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Providence in Christ’s Death

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg
The Truth Network Radio
July 10, 2023 4:00 am

Providence in Christ’s Death

Truth for Life / Alistair Begg

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July 10, 2023 4:00 am

Christ’s crucifixion is a heartbreaking and gutwrenching story. How could that have been God’s plan for His own Son? And how do we make sense of it? Study along as we examine Christ’s death from multiple perspectives on Truth For Life with Alistair Begg.



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The crucifixion of Jesus is a heartbreaking story.

It's gut wrenching. How could this be God's plan for his own son? Today on Truth for Life we'll examine the death of Christ from a number of different perspectives. Alistair Begg is teaching from the book of Acts and we're looking at verse 23 in chapter 2 and verse 28 in chapter 4. Now, I think we would be agreed, wouldn't we, that Simon Peter was not by any means a straight-A student in the school of Christ. It's perhaps not fair to single him out, but there's a sense in which he just asks for it. He's just like a naughty boy in school in many ways. He was always putting up his hand, always saying, I have the answer, I have the answer, I have the answer. And many times he did, but he was often good at getting it for a moment and then falling back dreadfully.

His life was sort of bursts of enthusiasm followed by periods of chronic inertia. And that from the very get-go, when he manages to come up with the right answer to the question, Who do you say that I am? And he says, Well, you are the Christ, the Son of the living God. And then within a matter of moments, he's banished to the bottom of the class, where he's told, Get behind me, Satan, because you don't have in mind the things of God. Jesus, you should know that if everybody deserts you, particularly some of these fellows, my friends here, if they all leave you, you can count on me right to the very end. I am your main man.

I will be with you all the way through. And then the rooster crowed, and the eyes of Jesus, and Peter met one another, and immediately while he was still denying Jesus, he went out and wept bitterly. I begin in that way as a backdrop for consideration of what we then have in this Pentecostal sermon.

Because when you realize that the person who is declaring these words is the person that I've just given that brief biographical outline for and not one that is particularly commendable. And yet here we have the fulfillment of what Jesus had told these followers of his when the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth. And when the Helper comes, whom I will send to you—this is in the Upper Room Discourse in John 15 and 16—when the Helper whom I will send to you comes, then you will be in a position not only to understand but also to declare. And so, here we are, right in the very first sermon with reference to Jesus, and what do we discover?

Well, the observation of Howard Marshall is in half a sentence. What we discover is the paradox of divine predestination and human free will in its strongest form—not separated by a chapter, not separated by a book, not even separated by a verse. This Jesus, delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by the hands of lawless men. Now, Peter, in explaining this, surely is the beneficiary of the wonderful Bible study that was provided by Jesus that is recorded for us at the end of Luke's Gospel, which again we do not need to turn to. But you remember on that occasion, Jesus actually begins to unfold the story of redemptive history throughout the Bible for those disconsolate disciples. And once he has done that, it is then time for him to send them on their way. And at the end of Luke chapter 24, he said to them, These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you, that everything written about me in the law of Moses and the prophets and the psalms must be fulfilled. He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures, and he said to them, Thus it is written that the Christ should suffer and on the third day rise from the dead. In other words, it was the eternal plan of God that was being executed in time, and that repentance and forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in his name to all the nations beginning from Jerusalem. Now, he says, You are witnesses of these things, and behold, I am sending the promise of my Father upon you. But stay in the city until you are clothed with power from on high. Then he led them out as far as Bethany.

Then and only then. For them to go prior to that, without the instruction that he had given and without the promise of the Holy Spirit, which was then poured out upon them, would have been absolutely devastating. And so it is right for us, when we take a doctrine such as the doctrine of providence—which is in some ways a difficult doctrine, it's a biblical doctrine, it's a helpful doctrine—one of the things that we've been teaching one another to ask with something that is difficult like that is, How does this actually play out in the life of Jesus? Because if we're trying to teach a biblical principle, a biblical truth, and when we come to it in the life and ministry of Jesus it doesn't work, then somewhere along the line we have ourselves gone wrong in what we're doing. Because it will always work, it will always fit in relationship to Jesus. Calvin, in a quite wonderful sentence in introducing this, says, We must not follow the lead of many clever types, who when they talk of God's providence engage in circumlocutions and in obscure and tedious speculations. So that as soon as the issue is raised, we have circumlocutions—which is even hard to say and difficult to spell—and we have tedious and obscure speculations.

Of that there is absolutely no doubt. And it is no part of mine to add to that body of work but rather to seek to help us to come to terms with what this means. Says Calvin, we must look to Jesus Christ, quotes, for he is the true mirror—mirror, as opposed to mirror—he is the true mirror in which we are to contemplate God's providence. So in other words, when we look at Jesus, then we have the opportunity really to come to terms with his providence.

Now, as I was working on this material, the thing that I found the hardest was to try, somehow or another, to create or discover an outline that would enable me not to be guilty of the very circumlocutions that Calvin warns against. And I was greatly helped not by finding a sermon by John Knox but by discovering three statements by John Knox, which I now use as the headings for the balance of our study this evening. First of all, in respect of God, the death of Christ was justice and mercy.

All right? So we're going to deal with it in respect of God, in respect of Jesus, in respect of man. That's how Knox dealt with it—the grave divine of the Scottish Reformation. So when we look at this in relationship to God, we see it in terms both of justice and of mercy. Now, here in Acts chapter 2—remember, Saul of Tarsus, at this point, is still Saul of Tarsus.

He's not Paul. We're only in Acts chapter 2. And therefore, in Acts chapter 2, we don't have a fully developed doctrine of the atonement, of what is actually happening in the death of Jesus. We're going to have to wait until Paul writes Romans to provide for us, for example, the twenty-fifth verse of chapter 4, where he says of Jesus, he was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification. We know that, because we've learned to read the Bible backwards. But there is, even in Acts chapter 2, already an understanding that through Jesus' death, the purpose of God was being worked out.

Right? As Peter preaches here and as the people listen, they are making the discovery that here in the death of Jesus, the purpose of God is being worked out. Now, we have not been taken into the behind-the-scenes with the Bible study of Luke chapter 24. So it's purely speculation on our part to wonder—and I think it is a safe bet, if I might use such terminology—to imagine that Jesus, in providing his disconsolate followers with the story of redemption, has settled in Isaiah chapter 53 as one of the high points along the way.

As I say, it is speculative. And if, then, he settled in Isaiah 53 and he quoted to them who has believed our report, and to whom has the arm of the LORD been revealed, he grew up before him as a tender plant and as a root out of a dry ground, he had no form or comeliness and everything. And he said to them, This is me, you know.

This is all about me. But then he would have had to deal with verse 10, which reads, Yet it was the will of the LORD to crush him. He has put him to grief, when his soul makes an offering for guilt. In other words, he has to say to his disciples, The reason that I died was because it was the set plan and purpose of my heavenly Father, thereby making clear that the death of Jesus is not something that was contrived in time in order to correct a defect in a system, but rather from eternity the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit entered, as theologians say, into a covenant of redemption with one another, so that the Father would send the Son, the Son would go and die in the place of sinners, and the Holy Spirit would then bring that truth home in all of its fullness to men and women. The bottom line is that the Son was assigned this work to accomplish redemption, and the Father would glorify him in return. That makes sense at the beginning of the high priestly prayer in John 17, as Jesus kneels in prayer—or stands in prayer, we don't know—and, Father, the hour has come, glorify your Son, that your Son may glorify you. How is he going to glorify him in his death? Now, Peter later on, when he writes in his letter, has this button down where he says in 1 Peter 1 verse 20—and you can read on for yourselves—of Jesus, He was chosen before the foundation of the world but was revealed in these last times for your sake. He says, I get this now—I really get this—that the death of Christ was purposed from all of eternity, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit entering into a covenant of redemption. Oh, how the grace of God amazes me! That God in eternity knew you, formed you, made you, loved you, sought you, saved you. You didn't do this. He did this.

It's amazing. So Peter's language here in Acts chapter 2 is absolutely clear, isn't it? This Jesus delivered up according to—listen to the language—the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, or the definite plan and set purpose of God. And according to God, it is the explication of his justice and his mercy—both justice and mercy equally expressed in the cross. As we rehearse for one another routinely, in the cross God pardons those who believe in Christ, even though they have sinned and deserve only his condemnation. Without that, we would be excluded from his presence forever. And it is here in the cross that he displays and he satisfies his perfect justice by executing the punishment on his own son, the punishment that our sins deserve. And without that, we would be not only separated from God, but God would not be true to himself. He delivered him up. Secondly, in respect of man, the death of Christ was murder and cruelty.

