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Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

THE SURPASSING GENEROSITY OF THE lORD JESUS CHRIST

 

THE SURPASSING GENEROSITY OF THE LORD JESUS CHRIST

 

2 Corinthians 8:9

New American Standard Bible (1995)

9 For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor, so that you through His poverty might become rich.

1 Context and Background

In his 2nd letter to the Corinthians, the Apostle Paul encouraged  the Church in Corinth to be generous in their giving, and gave as an example   the open-handedness of the Macedonian Church. Paul says to the Corinthians, “You ought to give the way the Macedonians give. They show their love in their giving; you need to manifest yours in your giving the way they did.”

Now the subject of giving is often a controversial issue which might not appeal to some, especially when Church leaders appeal for money. There is more to this, however, than meets the eye because the teaching of our Lord Jesus about giving, is more than just fund raising. The love of our Lord is manifest in the act of giving.

Paul cites the Macedonian Church  as a model for giving which he hopes the Corinthian Christians will emulate. This is the context in which he delivered the passage in 2 Corinthians 8:9. And here the good Apostle went even beyond the Macedonian example and reminded them of even the surpassing, magnificent and perfect example of our Lord when it comes to giving.

2  Knowing the Grace of our Lord and what he did for our sake.

And so, he says in verse 9, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor, that you through His poverty might become rich.” Jesus wanted to make us rich. And in order to make us rich, he had to make Himself poor.

In verse 9, he begins by saying, “For you know.”

A Christian is supposed to know and understand the Lord’s example. Every Christian knows Christ came down and gave his life. We all know that He was rich, yet He left His Heavenly Realm. We know that He became poor in order that we might be made rich. We know that. And that should be the great motivation, which should teach us on the subject of giving. The Lord’s example,  and His magnanimous self-giving.

So, Paul has just said, in verse 8, that love expresses itself in generous giving, and Christ, he says in verse 9, is the single greatest example of that. And we know it, he says.  A person who comes to Christ knows what the Lord did for him. That is at the heart of the gospel.

“You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Here Paul points out that the  Lord’s act of giving is described as “grace giving”. And in the level of generosity all free-will giving is grace giving. It is not duty; it is not obligation, it is not a fixed percentage, it is not a tithe, it is not an amount, it is spontaneous giving, whatever is in the heart. It is grace giving, not compelled, not grudging, not of necessity, but outflowing will to give. And that’s how Christ gave.

Christ gave purely out of love, mercy, grace, and kindness. It was unmerited, spontaneous kindness to undeserving sinners. And it is the action of the Savior that defines grace giving at its highest.

3  The Riches of Christ

Then St. Paul went on to affirm the riches of our Lord. He was rich; He made Himself,  that we might become rich.

That’s unsurpassed magnanimity. That is generous. There is no question some rich people out of generosity, help poor people. But rarely, if ever, do rich people make themselves poor in order for the poor to exchange places with them. Rich people give out of their riches; they don’t impoverish themselves in the process normally. They normally give and are no poorer for the giving. But the Lord Jesus Christ became poor, that we might be made rich. That the Lord is rich is not doubtful. It’s expressed in the statement “that though He was rich.”

When we talk about the riches of Christ, what are we talking about?  Are we talking about earthly material wealth? No. It’s only part of it. What we’re talking about here refers to His eternal glory. It is about the eternity of Christ or the eternality of Christ, or the preexistence of Christ. He is a member of the eternal Trinity. And the eternity of Christ, or the eternality of Christ, is the most important truth in all of Christology. The Lord Jesus Christ is rich because he is eternal. And the word rich is not even a close comparison.

There was never a moment when Jesus Christ did not exist. That is the most crucial truth in Christology.

He is the eternal God, not dependent on any other for His existence, not even on God the Father. He is self-existent and eternal. Jesus Christ, then, was rich, and He was as rich as the eternal God is rich. And that’s all we need to say about His riches. He is because He is God. He is the eternal God, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity.

In John 1, it tells us the Word is Christ, and it tells us about the Word, that the Word was with God, and the Word was God. In John 10:30, He says, “I and the Father are one.” In Colossians 1, He is the premier one, He is the supreme one, He is the one above all others who is called the image or the representation of the invisible God. Colossians 2:9, “In Him dwells all the fullness of the Deity.” Hebrews 1:3, He is the express image of God.

So, He is the eternal God. He is as rich as God is rich. God owns everything. He owns the universe and all that is in it. He owns all power, and all authority, and all sovereignty, and all glory, and all honor, and all majesty, and all that is created and uncreated. The wealth of our Lord Jesus is beyond comprehension. It’s is boundless; it is infinite. He is infinite. He is rich in the sense that He is God and as rich as God is rich, possessing eternity and all that it contains.

4   The Poverty of Christ

“Yet for our sake He became poor.” For our sake He became poor. What does this mean?

