The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 9 – The proof his victory is real

Thanks to Peter, we can now see the connection between the Kingdom and the Cross, because it was Christ’s death forgiving the sins of Israel that launched God’s Kingdom. And thanks to Peter again, in Acts 3:26, he made it clear where it all began: “When God raised up his Servant, he sent him first to you (Jews) to bless you by turning each of you from YOUR wicked ways.” God’s Kingdom had been launched afresh in Israel because God had dealt with THEIR sins first.

And how had God dealt with Israel’s sins? Through Christ toppling the dark forces that had caused Israel to sin in the first place.

And how did he do that? Three things won the battle for Jesus: First off, as Israel’s representative, he did what Israel didn’t do – he stayed utterly loyal to God and never strayed from his purpose. Secondly, he took the death that Israel had brought on itself from chasing other gods, on himself. And thirdly, by his death the sins of Israel were forgiven. All three dealt a deathblow on the evil forces, but the third one especially, forgiveness, because forgiveness destroys evil’s power.

Evil has no power where there is forgiveness. If you’ve done something horribly wrong to me, for instance, but I forgive you, the power of evil to make me bitter and angry at what you’ve done is broken. That’s the power of forgiveness, and through Jesus’ death forgiving Israel’s sin, the power of evil over Israel was broken too, freeing them up to fulfill their calling again. And they got off to a great start too, because thousands of Jews responded to Peter’s message, launching the Kingdom of God in the Church, that reached out next to the Gentiles, just as God promised to Abraham.

It was a great victory that now includes us Gentiles in it, because all nations would be blessed through Israel after Israel’s sins were forgiven. And it’s the same blessing for us as it was for Israel, that through Christ’s death our sins are forgiven too. And for the same purpose, to free us up from the dark forces so we can live the ways of God’s Kingdom that Jesus launched at his death, and by doing so prove in our own lives that his victory was real. 

(Coming up next – Did Jesus really come back from the dead?)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 8 – The importance of forgiveness

For many Christians the forgiveness of sins has nothing to do with the setting up of God’s Kingdom on the Earth. Instead, they say, our sins are forgiven so our souls get a free ticket to Heaven. To the Jews, however, forgiveness of sins had nothing to do with saving their souls for Heaven. 

To them forgiveness of their sins was totally connected to the setting up of God’s Kingdom – because who was God setting up his Kingdom through? It was through them. But Israel had sinned badly and put a halt to God setting up his Kingdom through them. For God, therefore, to continue his work of setting up his Kingdom through Israel, Israel was in desperate need of forgiveness. The future of the entire world now rested on Israel being forgiven.

Which explains why Jesus’ death was such a great victory, because it was through his death that Israel’s sins were forgiven.

But even though the Jews knew that forgiveness of their sins was the key to God’s plan getting back on track through them, they still didn’t connect it to Jesus’ death. We see that in Acts 1:6 – which is now several weeks after Jesus died on the Cross – and the main concern of Jesus’ disciples is: “Lord, are you at this time going to restore the Kingdom in Israel?”

They still didn’t get it, that when Jesus died to forgive their sins, it meant the Kingdom had ALREADY been restored in Israel. That’s what Jesus had died for. That’s what their sins had been forgiven for. His death meant their sins had been forgiven, and that meant they were back on the job God had called them to do, of spreading God’s Kingdom to all nations.

But it took the Holy Spirit to get that into their heads, as we see in Acts 3:17, when Peter acknowledges the Jews’ ignorance in killing Jesus, “BUT,” he adds in verse 18, “this is how God fulfilled what he had foretold through all the prophets, saying that his Christ would suffer.” 

It was the death of Christ that had flung open all those prophecies about God’s Kingdom being restored for the whole world through Israel. That’s why Christ’s death was such a victory, because the Kingdom promised through Israel had already begun…(concludes tomorrow)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 7 – The Kingdom and the Cross

Never did Jesus traipse round towns and villages yelling out, “OK everybody, gather round, I’ve got great news; the time has come for you to repent of your sins so you can all go to Heaven.”

