“But first and most importantly seek (aim at, strive after) His kingdom and His righteousness [His way of doing and being right—the attitude and character of God], and all these things will be given to you also.”
The Cross of Christ. There is only One. So why is this teaching entitled, “Three Crosses?” Allow me to explain.
The “three crosses” we’ll explore over the next few weeks are pathways created by God to both draw us into and to refine our relationship with Him. Leading us, ultimately, to our final cross—the Cross of Christ which we are blessed to share in—to carry….
A Cross is formed where the vertical meets the horizontal.
Before we can be used of God outwardly, we must first be called into relationship with Him inwardly…
Over the next three weeks we will be exploring three distinct yet interconnected areas where our vertical relationship with God intersects our horizontal service to produce the fruits of sacrifice and service. The place where our primary relationship with God moves us away from our selfishness, our comfort zones, demanding sacrifice. And calls us into that place where He begins the work of stretching us towards relationship, service, calling. Stretching us ever towards reflecting Christ to a lost and dying world.
At its height, a life lived in absolute surrender— its width, a picture of perfect submission and humility…
A task only One Man is fully able to surrender to—to embrace, as one embraces a lover; Jesus—our Teacher, our Guide, our Lord. Yet, if we’re a believer, then we too are called to follow Jesus’s sacrificial example—even if following that example leads us to our deaths. Not popular I know—but True nonetheless. His Cross stands as the pure Light which tries us, tests us, illuminates our darkest recesses, exposing us for what we are—sinners in need of salvation—in need of restoration—in need of God. Of the vertical relationship that ultimately will stretch us horizontally—enabling us, empowering us, willing within us, the desire to follow His example, His will, His laws…
In order that we might understand both the power and the purpose of The Cross of Christ—we must first understand all that God did to pave the way to the one place – towards the One person, who connects, bridges, advocates between Heaven and earth. God shows us—lays out for us, the way to the Cross. And, one of the ways in which He did this was through the Law. Yet, in giving us these laws God knew not one of His creation could keep them perfectly—wholly, as His Righteousness requires, demands, so, out of His great love for us, He chose to leave behind the glory of heaven and donned human flesh with all its needs and constraints. The Omnipresent One chose to be bound by what He created and sits above. The Bread of Life chose to have to eat bread that He might live. God chose to need what we need: sleep, rest, food, shelter—to feel what we feel: hunger, tiredness, loneliness, rejection, and physical pain. It was, after all, a man’s hands and feet that were nailed to His Cross. His physical body whose side was pierced by the Roman spear. Human Blood was spilled, staining the Cross He was nailed to; it was not stained with the sacrificial blood of bulls, goats, or sheep…
The first three of Gods Laws—His Commandments, are vertical. They point us towards Him. Towards the supremacy of the One True God. Jesus, in Matthew 22:37, confirms this for us as He points us towards the central teaching, the heart of the Law found in Deuteronomy: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind” –Deut. 6:5. This first Commandment, declares—makes plain, there is only One God.
Everything else we need to know flows down from that Triune foundational Truth. That One Source…
The law then goes on to instruct us how it is we must approach, revere, honor, exalt this Sovereign God of the universe. We are to have no other gods before Him, not make for ourselves graven images. Don’t exalt an image of what was created over the One who created it. Don’t take the Lord’s name in vain. Don’t toss around the Name of the Sovereign God of the universe like it was some common, everyday name—don’t abuse or defame His Holy Name. We’re to remember the sabbath day, keeping it holy. You have six days a week to work, as God did at creation, this sabbath day is intended as a time to be spent with Him, allowing Him to refresh you. The rest of the Law is horizontal in nature—teaching us, pointing us towards our responsibilities towards others, as well as those actions and desires we are to run from—disavow.
We were created in God’s image, to serve and honor Him. He alone sustains us, and, within these three commands He establishes His dominion—His Sovereignty, over our lives. They are a perfect list of our vertical duties—requirements, for serving a Holy God. Yet, even in having these we will still, forever, fall short of their perfect standard.
Enter Christ Jesus the Sinless Sacrifice ready to die for our sins and failures…
Yet Christ never came to abolish these Laws, rather to fulfill them. To do for us what the law couldn’t. Nonetheless, the law will forever have its place in our lives both as guideposts and as a stark reminder; mirrors both that reflect back to us our need for Jesus in our lives…
In Hebrews Chapter 10 Paul assures us that that the laws of Moses were only a dim preview of the good things to come—they weren’t, nor did they contain, the Power of the good things themselves. Under the Law a sacrifice needed to be made repeatedly as the shed blood of bulls and goats couldn’t bring about perfect cleansing. Rather, these very sacrifices reminded the one offering them of their sin and guilt—of their continual need for sacrifice and forgiveness. Paul goes on to assure us that the law’s requirements for the blood of bulls and goats could never, was never intended to be a permanent solution for absolving man of his sin. It was a mere shadow, a ‘first-step” on the path that would eventually lead to the beckoning Cross of Christ that is ever before us…
We witness the Truth of this in the life of Father Abraham. A man made righteous by his faith, by the will of God—not by blood sacrifices or works. How? A mystery. In the Beginning the Word already existed…
The Cross, and the salvation it affords, has always been Gods plan for His creation…
“Therefore, when Christ enters into the world, He says, “Sacrifice and offering You have not desired, But [instead] You have prepared a body for Me [to offer] In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin You have taken no delight. “Then I said, ‘Behold, I have come To do Your will, O God— [To fulfill] what is written of Me in the scroll of the book.’” –Hebrews 10:5-7
Join us next week when we will examine the effects of our second cross—The Lord’s Prayer. (for a deeper, more complete understanding of Christ and the law reading through Chapters 7-10 found in the Book of Hebrews, Romans Chapters 4 & 7, and Genesis 14:17 through 15:17, among other Scriptures, would help fill in the gaps for you).
And Friend, if you’re here today and have read through this but have not yet asked this Jesus into your life as your Lord and Savior, I believe today is your day for salvation to visit you! Stop now and pray, just simply ask Jesus into your life as Lord and Savior, then trust Him as He begins a good work in you that He alone is faithful to complete… ”because if you acknowledge and confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord [recognizing His power, authority, and majesty as God], and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart a person believes [in Christ as Savior] resulting in his justification [that is, being made righteous—being freed of the guilt of sin and made acceptable to God]; and with the mouth he acknowledges and confesses [his faith openly], resulting in and confirming [his] salvation.” –Romans 10:9-10
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