This passage is often commonly interpreted as speaking of the earthly economic poverty of our Lord Jesus. I remember in my Sunday School Class as a child, our teacher would say our Lord was poor, a lowly carpenter. Ever since, I have this picture of the Lord as a poor man coming from a poor family. Some Christians often incline to romanticize the poor background of our Lord. So let’s disabuse our mind a bit. The New Testament record does not say that our Lord was poor economically except for the record that he was born into an average human family. No question He was on the side of the poor judging from His teaching and healing ministry. Nowhere in the passage of Scripture does it mention of the low economic status of the Lord, which some Christian thinkers believe we should emulate. Some Bible Commentators believe that the compelling force of the gospel is found in the dire poverty in which Jesus lived, as if eliciting sympathy for His poverty had some redemptive virtue. There is no question the Lord pitied the poor, the sick, and the oppressed.

Our text 2 Corinthians 8:9 says nothing about the economic condition of Jesus.  Jesus – listen – didn’t make us rich by becoming economically poor. The gospel of salvation cannot be equated with the earthly financial or economic status of Jesus. The message is this: The Lord became poor in the sense that God had to become a man, human. That’s the impoverishing here. That is the poverty spoken of here.

What was the poverty of Jesus? The incarnation. Though rich he  became poor. He became poor when He being God, was born of a woman, Galatians 4:4; when He was made in the likeness of sinful flesh, Romans 8:3; when He had to come to the cross, Colossians 1:20;  when the Word became flesh, John 1:14; when He was made for a little while lower than the angels, Hebrews 2:7; when He was manifested in the flesh, 1 Timothy 3:16 – that was the issue. He laid aside the free exercise of all of His Heavenly Majestic power and prerogatives. He took on human form. It is in this context that he became poor.

Consider Philippians chapter 2  verse 6, “Who although He existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be grasped but emptied Himself” – He emptied Himself – “taking the form of a slave, and being made in the likeness of men.”

That’s the poverty of Jesus. “And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.” He became poor because he emptied himself, by taking the form of human flesh.

His riches was the glory He had before the world was made. His riches was being in the form of God and being equal with God, being God – a very God. His becoming poor was emptying Himself.

The poverty of Christ is His incarnation. And He came all the way down –to death and the most ignominious death on cross.

So, the eternal God, rich, becomes poor, humbled into human flesh, killed, executed, at the cross.

5   Through his poverty we might become rich

We have seen the riches of Christ, the poverty of Christ, and  thirdly, the purpose of Christ.

The purpose is clear: that we through His poverty, might become rich.  All of that for our sake. To make poor sinners  Spiritually rich. Yes. Eternally rich? Rich with the same riches that he possessed and possesses. Rich in salvation, forgiveness, joy, peace, life, light, glory. Rich in honor. Rich in majesty. We are so rich we are called joint heirs with Christ. We are promised an inheritance, incorruptible and undefiled that fades not away, laid up for us in heaven. In fact, we’re so poor, poor in spirit and the Lord came to make us rich in salvation as children of God, adopted into his family.  We are rich in position. We are rich in privilege. We are rich in relationship. We are blessed with all spiritual blessings in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus.

It was by His self-imposed and willing poverty that Jesus made us rich. This self-emptying, this self-sacrificing love by which we are so blessed and for which we are so thankful is exactly, Paul says, the motivation for our giving. This is the ideal standard of giving. The genuineness of our giving is an act of emptying.


Wednesday, April 1, 2015

THE MESSAGE OF THE CROSS

Every year the Christian world celebrates the Lent. It is a solemn religious observance, in the liturgical calendar of many Christian denominations  which begins on Ash Wednesday, and covers a period of six weeks culminating on Easter Sunday. The Roman Catholic Church, the Reformed, the Lutheran Church, the Anglicans, the Methodists and  some evangelical churches observe the Lenten season as a long held tradition. It has been so ingrained as a religious tradition, that the ritualism has overshadowed the real meaning and significance of Lent, in the Biblical sense. 

The Message of the Cross, is the heart of the celebration of the Holy Week. The Message of the Cross of Christ is to most of us an old Message in the sense that the tradition is repeated year after year, but no matter how old it is, it remains a life transforming message.

As Christians perhaps we need to revisit the message of the cross of Christ with a fresh new look, and imagine ourselves standing on that hill, where our savior died that dark Friday. 

The Message of the Gospel of Christ could be found there and we need not look elsewhere.

My friends as we gaze at the forlorn figure of the Christ on the cross it is my hope that you too will embrace Him as Lord and Savior.

The great Saint and Apostle Paul of Tarsus, spoke  succinctly of the Gospel message, which the whole Christendom is observing today. 

He said,  “Now, brothers and sisters, I want to remind you of the gospel I preached to you, which you received and on which you have taken your stand. By this gospel you are saved, if you hold firmly to the word I preached to you. Otherwise, you have believed in vain. For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures” (1 Corinthians 15:1–4).

The message of the cross of Christ is clear and simple. There is no need for us to go into theological or philosophical studies to grasp it.

St. Paul said there are three important things which we need to think in the gospel message. 

