atonement

Harmony #90: Christ Victorious (John 16:13-33, excerpted)

But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth. For he will not speak on his own authority, but will speak whatever he hears, and will tell you what is to come.  He will glorify me, because he will receive from me what is mine and will tell it to you….”

 “In a little while you will see me no longer; again after a little while, you will see me…. I tell you the solemn truth, you will weep and wail, but the world will rejoice; you will be sad, but your sadness will turn into joy…So also you have sorrow now, but I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you… I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace. In the world [order] you have trouble and suffering, but take courage—I have conquered the world [order].”

If I were the disciples, I would have questions. If Jesus had conquered the world order, why would they still have trouble and suffering? The Greek word “conveys the idea of triumphing over adversities, challenges, or enemies.”[1]  Yet those things were still present when Jesus said that, and even after he left. So what’s being conveyed here? I think the broad point is that God’s plan will win in the end. His Kingdom will come, and His will will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.

So, let’s talk about Christ, The Victor, who has conquered the world.

God, through Jesus, accomplished a lot of things on the cross.  There are numerous atonement theories; collectively, they point toward more than one thing. On the cross, God…

  • ·revealed His love (Romans 5:8, John 14:7-10);

  • ·reconciled all things to himself (2 Corinthians 5:18-19Col 1:20-22)

  • ·forgave our sins (Acts 13:38Ephesians 1:7)

  • ·healed us from our sin-diseased nature (1 Peter 2:24)

  • ·defeated death, the devil and the devil’s works (Hebrews 2:141 John 3:8; 12:31).

  • “disarmed the rulers and authorities…made a public display of them, having triumphed over them.” (Colossians 2:15).

  • rendered judgment on the “world order” (John 12:31)[2]

  • drew all people to himself (John 12:32)

  • ·gave himself as a ransom for the sins of all people (1 Timothy 2:6; Mark 10:45; Hebrews 9:15).[3]

  • gave us an example of ‘cruciform’ Kingdom living (Ephesians 5:1-21 Peter 2:21) by overcoming evil with love.

St. John Chrysostom’s (300s) wrote of what was accomplished in Jesus’ death and resurrection I one of his commentaries:

“O Death, where is your sting? O Hell, where is your victory? Christ is risen, and you are overthrown. Christ is risen, and the demons are fallen. Christ is risen, and the angels rejoice. Christ is risen, and life reigns…To Him be glory and dominion unto ages of ages. Amen.”

That’s the idea. When Jesus told his disciples that he had overcome the world order, I believe he is focusing on a particular aspect of what was accomplished on the cross. This is known as the Christus Victor (“Christ the Victor”) view of the atonement. It is one way to think about what Jesus did on the cross.

“In the New Testament, the saving effect of Jesus’s death is represented primarily through five constellations of images, each of which is borrowed from the public life of the ancient Mediterranean world: the court of law (e.g., justification), the world of commerce (e.g., redemption), personal relationships (e.g., reconciliation), worship (e.g., sacrifice), and the battleground (e.g., triumph over evil).” (Mark Baker)

The battleground imagery is the Christus Victor model.

From the beginning, the Bible records the on-going conflict with enemies visible and invisible (realms seen and unseen).[4] The Old Testament uses common cultural images of the dreaded Deep of the sea and the epic sea monsters in it. It was just an image for evil, pain and chaos. Yahweh stood out among the ‘gods’ of the surrounding nations because the God of the Israelites controlled, and demolished them (Psalm 29:3-41074:10-1477:161989:9-10104:2-9Job 7:129:81326:12-1338:6-1140:-41; Ezekiel 29:332:2Jeremiah 51:34Habakkuk 3:8-15Nahum 1:4). Nonetheless, the conflict was real.

  • We also read that when Israel was in conflict with other nations, it was more than just people fighting; there was a war in the unseen realm as well (2 Samuel 5:23-24;  Judges 11:21-24).

  • The Prince of Persia delayed the angel Michael in Daniel 10

  • The freeing of Israel from slavery in Egypt wasn’t just a conflict between Pharaoh and Moses.  It was between Yahweh and the Egyptian gods.

  • When the Philistines took the Ark of the Covenant and put it in one of their temples next to Dagon, Dagon kept falling and breaking and the people suffered sickness until they moved it. (1 Samuel 5:2-7)

There is a history of Yahweh’s victory over these forces seen and unseen. When Jesus arrived, he talked about “the archon of this world” (Jn 12:3114:3016:11), which typically referred to those in authority: the king, the local governor, the Sadducees. Behind that “world order” was Satan, a spiritual archon to whom God had granted some kind of power and impact in the world.

  • When Satan tempted Jesus, he offered the kingdoms of the world because “it has been given to me, and I can give it to anyone I want to.” (Luke 4:5-6).

  • In Revelation 13, the Beast “was given authority over every tribe, people, language and nation.” If you remember our Revelation series, I believe the Beast is Rome/Nero, but Satan is clearly depicted as the real power behind it all.

