May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world. (Galatians 6:14)
The high point in human history - the cross! . . . The single greatest force in human life [is] the cross. And believing that totally flips everything upside down. (Dallas Willard, Jesus and Culture, Divine Conspiracy talks)The cross is not primarily a show of how bad people are, but how badly people need God. Without God our efforts at good are always interrupted by necessity. Peter felt it was necessary to deny Jesus even though he swore he would go to death with him. Pilate felt it was necessary to turn Jesus over even though he could find no charges against him. The Sanhedrin turned Jesus over to the Romans because it was necessary for one man to die rather than a nation.
The reality of the cross is that as a human being, when I try to do good on my own, I will inevitably find it necessary to overturn or betray that good for the sake of something "necessary." The cross outlines the hope of all people. When my life is turned over to God, the "necessities" become the very things I have to put to death. Instead of crucifying what it good, true, and beautiful for the sake of these necessary desires and fears, I have to crucify these desires and fears.
"The wages of sin is death," says Paul. Living apart from God, away from his grace, and on my own only results in a continuing death. All that is good will be crucified because it threatens the "Almighty 'I will'". This form of self-will must die if I am to live.
The high point of the cross is that it really changed everything. The greatest discovery of humanity was made on the cross by the one who showed us everything a person should be, Jesus. The cross is mine to boast in because it shatters all the lies that I am fed daily about this world and myself. The cold, hard reality of the cross crowns the life Jesus lived in this world with the power to be humble, the joy to go through suffering, and the life to conquer death. These are not mere ideas, but realities found in relationship with God.
The world is crucified to me through the cross. All the glamour, the display of wealth and power, the fear and dread, the seemingly unending supply of pleasure and distraction turns out to be a lie. The world is a worn-out shirt, ready to be retired. The world is a defeated enemy, ready to be destroyed. The world is uninteresting and bland, ready to be replaced and renewed. The cross tears the mask off of the world of humanity working apart from God and for its own desires and shows it to be futile and empty, like a dying criminal on a tree.
I am crucified to the world through the cross. I become an exile in this world rather than a resident. I find myself "on the outside" in many situations. Jesus said that the world will hate those who follow him as it hated him. The systems and institutions set up without God or against him have no place for me. Occasionally I am attacked or rejected, but mostly where I follow Jesus I am just ignored.
Lord, let the cross define my reality and my hope. Let me be like Paul who boasts only in the cross of Christ. Amen.
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