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.