Slave Market of Sin
The Godhead
IN OUR STUDY OF THE TRINITY we
learned that God has both essence and personality. By essence we mean the
characteristics or makeup of deity. Many passages of Scripture describe God in
the plural, or as having separate personalities. Other passages describe Him as
being One. Whenever He is described as being one God, it is always a reference
to His
essence
or character.
In addition, God exists in three
separate and distinct personalities. The First Person is called the Father; the
Second
Person,
the Son; and the Third Person, the Holy Spirit. Each member of the Godhead
possesses all of the characteristics named in the essence box. So we say that
God is One in essence but Three in personality.
The conference in eternity past
In eternity past the three members
of the Godhead held a conference. It was then that the divine decrees were
established
(Acts
2:23; Eph. 1:4, 11; 3:11; 1 Pet. 1:2). In Their omniscience, the members of the
Godhead looked down the corridors of time and saw man in a sinful condition:
They saw him spiritually dead and subject to eternal condemnation. Because of
the character of God, a plan was developed so that man could choose between
eternal condemnation and eternal life.
The plan
All three members of the Godhead are
involved in the plan. God the Father is the author and designer of the plan;
God the
Son
is the executor of the plan; and God the Holy Spirit reveals the plan to man.
This plan of grace includes three phases.
Phase
One is salvation and was provided by God the Son, Jesus Christ. Born of a
virgin, He was true God and perfect humanity; He lived a sinless life which
reached its climax at the cross and was consummated by resurrection and
ascension.
Phase One was executed solely by
Jesus Christ, and for all who accept His work on their behalf, there is no
eternal condemnation, but eternal life.
Phase Two of the plan of God is
designed for the believer in time, and begins at the moment of salvation and
continues
throughout
his earthly life. This provision is a supernatural way of life in which God the
Holy Spirit indwells and fills the
believer
for the purpose of function and service.
Phase Three is eternity and is
executed by God the Father. It begins when the believer’s earthly life terminates,
and will be
wonderful
beyond description (Rev. 21-22)!
Because the members of the Godhead
are gracious, every provision was made for man long before he existed. Man was
created without sin or the sin nature, and for an indefinite period of time man
and woman enjoyed fellowship with God in the Garden. What caused them to become
alienated from God (Eph. 4:18)? Their sin of disobedience to God’s expressed
will (Gen. 2:17; 3:6)! Their negative volition toward God’s command produced
the sin nature and spiritual death the inability to have fellowship with God in
time. Adam and Eve attempted to hide in the Garden first of all, behind a
barrier of self-righteousness, represented by the aprons of fig leaves (Gen.
3:7); and next, behind a barrier of trees. Yet they need not have hidden at
all, for an even greater barrier now existed between them and God the barrier
of sin!
The barrier
God is on one side of this barrier
and man on the other. You must understand that no one has ever removed this
barrier by his own works or efforts. No matter what his abilities, talents,
ethics, conduct, assets, or any other factor, man is helpless. The removal of
the barrier is solely the work of God, and apart from divine intervention, man
would face eternal condemnation.
As a teaching aid, let us say that
the barrier is composed of the following six bricks.
1.
Sin: “For all have sinned and fall
short [missed the mark] of the glory of God” (Rom. 3:23).
2.
The Penalty of Sin: “For the wages
of sin is death . . .” (Rom. 6:23).
3.
Physical Birth: Man is born physically alive, but at the same time he is
spiritually dead, that is, without fellowship with God.
4. The Character of God, or His
divine essence: Man simply cannot measure up to the divine characteristics of
perfect God. Remember that men are not created equal; some men are inherently
more intelligent or more able than others. But no man is as good as God!
5.
Man’s Relative Righteousness: No matter how good man may be, his human
righteousness is still lacking, so we call it -R.
6.
Man’s Position in Adam: His short physical life span versus eternal life
— “In Adam all die ...” (1 Cor.
15:22). The fact that this barrier exists is very bad news. By an act of sin,
man erected the barrier; but because the members of the Godhead loved man even
before his existence, provision was made for the removal of the barrier. This
is the Gospel very good news
Grace found a way
Jesus therefore was saying to those Jews who had believed
Him, “If you abide in My word, then you are truly disciples of Mine.” (John 8:31)
Jesus was making this remark to
believers when a group of bystanders began kibitzing. These observers were
unbelievers — the religious members of the Sanhedrin. These Pharisees and
Scribes were always dogging the footsteps of our Lord, seizing every opportunity
to criticize and malign Him. They were like many of the religious organizations
in our country today who are critical of the truth, constantly discrediting the
Bible as the literal Word of God.
Once a person has received Christ as
Savior, he must continuously study the Word of God if he is to discover and
utilize the
divine
operating assets available to him. Jesus was emphasizing this point when He
said, “If you abide in My word.” Based on
the
technical structure of the Koine (common) Greek language, every time you find
the word “if” in the New Testament, it means one of four things:
1. First-class condition: “If” and
it’s true.
2. Second-class condition: “If” and
it’s not true.
3. Third-class condition: “If,”
maybe yes or maybe no.
