Monday Morning Music Ministry

Start Your Week with a Spiritual Song in Your Heart

When Jesus Prepared To Scramble Up the Cross

3-11-13

This is the Christian story: The Lord of the universe was pleased to create the earth and populate it with human beings. An aspect of His love was to imbue His children with free will, which no mortal has ever failed to use toward rebellion and sin. God delivered laws and commands to His Chosen People, called so because in His plan, when the Law would be recognized as insufficient for a rebellious humanity to be reconciled to Him; that from them, a Messiah would arise who would provide the means of that salvation.

These basics are widely known, even if non-Christians shrug their mental shoulders; even if Christians cease to be in awe of God’s plan, even taking for granted their astonishing inheritance. It has been calculated that the odds of all the Old Testament prophecies fulfilled in the birth, life, locations, miracles, and other circumstances surrounding Jesus (most not disputed, even by enemies of His and His disciples at the time) exceed a hundred million to one.

I sometimes wonder, given all this, why the Christian population of the world is approximately 3-billion; more than one-third of humanity. History, threads of religious traditions, logic, the personal testimonies of those who lives have been supernaturally touched – I wonder why 95 per cent of people do not claim Christ.

An answer has come to me. A very 21st-century outlook might be a matter of packaging, or “branding.” Just as, to me, the upcoming end of Lent will feature too much Bunny and not enough Easter, it might be that the church insufficiently communicates the reality of Holy Week as we look ahead.

Most of us know the stories, and the pictures, of Jesus humbly entering Jerusalem on a donkey, amidst adoring crowds. We know He was falsely accused; He was betrayed by one follower, and denied by another; He was chased down and arrested; He was tortured and abused; He was humiliated perhaps as no man ever has been; He died on a rough cross between two criminals; He was carried to a borrowed tomb; on the third day He rose, conquering sin and death.

As scripture prophesied, He was led like a lamb to slaughter.

But can it be that we place too much of our attention on His submission? Jesus could have called down ten thousand angels to lift Him from the cross, to strike His accusers dumb, to spare Himself the pain, humiliation, and (worst, in my book) the abandonment of His friends and disciples.

We must understand that Jesus was born to die. And to overcome death. He knew the Father’s plan to become the sacrificial lamb, to take the sins of the world – our sins, through history to you and me – upon Himself. From the wrath of God, everything we deserve for our rejection and rebellion, He spares us.

So in this view, I have another image. I know it is VIRTUAL, not the way the Bible describes it. Nevertheless it is true. I ask you to see Jesus, not ambling on a donkey into Jerusalem, but galloping full speed. I remind you that Jesus, at the Passover seder, did not stop Judas from ratting Him out, but hurried him on his way. I suggest to you that Jesus, silent before accusers in the temple and before Pontius Pilate, was virtually shouting, “Come on! Do your worst!” That, until He collapsed, a Man of sorrows and a man painfully bleeding, on the via Dolorosa, He carried His cross as if to say, “Let’s do this! For this I came to earth!”

… and that, instead of being stretched and nailed to a cross, it is spiritually the case that Jesus virtually scrambled up that cross. For us. “Forgive them; they know not what they do.” But Jesus knew what He was doing, and despite the portion of humanity with which we can identify (“if it be possible, let this cup pass…”) He was there for us. He was there. For us.

And then, looking forward to what we call Easter Sunday, we read the accounts of the risen Jesus appearing quietly to Mary, to pedestrians on the road, to His old disciples, to many hundreds of others – accounts recorded by the Jewish historian of the era, Josephus, and by the historians Origen and Eusebius. He quietly appeared and witnessed to people. But let us realize that Jesus metaphorically burst forth from that tomb. In that sense he ran out, shouting to everybody, “I’m Alive!!!” In words of Anthony Burger’s little son, ad libbing in a Sunday School pageant, “Here I come, ready or not!”

Then, and now, Jesus runs up to every person and says, “I live so that you may live also! Believe on me, and you shall have life for eternity!”

Let us return from the virtual and metaphorical. These truths, no matter what the details of their playing out, cannot leave us unchanged. We can make the life-changing decision to ignore Him, or the life-changing decision to accept Him. There simply is no middle ground.

