Particular Redemption (Part 2 – The Actual Purpose of the Cross)
by Jay Wegter
INTRODUCTION –
The actual or sovereign purpose of the cross pertains to God’s design in the
atonement. No matter how men respond to the universal offer of salvation, God’s
sovereign purpose in the cross cannot be thwarted or defeated in any way
whatsoever. Despite the fact that the
vast majority of the human race rejects the universal offer of the gospel, the
intent of Christ’s death cannot be frustrated.
SCRIPTURE ALWAYS
DESCRIBES CHRIST’S WORK AS EFFECTUAL
Hebrews 9:28 – By His death as a sin-bearer, there was
an effectual removal of the sins that
were laid upon Him.
John 10:27-30 - By His death, Christ secured the eternal safety of those
given to Him by the Father. “They shall never perish.”
Isaiah 53:10,11 – By giving Himself as a guilt offering,
Christ would justify the many by bearing their iniquities. The text says that Christ would be satisfied as a result of seeing “His Seed.” Seed refers to the spiritual “offspring”
purchased by Christ’s death. (See also
Heb. 10:10, 14; Rev. 5:9,10.)
BECAUSE CHRIST’S
DEATH WAS EFFECTUAL, ONE MUST NOT CONFUSE THE OFFER OF THE CROSS WITH GOD’S PURPOSE
IN THE CROSS
The offer is to
be taken to “every creature” (Mark 16:15).
The good news is to be preached, “be reconciled to God” (2 Cor.
5:20). But when men reject the
Substitute who suffered for sinners, and prefer to stay in unbelief, it does
not mean that one bit of Christ’s work was in vain.
God has not made
the purpose of the cross depend upon the fickle will of man which is enslaved
and corrupted. Mankind, by sinful
self-determination, does not mold God’s purpose in the cross.
Application: In our
humanistic age, the powers of man, his interests and his happiness are vaunted
as preeminent. When this humanism is
applied to Christianity, there is a tendency to view man’s will as that which
makes the atonement effectual. To do so
is to confuse the offer of the cross with the purpose of God in the cross. As soon as that confusion takes place, men
resort to the language of potentiality.
THE SCRIPTURES
KNOW NOTHING OF A HYPOTHETICAL ATONEMENT
Christ came to
seek and to save that which was lost (Luke 19:10). He purchased the church of God with His own blood (Acts 20:28).
God’s word knows
no distinction between what Christ did on Calvary and what purpose was
accomplished on Calvary. Christ’s one
act of redemption is not made complete by the sinner’s act. It is a completed work with all its effects
accomplished by His death.
Application: From the
man-centered perspective, the atoning work of Christ could be compared to a
life-giving remedy that sits waiting in a medicine chest. Spiritually dead men by opening the medicine
cabinet and taking the remedy are made well.
A hypothetical
atonement cannot be supported by Scripture. The death of Christ was not a
general atonement without a sovereign plan.
Christ died in order to sanctify the church (Eph. 5:26). Christ’s work is NOT the purchase of
non-specific dead capital.
The only scheme
that fully glorifies God and magnifies His grace and majesty is a complete
salvation that actually does the saving and redeeming. The cross is mighty to save. It reaches the sinner in his ruin and helplessness.
CHRIST’S DEATH
SECURED THE “DEATH” OF THE BELIEVER (The “death” of the believer in 2 Cor. 5:14
is defined in verse 15.)
2 Cor. 5:14,15 – Christ’s love constrains, controls and
governs the child of God. It presses,
coerces and impels the believer as a governing influence which controls the
life (see also, Gal. 2:20; Eph. 3:19).
This is the trait of Paul’s experience and is therefore common to all
Christians. As the believer is
constrained by a sense of the love of his divine Lord, he responds by
consecrating his life to Him. Faith in
Christ’s deity, love and substitutionary work is the principle or source of the
Christian life.
By stating,
“having concluded” or “we thus judge,” the Apostle assigns the reason why the
love of Christ exerted such a constraining power. It was because the Apostle judged that the death of Christ didn’t
just place believers under obligation to be Christ’s servants, it secured this devotion! Why?
It is because believers died
in Him (Rom. 6:4,5).
CHRIST’S DEATH
WAS A TRUE OR DIRECT SUBSTITUTION
“One died for
all, therefore all died” (verse 14).
Christ died in the place of His people.
The idea of substitution is clearly expressed. His death in our place saves us from death. The “all” in verse 14 is a class of individuals
characterized by the effects produced in their lives. The “all” is of necessity limited by what the Scriptures teach
concerning the design of Christ’s death.
One of the
effects of Christ’s death is stated in this clause, “therefore all died” or “then
all were dead.” Christ died for all who
died when He died.
Substitution is
taught in the great doctrine of Christ as Last
Adam (Rom. 5:12-21; 1 Cor. 15:20-28; 45-49). As Last Adam, Christ
stands in the room of His people and as their Substitute, He does the work for
all united to Him. The death of Christ
was legally and effectively the death of His people.
In the mind of
God, those whom the Father chose are so united to the Son that His death is
their death and His life is their life.
The Apostle’s argument is the same one he used in Romans 6. “How shall we who died to sin still live in
it?” (Rom. 6:2).
THE DESIGN OF
CHRIST’S DEATH WAS THAT HIS PEOPLE MIGHT LIVE FOR HIM (2 Cor. 5:15).
The death of
Christ secures our reconciliation to God and the reconciliation secures a life
of devotion to His service. Christ died
that He might be the Lord of His people.
His people serve Him as Lord.