4. Fourth-class condition: “If,” I
wish it were true but it’s not.
To illustrate: In the great
temptation of Matthew 4, Satan said to Jesus, “If You are the Son of God” —
first-class condition — and You are! Then he said, “If You fall down and
worship me” — second-class condition — but You won’t !In 1 John 1:9 we find another
example: “If we confess our sins” — this is potential, the third-class
condition — maybe yes, maybe no! And the final example is a bit of sanctified
sarcasm when Peter said to believers in 1 Peter 3:14: “If you should suffer for
the sake of righteousness” — fourth-class condition — 1 wish you were but you
are not! (Instead they were suffering because of divine discipline.) Each class
of these conditional phrases is important because it affects the meaning and
translation of every “if” passage.
The “if” in John 8:31 is a
third-class condition; this is the expression of volition and it should read
literally, “If you continue in My word — maybe you will, and maybe you won’t.”
Generally speaking, this is the picture of all believers; it is a matter of
their free will. Some choose to continue in the Word; they learn divine
operating assets and apply them with the result that they have a life of peace
and power, strength and stability. Other Christians are saved and have eternal
life, but they have negative volition toward the Word of God and never “get
with doctrine.” They live by their emotions and rationalizations. The most
miserable people in the world are Christians — those who make the decision not
to continue in the Word. On the other hand, the happiest people in the world
are also Christians those who make a positive decision to “continue in My
word.” They desire to know the truth.
And
you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. (John 8:32)
I remember that where I went to
college, the liberal arts building had this phrase over the entrance. I learned
many things in that college, none of which ever liberated me from anything! Of
course, this Scripture is not referring to academic knowledge or philosophy.
“Truth” is a reference to the Word of God. As Jesus used it here, it applied to
the truth of doctrine connected with Phase Two of the divine plan the operating
assets for the believer in time. Knowledge of these doctrines provides liberty
and freedom to serve the Lord. However, “know the truth” also has another
application: the truth is the Lord Jesus Christ. “Jesus said to him, “I am the
way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but through Me’”
(John 14:6). Jesus was saying in effect, “When you know Me, I liberate you. You
shall be made free.” Jesus continues His discourse with the Scribes and
Pharisees as they arrogantly attack His words.
The four enslavements
They answered Him, “We are Abraham’s offspring, and have never
yet been enslaved to anyone; how is it that You say, ‘You shall become free’?” (John
8:33)
At this point the religious
kibitzers answered Him in pride, in egocentricity: “We are Abraham’s
offspring.” Remember that religion is the devil’s ace trump; and when a
religious man opens his mouth, what he says is often wrong. You can visualize
the Pharisees as they swelled with pride and boasted of their lineage. They
were very proud of their Jewish heritage and the fact that they were descended
from one of the greatest men of all time. They were counting heavily on their
human relationship with Abraham. Heaven would be wide open to them, since the
“pearly gates” would surely never shut on any of Abraham’s offspring. They go
on to make a statement that is typical of anyone who has lost touch with
reality and is distorted in his perspective: “We ...have never yet been
enslaved to anyone.”
It is interesting to note that at
the time this phrase was uttered they were under four different systems of
slavery:
1.
They were in slavery to their own distortions of the Mosaic Law. The Law
was never given as a way of salvation, but as a means of proving that man is a
sinner and needs a Savior. Yet these religious Jews were trying to be saved by
keeping the Law, and, consequently, had become enslaved in a system of legalism
— salvation by works.
2. They were in bondage to their
religious system. Palestine had evolved into a union of Church and State under
the domination of religion and politics which was destroying their national
entity.
3.
They were in bondage to the Roman Empire: Jerusalem stood in the shadow
of the Roman eagle.
4. And finally, they were in bondage
to sin!
What a tremendous temptation to the
Lord Jesus Christ! The religionists had just uttered the most ridiculous
statement, and how simple it would have been to prove them wrong! “What about
the four hundred years of slavery in Egypt? What about the seventy years of
captivity in Babylon? If you’ve never been in bondage to anyone, what about
these Roman standards flying over your cities? Never been in bondage? What
about your Sabbath prohibitions? Under these legalistic restrictions, you
cannot plug a barrel that is leaking, even if it is your best wine. If someone
is stabbed on the Sabbath, you cannot even bind his wound. You must stand there
and watch him bleed to death! Not in bondage to religion? You cannot engage in
any activity on the Sabbath!”
The taboos found in the Talmud and
the Mishnah are fantastic, and in many cases ludicrous! For example, on the
Sabbath you were prohibited from cooking an egg by wrapping it with hot sand.
Apparently someone had really tried to get around the Sabbath laws! If you were
packing your mules from one town to another on Friday and arrived at your
destination just as the sun went down, you could loosen the girth of your mule,
but that’s all. If the pack fell to the ground it was all right, but you
couldn’t remove the pack.