  • John wrote that the entire world is “under the power of the evil one” (I John 5:19);

  • Paul calls Satan “the god of this age” (2 Corinthians 4:4) and references the “ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the spirit who is now at work in those who are disobedient.” (Ephesians 2:2).

  • Paul taught that whatever earthly struggles were a shadow of the real struggle against “the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places” (Ephesians 6:12)[5]

In the death and resurrection of Jesus, he showed his powerful triumph over evil through self-sacrificial love, and ransomed the spiritual captives of the Unseen Pharoah from the Unseen Egypt (I mean, that observation of Passover at the Last Supper wasn’t coincidental). The result?

“The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Messiah.” (Revelation 11:15)

God’s became flesh to overthrow the power of the Devil and bring an end to his works (Hebrews 2.14f.; I John 3.8). When Jesus heals the sick and drives out evil spirits, Satan’s dominion is departing and God’s kingdom is coming (Matthew 12:22-29; (Ac 10:38). He came to “destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil” in order to “free those who all their lives were held in slavery by the fear of death” (Hebrews 2:14-15). When the disciples cast out demons, Jesus “saw Satan fall from heaven like lightning” (Luke 10:18).

I have heard Jesus’ death and resurrection compared to D-Day. On that day, the outcome of the war was established. It didn’t mean there was no more battle left to fight. It just meant that the ending was sure. Perhaps we should think of the triumph of the cross as the downpayment on the promised restoration of all things in which, ultimately, God would “put all his enemies under his feet” (I Cor 15:25).  

For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. 

For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.  And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. 

For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him,  and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.

Once you were alienated from God and were enemies in your minds because of your evil behavior. But now he has reconciled you by Christ’s physical body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation— if you continue in your faith, established and firm, and do not move from the hope held out in the gospel. This is the gospel that you heard and that has been proclaimed to every creature under heaven, and of which I, Paul, have become a servant.” (Colossians 1:13-23)

Jesus wasn’t here only to solve the problem of our personal sin, though he certainly did that! He was here to overcome the kingdom of darkness, to reconcile all things to himself, to redeem the entire fallen system from top to bottom. Jesus came to….

  • “…open their eyes so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me” (Acts 26:17-18).

  • free Gentiles from “the god of this age” who had “blinded the minds of the unbelievers” (2 Corinthians 4:4).

  • free us “from the snare of the devil, having been held captive by him to do his will” (2 Timothy 2:26).

  • “set us free from this present evil age” (Galatians 1:4) and from  “enslavement to the elemental spirits of the world” (Galatians 4:3Romans 6:188:2Galatians 5:1Colossians 2:20Hebrews 2:14-15 ).

  • bind the Strong One, “spoil his goods” and “plunder his house.” (Mark 3:27)

  • Jesus promised that his disciples would be given authority to trample on snakes and scorpions (#imageryofevil) and to overcome the power of Satan (Luke 10:19).

  • set us free by “the law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus” from “the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8:2), the “old written code” (Rom. 7:6) that allowed the “law of sin” to place us in captivity (Rom. 7:23, 25).

We often talk about sin as only an issue involving our personal decisions. We certainly do make sinful choices, but these verses remind us that the god of this age blinds us; the Strong One has bound us; a “law of sin” places us in captivity; we have to be freed from the powerful captivity of Satan and the elemental spirits of the world

This doesn’t mean we can simply say “the Devil made me do it,” because even people in captivity can fight to be free. I’m just pointing out that in addition to our own sinful tendencies, there is a systemic problem. The world’s system and the spiritual powers behind them are actively working to deceive, bully, coerce, frighten, allure… whatever they can do to draw us into the chains of sin and the kingdom of darkness.

This is why, in addition to personal rescue, we need a liberation and restoration of the entire cosmos that had been “groaning in labor pains” because it was subjected to “the bondage of decay”  (Romans 8:18-22) This, too, was addressed on the Cross.

* * * * *

Let’s summarize so far. We have been liberated from the bondage of sin and evil and restoreed into the “new humanity” (Ephesians 2:14-15) that God always intended for us to participate in, a humanity filled with His Spirit, united by and in the love of God, participating in His ministry of reconciliation (2 Corinthians 5:18-20) the intends to reconcile all things to Himself.

We are saved from the destruction that would have been the inevitable consequences of our sin, saved from our fallen inability to live in right relatedness with God, saved from the idolatrous, futile striving to find “life” from the things of the world, saved… to forever participate in the fullness of life, joy, power and peace that is the reign of the triune God. (Greg Boyd)

Jesus’ life was dedicated to delivering us from slavery to our sinful nature and slavery to the “world order” with all its spiritual and practical implications. And what is the path to this freedom? Is there a way we can participate in the conquest and the freedom that follows?

The ultimate expression of what this battle looks like happened on Calvary, where Jesus’ self-sacrificial love revealed the way this battle will be won: through a cross-shaped love, a “cruciform” love. So much of what Jesus did expressed the sacrificial servant’s heart. Let’s look back on Jesus’ life.