His focus was entirely on the launching of God’s Kingdom here, not saving souls for Heaven. But for many Christians the announcing of God’s Kingdom is a bit of a mystery, because if we’re all going to Heaven one day, why does it matter what happens down here – except that by doing good works and being good church members we get ourselves a decent-sized reward when we arrive at the Pearly Gates?

We’re living in a Christian culture where little attention is being given to the connection between Jesus’ preaching about the Kingdom and why he died on the Cross. That’s not meant to condemn anybody because we all make mistakes, and Christians all through the ages have said and done some really stupid things, and we’d readily confess our own embarrassing contributions to that too, right? But admit it; we’ve got ourselves in a pickle and painted ourselves into a corner, because entire denominations representing the heart and soul of Christian preaching, and many well known preachers on TV too, have got stuck in a groove that leaves out a whole chunk of why Jesus came here and why he died.

We can’t criticize the Jews, then, for missing the connection between the Kingdom and why Christ died, when many of us Christians have missed it too. The Jews knew about the Kingdom, yes, but they didn’t connect it to Jesus having to die. We Christians, meanwhile, believe in Christ’s death, but we can’t see how it connects to his preaching about the Kingdom. The Jews, therefore, got a huge surprise when Christ died, but Christians get a huge surprise too, on discovering that Jesus’ death has nothing to do with going to Heaven.

And on both scores the surprise happens because the connection between the Kingdom and the Cross is STILL a bit of a mystery. How would you answer the question, for instance, “Why did Jesus die on the Cross?” If you say, “He died to forgive our sins,” yes, that’s true, but what if you were then asked, “What has forgiveness of sins got to do with setting up God’s Kingdom on this Earth?” What would you say then?… (continues tomorrow)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 6 – Victory here on Earth

The idea that Christ died to win back our rightful position as kings and priests and administrators of the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth – as God’s very own children too – is almost as foreign to many Christians as it is to the rest of the world. 

We’ve been cleverly distracted from our Father’s amazing purpose for us – right here on the Earth – into treading water until “God calls us home” to our eternal reward in Heaven. And for some odd reason we prize that over what God made possible through his Son’s death. We’d rather strum harps and sing in choirs in some far off distant “heaven” than think about what being restored back to our job as kings and priests on this Earth means, and what possibilities that has opened up for all humanity right in the here and now.

One has to wonder why we as Christians became so focused on leaving this Earth and going to Heaven, when Jesus’ focus was on the Kingdom of Heaven coming here. Right at the start of his ministry in Mark 1:15 he announced, “At last the time has come; God’s Kingdom has arrived,” and from then on, Matthew 9:35, he “went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the gospel of the Kingdom.” And in Luke 4:43 he said, “I must preach the Kingdom of God, because for this purpose I have been sent.” And did the Jews immediately interpret that as, “Great, we’re all going to Heaven”?

No, they didn’t. The mention of the word ‘Kingdom’ – in the minds of the people Jesus was talking to – was the great Victory here on Earth predicted in the book of Daniel two hundred years earlier. There it was in Daniel 7:13-14 that spoke of “one like a son of man,” a human being no less, who “was given authority, glory and sovereign power” – the power, that is, to create and rule an unending Kingdom involving “all peoples and nations” – here on the Earth. 

When the Jews heard the word ‘Kingdom’, therefore, that’s what it meant to them, that God was setting up his Kingdom here under the rulership of humans again, just as he originally intended.

And through Jesus, the long awaited Messiah, that kingdom had begun. They didn’t have to wait any longer for that kingdom to begin, therefore, because in Jesus it had already started…(continues tomorrow)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 5 – What did Jesus die for?

What Jesus represented to the Jews, either in his conquering hero outfit or in his death, was the saving of their skins and the hope of a secure and glorious future for their nation. But the picture of Jesus being presented by much of Christianity today is remarkably similar, that he’s the Saviour of our skins from Hell, and the provider of a one way ticket to a secure and glorious future in Heaven. In other words, just like Caiaphas and the Jews (in part 4), Christians can be into Jesus for selfish reasons too.

Missing in this picture is the great victory Jesus won over the dark forces, how he won it by dying on the Cross, and what new and wonderful things began to happen on this planet because of it. The focus of much of Christianity by contrast is on our sinful bodies and this troubled Earth being such a mess that God is going to burn the Earth up, pack all the bad people off to Hell, but whisk the souls of all the good people off to Heaven to live forever with Jesus.

Fortunately for us humans that’s NOT what Jesus died for. He didn’t die to get us OFF the Earth; he died to give us victory ON the Earth. He died to give us a great political victory over the dark forces ruling Planet Earth, because everything on this planet comes down to rulership. It’s not about dumping our responsibilities of ruling this Earth and disappearing off to Heaven; it’s about getting back to the business of rulership that God created us and this planet for, and that’s why Jesus died.

Jesus died to win back rulership – or sovereignty – of this Earth for us humans again. We lost it in a cunning political move by the dark forces that offered us instant self-gratification and self-fulfillment off a tree. And we fell for it. We happily handed over the reigns of our sovereignty to a serpent in exchange for chasing our own dreams of grandeur. We were just like Esau, trading our birthright for a bowl of soup.

From that point on our focus has mostly been ourselves and what this planet and our God-given abilities can do FOR US. We became utterly and horribly selfish, and like leopards we haven’t changed our spots much since. Even Christianity has largely become a quest for self, of saving our skins and feathering our nests with the best reward and position we can get in Heaven, much like Jesus’ disciples wanting the best positions in his Kingdom (Mark 10:35-37). But is that really what Jesus died for?…(continues tomorrow)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 4 – Is that why Jesus died?

Even the Jews, who had all the pointers to Jesus being the Messiah in their Scriptures, still didn’t get it that he would die, or the reason for it. 

Even when Caiaphas the High Priest prophesied in John 11:51-52 that “Jesus would die for the Jewish nation, and not only for their nation but also for all the scattered children of God to bring them together and make them one” – it still didn’t ring any bells that what he’d just said was straight out of Isaiah as the sign pinpointing who the Messiah was, what he’d come for, and how his death would accomplish it. And Caiaphas was just about to have Jesus killed in fulfillment of that prophecy too, but it wouldn’t mean a thing to him. How on earth could that be?

Well, we know from verse 48, that Caiaphas wasn’t really thinking about what Jesus’ death would accomplish for the whole world; he was thinking about what it would do for him. Caiaphas was in a difficult spot. If the movement Jesus began got any bigger the Romans might move in to crush it and in the process kick out Caiaphas and his cronies too. Jesus’ death, therefore, didn’t mean anything more to Caiaphas than saving his own skin. He said as much in verse 48, when he openly stated his concern that if too many people followed Jesus the Romans would remove “what little power and privilege we (priests) still have.”

What Caiaphas saw in Jesus’ death, therefore, was the chance to save himself and his own political future. And that’s all he saw. But most of his fellow Jews were just as short sighted and self-centred as he was, because all they saw in Jesus was a great conquering hero who would save them from the Romans and make them a great nation again. In other words, they ALL saw Jesus in purely selfish terms, as to what he would do for them, personally.

But let’s lift this up to us today, because at some point in our lives WE were faced with Jesus dying on a cross as well. And what did that register in OUR heads? Was it along the lines of something like this – that we sinned and brought down the penalty of eternal death on ourselves, but God unleashed his wrath on Jesus on the cross instead, so that our sins could be forgiven, and if we led a reasonably good life after that our souls would be taken up to Heaven? But is that why Jesus died?…(continues tomorrow)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 3 – It really was predicted

Imagine being a Scripture taught Jew since childhood sitting at a table with Jesus in Emmaus, not having a clue who he was, and “beginning with Moses and all the Prophets” he explains in detail “what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself,” Luke 24:27

Scriptures like Deuteronomy 18:15 – when Moses told the Israelites, “God, your God, is going to raise up a prophet for you. God will raise him up from among your kinsmen, a prophet like me. Listen obediently to him.” And how Moses repeated those same words in verses 18 and 19 too (so would Peter in Acts 3:22, and Stephen in Acts 7:37).