The point is that these Jews were in
bondage to the Law; they were in bondage to their religious leaders; they were
in bondage to the Roman Empire! Jesus, however, did not mention any of these
conditions, and here is the opportunity for believers to learn a tremendous
lesson. Stay with the main issue — the Gospel! The word “gospel” means “good
news,” even though the preliminary to the Gospel is Romans 3:23: “For all have
sinned and fall short [missed the mark] of the glory [perfect righteousness] of
God.” Don’t make an issue of the individual’s personal sins. If you are a
believer in the Lord Jesus Christ and desire that others find Christ as Savior,
don’t talk about their bad habits, their shortcomings, their failures; you have
some too! Don’t go around with the pseudo-sanctified “holier-than-thou”
attitude assumed by so many self-righteous believers: “I’m a plaster saint; I haven’t made any mistakes, but if I make
one it is purely accidental.” The only issue in salvation is the fact that
Jesus Christ died for our sins (2 Cor. 5:21).
Jesus Christ Himself proved this
point when He dealt with the religious unbelievers. He did not talk to them
about their bondage to the Roman Empire, their religious leaders, or the Mosaic
Law! He could have elaborated extensively on each of these, but instead He
talked about the basic fundamental bondage of the entire human race sin!
The big three — What is sin?
What
exactly is sin? When used in the Scriptures as a singular noun, the word sin
refers to the sin nature, as in Romans 7:14
and
1 John 1:8. The presence of a sin nature in all members of the human race makes
it impossible for anyone to measure up to the perfect righteousness of God.
Personal sins which emanate from the sin nature are always directed against
God, even though they may involve wrongs toward oneself or others (Ps. 51:4).
The Bible defines personal sin by means of several
synonyms:
1.
Fall short — Romans 3:23
2.
Transgressions — rebellion
against or overstepping the Law (Ps. 51:1)
3.
Act unfaithfully — self-will
over God’s will (Joshua 22:20)
4.
Trespasses [falling aside] —
Ephesians 2:1
5.
Lawless — failure in relation to the Mosaic Law (1 Tim. 1:9)
6.
Unbelief — the only
unpardonable sin (John 8:24; 16:9)
Man is born into this world with
three strikes against him: he inherits Adam’s sin; he possesses the nature to
sin; and eventually he commits personal sins. The sin of Adam was passed on to
the human race, and we call this imputed sin. Through physical birth, we
inherit an old sin nature. That’s what David meant when he said, “ .. . I was
brought forth in iniquity. . .” (Ps. 51:5). Not that there was anything wrong
with his parentage, but it simply means that by being born through natural
procreation, he inherited an old sin nature which made him a sinner.
In contrast, by means of the virgin
birth, Jesus Christ came into the world without imputed sin and without an old
sin nature. In addition. He lived a life free from personal sins in order to be
qualified to redeem mankind.
Inside the slave market
The rectangle in the diagram
represents the slave market of sin. With the exception of Jesus Christ, every
member of the human race is born inside this slave market. This includes such
notable individuals as Mohammed, Guatama, Madame Blavatsky, and Mary Baker
Eddy, as well as all the lesser known Charlie Browns and John Smiths. No matter
how important someone may be in the eyes of the world, he still was born inside
the slave market of sin!
Jesus
answered them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, every one who commits sin is the
slave of sin.” (John 8:34)
“Commits” is present linear
aktionsart in the Greek. The dramatic present emphasizes the fact that Jesus
shocked these proud, self-righteous do-gooders: “You say you have never been in
bondage to anyone? But I say that if you have committed sin (first-class
condition — and you have), you are a slave to sin He then went on to make
another very significant statement:
“And
the slave does not remain in the house forever; the son does remain forever,” (John
8:35)
The “house” in our diagram
represents eternal life. We cannot be in the house if we are in the slave
market. Since we have three strikes against us, we cannot help having been born
in the slave market any more than we can help being born male or female A slave
has no rights or privileges, no assets or capital; he is helpless to free
himself. If he is ever emancipated, someone who is free must liberate him.
“If
[first-class condition — and He does] therefore the Son shall make you free,
you shall be free indeed.” (John 8:36)
The point here is very simple: in
order to purchase the freedom of someone in the slave market, one must be a
free man! Since the only person ever born into this world outside the slave
market was the humanity of Jesus Christ, He is the one free man who can redeem
us forever. Any purchase, however, always carries a price.
Redemption
pays the price
The
Lord redeems the soul of His servants; and none of those who take refuge in Him
will be condemned. (Ps. 34:22)
The word “redeem” means “to buy, to
purchase.” In the case of a slave it means “to purchase his freedom from a
slave market.” One of the words for “redemption” means not only to purchase the
freedom of a slave, but to free him after you purchase his freedom. This is the
word used here. Notice the fact that the Lord, no one else, does the redeeming.
Since it is the soul that sinned (Ezek. 18:4), it is the soul that must be
saved (Ps. 19:7; Heb. 10:39). Jesus Christ paid for the soul’s redemption and
set it free. From now on when you read the Bible, every time you see the verb
“to redeem” or its cognate “redemption,” you should understand these words
refer to “purchasing the freedom of a slave.”
