Galatians 6:11-18 · Not Circumcision but a New Creation
The Marvelous Meaning of the Cross
Galatians 6:11-18
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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Toward the end of that marvelous classic, Pilgrim''s Progress, the character, Christian, is moving with tremendous difficulty on the highway between the walls of salvation. His heavy burden makes it almost impossible to move, though he slowly inches along. Finally, he reaches an elevated place upon which there stands a cross and a little below, in the bottom, a sepulcher. As Bunyan describes it:

Just as Christian came up to the cross, his burden was loosened from his shoulders and fell from his back and began to tumble and continued to do so until it came to the mouth of the sepulcher, where it fell in and I saw it no more.

Then, Christian was glad and lighthearted and said with a merry heart, "He has given me rest through his sorrow, and life through his death." He stood still a while to look and wonder, for it surprised him that the sight of the cross should thus ease him of his burden. He looked and looked, until the tears streamed down his cheeks. (1)

Christian is not alone in this discovery. Women and men since the day of Calvary have stood in wonder and asked the same question. How can the sight of the cross give us insight on how to deal with our burdens? How can Christ''s death on the cross insure forgiveness of our sins?

It is not far from Bethlehem, where Jesus was born, to Golgotha, where He died on the cross. The distance is not long. As you stand on the lonely hill at Golgotha and look all the way back to Bethlehem, one haunting question comes to mind, "Was it worth it--was Jesus'' trip worth what it cost?" On that fateful day, when the sun hid its face in shame, when He cried out from the top of the cross, "It is finished." What had He done? It hardly seemed like a triumph. When He ascended into heaven, leaving a 33-year history of God trying to speak to humanity, "What did He leave behind?" What is the marvelous meaning of the cross to a world that scorned His coming and chose to worship Him only when He was gone? Why would the Apostle Paul declare, "God forbid that I should glory in anything except the cross of our Lord, Jesus Christ."

Without further chitchat today, I want to share four things for your consideration as we consider the marvelous message of the cross!

First, the cross reminds us of the horror of our sin.

Now, I use the word "horror" intentionally today because many of our young people have a great interest in horror movies and the violence that is contained in them. We think that horror is very funny. It might be in Hollywood, but not in the real world.

The most violent event in human history took place on the cross. The worst horror scene ever was the nailing of the son of God to an old rugged cross as reported in Luke''s gospel. This is worse than the O. J. Simpson hearings and the skin-head brothers in our own commonwealth. These events, while tragic, come from our lower nature. However, the worst kind of evil arises in our higher nature when we desire to be God.

In Genesis 3:5, we read of Adam''s sin and his desire to be like God. It was Adam''s sin and it is our sin also. Our sins must be extremely horrible for Christ to die for them.

If you take the word "sin," the middle letter is "I." As Calvin Miller so beautifully writes, "No serpent ever crawled so low that he did not dream of thrones and crowns." (2)

If you take the word "pride," which the early church fathers listed as the worst of the seven deadly sins, you will come again to notice that the middle letter is "I." Basically, sin is the big "I."

According to the Apostle Paul in Romans 1:18-25, it is when we begin to worship the creature rather than the Creator. It is when we want to decide what is right and wrong, to forget God''s law and will, and replace it with our laws. The cross reminds us how much we have done to put Christ there. Were you there when they crucified my Lord? Yes, you were there.

Many of us know the story of John Newton. Newton was once a wild and vile man, a slave trader who transported slaves from Africa to England. But God saved him. He was converted to the compelling truth of the Christian faith. From horror--to holiness.

He wrote about this dimension of the cross''s message when he penned the words to a lesser known hymn he wrote:

In evil, long I took delight,
Unawed by shame or fear,
''Til a new object met my sight,
And stopped my wild career.

I saw One hanging on a tree,
In agony and blood,
Who fixed His languid eyes on me,
As near His cross I stood.

Sure, never to my latest breath
Shall I forget that look,
It seemed to charge me with His death,
Though not a word He spoke.

A second look He gave, which said,
"I freely all forgive,
My blood was for thy ransom paid,
I died that thou mayest live."

Yes, the cross is a painful reminder of how we try to erase God from our lives, and fill them with horrors of our sins. Yes, the cross is a reminder of how far man will go in hate and horror.

