Thursday, March 26, 2009

Amazing Grace (Or, God Hates Us!)


Last July, Mark Driscoll said this to a group of pastors: "I preached propitiation and we grew by 800 people in one week... telling people that God hated them!" Have you ever heard a preacher tell you that God hates you? I imagine it would be comparable to an abrupt wake-up call of ice cold water. Surprise, confusion, and anger all coalesce into one knee-jerk reaction: No he doesn't!

Well, the fact of the matter is this: God is love, but God is just as much a judge. And with God as judge, humanity is under the scrutiny of the prosecution. This is not your usual courtroom situation. Those things that put me in court range from lying (perjury) to theft to murder in our society. Now according to our judicial system the punishment will typically fit the crime. The truth of the matter is that this goes all the way back to levitical law and the Jewish judicial system. Ever hear the phrase "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth"? That's Biblical! You may recall Moses judging all of the cases of the Israelites in Exodus 18 and 19. This phrase was the basis for his judgments. If you steal something, you must repay it. If you kill someone, you must repay with your life. Today we do the same thing. Various offenses deserve various degrees of punishment. If you commit murder, you get what is called a "life sentence".

So the question of hell remains. If hell is eternal, why can man receive it as punishment for mere theft or murder? Every sin man commits is a double offense. Not only do I break society's laws, but at the same time I break a greater law. I breat God's law. The funny thing is that all He really requires is love and obedience. My offense? Rebellion. My finite lawbreaking receives finite consequences; the punishment fits the crime. But my infinite lawbreaking receives infinite consequences. With every sinful act, I rebel against the infinite God of the universe. This was Lucifer's crime and the cause for his eternal punishment. Every single man, woman, and child rebels continually against an infinite God. Every one. Therefore, every single man, woman, and child receives due penalty, infinite penalty for this defiance.

This is where God's wrath comes into play, and oh yes, God carries out every iota of His wrath. This rebellion must be dealt with. In the government of a great nation, the sovereign has various counselors and advisors. These men are chosen for their wisdom, strategy, and insight, but above all else, their task is to aid the sovereign in leading his nation in victory and prosperity. Even the slightest rebellion must be dealt with or it begins to spread and soon the sovereign's rule and power falls into decadence. God, as the perfect sovereign of the universe, must and will judge and remove all rebellion from His kingdom. God hates this rebellion. God hates these rebels. God punishes and destroys every last one. This is His wrath.

But by His amazing grace, an infinite sacrifice was made on my behalf in my place in order to take on all of my eternal punishment. One man was punished for all of my rebellion, leaving me scot free. But how can a finite man be substitute for my infinite rebellion? Jesus Christ was fully man, but he was not finite for He was fully God. This is called the hypostatic union and results in the God of the universe coming to earth incarnate and taking on, eternally, the punishment for ALL who call on His name (Rom 10:13). The infinite God of the universe poured out all of His eternal wrath on my infinite rebellion via His infinite Son. Wrath and grace meet at the cross. All of God's wrath and hate for me were taken out on Christ.

But now for the proof? How do we know that this actually worked? Or, maybe we just have to wait, like the Muslims, until Judgment Day to really know if God will accept us? Me Ginoita!!! This is what Paul said twice in Romans 6 when he exclaimed, "May it never be!!" Our proof came three days later when God accepted the sacrifice and raised Christ from the dead. Romans 4:25 says precisely this,

"He who was delivered over because of our transgressions, and was raised because of our justification."

Christ was delivered up as a result of our transgressions. This was the purpose for which He did what He did. Christ's work was to come, minister for three years, live perfectly to show the way, and then die on the cross in place of the world. Because God saw fit that my punishment was dealt accordingly, that my punishment fit the crime, He raised Jesus Christ from death in acceptance of the sacrifice. This was the first sacrifice in history that God fully, eternally accepted. No other sacrifice was risen from the dead because all other sacrifices were temporal and fleeting. All Jewish sacrifices of the levitical system were made with the express intent of holding off God's wrath until the true sacrifice arrived. This final sacrifice covers all of His people past, present, and future.