked with His work
of reconciliation. As we will see, if Jesus Christ were not both God and man, He
could not have been our Savior reconciling us to God.
This
morning, before looking at God's provision for reconciliation I want to look at
verse 21, noting that the need for reconciliation implies a broken
relationship. Verse 21 says, "And
you were once alienated and hostile in mind, doing evil deeds," That's
pretty direct. No mincing of words here.
It
identifies man's need for reconciliation. Paul is describing the condition of
the Colossian Christians before they were reconciled to God. He had earlier
described what had taken place at their conversion. In chapter one, verses 13
and 14, "He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred
us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the
forgiveness of sins."
A 2013
Harris Poll found that a healthy majority or 74% of Americans believe in God. The
question verse 21 would raise is, do the 74% that believe in God see themselves
as the God they believe in sees them? My guess is that most people don't stay
awake at night concerned with their need to be reconciled to God. As Leon
Morris writes (New Bible
Dictionary 1077) "Man, left to himself is content to let bygones be
bygones. He is not particularly worried by his sin. Certainly he feels no
hostility to God on account of is sin. The barrier arises because God demands
holiness in man."
In other
words, we are unaware that from God's perspective, without Christ we are alienated
from God we are enemies of God and our lives are characterized by evil behavior.
The New English Bible captures the thought so well, "Formerly you were yourselves
estranged from God; you were his enemies in heart and mind, and your deeds were
evil."
That is the
universal condition of every person -- a broken relationship with God therefore
in need of reconciliation. To be alienated from God is to be separated from God.
It's the opposite of intimacy. It is the opposite of friendship. It is not a
picture of two parties at peace with each other. Hostile in mind. We are
enemies; at heart adversaries of God; in rebellion towards God. And Paul says
our actions are consistent with that
heart condition, "your deeds were evil."
Paul
painted a similar picture when writing the Ephesian church. He described their
pre-conversion condition as follows, (Ephesians 2:1-3 ESV)
"And
you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following
the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the
spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience -- in the passions of
our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind and were by nature
children of wrath, like the rest of mankind."
That
description should trouble us. Leon Morris, has described it this way,
"The
Bible tells us bluntly that sinners are 'enemies' of God...An enemy is not
someone who comes a little short of being a friend. He is altogether opposed. The
New Testament pictures God in vigorous opposition to everything that is
evil."
You see, it
is our sin that alienates us from God. Here's the problem. God's holiness and our
sin are incompatible. R. A. Finlayson explains,
"Holiness
may be said to be the distinctive overall attribute of God. The outshining of
all that God
is. It is his holiness that particularly sets him apart from all His creation
-- for he only is holy --and that renders Him unapproachable in all His
perfection."
You see, apart
from Christ we are in dire straits. We're in trouble! Our only hope is reconciliation
to God.
Notice
secondly, God's provision of reconciliation, verses 20-22,
"and
through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven,
making peace by the blood of his cross. And you, who once were alienated and
hostile in mind, doing evil deeds, he has now reconciled in his body by his
death, in order to present you holy and blameless and above reproach before
him."
We've
seen our need for reconciliation. Let's make sure we understand what it means
to be "reconciled." Leon Morris writes (NBD 1077),
"Christ
died to put away our sin. In this way He dealt with the enmity [or deep rooted hatred]
between man and God. He put it out of the way. He made the way wide open for
men to come back to God. It is this which is described by the term
'reconciliation.'"
I want you
to notice six things about reconciliation this morning. First of all we are reconciled
Romans 6:23. In other words, because of our sin we deserve death.
A holy
God must punish sin. A holy God would no longer be just if he were to overlook sin.
As a just judge he must pass judgment on the guilty. The penalty for sin, death
must be paid. That's what the cross is all about. It served only one purpose
for the Romans. It was an instrument of death. So Paul said, God made peace,
verse 20, "by the blood of his cross."
You see,
peace with God comes at a price, the shedding of blood. This principle was taught
way back in Old Testament times. Leviticus 17:11, "For the life of the flesh
is in the blood and I have given it for you on the altar (of sacrifice) to make
atonement for your souls for it is the blood that makes atonement by the
life." The writer to the Hebrews echoed this truth, (9:22 ESV) "Indeed under the law almost
everything is purified with blood and without the shedding of blood there is no
forgiveness of sin."
And so in
the Old Testament God instituted the sacrificial system of shedding the blood of
animals. This was a type that pointed forward to the perfect, once for all, sacrifice
of Jesus Christ on the cross. Playwright George Bernard Shaw, in his attack
upon the Book of Common Prayer,
wrote, "It is saturated with the ancient and to me quite infernal superstition
of atonement by blood sacrifice, which I believe Christianity must completely
get rid of, if it is to survive among thoughtful people."
Paul
anticipated Mr. Shaw's response when he wrote, the Corinthians (1 Cor. 1:23-24 ESV)
"for Jews demand signs and Greeks seek wisdom but we preach Christ
crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and folly [or foolishness] to Gentiles, but
to those who are
called, both
Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God."
