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THE TRIUMPH OF CHRIST OVER SIN AND HELL Dr. W. A. Criswell 1 Corinthians 15 04-10-90
It is hard for me to realize this is the forty-sixth year that I have presided over them. Remember, it is your busy lunch hour. The services last from twelve to twelve thirty. And if you have to leave, all of us will understand. If it occurs right in the middle of a sentence, it's all right. Just come when you can and leave when you must. I cannot but again remark upon the reverential attention of our First Baptist Academy. It is an encouragement to me, beyond anything you could ever know, your listening to the Word of God. The theme for this year is “The Triumphant Christ, The Triumph Of Christ.” Yesterday, The Triumph Of Christ Over Satan. Tomorrow, Over Death. The next day, Over The World. On Friday, The Triumph From The Cross. And, today: The Triumph Of Christ Over Sin And The Judgment Of Damnation. Many, many of the students of Holy Scripture say that the high water mark of all revelation is the fifteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians. And, all five of the messages in this series are taken from that glorious part of the revealed Word of God. And, this morning, from the first verses: Brethren, I declare--I make known--unto you the gospel which I preached, which also you received, wherein you stand. By which also you are saved… . For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures… . There are two kinds of Christianity. One is a Christianity of idealism, of inspiration. In that Christianity, Jesus is a great teacher and a prophet and a martyr. When they use the word of “salvation,” they refer to social amelioration. Jesus is one--in that part of the presentation of the Christian faith--Jesus is one of the great inspirational idealists of the world. For example, Confucius was a great teacher, contributing to the amelioration of mankind. Socrates was a great teacher. Justinian and Marcus Aurelius were great teachers. And, Jesus also was one of those great teachers. That's one of the presentations of the Christian faith. There is another presentation of the Christian faith. And, that is that Jesus “died for our sins according to the scriptures.” It is a gospel of redemption, of salvation for our souls. It is a message that God, in heaven, looked down in grace and mercy upon a lost humanity, and sent His Son that we might be saved from the judgment of our sins. In that first kind of Christianity, the Cross of Christ is incidental. In the second, it is central. In that first kind of Christianity, the Cross of Christ is, oh, however you might receive it or reject it. To me, it is an amazing thing that those people try to take out of our hymnbooks all of the songs of the Cross, and try to obliterate the sufferings of our Savior. But, in this second kind of Christianity, it is a gospel of redemption. The heart and center of the gospel message is the Cross of Jesus our Lord. Which one of those two presentations of the Christian faith is the gospel, according to the holy scriptures, according to the Son of God? Without exception, it is the second. Paul said: “God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.” The Cross, in all of its naked hideousness, as the Romans would have it. The Cross, in all of its philosophical irrationalities, as the Greeks would have it. The Cross, in all of its suffering and shame, as the Jews would have it. But, the Cross, in its power to save, as Paul preached it. So, he avows here. He says: “I delivered unto you--I preached unto you-- first of all,” That “first” does not refer to time, but it refers to emphasis and importance, such as there is a “first and great commandment” of the Law. So there is a first--a great, first doctrine of the Christian faith. It is not the fatherhood of God or the kingdom of our Lord or the incarnation of our Savior. But, it is the message that Jesus “died for our sins according to the scriptures.” It is the gospel of redemption. This is the heart and the keystone of the Christian faith. Somebody, one time, said to that great English London preacher, Charles Spurgeon, "Your sermons sound all alike." And, he replied, "That's right. No matter where I take my text, I make a beeline to the Cross." There is no redemption apart from the shedding of blood. There's no salvation apart from atonement. There's no reconciliation apart from the payment of our debt. Not by His holy and beautiful life, but by His stripes, we are saved. You see that in the Gospels themselves. It is remarkable that one or the other of the Gospels will leave out, say, the birth of our Lord or the Sermon on the Mount or the transfiguration of Christ or the Lord's Supper, or even His ascension into heaven. But, all four of them, in great detail, recount the suffering and the death of our wonderful Lord. It is the message of salvation and hope for the world. And, that differentiates the Christian faith from all other religions of mankind. The Christian faith is not, in the first place, an ethic, although it is ethical. It is not, in the first place, theology, although it has theological implications. It is not, in the first place, an amelioration--a reformation of society or of mankind, although it has reformational ameliorational overtones. But, the gospel of Christ is, first and above all, a message of redemption, of the saving of our souls from the judgment of sin. You see this in the sign and the aegis of the Christian gospel. The sign of the Christian faith is not a burning bush. It is not two tables of stone. It is not a seven-branch lampstand. It is not a halo around a submissive head. It is not even the crown of a victor. But, it is a Cross. When I think of a sign of the gospel of Christ, I think of a Cross, a bloody Cross, on which the Savior of our souls did die. “For I delivered unto you, first of all, that which also I received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures.” According to the scriptures. I wonder if many of you were present when on a Sunday night, a New Year's night, I announced that I was going to preach till midnight. Do you remember that? And, I entitled it “The Scarlet Thread through the Bible.” I started at seven thirty o'clock, in this pulpit, and preached until past midnight, following, through Holy Writ, the sacred story of the preparation of our world for the atoning grace of Jesus, our Lord. According to the Scriptures, Christ died for our sins. The whole Bible concerns just that. In the beginning, when our first parents fell, they covered themselves with fig leaves. But, our Lord said: Not enough. And, He shed blood--the first blood shed--He shed blood to cover the nakedness of our first parents. When those sons came before God with a minchah--with an offering--Abel offered blood, a lamb sacrifice. When Abraham was tempted of God, and tried of the Lord, it concerned the dedication of the life of his