Other Articles on Hope
The Christian Hope
Part
One
Part
Two
Hope Beyond the Terror
The Resurrection of the Just and the
Unjust
There Is Hope
What Is This World Coming To?
1-What Is This
World Coming To?
2-Today's
Headlines Written Nearly 2,000 Years Ago
3-Why God
Permits Evil
4-A Ransom For
All
5-The Call of
the Church
6-The Kingdom
of Christ
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A Ransom For All
Chapter
4
The
Scriptures are explicit that not just a few, who call themselves
Christians or who believe a certain way, but all mankind will
benefit by the death of Jesus. Hebrews 2:9 states, “Jesus Christ
by the grace of God tasted death for every man.” God’s justice
demands that all mankind, living and dead, before and after the
death of Christ, will experience the benefits of Christ’s death.
The
following scriptures unfold the beautiful logic of God’s justice in
this matter: I Timothy 2:6 speaks of Jesus’ death as “a ransom
for all to be testified in due time.” The word
“ransom” is a translation of the Greek word anti-lutron
which means corresponding price. Father Adam, perfect, sinned. Death
passed upon Adam and the prospective human race yet in his loins.
Deliverance from death required the payment of a corresponding
price, the death of a perfect man. No member of the sinful,
imperfect, human race could pay this price. Only Jesus, who was
“holy, harmless, separate from sinners” could. (Hebrews 7:26)
The
perfect man Jesus died for Adam’s sin, thereby redeeming Adam and
his offspring, the human race, from death. Paul in Romans 5:17 says,
“Therefore as by the offense of one [Adam], judgment came upon
all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one
[Jesus], the free gift came upon all men unto justification of
life.”
The
question is sometimes raised, does not the providing of a ransom for
man’s escape from death prove that the death sentence was unjust or
too severe, and therefore God changed His mind? The very fact God
provided so expensive a ransom price proves that His justice is
unbending.
In
courts of law, several forms of punishment may be equally just for a
specific crime; for example, five years’ imprisonment or twenty
thousand dollars. Say we were penniless and received such a
sentence. After serving half a year, a complete stranger came along
and took an interest in our case and paid the twenty thousand
dollars, would we not feel indebted to him for the rest of our
lives!
The
Scriptures reveal that the ransom price, as a satisfaction for
justice, was coexistent as an alternative to the death sentence.
Thus, Jesus is spoken of as “slain from before the foundation of
the world.” (I Peter 1:19-20; Revelation 13:8) The Psalmist also
states that no man could give a ransom for his brother. (Psalms
49:7)
For man’s eternal good, God permits him to experience the effects of
the death sentence. Then He applies the alternative means of
satisfying justice, the ransom price. When mankind becomes fully
aware, they will be eternally indebted to their Redeemer, the one
who paid the fine to the court of the universe for their release
from the prison-house of death.
Why Jesus Suffered
Not
only did Jesus die to provide the fine, a perfect human life that
will eventually release the human race from death, but during his
lifetime he suffered at the hands of his fellow man so that he could
fully understand their every weakness.
The
Prophet Isaiah anticipated Jesus’ suffering: “He is despised and
rejected of men; a man of sorrows acquainted with grief.... Surely
he has borne our grief, and carried our sorrows.... He was wounded
for our transgressions… and with his stripes we are healed.”
(Isaiah 53: 3-5)
Hebrews
4:15 tells us that Jesus is a sympathetic high priest who can be
touched with a feeling of our infirmities. Jesus continually
permitted himself to be afflicted through contact with sinful man.
Every time Jesus healed, it was at the expense of his own strength.
We read that “virtue [strength] went out from him”
(Mark 5:30) as he healed the blind, the lame, the deaf, the lepers.
He was expending his own strength so that he might be touched with a
feeling of our infirmities.
Further, Jesus was mocked. He experienced brutality, violence and
murder at the hands of his fellow men. As a Jew, he tasted the
racial scorn of the Romans. He identified himself with poverty,
drudgery and obscurity. Full of compassion, his heart was moved for
the mentally ill, the physically sick, the lame, the deaf, the
blind. Why? So that in his Kingdom Christ will know just what
lessons mankind will need. “Who can have compassion on the
ignorant, and on them that are out of the way; for that he himself
also is compassed with infirmity.” (Hebrews 5:2)
Jesus
assumed upon his shoulders the ills of what this world is coming to.
Indeed, he has compassion on the ignorant and them that are out of
the way. Those whom he ransomed, all mankind, he will know how to
restore.
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