Revelation 1:5, Hebrews 9:11-14, and
many other passages deal with the fact that Christ has already redeemed us. Job
said, “I know that my Redeemer lives...” (Job 19:25). Galatians 3:13: “Christ
redeemed us from the curse of the Law.” The “curse of the Law” refers to the
Ten Commandments which simply prove that we are sinners. Ephesians 1:7: “In Him
we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses,
according to the riches of His grace.”
Money won’t buy it
Some of the mechanics of our
redemption are clarified in 1 Peter.
Knowing
that you were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold from your
futile [empty] way of life inherited from your forefathers. (1 Pet. 1:18)
Knowing should become your motto
since knowledge of doctrine is the most important single factor in the
Christian life.
God
has made provision for every believer to know and understand every doctrine in
the Word of God. You can neither orient to the grace of God nor advance to
spiritual maturity apart from knowing Bible doctrine.
We are now commanded to know the
doctrine related to redemption. First, a negative: we were not redeemed with
perishable things — commodities that are subject to decay or destruction. These
are defined more specifically here as “silver or gold”; but in the Greek it is
actually “silver and gold coins” — money, in other words. Money will buy some
things, and there are many things people will do for money. However, money will
not buy happiness, love, or friends; and above all, money will not buy
salvation. Money will not liberate anyone from the slave market of sin, nor
will materialistic possessions free us from a worthless, futile life.
The Jews had inherited a legalistic
tradition of salvation and spirituality by works that was in total conflict
with both the
Word
of God and the grace principle of His plan. They had a glorious heritage of
grace provided from their Scriptures, but
religion
and legalism had destroyed it.
Second, a positive: Peter clearly
states the ransom price for the purchase of our freedom.
But
with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of
Christ. (1 Pet. 1:19)
Ritual reveals reality
The Jews who received this epistle
understood perfectly the analogy between Christ and the outwardly perfect
sacrificial lamb used in the Levitical offerings. This lamb had done nothing
wrong; furthermore, it did not deserve to die. Perhaps it bleated once or twice
and the Jerusalem Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals complained
that surely there could be no reason to kill poor lambs. Yet, according to Old
Testament ritual, die it must!
And he [the offerer] shall lay his hand on the head
[identification] of his offering and slay it at the doorway of the tent of
meeting, and Aaron’s sons, the priests, shall sprinkle the blood around on the
altar. (Lev.
3:2)
By placing his hand on the head of
the lamb, the one who brought the sacrifice symbolically transferred his sins
to the lamb. As the offerer killed the sacrifice and the priest collected and
sprinkled the blood, people observed and learned the doctrine of redemption.
From this we discover an important principle: Jesus Christ has always been
clearly revealed to the human race in every age (Titus 2:11).
Few people of that day were able to
read, so this was a significant ceremony or ritual. Since Messiah had not come
yet, the lamb represented the Savior. The Jews understood that just as the
innocent lamb bore their sins symbolically, so the Lamb of God would one day
carry away their sins by His spiritual death. The purchase price was not His
literal blood, nor even His physical death, for all of His blood was not shed,
and He finished the work of salvation before He died physically (John 19:30).
His physical death was essential to the principle of resurrection.
The sins having been acknowledged,
were symbolically transferred to the lamb. So the lamb bore the sins, and “the
precious blood of Christ as of a lamb” is a technical term used in the New
Testament which refers to the sacrifice of Christ. The lamb had to be perfect
because it represented Jesus Christ who was sinless.
Jesus Christ has redeemed or
purchased the freedom of the slaves from sin; however, the slaves are still
inside the slave market. The problem is a question of volition. A slave must
move out, and this is accomplished when the slave takes “refuge in Him” (Ps.
34:22). Salvation is free; redemption is free. The reason it is free is because
someone else paid for it. Someone always has to pay!
After a ball game, the coach or one
of the fathers often treats all the little boys on the team to sodas. All they
have to do is to enjoy what is offered, because someone else pays for the
treat. Some papa shells out at the concession stand so the soda is free to the
little boys who take it. Jesus Christ picked up our tab and paid the bill at
the cross, and salvation is free to those who receive it (John 1:12)!
The open door
At some time in his life, everyone
has used faith. You say, “Not me. I’m an intellectual. I’m well-trained
academically. I’m a rationalist. I’m an empiricist.” You didn’t start out that
way! You started out using faith as your basic system of perception. Someone
told you, “The sky is blue . . . the grass is green.” You identified a “dog” as
a “dog” and a “cat” as a “cat” because someone told you what they were! You
accepted those facts on faith. A teacher said, “There’s a place called
England.” But you hadn’t been there and seen the country. You didn’t learn
about England by empiricism; someone said it existed and you believed it. This
is the way everyone begins the learning process, since faith is the basic
system of perception.
Since Christ purchased our freedom
from the slave market of sin, the door is now open, the shackles of sin have
been broken, and we are free. Suppose a man walks in and finds a group of
people in a slave market whose shackles have all been removed. He says to them,
“You’re free. Go!” They answer, “Shackle us up again. We just don’t want to go.
We won’t go!” So, they sit there with negative volition, just as much of the
human race has done.
Even though Christ has opened the
door, you may sit in the slave market from now till doomsday if you desire.
Walking away from the broken shackles takes an act of positive volition on your
part: You must get up and move out under your own decision. That is why the
Scripture says, “Believe .” Salvation is free for the taking, but it must be
received by faith!
But
as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God,
even to those who believe in His name. (John 1:12)
“I
am the door; if anyone enters through Me, he shall be saved, and shall go in
and out, and find pasture.” (John 10:9)
Jesus Christ is the door! Once you
see that open door, all you have to do is walk through it. There is frequently
some confusion at this point. Perhaps someone stands up and gives a glowing,
marvelous testimony about how he found Christ as Savior. He may have trusted
Christ during the war when as a pilot he was shot down and had to bail out of
his plane. As he pulled the ripcord he remembered a verse of Scripture his
mother had often quoted, and he said, “Oh, God, I’m trusting in Christ.” As he
floated toward earth, he knew he was saved and would make it safely because he
experienced such great peace of
mind.
“I felt so wonderful!”
Someone who is listening to this
glorious experience says, “Now wait just a minute. I trusted Christ, too, but I
wasn’t flat on my back at 30,000 feet and I didn’t go through all that. I
didn’t feel wonderful at all. As I recall, I had a migraine headache at the
time and still had it afterwards. I guess I’m really not saved because I didn’t
feel what he felt.” Maybe you too are thinking, “When I believed in Christ I
never had a rosy glow either; I didn’t have an exciting experience. l was just
sitting in a seat in the auditorium of a church. Perhaps I’m not really saved
at all!”
Where does the Bible say that you
must have a rosy glow to be saved, or that you must be on “Cloud 54,” or have a
sensational
experience?
One person may go through the door walking on his hands; another backwards. The
point is not how you get through
the
door; the point is that you go through the door! It’s all right to have a
thrilling experience or to feel elated, but that is inconsequential. It is what
Christ did that counts! You cannot even “tip the waiter.” Christ not only
picked up the tab at the cross, He even paid the tip! There is nothing left for
you to do but accept His provision.
There is only one door, only one way
to God (John 14:6). How we arrive at the door may differ, but we must all go
through the door! We enter through faith and faith alone. How you feel
afterward may depend on your health, your personality, your economic status, or
many other factors. Salvation, however, depends only on one factor:
“Believe
in the Lord Jesus, and you shall be saved” (Acts 16:31).
If we had to feel a certain way to
be saved, everyone would need to crank up his emotions. But to depend on a
certain feeling is your doing something. You can see immediately that if a
person were to receive eternal life by being ecstatic, then salvation would be
limited to only those who could work up an emotional jag. However, if salvation
is “unlimited,” and it is, then the means for accepting it must be on an equal
basis for all. Faith is something that every member of the human race possesses
and is all that one needs to go through the door.
One for all
There is another way of looking at
the payment for sin called “unlimited atonement.” This simply means that Christ
died for the sins of every person who ever lived.
For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded
this, that one died for all, therefore all died; and He died for all, that they
who live should no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose
again on their behalf. (2 Cor. 5:14-15)
Twice we read that Christ died for
all! In a moment of time the sins of every person who ever lived (about three
hundred million billion quadrillion, ad infinitum, number of sins) were borne
by Jesus Christ: He carried them in His own body. Unlimited atonement simply
means that the sins of everyone in the world were borne by Christ on the cross.
Let’s not worry about Adam’s and Eve’s sins, or Cain’s and Abel’s sins — just
think about your sins for a minute.
What sins have you committed in the
past? How many are you committing right now? Are there any lined up for the
future? Can you remember your first sin? (Don’t say yes because this might make
you a liar and add one more to your list!) Everyone has committed hundreds and
thousands of sins. You may say, “I haven’t committed that many.” Perhaps you
don’t recognize all of the sins there are, but there are a lot of them. As a
fellow said to me one day, “A whole passel of them.” The point is that every
sin you will ever commit was borne by Christ as He hung on the cross.
In Hebrews 12:2 we read: “Fixing our
eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before
Him endured the cross.” Now, you are the joy that was set before Christ. He
could look down the corridors of time and see you personally, and He did the same
thing for every other member of the human race! Second Peter 2:1 teaches us
that Christ even died for the false teachers. Our Savior left no one out; the
payment was complete. That’s unlimited atonement!
And
He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also
for those of the whole world. (1 John 2:2)
The last judgment
Sin as a barrier between God and man
has been removed; now all man has to do is step over the line. As we study the
biblical account of the Last Judgment, I want you to keep something in mind:
the word “sin” in our diagram has been blotted out. While man was responsible
for erecting this barrier, God, in His grace, has provided for its removal. His
invitation to the entire human race is: “Come on over.” How? By simply
believing in Christ who picked up the tab; He paid the penalty by bearing your
sins; Christ was your substitute; therefore, you simply depend on His work.
Ultimately, every member of the human race faces this issue: Will you depend on
the work of Christ — redemption and unlimited atonement — or will you depend
upon your own human works, your good deeds?