They belong to Him and are devoted to Him (See also, 1 Cor. 6:19,20;
Titus 2:14; 1 Peter 2:24; 3:18).
There is no
distinction between those for whom Christ died and those whom He sanctifies
(Hebrews 10:10; 2:11; 1 Cor. 1:30).
Those for whom Christ died really die to sin and itsdominion over them.
Application: Those for whom Christ died and upon whom
His death takes effect, HENCEFORTH
(from the time they apprehend their relation to Him and the power of His
vicarious death) they do not live unto
themselves.
This describes
the Christian’s life in negative terms.
In the next clause (2 Cor. 5:15), it is stated in the positive. “[They live] for Him who died and rose again
on their behalf.”
He is not a
Christian who is simply unselfish or who lives for some noble cause. He only is a Christian who lives FOR Christ.
Many think they
can be Christians on easier terms than these.
Multitudes who profess to know Christ rest upon a “decision” for Christ
or upon a mental assent to gospel truth, but they do not live for Christ. By
contrast, the Bible teaches that if we are partakers of Christ’s death, we are
partakers of His life (Heb. 3:14; 1 John 3:14; 5:11,12).
In the true
believer, saving faith and consecration to Christ’s service are inseparably
joined. Those who have put their trust
and hope in the merits of Christ’s death will evidence the sovereign purpose of Christ’s death; they will be constrained to
consecrate themselves to His service.
BY UNION WITH
CHRIST, THE BELIEVER IS TRANSFORMED (2 Cor. 5:16,17)
Christ is
covenant Head of His people as Adam was of our race. Those who are in Christ by faith are in Christ by covenant (1
Cor. 11:25; Heb. 9:15; 12:24).
By union with
Christ, the believer is transformed.
New life is imparted. A new
creation is effected. A new perspective
is given (verse 16).
For those in
Christ, “old things have passed away.”
These include old opinions, old views, old plans, old desires, old
principles and old affections. New
views of truth, new principles, new apprehension of purpose and destiny and new
affections govern the soul.
Application: Those united to Christ gain eternal
interest in the merits of His death. To
be a partaker in Christ’s life and death is the whole foundation of the
doctrine of sanctification (Rom. 6).
The term
“creation” in 2 Cor. 5:17 indicates the greatness of the change wrought in
us. It is a change produced by the
mighty power of God that is so radical in nature that it is justly called a new
creation.
RECONCILIATION
BELONGS TO ALL IN CHRIST (2 Cor. 5:18,19)
“All these things” (verse 18) refers to the
entire change of which the Apostle has been speaking. God is the reconciler.
Man never makes reconciliation.
The enmity or barrier between God and man is removed by an act of
God. The propitiatory death of Christ
is always represented as reconciling us to God. The reconciliation consists in the satisfaction of the divine
justice by the sacrifice of Christ.
By the use of
the word “world” without the article is meant mankind (verse 19). It
means the class of beings towards whom God was manifesting Himself as
propitious. (This is the same sense in
which Christ is called the” Savior of the world” or of “all men.” John 4:42; 1
Tim. 4:10; 1 John 4:14)
“God…reconciling…to
Himself,” does NOT mean that He was rendering friendly to Himself. The
work of reconciliation is unfolded in the next phrase, “not counting their
trespasses against them.” Not to impute
sin is to forgive it (Rom. 4:7,8). Here
is the basis of the ministry of reconciliation. God is propitious. He
freely forgives sinners.
Application: When God is said to forgive men (or not
count their sins against them), it of course does not mean all men, penitent,
impenitent, believing, unbelieving. No,
here as earlier in the text, there is a specific class indicated towards whom
forgiveness is exercised (note the three uses of “us” in verses 18 and 19; all
believers).
In the
believer’s case, the reconciliation to God is made the source and cause of our new creation (our regeneration and
holiness). Until God’s wrath and curse
are removed, there is no possibility of holiness and love.
Application: It is the duty of believers to proclaim
to men that God, justly offended by their sins, can be just and yet justify
those who come to Him by Jesus Christ.
The ministry of reconciliation is the preaching of the good news that
God’s wrath has been put away by God’s Son bearing it upon the cross. The priceless peace won is thereby offered
freely to men.
CHRIST’S
SUBSTITUTION FOR HIS OWN IS THE JUDICIAL GROUND OF THEIR PERFECT ACCEPTANCE
WITH GOD (2 Cor. 5:20,21)
“Be reconciled
to God,” is a call to embrace the reconciliation effected by Christ’s
death. God is propitious! He has provided the sacrifice to satisfy His
offended justice and appease His righteous indignation and wrath. The sinner is
guilty and deserving of eternal death and separation.
The very idea of
substitution is that what is done in my place by another avails as if I had
done it myself. If both parties die
condemned, there was no substitution!
Those for whom Christ was a true Substitute, have no condemnation. The design of the substitution is to make
Him “sin” (bearer) that we might be made righteous.
Our sins were
the judicial ground of the suffering of Christ so that there was a satisfaction
of justice. His perfect righteousness
is the judicial ground of our acceptance with God.
Application: Our pardon
is an act of divine justice. Our
justification is a declaration that justice is satisfied. We are set free NOT by a mere act of divine
sovereignty, but by the judicial decision of the infinitely just. It is important that believers understand
that the Apostle sets before our consciences a reconciliation that is in total
keeping with the perfect character of God.
God’s Law is immutable. When the
believer is burdened with a sense of sin, his conscience cannot rest until it
knows God to be just in justifying the sinner.
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