If we see Jesus in this different way – that He was Savior not just willing to die for our sins, but EAGER, such is God’s love for us, and that He excitedly confronts us daily – then we might see Lent in another light. And the rest of the year. And the Lord Himself. And the condition of our souls.

+ + +

Humanity’s response to God’s plan, and the sacrifice of His Son so that we might be reconciled by the acceptance of Jesus’ substitutionary death, has taken myriad forms through the centuries. Indifference, sadly; to revelation about the availability of a personal relationship with our Savior; to expressions in art and music. The awesome mystery of this salvation plan often is met by the question, “Why Me, Lord?” We know the answer is “Because I love you,” yet our souls scarcely can comprehend the enormity of God’s love. A contemporary song is Kris Kristofferson’s classic plaint, “Why Me, Lord?” Here he explains to some friends how he came to write it, after he had a life-changing experience.

Click: Why Me, Lord?

Category: Christianity, Faith, Jesus

Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

5 Responses

  1. Chris Orr says:

    It is hard to understand Rick as you say that not more people would not believe in Jesus but then most unbelievers look at the church as representing Christ and are turned off by what we now call ‘Christianity’. So many of our churches have moved away from the teachings of Jesus to a form of modern religion that includes performance led services and lives!!.. When people come from other countries to the USA or United Kingdom they think they are coming to Christian countries but they get very disilusioned when they find how immoral our western countries are and find that many of their ‘non Christian’ home lands are more moral than the West. With over 20,000 Christian denomonations can we blame people for not chosing to believe the ‘Real Easter’ message..The only answer.. for the Christian church to repent and turn back to the living God and dump the salaried led leaders who will one day have to give an account of their motives!!

  2. Yes, Chris. I made the “mistake” of talking about the Gospel, the Bible account itself; not what the church in many cases has become, when I wonder at the lack of appeal. Religion is turning people off… Chrsitianity cannot help draw all men unto it. To help people see through the smoke and haze and corruption and distortions is our job.

  3. mark dittmar says:

    Reminds me of Jesus giving it his all to carry his cross (and scrambling to get back on it after he fell off) in Gibson’s “The Passion”. He was determined to die for us.

  4. Rick – I was just re-reading a passage out of “Wild at Heart” and how we have turned living as Christ lived into growing men into being really nice guys. I have always marveled how many people miss the true passion of the man, Jesus.

    Many people are often shocked that Christ was called meek when he threw everyone out of the temple because they had corrupted it’s purposes. Meek, as you know, is power under control. Jesus was in perfect control of himself when he was moved to clear the temple even though he had the right and power to do much worse.

    We want to package Christ as a pacifist. He was anything but a pacifist. He was on purpose, engaged in relationships, sacrificial by choice. Yes, he wrestled in the garden, as all of us wrestle when confronted by the divine within our humanity. But the decision to finish the work was made in the garden. He walked through His suffering and death On Purpose, committed to the goal. That takes an enormous amount of will, to see it through to the end. As well, we often conceptualize that his battle ended when he died. However, he descended into hell (as if what he just went through was not hell enough) to face Satan.

    Christ aggressively took his throne – and thank you for reminding me today how passionately he pursued the goal for me.

  5. Hope Flinchbaugh says:

    “Forgive them; they know not what they do.” But Jesus knew what He was doing . . . That is a profound thought. I’m carrying that one with me today. Thanks for sharing, Rick.

Leave a Reply

Welcome to MMMM!

Categories

About The Author

... Rick Marschall is the author of 74 books and hundreds of magazine articles in many fields, from popular culture (Bostonia magazine called him "perhaps America's foremost authority on popular culture") to history and criticism; country music; television history; biography; and children's books. He is a former political cartoonist, editor of Marvel Comics, and writer for Disney comics. For 20 years he has been active in the Christian field, writing devotionals and magazine articles; he was co-author of "The Secret Revealed" with Dr Jim Garlow. His biography of Johann Sebastian Bach for the “Christian Encounters” series was published by Thomas Nelson. He currently is writing a biography of the Rev Jimmy Swaggart and his cousin Jerry Lee Lewis. Read More