Friends, what
has been your response to the cross.? Have you belittled it like Bernard Shaw? Are
you ignoring it? Or have you embraced it as your only hope for reconciliation to
God?
But
notice secondly that we are reconciled through a substitutionary act. Here's the amazing truth of the
Gospel. We've already seen our need for reconciliation verse 21, we are
"alienated" from God, "hostile in mind," "doing evil
deeds." In spite of that God took the initiative and reconciled us, His
enemies, to himself by becoming our substitute as He
died in our place, paying the penalty for our sin on the cross. To some, this
might sound to good to be true. That's why the gospel is called "Good
News"!
Paul Van
Gorder writes the following of a wagon train as it journeyed West, "One
day, after months on the trail, the weary travelers came to the top of a high
hill. There they were met by a terrifying sight! A great wall of fire had
engulfed the prairie and was racing in their direction. Death seemed inevitable.
Then the leader of the expedition quickly turned and rode his horse to the rear
of the caravan. With deliberate haste he ignited the dry grass behind them. The
same wind that was blowing the advancing blaze toward them also began fanning
the new fire away from them. Within minutes the wagons could be driven onto the
burned-out area.
As the
heat and smoke became more intense, a little girl cried out, 'Are you sure
we're safe?' 'Oh, yes,' said the wagonmaster, 'we're safe because we're
standing where the fire has been.'"Friends, Jesus
bore the penalty for our sin. When we put our trust in Him, we stand where the
fire has been."
Thirdly,
we are reconciled through the sinless God - Man, verse 22. In verse 19, Paul emphasizes
the Deity of Christ in relation to His work of reconciliation, while in verse 22,
Paul emphasizes the humanity of Christ in relation to His work of
reconciliation.
Just as
we could not have been reconciled to God without the substitutionary death of Jesus
Christ, Jesus Christ could have never died a substitutionary death in our place
without sharing in our humanity. As the God-Man, He lived a sinless perfect
life. The writer to the Hebrews, (4:15 ESV) because He was a human like us "...we
do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but
one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin."
Years ago
I read this story, "The keeper
of a large zoo was overseeing his men as they fed the animals and reptiles. Suddenly
an assistant let out a shriek. Rushing to his side, the superintendent saw that
a rattlesnake, roused from its winter sleep, had sunk his fangs deep into the
man's flesh. Immediately he grasped the victim's arm and began sucking the
venom from the wound, spitting it on the ground. His action saved the attendant's
life. The newspaper account of the incident stated that if the zoo keeper's teeth
had been decayed or he had a sore in his mouth he would have been killed by the
poison."
Had their
been the slightest defect in Jesus, His death would have been worthless. Even one
moral imperfection, His death would have accomplished nothing.
Fourthly,
notice that God's loving initiative brings reconciliation, verses. 19-20. Henry
Bosch, writes of the following incident,
"In
sixteenth century England, Oliver Cromwell ordered that a soldier be shot for
his crimes at the ringing of the evening bell. But that night at the fateful
hour, no sound came from the belfry. The girl who was to be married to the
condemned man had climbed up into the tower and had clung to the great clapper
of the bell to prevent it from striking. Brought before Cromwell to give an
account of her actions, she only wept and
showed him her bruised and bleeding hands. Cromwell was greatly impressed, and
he said, 'Your lover is alive because of your sacrifice. He will not be
shot.'"
As
imperfect as that illustration is, in the same way it was the love of God that
set in motion and accomplished our reconciliation. This passage implicitly
portrays God as the initiator of our reconciliation. And He was motivated by
love. Paul explained it this way to the church in Rome. (Romans 5:6-11 ESV)
"For
while we were still weak, at the time Christ died for the ungodly. For one will
scarcely die for a righteous person--though perhaps for a good person one would
dare even to die--but God shows his love for us in that while we were still
sinners, Christ died for us. Since, therefore, we have now been justified by
his blood, much more shall we be saved by him from the wrath of God. For if while we were enemies we were
reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more, now that we are reconciled,
shall we be saved by his life. More than that, we also rejoice in God through our
Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation."
Number
five. Notice the reconciliation of creation, verse 20. In verse 15 we saw that Jesus
Christ is supreme over creation. In verse 16 we saw that He was the agent of creation.
In verse 17 that He pre-existed creation and preserves and sustains creation.
Here, Jesus Christ takes all of creation and reconciles it to himself. Even creation awaits its freedom from the curse of sin.
Here, Jesus Christ takes all of creation and reconciles it to himself. Even creation awaits its freedom from the curse of sin.
Again, the
Apostle Paul explains, Romans 5:20-21 (ESV).
"For
the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected
it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption
and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God."
Number
six. Lastly, the result of reconciliation, our justification, verse 22, "he
has now reconciled in his body of flesh by his death, in order to present you holy
and blameless and above reproach before him."
Paul is speaking of our justification. When we
confess our sin and repent of our sin and trust in Jesus' death and
resurrection for the forgiveness of our sin, God will regenerate us by the power
of His Holy Spirit, delivering us from the power of sin. He will give us a new
heart.
Paul put it this way, 2 Corinthians 5:17 (ESV), "Therefore, if anyone is in
Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away, behold the new has
come."
But He will also deliver us from the penalty of our
sin. That is, He will justify us, declaring us righteous in His sight because our sin has
been put to Christ's account and we stand before God clothed in the
righteousness of Jesus Christ. Again Paul, 2 Corinthians 5:21 (ESV), "For our sake he made him
to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of
God." That's what justification means. Someone has defined it this way, "The
act whereby a holy and just God declares the unjust and guilty sinner to be
righteous or just in his sight, having imputed to them the righteousness of Jesus
Christ."
You see
when we are justified a legal transaction takes place in the Court of heaven. Our sin
is put to Christ's account, it is imputed to Him. And His righteousness is put
to our account or imputed to us. Therefore God can justify us declaring us
righteous in His sight, because as Paul wrote, we are "clothed in the
righteousness of Jesus Christ."
Lastly,
there is an alternative to reconciliation.
Implicit in this passage and stated explicitly in others, there is an alternative
to being reconciled to God. For example, Paul spoke of the consequence of rejecting
the gospel in 2 Thessalonians 1:5a, 7-10 (ESV),
"This
is the evidence of the righteous judgment of God...when the Lord Jesus is
revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire, inflicting
vengeance on those who do not know God and on those who do not obey the gospel of
our Lord Jesus. They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction away
from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might, when he comes on
that day to be glorified in his saints, and to be marveled at among all who
have believed, because our testimony to you was believed."
The
consistent message of the Bible is that the alternative to reconciliation with
God is the reality of facing the judgment or wrath of God. Admittedly this is
not popular today in the culture and even to some in the church. In his classic
book, Knowing God, J.I. Packer
writes,
"The
modern habit throughout the Christian church is to play this subject down. Those
who still believe in the wrath of God (not all do) say little about it; perhaps
they do not think much about it. To an age which has unashamedly sold itself to
the gods of greed, pride, sex and self-will, the church mumbles on about God's
kindness, but says virtually nothing about his judgment." If that was an
accurate statement in 1993 it is even more true today. Earlier in this message we
dealt with the term religious "pluralism" referring to an ideology that
"affirms the independent validity of all faiths." In other words Jesus
Christ is not unique in His person or work. It's a denial of His claim. "I
am the way, the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father but by me."
Dr. Stott points out (CT Stott) we must reject religious pluralism because,
"we
are committed to the uniqueness of Jesus (he has no competitors) and his
finality (he has no successors). It is not the uniqueness of 'Christianity' as
a system that we defend, but the uniqueness of Christ. He is unique in his
incarnation (which is quite different from the ahistorical and plural 'avatar'
of Hinduism); in his atonement (dying once for all for our sins); in his
resurrection (breaking the power of death); and in his gift of the Spirit (to
indwell and transform us). So, because in no other person but Jesus of Nazareth
did God first become human (in his birth), then conquer death (in his
resurrection) and then enter his people (by his Spirit), he is uniquely able to
save sinners. Nobody else has his qualifications."
Many today
are attempting to reach God in their own way, ignoring the claims of Christ. The
English explorer William Perry took his crew to the Arctic Ocean to chart the
far north. He calculated the team's position using the stars. Then they began
the dangerous and exhausting trek north, hour after hour. They stopped to check
their position hoping they had made progress. What they found was not what they
had expected. Though they had been traveling north they found they were further
south than when they began their trek north. They double-checked their
readings. Then they realized they were trying to make progress while walking on
an ice flow. The ice flow was moving south faster than they were walking north.
Could
that be where some of you are today in your spiritual journey? You think you're
making progress but you're on an ice flow that is moving in the wrong
direction. In other words you have misplaced your trust.
Jesus
used a similar illustration as he concluded his message, bringing his audience
to a place of decision as recorded in Matthew 7:24-27. He said,
"Everyone
who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who
built his house on the rock. The rain came down, the streams rose, and the
winds blew and beat against that house; yet it did not fall, because it had the
foundation on the rock. But everyone who hears these words of mine and does not
put them into practice is like a foolish man who built his house on sand. The
rain came down, and the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against the
house, and it fell with a great crash."
What is
your house built on this morning? The rock Jesus Christ or the sand of your own choosing?
Your soul hangs in the balance. Are you trekking on the solid ground of God's truth
that you've heard this morning or walking on an ice flow that is taking you in
the wrong direction?
If you
are apart from Christ this morning, As Paul said "God
making his appeal through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled
to God." (2 Corinthians 5:20)
© James P
McGarvey All Rights Reserved