Many people have been led to believe
that good deeds are the basis of salvation. This Satan-inspired lie has been
peddled by all manner of people and religious organizations, including
fundamentalists! You may have even heard an evangelist preach about the Last
Judgment and dramatically condemn a few choice sins. “You remember those sins
that you’ve committed? God’s going to call you to account!” There is shocked
silence among the listeners and everyone thinks, “Oh boy, I’ve had it!”
I hate to spoil evangelistic sermons
or ruin sensational presentations of sin, but I have some good news for you:
God mil not mention anyone’s sins at the Last Judgment! This is the application
of the law of double jeopardy — you cannot be tried twice for the same crime.
Since every sin has already been judged at the cross, and since Christ will be
the judge at the Last Judgment (John 5:22), He cannot mention that which has
already been judged.
And
I saw a great white throne and Him who sat upon it, from whose presence earth
and heaven fled away, and no place was found for them. (Rev. 20:11)
In the Scripture white represents
righteousness. In His first advent Christ was judged for us, but at the great
white throne He is the righteous judge. The people who are trying to escape
from this judgment are the unbelievers — people who did not receive Christ as
Savior during their lifetime. They will be resurrected to stand before Him.
And I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing
before the throne, and books were opened; and another [of a different kind]
book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged from the
things which were written in the books, according to their deeds. (Rev. 20:12)
There will be two sets of books
present at the judgment scene: one is the Book of Life, which includes the name
of every person who has believed in Christ. The interesting fact about the Book
of Life is that originally all members of the human race were listed. However,
when anyone dies without accepting Christ as Savior, his name is blotted out
(Ps. 69:28; Rev. 3:5; 1 John 5:5). There is a second set of books, the Books of
Works, volumes and volumes listing the good deeds of the unbelieving members of
the human race.
Notice that the unbelievers who have
been resurrected called the “dead” in our passage re Judged according to their
deeds, not according to their sins. No one will ever be judged for sin because
Christ solved the sin problem once and for all. That is the true meaning of the
Gospel — the good news that Christ died for all sins! While both believers and
unbelievers are accountable for sin during their lifetime, sin is never the
basis for indictment at the Last Judgment. This condemnation is based solely on
works — good deeds — because sin is no longer an issue! When you reject the
work of Christ on the cross, you must accept your own works as a substitute. To
make this point clear, let’s hear the case of Charlie Brown.
Are You Charlei Brown?
“Brown, C.” is standing before the
court in heaven. The angelic clerk turns to the B’s in the Book of Life and
finds that Charlie’s name has been blotted out because he died without
accepting Christ as Savior. However, there are quite a number of impressive
pages on record for Charlie in the Books of Works.
Charlie Brown had been regarded as a
very successful businessman. Through shrewd management and hard work he
accumulated great wealth; however, in the process of accruing his vast fortune,
he had stepped on a few toes and his reputation had been somewhat tainted. He
decided to take up the slack and make amends for his lack of scruples; so he
spent the last years of his life involved in performing good deeds.
Charlie was very sincere about
projecting his new image. He joined a church and gave large donations,
including a stained glass window with his name on it! Charlie became one of the
outstanding leaders of his community and succeeded in many philanthropic
endeavors that (from human viewpoint) were truly wonderful. He was good-hearted
and very generous, giving large sums of money to numerous charities, as well as
helping many other worthy causes in various ways. His list of good deeds was
quite impressive!
The divine adding machine now goes
into action: Charlie’s ledger totaled one million, two hundred and seventy-five
thousand, three hundred and twenty-four, point five (one questionable!) good
deeds. That is about as enviable a record as anyone could have. Charlie had
really gotten with it! He had been a phenomenal do-gooder. With this tremendous
record, surely the “pearly gates” would open wide and Charlie would be received
with ruffles and flourishes!
But wait a minute! There is more
calculating being done 1,275,324.5 good deeds and they all add up to -R (man’s
relative righteousness). His works had not canceled his debt with God; they
fall short of God’s +R (perfect righteousness). “If you are going to qualify to
spend eternity with God, Charlie, you need +R; and +R comes only through
accepting Christ as Savior. It’s too late now; this transaction should have
been handled during your lifetime!”
This is the way Charlie’s balance
sheet in the Books of Works would have looked, compared to that of Joe Brown, a
believer.
Name:
Brown, C. In the debit column Charlie’s sins are numbered; however, since
Christ died for those sins, they have been canceled out. He also has all his
good deeds listed in the debit column, but they still add up to -R. He needs
+R, which is the righteousness of Christ, in the credit column to balance his
ledger! However, the only way +R is obtained is by faith in Christ, and Charlie
had rejected Him. Charlie’s ledger is in the red! He has been condemned on the
basis of his own good deeds, or works.
Joe Brown, the believer, will have
his -R, his human good works, destroyed at the Judgment Seat of Christ and will
be saved based on the credit of +R at salvation (1 Cor. 3: It-15).
If evangelists and preachers were
accurate, they would have to say, “And every good deed that you have ever done
will be brought up at the Last Judgment to prove that, as good as they may have
been, they are not good enough! The only good deed that opens the door of
heaven is the work of Jesus Christ on the cross redemption and unlimited
atonement!”