  • When Peter cut off a guard’s ear, Jesus healed the attacker’s ear and rebuked Peter (Luke 22:50-51). #notthatway

  • He washed the feet of his disciples, who would abandon him in a couple of hours (John 13:3-5). #thisway

  • And don’t forget Judas, whom he loved until the end (John 13:1). #thisway

  • Jerusalem welcomes him as a Zealot Messiah, and Jesus weeps (Luke 19) #notthatway

  • ·“Can we call down fire on the Samaritans?” (Luke 9)  #nonotthatway

  • Instead, Jesus converts the Samaritans (John 4) #thatway

The kingdom of God is fundamentally rooted, grounded, and expressed in cruciform love. This is how we fight our battles. This is how we participate in the conquest of evil that Jesus initiated. Jesus was all about overcoming evil with good. It is the loving reign of God expressed in the loving ministry of reconciliation by his people that will defeat the powers that resist it. The gods of the age are overcome through radical, Calvary-like, self-sacrificial love.

“According to the New Testament as a whole, God sent his Son in the flesh…. as a suffering servant; and the power that Jesus unleashed as he bled on the cross was precisely the power of self-giving love, the power to overcome evil by transforming the wills and renewing the minds of the evil ones themselves.” (Thomas Talbott)

“I’ll remind you of just one beautiful image of God, evident in the Christ of the Gospels: he’s the Restorer of lives. Jesus is the One who sat by the well and restored the Samaritan woman to her place in her community. He restored Zacchaeus’ integrity and offered him friendship. He saved and restored the woman caught in adultery to morality and life. He restored the paralytics, the blind and the deaf to wholeness. He restored outcasts such as lepers and the bleeding woman. He restored the sanity of the demonized. Even harshest rebukes were offers of restoration to the unrepentant. When we see Jesus in action, we are seeing the true heart of God, the Restorer of lives.”  (Bradley Jersak)

We have to make a choice: will we participate in Christ’s victory or not? Because if we want to, it means we will have to not only have the mind of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:16), but the methods of Christ. Not only the heart of Jesus, but the hands of Jesus. We always, relentlessly, overcome evil with good, trusting in the power and provision of our cruciform Savior’s love.

This is why God kingdom can never come by coercion, force or threat. God’s Kingdom invites and compels through steady witness to the transformative, saving power of cruciform love on display in our lives. The Kingdom of God through Christ comes through love, so the kingdom of God persuades by witness of our words and lives, by compassion, by the fruit and through the gifts of the Holy Spirit, through sacrificial love.

“For the earliest Christians, the story of salvation was entirely one of rescue, all the way through: the epic of God descending into the depths of human estrangement to release his creatures from bondage to death…to set the captives free and recall his prodigal children and restore a broken creation… We were born in bondage, in the house of a cruel master to whom we had been sold as slaves before we could choose for ourselves; we were born… corrupted and enchained by mortality, and so destined to sin… we were ill, impaired, lost, dying…But then Christ came to set us free, to buy us out of slavery, to heal us, to restore us to our true estate.” (David Bentley Hart)

How do we join the mission of Christ the Victor? Well, we sign up.  I was raised in a church that stressed the importande of the Sinner’s Prayer, a spiritual Pledge of Allegiance to God. It looked something like this.

“Lord Jesus, I know I am a sinner. I believe You died for my sins and rose from the dead. I turn from my sins and invite Your Holy Spirit to dwell in me. I want to trust and follow You as my Lord and Savior.”

But we have to be careful that we don’t think Jesus is calling us to say words and move on with our lives. It’s possible to know and say the right things and not be on mission with God (Matthew 25; James 2). We demonstrate that we truly believe what we said by joining in with the mission of Jesus by learning how to have his heart for the world, then expressing that heart with our hands.

It’s worth noting that not everyone who began to follow Jesus in the Bible are recorded saying just the right words. Maybe they did, but many of the stories focus on their changed lives. They were different. They wanted to be like Jesus, so they followed in his footsteps. They wanted their lives to look like Jesus’ life.

More than once Jesus tell his followers that people will know they are following him when they love like He does. (John 13:35) This translated into obedience, which is just another way of saying that we are committed to doing what Jesus says will help us look more and more like Jesus.

Our words can and should be a consistent testimony, but our lives are probably the testimony that speaks louder. Constantine was famous for using the cross as an emblem of war. “In this sign, conquer.” He could not have been further from the spirit of what Jesus did on the cross.

Jesus conquered sin, death, hell, the devil and the grave with cross-shaped, sacrificial love. He’s in the process of restoring all things.

Let’s join him.