Second, the cross reminds us of the heart of God''s love.

John 3:16, exclaims, "God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten son." If you want a picture of what the heart of God looks like, then you look no further than the cross. Do you realize that God loves you and me so much that even if you and I were the only people on the face of the earth, He still would have sent Jesus to die for our sins that we might have life in all its fullness?

One of the early church fathers, Iranaeus, said it was by a tree that Adam sinned and it was also by a tree that Jesus died on the cross to save us from the penalty of sin and grant us the forgiveness of our sins. One tree represents our rebellion and sin. One tree represents our forgiveness from God.

Somebody died that you and I might have the forgiveness of sins. On one tree we see the gravity of our sin; on the other tree we see the marvelous grace of God. We see the heart of God''s love--not the hardness of our hearts or the horrors of our actions.

In Stroudsburg, PA, there is a tomb to an unknown Union soldier who died fighting in the Civil War. When President Abraham Lincoln heard of it, he had the tomb inscribed "Abraham Lincoln''s Substitute. He died that I might live."

You see, that cross tonight represents [insert your name] substitute. Jesus died in my place. It is that simple. This is the beginning of the Good News of the gospel.

It is hard for me to even comprehend how large God''s heart really is, but I do know for sure that it is in the shape of a cross. This is why Dr. Charles Haddon Spurgeon said, "When I study a biblical passage--I make a beeline right to the cross."

Let me make one thing clear today. God does not love us because Christ died for us. Christ died for us because He loved us. Yes, the cross reveals the heart of God''s love. This is what Christian discovered in his journey. When he did, he lost the burdens he was carrying. Jesus took them to the cross with him.

Third, the cross heals'' the broken relationship between us and God.

St. Jerome was one of the distinguished church fathers who helped to guide the church in matters of faith and the Bible. He translated the Ancient Greek manuscripts into Latin to help put the Bible in the language of the people. He wanted the people to read and know the Bible. He lived in the actual town of Bethlehem for a time to get a feel of how Jesus lived during his earthly journey among us. The rich oral traditions of the church tell how St. Jerome, while living in Bethlehem, had a dream that Jesus visited him. The dream was so powerful and convincing that St. Jerome rounded up all his material blessings and offered them to Jesus. He heard the Lord declare, "I do not want your possessions." So being a good church leader, he offered all his money to Jesus. Jesus once again declared, "I do not want your money." Finally, in desperation St. Jerome cried out "Jesus, what do you want from me?" Jesus simply replied, "Give me your sins. That is what I came for--I came to take away your sins. Give me your sins."

Remember the gospel of St. Matthew announces Christ''s entrance into human history with these words found in Chapter 1:21, "She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins."

There is a chorus written by Bill Gaither which I have come to love that describes the change which happens when we give our sins to Jesus:

Something beautiful, something good,
All my confusion he understood.
All I had to offer him was brokenness and strife,
But he made something beautiful of my life.

Like Christian, lay your sins down at the foot of the cross. If you want to be healed, make a beeline to the cross and experience the heart of God.

Fourth, the cross is the marvelous message of triumph because it leads us home to God.

Let me finish by telling a story that happened in England. There was a little girl in the city who lost her way. She just wandered around in the streets of London, crying heartbrokenly, piteously. An English bobby saw the child wandering and stopped her to ask her why she was sobbing. The child answered that she was lost and did not know how to find her way home. The bobby said to her, "Do not cry. Sit down here by my side and we will find where you live, where home is." So the bobby sat on the curb of the street and the little brokenhearted girl sat by his side. He said, "Now, I am going to ask you some places in London and you tell me if you recognize any of them. Piccadilly Circus?" "No." "Westminster?" "No." "Charing Cross?" "Ah," said the little girl in her tears, "Yes, yes. Take me down to the cross and I can find my way home from there!" (3)

How true for all humanity, for all mankind, for our hopes and our hearts, and our lives! Take me to the cross and I can find my way home from there. This is why Spurgeon made a beeline to the cross. Like the character Christian, may you make this discovery as well. Like St. Jerome--give your sins to Jesus. When you do--Jesus can make something beautiful out of your life. May God give you grace so to do! Yes, make a beeline to the cross for this is where you find the way to your true home. This is the marvelous message of the cross.

Amen and Amen.

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz