No Sacrifice Too Great!

December 7, 2009 at 8:19 am | Posted in Love, Penal Substitution, Soteriology, Systematic Theology, missions | Leave a Comment

In My Place Condemned He Stood

We don’t want to encourage violence, marginalize the gospel, or promote individualistic passivity. But I haven’t seen sinners who are gripped by Christ’s substitutionary death respond that way. Instead, I’ve more often observed responses like C.T. Studd’s famous statement: “If Jesus Christ be God, and died for me, then no sacrifice can be too great for me to make for him.” Charles Spurgeon put that point well: “It is our duty and our privilege to exhaust our lives for Jesus. We are not to be living specimens of men in fine preservation, but living sacrifices, whose lot is to be consumed.”

In C.J. Mahaney’s book Living the Cross Centered Life (Multnomah, 2006), he shares with us his advice to his young son, Chad” “This is what I hold out to my young son as the hope of his life: that Jesus, God’s perfect, righteous Son, died in his place for his sins. Jesus took all the punishment; Jesus received all the wrath as he hung on the Cross, so people like Chad and his sinful daddy could be completely forgiven.” Like Chad, we would do well to accept our guilt and admire God’s grace, to let the Holy Spirit encourage us by the Savior’s self-denying love to follow his example, and to savor God’s love to us in this almost incredible sacrifice.  - Mark Dever

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Dever, Mark. In My Place Condemned He Stood. Wheaton (Good News Publishers, 2007), 110.

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