Adapted from Truth Endures (By John MacArthur) Reading 1 (Pastor Dave, Reader)

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Meditations for Songs of the Cross Service February 22, 2015 Evangel Baptist Church A podcast of these readings can be found on the Evangel website (evbapt.org). Go to the Calendar (list view) for February 22 and select Sermon Outline in the links. Adapted from Truth Endures (By John MacArthur) Reading 1 (Pastor Dave, Reader) Many understand that the life of Christ is an example for Christians to follow. But I daresay most people would not assume that the death of Christ is an example, and yet that is exactly what Peter says it is that Christ in suffering and dying has left us an example we are to follow. The Bible tells us He was the perfect man born without sin, committing no sin, holy, innocent, undefiled and separate from sinners. In life, He is our perfect example. We are to be holy as He was holy, pure as He was pure, gentle as He was gentle, wise as He was wise, and humble as He was humble. Christ was obedient to God, and we are to imitate His example. Our service should be like His, and our attitude toward the world should reflect His attitude toward it. We understand that the life of Christ was an exemplary life. Few people would argue that. But the issue before us in 1 Peter 2:21 is that Christ is our example, not only in the way He lived, but also in His death. So often, we learn more about the character of a person by how he dies than by how he lived.... It is the trying times that reveal character. It also is true that we find then the purest, truest revelation of the character of Jesus Christ in the time of His greatest trial. We find that Jesus in His dying moments was as perfect as He was during His life. His dying only confirms the perfect character He manifested in His living. In His death, Jesus teaches us how to live. We often look at His dying moments and observe that His death illustrates the seriousness of sin and the need for a Savior to pay the price for our iniquity. We recognize that by His substitutionary death, He died in our place. But Peter said that there s even more to the cross than that. Christ died not only for us, but also as an example to us. He died to show us how to live.

Now how are we going to know anything about Him in His death? How is His character revealed? It could not be revealed by what He did He was nailed to a cross and unable to do anything. It cannot be revealed to us in something He thinks, because we can t read His thoughts. The character of Christ was revealed in His dying by what He said. From the earliest years, the church has celebrated the death and resurrection of Christ by remembering His last seven sayings on the cross. What He said in dying becomes principles for living. Christ Our Example Forgive Others In Luke 23:34, Jesus says, Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing. Christ died forgiving those who sinned against Him. That is a principle to live by. In His dying, Jesus revealed His forgiving heart, even after a lifetime of experiencing mankind s worst treatment. Christ made the world and came into it, but the world would not acknowledge Him. Eyes blinded by sin did not want Him and saw no beauty in Him. His birth in a stable foreshadowed the treatment He would receive from mankind throughout His life. Shortly after His birth, King Herod tried to have Him killed, which was only the beginning of mankind s lifelong hostility toward Him. Again and again, His enemies sought His destruction. Their vile treachery reached its climax at the cross. The Son of God has yielded Himself into their hands, and they are in the process of executing Him. Christ s forgiveness of His executioners came after a mock trial of trumpedup accusations. The judge admitted he found no fault in Him, but used Him to appease a clamoring crowd. Because no ordinary death would satisfy the implacable foes of Jesus, they made sure that He died the most painful, intense and shameful death imaginable that of hanging on a cross. His forgiveness came as He hung on the cross, the victim (from a human perspective) of the hatred, animosity, bitterness, vengeance and vile wickedness of men and demons. From a human standpoint, we would naturally expect Him to cry out to God for pity, or shake His fist in the face of God for His unfair execution. If we wrote the story, we might show Him crying maledictions and threats of vengeance upon His killers. But the Son of God did none of that. The first thing He says is a prayer a prayer to God to forgive those who were taking His life. And underlying His prayer for forgiveness is an understanding of the wretchedness of the human heart: For they do not know what they are doing. (vs. 34) Jesus understood the sinfulness of men and the blindness of the human heart. He was painfully aware of the ignorance of depravity. He knew His executioners understood neither the