The unpardonable sin
There is just one sin for which
Christ could not die one unpardonable sin. It is not suicide; it is not calling
your brother a fool — it is rejection of Jesus Christ! He is the salvation
“package,” and if you reject Him, there is no other way. You see, Christ could
not die for the rejection of Himself.
And there is salvation in no one else; for there is no
other name under heaven that has been given among men, by which we must be
saved.
(Acts 4:12)
He who believes in Him is not judged; he who does not
believe has been judged already, because he has not believed in the name of the
only begotten Son of God. (John 3:18)
He
who believes in the Son has eternal life; but he who does not obey the Son
shall not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him. (John 3:36)
Charlie Brown had committed the
unpardonable sin, and the next step on the agenda was his final disposition.
And
the sea gave up the dead which were in it, and death and Hades gave up the dead
which were in them; and they were judged [notice again for the second time],
every one of them according to their deeds. And death and Hades were thrown
into the
lake of fire. This is the
second death, the lake of fire. And if anyone’s name was not found written in
the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire. (Rev. 20:13-15)
For anyone who has rejected Christ
as Savior, his name has been blotted out of the Book of Life and he will be
cast into the lake of fire “where their worm does not die, and the fire is not
quenched” (Mark 9:44). “And these will go away into eternal punishment . . .” (Matt.
25:46). The principle to be learned from a study of the Last Judgment is a very
simple one: As you read this passage over and over again, you will never find
that a person is judged for his sins!
The penalty of sin
One brick — sin — has been removed.
The second brick in the barrier is the penalty of sin — death! Romans 6:23
says, “For the wages of sin is death.” Romans 5:12 says, “Therefore, just as
through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death
spread to all men, because all sinned.” Proverbs 14:12: “There is a way which
seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death.”
When I say “death,” immediately you
think of physical death; however, that is not the penalty of sin.
But from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you
shall not eat, for in the day that you eat from it you shall surely die
[literally, “dying thou shalt die"]. (Gen. 2:17)
If the penalty of sin had been
physical death, then Adam and Eve, at the moment they ate of the fruit
(whatever it was), would have died physically. We know from Scripture (Gen.
3:65:5) that they lived many years after they sinned, so this was not physical
death but spiritual death. They were no longer capable of having fellowship
with the Lord; so when Christ came walking in the Garden, they ran and hid
themselves. God in His grace broke the silence and called to Adam, “Where are
you?” (Gen. 3:9). Because of omniscience, God knew exactly where they were. He
meant, “Why are you where you are?” Adam piped right up and in typical fashion,
as only man can do, said, “Well, God, it’s all Your fault. You gave me the
woman and she gave me the fruit; therefore, it’s Your fault and her fault.”
Passing the buck! Then the Lord turned to the woman who said, “It really isn’t
my fault; it’s this little pet You gave me the serpent.” As you can see.
Operation Patsy is not a twentieth-century innovation!
The point is that Adam and Eve were
spiritually dead because of sin; as a result, they would eventually die
physically. Psalm 22 will help us understand how Christ paid the penalty of sin
and removed the issue of man’s spiritual death.
The pressures of payment
My
God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me? Far from my deliverance are the words
of my groaning. (Ps. 22:1)
Jesus Christ uttered these words on
the cross. Christ is God; He is also man. He quoted this Scripture from His
humanity addressing God the Father. Christ knew perfectly well why the Father
was forsaking Him. This was the purpose for which Jesus had been born into this
world. The Father was forsaking the humanity of Christ as part of judging Him
for the sins of mankind. The sins of mankind were being imputed to Him, and He
was taking the punishment due to every human being who would ever live. So
horrible was this judgment to His sinless humanity that He expressed His agony
by repeating again and again from this psalm of David. The Hebrew word for
“groaning” meant that our Lord was screaming in the pain of divine judgment.
You must realize just why Jesus
Christ was screaming, and you must have some picture of what had happened to
our Lord prior to that time. Jesus had just endured six trials. During this
time, men had lied about Him (no one enjoys being maligned) and yet Jesus
Christ kept quiet. He did not answer or fight back. When the court finished
taking the testimony, they could not draw an indictment because the false
witnesses did not agree. Men began to step up and have a little fun at His
expense. They took turns slugging, cursing, and spitting on Him. Jesus Christ
was hit dozens and dozens of times. As the Bible says, “He was buffeted,” which
is simply the Greek word for “slugged” (Matt. 26:67; Mark 14:65). Isaiah 52:14
tells us that He was so badly beaten that the features of His face were
completely destroyed, and yet He stood up and took it all and lived.
In between all of this punching,
other men came up and said, “So you are a prophet, hub? Then prophesy who hit
You!” Boom! They slapped Him; they hit Him (Matt. 26:68). At one point during
these trials He was stripped to the waist. His hands tied above His head, and
then He was scourged (literally “skinned alive with a whip”) .The Romans used a
“mastix,” a very brutal type of whip, to which they attached sharp bits of
bone, metal, and splinters anything that would cut! Then the strongest man in
the battalion would beat the victim.