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[1] Strong’s Lexicon

[2] “Therefore when Pilate heard these words, he brought Jesus out, and sat down on the judgment seat at a place called The Pavement, but in Hebrew, Gabbatha.” (John 19:13). Who sat in the ‘judgment seat?’ In English—and in many paintings—it looks like Pilate is seated there. But in Greek, John intentionally makes it ambiguous—it could also be Jesus sitting in Pilate’s seat as the governor runs in and out, between Jesus and the crowd (like a servant) seven times! (Brad Jersak)

[3] I don’t think we should get hung up on who received this ransom (Was it Satan? God?). The Bible says God paid a ransom for Israel to be free of Egypt, but God did not pay Egypt a literal amount of money to redeem Israel from slavery. God just liberated them. (Isaiah 43:1) I think it’s just imagery that the people understood: they were in bondage; someone set them free.

[4] I am borrowing my basic outline in this portion of the message from an excellent article by Greg Boyd on the Christus Victor model (https://reknew.org/2018/11/the-christus-victor-view-of-the-atonement/.). I want to be very clear that I do NOT agree with all of Boyd’s theology, particularly his view on Open Theism. However, his explanation of Christus Victor is one of the best short form explanations I have read. Props for compiling all the Scripture references for me to use :) N.T. Wright has a book length explanation in The Day the Revolution Began: Reconsidering the Meaning of Jesus's Crucifixion.

[5] “See also passages about “rulers,” “principalities,” “powers” and “authorities” (Romans 8:3813:1I Corinthians 2:6815:24Ephesians 1:212:23:106:12Colossians 1:16: 2:10, 15) along with “dominions” (Ephesians 1:21Colossians 1:16), “cosmic powers” (Ephesians 6:12), “thrones” (Colossians 1:16), “spiritual forces” (Ephesians 6:12), and “elemental spirits of the universe” (Colossians 2:820Galatians 4:38-9).” I got this list from a commentary on BibleHub that I failed to keep track of.

Easter Is Personal

“By this gospel you are saved: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day.” (1 Corinthians 15:2–4) 

Over church history, there have been a variety of ways of explaining what happened on the Cross,[1] that combine the diverse language of biblical writers with cultural moments in which the message of the Cross was being preached. Scott McKnight compares it to a set of golf clubs: they all matter at the right time and place.

 A foundational view everyone builds on is called Christus Victor: Christ the Victor, or Christ victorious. Jesus’ death and resurrection demonstrated victory over the greatest foes: evil, sin, death, Satan, Hades. Jesus triumphed over them all, freeing humanity from bondage to them.

  • Jesus drove out the “ruler of this world” (John 12:31), setting spiritual captives free (Luke 4:18; Eph. 4:8).

  • He destroyed “the one who has the power of death” in order to “free those held in slavery by the fear of death” (Heb. 2:14-15). 

  • He overpowered the “strong man” (Luke 11:21-22), “disarming the rulers and authorities…triumphing over them” (Col. 2:15)

Jesus, the Messiah, truly is the long awaited Liberator of our souls.[2] This is foundational to what happened on the cross.

 Add Recapitulation Theory[3] to that foundation. This simply notes that Jesus is the second Adam who is getting right what the first Adam got wrong.[4]

“For since by man came death, by Man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ all shall be made alive.” (I Corinthians 15:21-22; see also Romans 5:17) [5]

Adam might have messed up the beginning of the story, but that doesn’t mean he controls the end of the story. The Second Adam is the Great Physician who has arrived “so that the world might be saved.” (John 3:17)[6]

Ransom Theory focused on the biblical teaching that Jesus died as a ransom for the debt of our sins.

“For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” (Mark 10:45)

Ransom language fit the ancient Greco-Roman world well. Conquest was familiar to those who lived in or had been conquered by Rome; a redemptor could buy the freedom of someone taken prisoner. [7] Ransom language reminds us that we are in a spiritual war. Adam and Eve sold us into slavery to sin and death, and we can’t buy our way out. If the wages of sin is death[8], then the ransom of Jesus’ life satisfied the debt, and Satan cannot claim his due. C.S. Lewis uses this approach in the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

In the 11th century, Anselm focused on Satisfaction Theory. Anselm lived during Medieval European feudalism, where honor to one’s earthly master or lord was incredibly important.[9] In the feudal hierarchy of serf/lord/king, dishonoring the one above you was a huge deal. The more noble the person you offended, the greater your reparation.[10] Anselm said that our sin has dishonored God, and honor must be restored. God’s honor is satisfied when reparations are paid – which he paid Himself in Jesus through the cross.[11]

God made him who had no sin to be a sin offering for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. (2 Corinthians 5:21) 

This approach is still a primary approach used by missionaries introducing the Gospel in honor/shame cultures around the world.

 A contemporary of Anselm named Abelard focused on what it now called Moral Influence Theory. To Anselm, the most important thing was that Jesus is our example, our moral leader. We see this focus in WWJD or the classic Charles Sheldon book In His Steps.