identity of their victim nor the enormiity of their crime. They didn t know they were killing the Prince of Life, their Creator. They didn t know they were slaughtering the Messiah. Christ s executioners needed forgiveness. The only way they could be ushered into the presence of a holy God and ever experience the joy that God gives one who is in fellowship with Him was if their sins were forgiven. Christ prayed for the most profound need of His killers. He was more concerned that His wicked murderers be forgiven than in seeking vengeance. That is the magnanimous heart of Christ. That is the truest revelation of a pure heart, for a pure heart seeks no vengeance. While being reviled, He did not revile in return; while suffering, He uttered no threats, but kept entrusting Himself to Him who judges righteously. (1 Peter 2:23) Forgiveness is man s greatest need. It is the only way we can enter into fellowship with God and avoid hell, and that s why Jesus prayed for it. We need to recognize that apart from Christ, we are sinners unfit for the presence of a holy God. Noble ideals, good resolutions and excellent rules to live by are useless if sin isn t dealt with. It is of no use to attempt to develop a beautiful character and aim to do that which will meet with God s approval while there is sin between you and God. It would be the same as fitting shoes to paralyzed feet or buying glasses for blind eyes. The question of the forgiveness of sin is the most fundamental question of all. It does not matter that I am highly respected in the circle of my friends if I am yet in my sins. It does not matter that I have attained a level of human goodness if I am still in my sins. Jesus understood the deep need of man. He understood that the only way man could ever escape hell and know blessing was if His sins were forgiven. It did not matter to Him that the sin He sought to be forgiven was the sin of killing Him. Christians are to be more concerned with God forgiving those who sin against them than with vengeance. Stephen, while being stoned to death for preaching about Christ, prayed, Lord, do not hold this sin against them! (Acts 7:60) He followed the Lord s own example. So should we. Christ Our Example Meet the Needs of Others (Pastor Joel, Reader) John 19:26-27 says, Woman, behold, your son... (Son,) behold, your mother! Jesus died expressing selfless love. Standing at the foot of His cross was a group of five people far different from the mocking crowd. Along with the apostle John was Mary, the mother of our Lord, who was experiencing the full force of Simeon s prophecy many years before that her soul would be pierced through because of Jesus. (Luke 2:34-35) Bound by love to the cross

of her son, she stood suffering in weak silence. Beside her stood Salome possibly her sister, the mother of James and John. There was also Mary the wife of Clopas and Mary Magdalene, out of whom Jesus had cast demons. (Mark 15:40; Luke 8:2-3; John 19:25) It seems fitting that the name Mary means bitterness in Hebrew. The Romans crucified people close to the ground, so it is reasonable to assume that John and the women could have touched Him perhaps they did. They were able to get near enough to hear Him speak softly. When Jesus said, Woman, behold, your son, He didn t call her mother because that relationship was over. Similarly, when He began His ministry, He identified her as woman (at the wedding in Cana; John 2:4). On the cross, she was reminded again that she needed to understand Jesus, not as her son, but as her Savior. Yet His intent was not to call attention to Himself, but to commit His mother to the care of John, and John to the care of His mother. As Christ was dying, His mother was on His heart. Out of the crowd at the foot of the cross, Jesus mother was perhaps the neediest of all. It is likely that Joseph had died by this time, or Jesus wouldn t have had to make such a commitment. And He couldn t commit her to His half-brothers, since they didn t believe in Him. (John 7:5) He would not have committed the care of His believing mother into the hands of His unbelieving relatives. Once again, we see Christ s selfless love. On the cross, He experienced the weight of the world s sins, the agony of the cross and the wrath of almighty God a far greater internal pain than His external pain. Yet in the midst of His pain, He showed compassion. His thoughts were directed towards someone else, a demonstration of the purity of His character. That s how we are to live never so overwhelmed with our own pain that we lose sight of the needs of others. (cf. Philippians 2:4) Christ Our Example - Realize the Seriousness of Sin (Pastor Dave, Reader) In Matthew 27:46 comes the saying with the most pathos: My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me? Jesus died understanding the seriousness of sin. He died resenting its implications. Sin separates from God. Forsaken is one of the most painful words that a person could use to describe himself alone and desolate. Jesus was forsaken. His cry meant, My God, My God, with whom I have had eternal, unbroken fellowship, why have You deserted Me? Against that background of eternal intimacy, Christ s forsakenness has profound significance. Sin is seen to do what nothing else in the universe could do. Men couldn t separate the Father from the Son; demons couldn t; Satan couldn t. But sin caused the Son to suffer the most devastating reality in the universe separation from God. He who was in the Father and the

Father in Him, He who was one with the Father and the Father one with Him, He who had enjoyed eternally uninterrupted, perfect communion within the Trinity is now forsaken by God. Why? Because He s bearing sin, and sin separates. God is too holy to look on sin. (Habakkuk 1:13) As a result, sin alienates man from God. When Christ bore our sin on the cross, He reached the climax of His suffering. The soldiers had mocked Him crushed a crown of thorns on His head, scourged Him, struck Him, spit in His face and pulled out the hairs of His beard. Even when suffering pain beyond description His hands and feet pierced He endured the cross and its shame in silence. Though taunted by the vulgar crowd, and suffering the curses of those crucified beside Him, He had not answered back. But when God forsook Him, Christ experienced a pain beyond even all that, and He cried out in agony. No earthly struggle, trial or trouble should come close to the distress our own sin should cause us, because it will separate you from God. Like Christ, believers are to be profoundly anguished by the separation caused by sin. Jesus experienced personally the searing pain sin brings, because it separated Him from the Father. We must understand the implications of our sin that it wrenches us away from God.