The sermon for Good Friday is now available on the New Life web site.
In this sermon, which is based on Hebrews 10:15-25, I talk about The Cross
Click here to listen in your browser, here to download the mp3
It is almost impossible for us today to capture the strangeness of mentioning, let alone celebrating, the crucifixion of Jesus.
In the first century, “crucifixion” was not a metaphor. No one said, “Oh, man, I got crucified at work today”. In fact, Roman etiquette books reminded people to never mention crucifixion in polite company.
Crucifixion was cruel and unusual by design. The whole theatre of it was all calculated to bring you shame.
Crucifixion was cruel and unusual by design. The whole theatre of it—the nakedness, the loss of control of bodily functions, the slowness of the death, the public spectacle as you were thrust up into the view of all—it was all calculated to bring you shame. No Roman citizen could be crucified. It was reserved for non-citizens, for slaves, and for outlaws. The Romans would happily decapitate a citizen who had committed a serious crime, but not crucify them. Come on! We have standards, people!
Those who were crucified bore on themselves the full weight of Rome’s military might and judicial power. As their bodies were left to rot or become food for birds, they were a reminder to the rest of what happens to those who challenge Roman order.
For a Jewish person, crucifixion had an additional layer of meaning. In the Old Testament law, anyone who was “hung” on a tree (or a cross) was “under God’s curse” (Deuteronomy 21:23). A Jewish person reading their Scriptures and looking at a body nailed to a cross didn’t have to wonder what it might mean. It already meant something. It meant they were under God’s curse.
Crucifixion wasn’t an empty vessel, waiting for Christians to fill it with meaning. It already meant something. Loser. Non-person. Cursed by God. These are the essential meanings of crucifixion. In the Christian faith, we are not stepping into a semantic vacuum, trying to argue that the crucifixion of Jesus meant something after all. We are arguing that it means something else. But what?
The clue is back there in the next part of that poem by Isaiah:
Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering,
yet we considered him punished by God, stricken by him, and afflicted.
But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities;
the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed. (Isaiah 53:4-5)
The Christian faith addressed the problem of the meaning of the cross, not by going around it, but by going through it. Cursed? Yes! Punished? Yes! Crushed? Yes! But why? For our pain and suffering. Our transgression. Our iniquity.
God in Christ stands where we should have stood, receives the punishment we should have received, died the death we should have died.
The pulsating heart of the Christian faith is right here. God in Christ stands where we should have stood, receives the punishment we should have received, died the death we should have died. He takes our place. The righteous for the unrighteous, to bring us back to God.
Jesus, in his burial, died the death of the creature, and the death of sinners. By slowing down at the point of Christ’s death, the [Apostle’s] Creed invites us to linger over the mystery of the incarnation. Fully, completely, actually, without having to cross your fingers or squint or look sideways, Jesus, the Son of God, died. As the early church fathers never tired of saying of Jesus, “That which he did not assume, he could not heal.” Jesus did not conduct his mission in a Hazchem suit. He completely identified with our humanity in order to heal all of our humanity. Humans go to their graves as finite creatures and guilty sinners. Jesus went there too, not as a guilty sinner, but as a saviour.
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It’s more important for us to embrace truth than to be right or wrong. If we’ll always embrace truth, we’ll go from wave to wave of His Spirit’s move, or from glory to glory in the Lord. Keith Miller

A breezy and cool morning. Due to a 9 am appointment I took a shorter route today.

Abundant living doesn’t mean having a nice home or cars, even though there’s nothing wrong with those things. Abundant life means God is doing things through our lives that are extraordinarily above and beyond what we can do. Keith Miller

Scripture
Then the disciple who had reached the tomb first also went in, and he saw and believed.
Observation
Sunday, after the crucifixion, the women go to Jesus’ tomb. The stone has been rolled away from the entrance. Mary Magdalene goes to tell Peter. Peter and John go to the tomb, and they see the linen wrappings. John sees and believes.
Mary looks in the tomb and sees two angels. She asks them where Jesus is. Then Jesus comes up behind her, and she asks Him the same thing.
Jesus says her name, and suddenly she recognises Him. John tells her to go and tell the disciples what she has seen and that He is to ascend to the Father.
Application
They say that seeing is believing. When John and Peter saw the empty tomb, they finally understood what Jesus had meant by his teaching about the resurrection.
It seemed like impossibly good news. The Jesus who had died is now alive.
It is good news because the resurrection validates all that Jesus stands for. It shows that He has overcome sin and death. Because Christ is alive, we can share in His resurrection, and be assured that we will live forever.
Prayer
Thank you Lord for the promise of eternal life. This present life is not all that I have, but I shall live with you forever. Nothing in this life can take that away from me. Amen
Good to get out again this morning, despite the threat of rain.

The Holy Spirit wants to anoint you with power so that you will be a witness for Jesus not in mere words but in demonstrations of His Holy Spirit. Keith Miller

Scripture
The whole earth will acknowledge the Lord and return to him. All the families of the nations will bow down before him.
Reflection
Psalm 22 is a powerful visual description of crucifixion, especially Jesus’ crucifixion.
It is the death of Christ on the cross that sets us free from sin.
“The cross is my provision for you,” says the Lord. ” There is no other way.”
Through Jesus’ death on the cross, I know my sins are forgiven and that the wall of separation that kept me away from God is demolished; not one brick stands on another.
The whole Earth will acknowledge the Lord. The gospel has gone to every nation on the planet. Millions and millions of people get saved every year. Whole nations who just a generation ago were pagan are now confessing Jesus Christ is Lord.
As many nations in the West – Europe North America and Australia – turn their backs on the Lord, many more in Asia and Africa are coming to the Lord.
Prayer
Thank you Lord for the cross of Christ. It is the only way to salvation. Thank you for paying the price for my sin. Please help me to live as your obedient child. Amen.
Another beautiful autumn day. A light breeze made riding a little harder but it wasn’t too bad!