The Jews of Jesus’ day KNEW, therefore, that a great prophet like Moses would arise again. They were looking for him too, as we see in Philip’s excited shout to Nathaniel in John 1:45, “We’ve found the One Moses wrote about in the Law, the One preached by the prophets. It’s Jesus, Joseph’s son, the one from Nazareth.” 

Philip got that part right, but still no clue that the One Moses wrote about would also suffer and die, or why his suffering and death were necessary, or what would actually be accomplished by his suffering and death as well. That part was still a mystery to all Jesus’ disciples.

But how did they MISS it, when only two hundred years earlier an amazing book had hit their Jewish bookstores specifically predicting the Messiah’s arrival, including actual dates they could work out for themselves, that also predicted his death as well? There it was in Daniel 9:25, that great prediction of an “Anointed One” who would put an end to sin and “set things right forever” (24) – BUT, who would also be killed (26).

Surely that would ring a bell or two in their heads as they sat there with Jesus taking them through the prophecies they were already familiar with in Isaiah – like the one in Isaiah 49:5-6 that spoke of a great Servant whom God had chosen to “recover the tribes of Israel” so that Israel would become “a light for the nations to make God’s salvation global.” And how that Servant, in the process of saving Israel and the whole world, would also suffer and die – mentioned in considerable detail just four chapters later in Isaiah 53

It was all there in their Scriptures, but so difficult for them to accept. And not just difficult for those two men either…(continues tomorrow) 

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 2 – Understanding dawns

As soon as Jesus was raised back to life again, he got right down to the business of explaining what had just happened – first of all to the ladies gathered at his tomb, and then to two men on the road to Emmaus. 

The two men were deeply saddened by Jesus’ death because, Luke 24:21, they thought Jesus “was the glorious Messiah who’d come to rescue Israel,” but now he was dead. It must have been quite a shock, then, when Jesus, who’d joined them, burst out with, “You are such foolish, foolish people,” verses 25-26, because “you find it so hard to believe all that the prophets wrote in the Scriptures. Wasn’t it clearly predicted by the prophets that the Messiah would have to suffer all these things before entering his time of glory?”

It was? But where in Scripture was the Messiah’s suffering predicted? They hadn’t a clue, so in verse 27, “Jesus quoted them passage after passage from the writings of the prophets, beginning with the book of Genesis and right on through the Scriptures, explaining what the passages meant and what they said about him.”

The two men were so excited by what was in their Scriptures all along that they asked Jesus to stay over that night to explain more. But during supper, when it dawned on them who Jesus was, he disappeared. So they packed their bags and headed straight back to Jerusalem to report to the remaining eleven disciples what had just happened.

But half way through their report Jesus suddenly appears (36). And again he reminds them, “When I was with you before,” verse 44, “don’t you remember me telling you that everything written about me by Moses and the prophets and in the Psalms must all come true?”

Well, yes, that IS what he’d told them in Luke 18:31, when he’d said they were all going to Jerusalem, and when they got there “all the predictions of the ancient prophets concerning me will come true.’” 

And in John 5:45-46 he’d mentioned one of the prophets by name too, when he told the Jews who wanted to have him killed, “Your accuser is Moses,” because “he wrote about me, but you refuse to believe him, so you refuse to believe in me.” So again, it was in their Scriptures all along, starting with the writings of Moses, that Jesus would be coming – and what he was coming for. What other scriptures could there be, then?…(continues tomorrow)

The victory Jesus won for us on the cross

Part 1 – No one saw it coming

As Christians we believe that Jesus won a massive victory for all humanity when he died on the Cross.