Usually by this time any member of
the human race would have been reduced to screaming, incoherent hysteria, “Like
a sheep that is silent before its shearers. So He did not open His mouth” (Isa.
53 b cf. Acts 8:32). He never cried out to anyone; He did not raise His voice
to scream in pain. Then after the beating was over, as was the Roman custom,
they rubbed salt into what was left of the raw back to cauterize the wound.
They mocked Him; they scourged Him; they took Him to the cross.
As He hung upon the cross, it was
excruciatingly painful. His bones pulled apart from the weight of His body,
slowly, miserably. The torture was unbelievable! Yet not once did He cry out —
not until midday when the sun was overhead. Suddenly the hill was blotted out
in darkness. Then, in that darkness, something happened that made Jesus scream.
All of the punching, slapping, lying, maligning, torture, and pain had not
caused Him to cry out; yet now, something terrible made Him scream!
In a moment of time, your sins, my
sins, and the past, present, and future sins of the whole world were poured out
on Him. It was then that in His greatest agony He screamed. God the Father
turned His back on Him. Why? Because “Thou art holy . . “ (Ps. 22:3).
Holiness is a combination of
righteousness and justice. In absolute righteousness God the Father directed His
perfect justice against Christ, imputing all human sins to Him and judging Him
as the substitute for mankind. In that moment of time. He who knew no sin was
made sin for us “that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor.
5:21). So, if you want to know what made Christ scream, it was the only thing
that could — your sins, my sins, and the sins of every person who has ever
lived.
In Psalm 22:6 Christ says, “But I am
a worm.” There are many different Hebrew words for worms, but this is the rarest
of them all. This was a special type of worm whose blood was gathered and used
in making the crimson dye of the ancient world. This most valuable dye was used
for the robes of kings. Psalm 22:6 pictures Jesus Christ as the worm, crushed
on the cross by our sins; and as a result of His being crushed, we now wear the
robes of kings. The first six verses of Psalm 22 actually constitute a picture
of expiation. Christ was separated from and forsaken by the Father that you and
I might never be separated from God again! Another passage on expiation is
found in the New Testament:
Having cancelled out the certificate of debt consisting
of decrees against us and which was hostile to us; and He has taken it out of
the way, having nailed it to the cross. (Col. 2:14)
One of the most significant
metaphors in the Bible is “having cancelled out the certificate of debt.” In
the Greek, it is a gambler’s term for the cancellation of an IOU. Now, what do I owe God as a member of the human race? I owe Him
perfect righteousness, absolute righteousness, +R. The big question is: Can I
pay it? Every member of the human race has this IOU of
perfect righteousness out against him. When we check our assets, we find that
we may be in the same boat with Charlie Brown one million plus! But one million
plus good deeds will never be enough. They add up to -R, and this will not pay
off the debt. Someone must pay; expiation must take place. Verse 14 says,
literally, “Having once and for all canceled the IOU.” I
translated that “once and for all” since this aorist tense in the Greek is a
point of time, divorced from time and perpetuated forever. That was the
historic event of the cross!
“Has taken” is the perfect tense.
Christ took sin out of the way in the past with the result that God’s IOU against us has been taken away forever. Where once there was a
barrier, there is now nothing between you and God except the person of Jesus
Christ. He canceled the debt by nailing it to His cross.
Once again, man is on one side of
the barrier and God is on the other. The issue of sin has been removed by
redemption and unlimited atonement. The penalty of sin — spiritual death — has
been removed by expiation. In another book, The Barrier, we will take up the
other bricks that separate the unbeliever from God. But let me summarize by
saying right now that all of the bricks are removed by the work of Christ on
the cross. This emphasizes once again that your attitude toward Christ
determines your eternal future.
Is “Chicken” you game?
In my early Air Force days, when I
had a lot of youth but not much judgment, my friends and I would engage in the
flying version of “chicken” over the Arizona desert. The front and rear cockpit
pilots took turns putting the plane into a spin, removing their hands from the
controls, and letting the plane do what it would. The point was to see who lost
his nerve first within, of course, reasonable limits.
A friend and I were playing this
“game” one afternoon. Since we had had a friendly grudge battle going from
college days, I was determined he would not outdo me, and he was determined I
would not get the best of him. So, we both folded our hands and “let her spin.”
All of a sudden we both realized that we were wound up tight, and if we didn’t
do something quickly we would never do anything again. We were stuck in the
center of gravity spinning violently to the right. The only thing we could do
was to kick that full left rudder pedal. Without realizing it, both of us did
exactly the same thing at the same time: we neutralized the rudder pedals,
pushed the stick forward, and worked the throttle. We came out level right over
the top of a cactus. Needless to say, we were relieved to be alive and happy to
discontinue the game of chicken!
If you are in a spin in a plane and
the spin continues, you’re dead! The human race is in the spin of sin, wound up
tight. Anyone who continues on this flight has had it! He won’t walk away from
that one! Why play such a foolish and dangerous game? The alternative is very
simple: The rudder/stick combination which will pull you out of the spin of sin
is Jesus Christ. Accept His provision!
But
God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us. (Rom. 5:8)