“He demonstrated the act of the greatest love by laying down his life for his friends. Follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.” (Ephesians 5:1-2)

Abelard focused on a God who demonstrated his love for humanity through the death of Jesus to show us a righteous way of living.[12]

The Reformers (1500s) reframed Ransom and Satisfaction theory in what we call Penal Substitutionary Atonement (PSA), the one with which we in the US are generally most familiar. They added a legal framework to Satisfaction Theory, a court-centered “balancing of the ledgers” between what is owed and what is paid.[13] 

Here, Jesus was not repaying God for lost honor; rather, he was paying the penalty of death to satisfy the demands of justice. Once again, God Himself, through Jesus, satisfies the demands of justice himself. 

"He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, that we might die to sin and live to righteousness."(1 Peter 2:24) 

"For Christ also died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God." (1 Peter 3:18) 

I remember being taught an analogy of a judge (God) taking off his robe and stepping down off the bench to stand in the place of the criminal (me) and take my place in jail.[14]

In all of these views, the foundational truth shines through. Jesus’ death on the cross changed everything, and His resurrection proved it.

* * * * *

Easter doesn’t just celebrate a historical event (though it does that); it doesn’t just highlight a theological atonement theory (though that’s important). Easter is not meant to be merely a corporate gathering once a year where we ponder ideas about atonement as an intellectual exercise.

Easter is personal. A person – Jesus – did something for persons: you and me. Jesus didn’t just give himself through his life, death and resurrection out of love for the world in a vague sense, he did it for me and you in an intensely personal sense.  

We live in a broken world. This is not a secret. The Bible talks about how all of creation mourns[16] in the midst of the brokenness. There are Big Picture issues like the war between Ukraine and Russia, and Israel and Hamas. There is famine, and human trafficking, and bridges collapsing. There are also family tragedies, and sickness, and despair.

Sometimes we participate in the breaking.  It’s another way of saying we step outside of God’s design and we sin. We bully, and slander, and demean. We lust, and fight, and deceive. We are the perpetrators of abuse and hatred. We have dishonored God and others. We know that we are part of the problem of the brokenness in the world.

Sometimes, we have been broken by it. This past year I have had to come to grips with the reality that some bad things were done to me when I was a kid, things that my brain put on a shelf until I was 54.  They were the kind of things that rob a kid of  innocence and trust, and that leave a mark for a long time. It's been draining, and insightful, and terrible, and healing, and it’s ongoing.

We call Crucifixion Friday “Good Friday” not only because we have a Savior who atoned for us that day, but because in his living and dying we know that God understands us because Jesus experienced the worst of what it is like to live in this broken world.

“On the cross, Jesus insists that God is in the hard things, the low things, the scandalous things. The gritty, messy, broken things.  God does not hold God’s self remote from the worst of this world.”[17]

Then, resurrection.

In the light of dawn, the Light of the World reveals himself. All was not lost; all is not lost. “Behold,” Jesus said, “I make all things new.” (Revelation 21:5)  As Tolkien described it, because of Jesus’ Resurrection, everything sad will become untrue.[18] Now it is clear that all that is evil has been conquered by the Risen Jesus. Crucifixion will not have the last word; Resurrection will.

  • We may see part of our lives burn to ashes, but Jesus makes beauty from ashes.

  • We may feel like death has come for our hearts and souls, but Jesus specializes in bringing dead things back to life.

  • We may take our own Prodigal path, but Jesus, the Good Father, waits to embrace us with joy and feasting.

  • There is night, but there will be a morning characterized by rejoicing, whether in the life or the next.

 This is the hope: the brokenness of our history is not our destiny.

His love, as displayed on the cross, covers a multitude of our sins. His power, as shown through His resurrection, shows us that when he says he can make something new, he can make something new.

There is nothing in us so broken he cannot mend it; so foul he cannot cleanse it; so evil he cannot save it; so worthless he cannot refurbish it; so useless he cannot rehabilitate it; so lost he cannot find it; so dead he cannot revive it; so parched he cannot refresh it; so bitter he cannot sweeten it; so in despair that he cannot fill it with hope.

“I’ll remind you of just one beautiful image of God, evident in the Christ of the Gospels: he’s the Restorer of lives. Jesus is the One who sat by the well and restored the Samaritan woman to her place in her community. He restored Zacchaeus’ integrity and offered him friendship. He saved and restored the woman caught in adultery to morality and life.  

He restored the paralytics, the blind and the deaf to wholeness. He restored outcasts such as lepers and the bleeding woman. He restored the sanity of the demonized. Even harshest rebukes were offers of restoration to the unrepentant. When we see Jesus in action, we are seeing the true heart of God, the Restorer of lives.” (Brad Jersak) 

I don’t know the history of your wounds, the length of your scars, the depth of your sin and failure. But I do know this: Jesus came so that we might be saved from the sinful ravages of this broken and fallen world. He offers real life in His Kingdom starting now and continuing into the ages to come. He offers a new life in exchange for your old one, over and over and over.

Christ is Risen (He is risen indeed).

