Billions cry out, "What must I do to be saved?" The Bible answer is, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ ..." (Acts 16:30, 31).
You cannot tell someone who is "without strength" (Rom 5:6) to "DO something." Salvation by works is useless. What you can do is to tell someone something to "believe." Believe what? That "Christ died for the ungodly." On His cross He identifies fully with the sinner. Darkness enveloped His soul. He was terrified of the second death that He faced. He was within a millimeter of coming "unglued" (see Psalm 22:14, 15). The cable that bound Him to sanity was only a hair's breadth. But through that cable there flowed a millivolt of faith: "Why have You forsaken Me?" was His despairing cry, but He did ask the question. And He waited in the darkness for the answer. He did not curse God, which Job's wife told him to do. And don't you ever do it!
Jesus doesn't ask us to DO what He DID; He asks us to BELIEVE what HE did, that is, to appreciate it. In that total darkness of human despair, He built a bridge over our dark chasm--"the atonement." The Father did not reconcile the Son to Himself; the Son reconciled Himself to the Father. "You can forsake Me," cries Christ, "but I will not forsake You!" In the total darkness of being "made sin," suffering the ultimate hell of God-forsakenness (2 Cor. 5:21), being "made" us, bearing the total weight of our guilt, selfishness, despair, our hell, He is "poured out like water, ... [His] heart is like wax; it is melted in the midst of [His] soul. [His] strength is dried up" [He is "without strength"], --in all this horror He chooses to believe a morsel of Good News: "Thou hast heard Me from the last utter extremity of being tossed on the horns of the vicious wild buffalo" (see Psalm 22:21).
That millivolt of faith triumphed: "He hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted; ... but when he cried unto Him, He heard" (vs. 24). He chose to believe without an iota of outward evidence. Thus "agape never faileth" (1 Cor. 13:8). Tell someone!
Copyright © 2009 by Robert J. Wieland.
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