First, the Man on the cross “died for our sins.” We are all sinners. As Romans 3:23 tells us, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”

When we speak of sin there is no difference! No difference between the corporate lawyer, the drug dealer, the rapist, or the judge. No difference between a rich politician, a bank robber, or refined graduate of the Ateneo. And no difference between a gangster or an upright member of Rotary or Sto. Nino Parish.  

Apart from the grace of God poured forth at the cross, we would all be going to hell.

The reality of sin needs to be acknowledged by all who approach the throne of God for salvation. A sinner must acknowledge the hopelessness of his guilt before God in order for forgiveness to take place, and he must understand that the “wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). Without this foundational truth, no gospel presentation is complete.

Second, the person and work of Christ are indispensable components of the gospel. Jesus is both God (Colossians 2:9) and man (John 1:14). Jesus lived the sinless life that we could never live (1 Peter 2:22), and, because of that, He is the only one who could die a substitutionary death for the sinner. Sin against an infinite God requires an infinite sacrifice. Therefore, either man, who is finite, must pay the penalty for an infinite length of time in hell, or the infinite Christ must pay for it once. Jesus went to the cross to pay the debt we owe to God for our sin, and those who are covered by His sacrifice will inherit the kingdom of God as sons of the king (John 1:12).

Third, the resurrection of Christ is an essential element of the gospel. The resurrection is the proof of the power of God. Only He who created life can resurrect it after death, only He can reverse the hideousness that is death itself, and only He can remove the sting that is death and the victory that is the grave’s (1 Corinthians 15:54–55).

And finally my friends, please ponder on this: Unlike all other religions, Christianity alone possesses a Founder who transcends death and who promises that His followers will do the same. All other religions were founded by men and prophets whose end was the grave.

The  Christ  who died on that cross whom we venerate Lent after Lent offers His salvation as a free gift (Romans 5:15; 6:23), that can only be received by faith, apart from any works or merit on our part (Ephesians 2:8–9).

As the apostle Paul tells us, the gospel is “the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes: first to the Jew, then to the Gentile” (Romans 1:16). The same inspired author tells us, “If you declare with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9).


God Bless all of you my dear friends.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

THE WIDE BELIEVING EYES OF A CHILD


THE WIDE BELIEVING EYES OF A CHILD

My friend an intellectual and academic, asks me why I profess to be a Christian, knowing that we used to be rabid skeptics during our college days. I gave him a straight, simple answer.

I told him my conversion was providential. One day I said to myself if I were to remain a skeptic, then I had to be honest in my skepticism. So I got down to read Christianity’s Scripture, not with a critical mind, but to know really what it has to say to me. So I came to the saving grace of Christ, not as a learned man, of which I could not perfectly say I am, but as a child.

The most amazing message that Jesus said, struck me, cutting me down to size. The Savior said, “I tell you the truth, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it." (Mark 10:15)

Then He continued to say, "I tell you the truth, unless you turn from your sins and become like little children, you will never get into the Kingdom of Heaven.”(Matthew 18:3). “Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven”(Matthew 18:4)

I realized I am a sinner, no doubt about it. And the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). The best things I will ever attain, or hope to attain, or the best of whatever good I will do or hope to do, cannot impress the Living God, who created everything and  before whom all of us, at the appointed time will stand.

And this is where I part company with some of my friends, who believe that as long as they live good upright and moral lives, as long as their good deeds outweigh the bad, they are right with God.

The problem is no one is good enough. I believe that while there is some innate goodness in man, Scripture declares that man has fallen into sin, and this sin nature, separated him from God. The Bible declares that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.(Romans 3:23) For there is  no one  righteous, not even one.(Romans 3:10).

Even the best of us and the most upright of men cannot stand before the awesome presence of the Almighty God and claim that he deserves to enter God’s Kingdom, or deserves God’s favor, solely upon his own personal merit.  I also realized I cannot approach God on my own terms. Having rejected God at some point in my life,  did not give me any real peace, or joy, at all, but restlessness and turmoil, for I was looking for Him in the wrong places.

I came to the point of understanding that man’s salvation is by grace through faith, not of himself, it is a gift of God, and not of man’s works, so that no one can boast. The gift of God is eternal life in Jesus Christ, our Lord (Romans 6:23).

This conviction led me to embrace the Christ, of the Christians. For Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but made alive by the Spirit. (1 Peter 3:18). This is the living hope of all Christians. Hope that if they die in Christ, they too will live with Him.

Conversion is becoming like a child. Children do not put on airs of pride and arrogance. They do not desire power or authority, they do not make harsh judgments, are free from malice, teachable, trusting, utterly dependent, and weak. A childlike faith is simple, simple enough to understand.

In their book, Wrestling Prayer, Christian authors Eric and Leslie Ludy, aptly said, “So, if you are an intellectual who thinks himself smarter than the Word of God, I hope my unwavering confidence in the Bible doesn't prove a stumbling block but rather an inspiration as you keep reading. For what we are about to enter into is sacred territory that can be apprehended only through the wide, believing eyes of a little child. This divine terrain holds untold blessings in its bosom; however, those blessings will be gleaned only by those who rise up and claim them with the unabashed faith of a five-year-old.”

God Bless you my friend.