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[1] https://www.sdmorrison.org/7-theories-of-the-atonement-summarized/

https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/history-theories-atonement/

[2] “For the earliest Christians, the story of salvation was one of rescue all the way through: the epic of God descending into the depths of human estrangement to release his creatures from bondage to death, penetrating even into the heart of Hades to set the captives free, recall his prodigal children and restore a broken creation.” (D.B. Hart)

[3] https://faithrethink.com/7-atonement-theories-from-church-history/

[4] “God became what we are so that we might become what He is.” – Irenaeus

[5] Scott McKnight thinks Jesus is recapitulating Israel also. “Jesus quotes from Deuteronomy 8:3; when tempted to jump off of the temple, Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 6:16; and when tempted to seize the kingdoms, Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 6:13. Each of these texts is from Israel’s wilderness experience. Jesus is being depicted as a second Israel in a second wilderness. He became what Israel was to undo what Israel did.” 

[6] These two views remain the heart of the Eastern Orthodox position. https://orthodoxbridge.com/2018/07/22/orthodox-christians-on-penal-substitutionary-atonement/

[7] https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2022/april/bonnie-kristian-atonement-theories-historical-context.html

[8] There was/is disagreement about to whom that ransom is owed. Was it Satan? The grave? Meanwhile, Isaiah 43 talks about God trading nations as ransom for Israel, but that looks like picturesque language about the depth of their bondage, not an actual trade.

[9] https://faithrethink.com/7-atonement-theories-from-church-history/

[10] https://andrewspringer.medium.com/five-views-on-the-atonement-of-christ-d71dddca9b84

[11] Jesus offered an overflow of satisfaction to human beings so they can satisfy God’s honor. https://faithrethink.com/7-atonement-theories-from-church-history/

[12] “1 Peter 2:22, “For this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you should follow in his steps.” https://andrewspringer.medium.com/five-views-on-the-atonement-of-christ-d71dddca9b84  See also Mark 10:42-45, Romans 12:1-21, and 1 John 3:16.

[13] “John Calvin, who studied law before becoming a Reformer, replaced the image of a serf trying to satisfy his lord with a courtroom where God as righteous judge condemns sinners who violate his law... [it] is immediately intelligible in the world of the Reformation, Renaissance, Enlightenment, and Industrial Revolution.” https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2022/april/bonnie-kristian-atonement-theories-historical-context.html

[14] Reformers talked of “imputed righteousness” where Jesus literally took upon himself all of mankind’s sins and in exchange transferred (or imputed) his righteousness to the repentant sinner. https://faithrethink.com/7-atonement-theories-from-church-history/

[16] Romans 8:22

[17] https://www.journeywithjesus.net/essays/3362-cruciform

[18] Samwise to Gandalf

The Replay (John 4:7-5:5)

John is about to go into a summary section. In it, he kind of weaves in and out of several themes, specifically the importance of Jesus and his atonement for our sins and the importance of loving each other. For the sake of addressing these topics in a way that focuses on one at a time, I am reshuffling them. So the order of paragraphs is different than the text, but it’s still the text. First, let’s talk about Jesus.

1 John 4:7 My loved ones, let us devote ourselves to loving one another. Love comes straight from God, and everyone who loves is born of God and truly knows God. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. 

Because of this, the love of God is a reality among us: God sent His only Son into the world so that we could find true life through Him. 10 This is the embodiment of true love: not that we have loved God first, but that He loved us and sent His Son to become an atoning sacrifice for our sins. 

13 How can we be sure that He truly lives in us and that we truly live in Him? By one fact: He has given us His Spirit. 14 We have watched what God has done, and we stand ready to provide eyewitness testimonies to the reality that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the world15 If anyone unites with our confession that Jesus is God’s own Son, then God truly lives in that person and that person lives in God. 

1 John 5:4 Everything that has been fathered by God overcomes the corrupt world. This is the victory that has conquered the world: our faith. Who is the person conquering the world? It is the one who truly trusts that Jesus is the Son of God.

 Last week John said: get Jesus right. Embrace that he is fully God and fully human, the Word become flesh. Here John comes back to the same thing Paul was so adamant about: Jesus’s death is what provides the payment for our sins. 

In theological circles this is called penal substitution. Just like our prisons are called the penal system because there is penalty involved, this has to do with those of us who were in prison, slaves to sin and doomed for death. So, all of us. Jesus paid penalty we deserve when he died on the cross so we could be freed from the prison of our own making. 

Why a cross? Here’s where we talk about covenant. 

In the Ancient Near East, there was a thing called a suzerain covenant. A stronger party – the suzerain - initiated a covenant relationship with the weaker party.[1] In order to understand atonement theology, or penal substitution, we need to look at God’s suzerain covenant with Abraham.

When God made a covenant with Abraham in Genesis 15, (you get more details through chapter 22), God promised to bless the world through Abraham. This will happen in a number of ways, but it has traditionally been seen as a most importantly a foreshadowing of Jesus. There were only two stipulations for Abraham: leave his home/the gods of his fathers and follow God, and be obedient to the voice of God (Genesis 22).[2]

In a classic ritual that sounds weird to us but wasn’t to them, Abraham killed some animals, cut them in half, and arranged them to walk through. This was a Covenant Of The Pieces that contained a warning: that kind of penalty awaited the covenant breaker. A great darkness fell, and God, the stronger party, passed through the dissected animals (as a blazing torch) but never made Abraham, the weaker party, do the same.

By passing through the slaughtered animal, God was saying that if He didn’t bless Abraham and honor the covenant, God – the stronger, initiating party - would have to pay the penalty. That alone would be unusual, but that wasn’t the most incredible point. God was saying that if Abraham and his descendants didn’t keep the covenant, God would pay the penalty for them. 

Fast forward several thousand years. 

Abraham and his descendants had one job –well, two: leave other gods and be obedient to God. When God initiated another covenant with Moses, all the details got a lot clearer in the giving of the Law. It did not go well. The prophets had a loooooot of bad news to convey about just how badly this was going.  If you’ve seen the Lord Of The Rings movies, there is this eerie start where the music is foreboding, and “men desire power,” and chaos reigns, and Middle Earth just goes off the rails as they wait for the Return of a King[3] who will make things right. That’s an Old Testament kind of epic. 

Somebody has to pay the penalty for Abraham’s descendants breaking the covenant

·      If nobody does, what’s the point of covenant if it has no punch?  

·      If Abraham and his descendants do, what was the point of the promise that God would pay it for all parties? 

We see God fulfill his covenantal duty and pay the penalty for Abraham in the death of the incarnate Jesus. On the cross, a great darkness descends again, and Jesus, the Light of the World, fulfills the conditions of the covenant. What was represented by the death of those animals thousands of years earlier was done to him. Jesus was Yahweh, the Covenant Maker and Covenant Keeper.

We Christians, now, are the children of Abraham (“Those who have faith are children of Abraham.” – Galatians 3:7). And we, too, have done a terrible job keeping the covenant stipulations we have been given in the New Covenant that started with Jesus. The reality that “the wages of sin is death”[4] must be honored. Someone must pay for our breaking of the covenant. 

But “the gift of God is eternal life,”[5] and we commemorate how that penalty was paid by Jesus every time we partake in communion – His body broken, His blood spilled. “Do this in remembrance of me…remember his death[6]…”

The sacrifice that fulfilled the stipulations of an old covenant simultaneously took care of the inevitable failures of the new covenant makers. Because of Jesus’ death and resurrection, even flawed covenant makers are seen by God as flawless covenant keepers. This is what we celebrate when we take COMMUNION together.

* * * * *

John’s second point in his summary: When we are in communion with God, we are also incommunity that ought to be characterized by the love God modeled. True communion with God builds true community with others.  

11 So, my loved ones, if God loved us so sacrificially, surely we should love one another12 No one has ever seen God with human eyes; but if we love one another, God truly lives in us; God’s love has accomplished its mission among us

If I understand this correctly, the closest we will get to seeing God on this side of heaven is when we love each other as Jesus intended, and God truly lives in us. When we pray, “God is just want to know you real,” one of the primary ways God intends for this to be confirmed is by the way in which His children pass on the love of the Father. 

19 We love because He has first loved us. 20 If someone claims, “I love God,” but hates his brother or sister, then he is a liar. Anyone who does not love a brother or sister, whom he has seen, cannot possibly love God, whom he has never seen. 21 He gave us a clear command, that all who love God must also love their brothers and sisters. 

Everyone who trusts Jesus as the long-awaited Anointed One is a child of God, and everyone who loves the Father cannot help but love the child fathered by Him. Then how do we know if we truly love God’s children? We love them if we love God and keep His commandsYou see, to love God means that we keep His commands, and His commands don’t weigh us down.

God’s love reaches the end of its mission when we enter into right(eous) relationship with others as a result of Jesus restoring us to right(eous) relationship with God.[7]  There is no such thing as a truly transformative experience of God’s love that does not result in love for his people manifested by obedience to God’s word.[8] We love others best when we love them as God commands. That’s the most obvious sign that the Holy Spirit is the wind in our sails.[9]#lastweek’smessage

When this happens, God is now ‘seen’ in the world through his family (v.11-12). We are his “body.” He is the head;[10] we make up the rest.  And when we pass on to others the love He has given to us, the mission of His love reaches the fullness of its expression[11] in obvious, profound and breath-taking sacrifice.[12] The ground should be littered with what’s been pouring out of us spiritually as we have been broken and spilled out for those around us. 