son, Isaac. When the Passover was instituted, God said: “When I see the blood, I will pass over you.” The heart of the Levitical worship system is the shedding of blood. Do you remember Leviticus 17:11: For the life of the flesh is in the blood, and I've given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls, for it is the blood that maketh atonement for the soul. And, all of the temple worship concerns the sacrifices unto God: “Without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sins.” And, the preaching of the prophets was that: He was wounded for our transgressions. He was bruised for our iniquities. The chastisement of our peace was upon Him and with His stripes--His stripes, His suffering--we're healed. This is the Scriptures. And, the Old Testament is but an introduction to the New Covenant. The New Covenant begins in the same way, John the Baptist presenting our Lord saying: “Behold, the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world”: The sacrifice of blood that we might be washed from our iniquities. And, the life of our Lord is just that. When He began His ministry, He said: “Destroy this temple, and in three days I'll raise it up.” They had no idea to what He referred. John says He was referring to His coming death. When the Lord spoke to Nicodemus, he said, “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” He began His ministry in the consciousness of His death for our sins, and it continued throughout all of the days of His flesh. In Capernaum, in His preaching, He said: “Except you eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of God, you have no life.” When the Greeks same to see Him, He said: “And I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto Me.” And, when Mary of Bethany anointed Him, He said it was for His burial. Do you remember the meaning of the ordinances? In the ordinance of baptism, He died for our sins and was buried and was raised for our justification. In the ordinance of the Lord's Supper, “This is My blood of the new covenant shed for the remission of sins.” Jesus wrought many marvelous miracles. But He never said, “This miracle is wrought for the remission of sins.” Jesus preached marvelous sermons, but He never said, “These sermons are spoken for the remission of sins.” Jesus healed many sick. He never said, “The healing of this sick is for the remission of sin.” But, He did say, “This blood of the New Testament--of the New Covenant, of the new promise and hope--is shed for the remission of sins.” And, if I have time to follow through the preaching of the apostles--by the Cross of Christ, in the shadow of the Cross, they took their stand. And, every message they preached and every word they wrote is inspired by the Cross and is stained by the blood of our dear Lord. May I close with the message of the Cross to us? When you stand and look at the Cross of Jesus, our Lord, what do you see? The Roman soldiers looked and, to them, in their greed, it was an opportunity to gamble for His garments. You have, world without end, today men who stand in the pulpit and deliver the message just for the sake of the abounding wealth that comes to them. They brought reproach upon the Christian faith beyond anything that the Christian world has ever seen. That's what some see in the cross: an opportunity for affluence and aggrandizement, like those Roman soldiers. They looked at the Cross and saw an opportunity to gamble for his garments. There are those, like the Sanhedrin and the Pharisees, who looked upon the Cross and saw in it a way to obliterate their enemies. I stood in Hyde Park in London one time. And, a devout man of God was preaching the gospel. And, while he was preaching, a man stood up and cursed God, and said, "If I could get my hands upon Jesus Christ, I'd choke him to death." There are those who look upon him as though Sanhedrins, seeing Him an enemy. There are those who look at the Cross and see someone who's just like as they are. He's dying. We're dying. He's no different from the rest of us. There are some who look at the Cross and see, as the presiding officer of the Passover season, a pollution that ought to be taken down and be rid from the land. What do you see when you look at the Cross of Jesus Christ? What do you see? One thing: I see myself in my sins, and the condemnation of God upon my iniquity and my transgressions and my wrong-doing. I read of a man who, in a dream, saw Christ being beaten. And, the beater had a leather thong and, in it, sharp-edged pieces of lead. And, he was bringing down his arms in strength against the back of our Lord. And, His back was torn and bloodied. And, the man in his dream reached forth and seized the hand of the man. And, the man turned around and looked at him in surprise. And, this dreamer recognized himself. We're that way. What do you see when you look at the Cross? I see me, in all of my sins and my transgressions. I did that. We did that. We pressed upon His brow the crown of thorns. We nailed Him to the tree. We thrust that spear into His side. We did it. Our sins crucified our Lord. Then, I see something else. I see a love and a mercy beyond anything mind could ever think of or heart could ever imagine: The atoning grace and poured out love of our Savior for us. A little pericope out of history: Dikran II was an enemy of the Roman Empire. He was the King of Armenia. And, in the first century before Christ, Pompey, the Roman general, conquered Armenia and conquered Dikran II, and brought Dikran II, the King of Armenia, with his wife and his children, before the Emperor to be condemned to death. And, in the tribunal, Dikran II, the king, there with his wife and his children--Dikran II fell down before the Emperor of Rome and said to him, "You take my life. You do with me as you please. But, for my wife and for my children, could you spare them and free them and give them life?" Well, the appeal of the King so moved the heart of the Emperor that,, he not only spared the dear wife and the mother of the children, and the children, but he spared the life of King Dikran II himself, and let them go free back to Armenia. As they returned, King Dikran II said to his wife, "What did you think about the Roman Emperor? Did you see him presiding over that tribunal?" And, she replied, "No. I didn't see him. I didn't see him." And, the king said to his sweet wife, "You never saw him. He was there, presiding over our trial. And you never saw him?" And, she said, "No. I never saw him. I never saw anybody but you. My eyes were fixed upon you, down on your knees, pleading for me and our children, and offering your life for us. I never saw anybody but you." That's what we see when we look at the Cross: His grace and His love and His mercy fill our souls with love and gratitude, and our hearts with everlasting wonder at the love and grace of God in Christ Jesus, our Lord.
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