It was the day the dark forces that had been ruling this planet since the time of Adam and Eve were soundly defeated. But, amazingly, none of the Jewish religious leaders saw it coming, nor did their scholars of the Scriptures, nor did the other Jewish leaders, and – most importantly – nor did the dark evil forces. They were ALL caught completely by surprise. Evil’s defeat was done and dusted before anyone realized it had happened.

As Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 2:8, “None of the rulers of this age understood it; for if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.” The powers controlling the world had no idea what they would be unleashing by killing Jesus. But why didn’t the dark forces with all their cunning see it coming? How did they bungle things so badly? Well, that’s God’s genius, because who would have guessed by Jesus dying that evil would be defeated, or that death would bring victory? 

On the surface it made no sense at all. It made no sense to the disciples either. When Jesus “began to speak plainly to his disciples” in Matthew 16:21, “that he would suffer at the hands of the Jewish leaders, be killed, and three days later would be raised to life again,” Peter yelled out, “Heaven forbid; this is not going to happen to you.” 

Why on earth did Jesus have to DIE? But at this point the reason for Jesus dying was still hidden from the disciples (Luke 9:45), and they were too scared to ask Jesus for further explanation because what he was saying didn’t sound good at all.

But even the prophets who made the predictions about the Messiah dying couldn’t put the two together either. As Peter wrote in 1 Peter 1:10-11, “Concerning this salvation, the prophets searched intently and with the greatest care, trying to find out the time and circumstances to which the Spirit of Christ in them was pointing when he predicted the sufferings of the Messiah and the glories that would follow.” 

But it wasn’t meant for the prophets to know, because “they were not serving themselves but you,” verse 12. It wasn’t meant for the “angels who longed to look into these things,” either (verse 12). It was meant for us, and all those since Jesus’ death, as we see in what Jesus did right after his death…(continues tomorrow)

Stories from the Old Testament for coping with 2023 

Daniel – part 3 (part 2, March 24)

Daniel was in a fix. Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, was “so angry and furious” at his magicians, enchanters, sorcerers and astrologers for not interpreting a troubling dream he’d had, “that he ordered the execution of all the wise men of Babylon,” Daniel 2:12

For some odd reason the king hadn’t consulted Daniel about his dream, despite Daniel’s ability to “understand visions and dreams of all kinds” (Daniel 1:17). Was Daniel even aware, then, of the “decree” that had been issued in chapter 2:13 “to put the wise men to death,” and that “men had been sent to look for him and his friends to put them to death” as well?

Perhaps the first he heard of it was when he bumped into “Arioch, the commander of the king’s guard” in the palace, and discovered Arioch had been sent out “to put to death the wise men of Babylon,” and here was Daniel face to face with him. So what was Daniel’s reaction? Drop everything and run? Or bellow to Arioch, “Whose daft idea was this, then?” – something I was sorely tempted to yell during the pandemic in response to similarly dictated extreme measures – or stick his chest out and shout, “Now look here, my good man, don’t you know who I am?”  

Fortunately, Daniel was a wise man. Clearly, the king was in a psychopathic rage and totally off his rocker including Daniel in his decree, when wisdom was so much what he’d valued in Daniel (1:19-20). So, reading the situation and how delicate it was, “Daniel spoke to Arioch with wisdom and tact,” verse 14.  

So rather than being overcome with fear, or defending himself, or openly challenging the decree with an opinion of his own, Daniel “asked the king’s officer” a question – not something I’m very good at when faced with idiotic decrees from on high. But Daniel kept his cool, and showing no signs of fear or aggression he asked Arioch in verse 15, “Why did the king issue such a harsh decree?” 

How I wish I and millions of others had asked that question of our governments when they landed us with lockdowns and other harsh decrees, despite the virus having little effect on the general population. But fear and aggression took over, and I include myself in that. So what made Daniel so wise in his reaction?….(part 4 in a couple of weeks)