So now we can begin to understand John's concern for love and unity in the church.  This isn’t one of the extras one orders for church like the extra features when you get a new car. This is something without which there is no car. First-century Jewish writers were adamant about this: 

“And it is impossible that the invisible God can be piously worshipped by those people who behave with impiety toward those who are visible and near to them.”[13] 

* * * * *

There is a movement of people leaving the church today in what is being called “deconversion.” Some are leaving evangelicalism (“exvangelical”). Some are leaving white evangelicalism (#leaveloud) because of ongoing frustrations with how the legacy and on going reality of racism is (or isn’t) being addressed. (More on this next week). When people leave, it is rarely as simple as having been wooed away. There are three primary reasons (not the only ones, to be sure) that show up over and over again:

·      they feel deeply wounded in some fashion

·      they don’t feel safe wrestling honestly with life

·      they feel[14] actively pushed away by terrible teaching, harsh people, or both

 I don’t think I know anyone who has deconverted or become an exvangelical simply because something else caught their eye. The theme I hear over and over through personal conversation or through testimony online is the aftermath of disillusionment, frustration, and pain not just experienced in church but brought on by church, and it almost always has to do with not having the love of Christ passed on well.

We talk a lot about the dangers the church faces by getting sucked into culture, and that’s absolutely valid. But remember how John’s earlier focus on “antichrists” wasn’t outside the church? In fact, nothing in the book has warned Christians about the dangers lurking outside. It’s all been about how things can go wrong inside the church and shipwreck our faith. 

Here’s my summary of why so many people are leaving right now (not a Bible verse…it’s my way of trying to summarize). A bad thing looks better than it deserves if a good thing looks worse than it should.  I mean, if you give me a choice between shrimp and grits (the church) and liver and onions (the world), I’m only choosing the liver and onions if the shrimp and grits are nasty. 

So what’s the solution?

Jesus entered into our world to show that he was qualified to be an empathetic advocate for us.[15] This meant a number of things: 

·      he “saw” people[16] (loaded word)

·      he listened and thoughtfully responded (the Rich Young Ruler[17]; the woman who touched his garment[18]; the woman caught in adultery[19])

·      he spent time with them (that crazy ‘friend of sinners’[20], an insult Jesus embraced). 

·      He invited himself into their homes (Zaccheus[21]).

·      He went to their unclean neighborhoods (Woman at the Well in Samaria[22]).

·      he spent 33 years on earth in our neighborhood, during which time “he had to be made like his brothers in every respect, so that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in the service of God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people. For because he himself has suffered when tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted.” (Hebrews 2:17-18)

When we are promised an empathetic advocate, we know we have one. He didn't sit in the heavens are read about what it was like to be human; he became human. 

When we ‘enter into the world’ of others, we model the example of Jesus.  We see; we listen; we spend time together; we seek to understand so that we might be faithfully and lovingly present in attitude, action, and word. 

And when we do this, church life becomes very, very compelling. Imagine being part of a group of people who are committed to knowing you, understanding you, loving you, being poured out for you in honor of Jesus, who was poured out for us.[23] 

11 So, my loved ones, if God loved us so sacrificially, surely we should love one another12 No one has ever seen God with human eyes; but if we love one another, God truly lives in us; God’s love has accomplished its mission among us.

 
_____________________________________________________________________________

[1] Genesis 15-22; Deuteronomy 29 and 30

[2] On the other hand, there were at least 14 very specific promises that God puts on himself. http://www.lifeinmessiah.org/resources/articles/gods-covenant-with-abraham

[3] Please give me bonus points for LOTR references..

[4] Romans 6:23

[5] Still Romans 6:23 J

[6] 1 Corinthians 11:24-26

[7] Colossians 1:20-22; 2 Corinthians 5:18; Romans 5:10

[8] “The connecting lines of thought are not on the surface, and cannot be affirmed with certainty. What follows seems to give the clue to what otherwise looks like an abrupt transition. ‘I say we must love one another, for by so doing we have proof of the presence of the invisible God.’” (Cambridge Bible For Schools And Colleges)

[9] See Paul’s opinion on this in 1 Corinthians 13

[10] Colossians 1:18; Colossians 2:18-19; Ephesians 1:20-23; Ephesians 5:23-30; 1 Corinthians 12:27.

[11] Our love for God is no greater than our love for “the least of these.” 

[12] We are never intended to be terminals of God’s blessings, like those things electricians use to stop the progress of the electricity going through wires; we were intended to be conduits or channels the keep the love from the source moving along. Think of spokes in a bicycle tire: as they get nearer to the center of the wheel, they get nearer to one another. (Believers Bible Commentary)

[13]  Thanks to Zondervan Illustrated Bible Background of the New Testament for some great ideas here. 

[14] “Feel” is a key word. Maybe they projected something into a situation…but maybe they didn’t, too.

[15] Hebrews 4:15  “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize (literally, “to have a fellow feeling with” in both Strong’s and the NAS Exhaustive Concordance; Thayer’s Greek Lexicon says “to be affected with the same feeling as another”) with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are--yet he did not sin.” (NIV)  The NIV gets it right here. Though the word is often translated as ‘sympathetic,’ the best English equivalent is ‘empathetic’.

[16] Matthew 5:1; 9:36, for example

[17] Mark 10

[18] Matthew 9

[19] John 8:1-11

[20] Matthew 11: 16-19 & John 8: 1-11

[21] Luke 19

[22] John 4

[23] Philippians 2:8