All right? In terms of God, justice and mercy. In terms of man, murder and cruelty. The fact that the principal cause was the definite plan and foreknowledge of God does not in any way at all relieve the instigators—Jews and others—and the perpetrators—Romans and others—does not relieve either the instigators or the perpetrators of their violence, does not free them from their responsibility. And again, this comes so clearly, doesn't it, in the twenty-seventh verse of chapter 4? For truly in this city there were gathered together against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, both Herod, Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles, and the peoples of Israel. They were all here, and this was according to the foreknowledge and counsel of God.

Now, here's the question. Did the primary cause of God's predestinating grace mean that the activity of those who were engaged in the death of Jesus, in the flesh and blood reality of it all, in the crown of thorns, in the stripping of him naked, in doing all that they did to him and finally nailing him on a tree—does that allow us, then, to say, Well, that sets them free from any kind of culpability at all? No, clearly it doesn't. We know that because of the way the Bible presents it. According to God's set for purpose, according to his mercy and his justice, but in terms of you guys—and the whole human race is culpable in this—in terms of you fellas, the perspective is that of murder and of cruelty. A flavor in his wonderful book The Mystery of Providence, which everybody ought to buy a copy of and read, he addresses this in somewhat archaic language, but I'll try and read it, and I think you'll get it clearly. He says, the foreknowledge and counsel of God—the set purpose and his predetermination—quotes, did no more compel or force their wicked hands to do what they did than the sailor hoisting up his sails to take the wind to serve his design compels the wind. The sailor does not compel the wind.

The sailor pulls up the sails, determines as the set of the sails, but has no control over the winds at all. But he is actually doing what he's doing. So in other words, here we are again at concurrence, in the same way that we saw it in the life of Joseph. Joseph says to his brothers, Your motivation in this was evil. God's motivation in this was good. You intended it for evil. God intended it for good. And the fact that God intended it for good to provide a savior for those who were impoverished in Egypt does not in any way alleviate the responsibility of you, the miserable brothers who were jealous, spiteful, hateful, and did exactly what you did.

You look at the cross, and you have the same thing. You folks intended this for evil, but God intended it for good. They said, We will not have this man to reign over us. They lifted up their voices together against God and said, No, we're not going to do this. And as I say to you, the deeper truth is that the whole human race is culpable in this regard. Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

Oh yes, in every realistic sense we were. So in relationship to God the Father, it is justice and mercy. In relationship to man, it is murder and cruelty. And finally, in relationship to Christ himself, it is obedience and humility. You see, it is not that simply the Father delivered up the Son, and the Son was a reluctant participant in the process. It is true that God gave the Son, but it is equally true that the Son gave himself.

Remember? When Judas comes to betray him in the garden with the soldiers, he's not hiding behind a tree. He steps forward and says, Are you looking for someone?

He knows they're looking for him. When Peter, once again seeking to go to the top of the glass, decides to take somebody's head off and misses and takes their ear off, Jesus says, Put away your sword. If I wanted it to be another way, I could call twelve legions of angels, and we could be done with this whole program right now. But no, the Father and the Son take the initiative together in the salvation of sinners. Hence, hymnody sets it forward, My Lord, what love is this that pays so dearly that I, the guilty one, may go free? As Augustine said, the cross is the pulpit from which God preached his love to the world. And consequently, the men that have the best influence in the church throughout history, when you read their stories, are those who, according to Ian Murray, have been taken with, captivated by, carried away by God's love for sinners, to the extent, says Murray, that persuading men of God's love is the great calling of Christian ministry. And we will never persuade men of his love unless we understand the extent of his love. It was his love for me, says the hymnwriter, that nailed him to the tree to die in agony for all my sin. "'Tis mystery all, the immortal dies.

Who can explore this strange design? In vain the firstborn seraph tries to sound the depth of love divine. Amazing love! How can it be that thou, my God, would die for me? You created the universe, and I am part of the ugly crew that said, I don't want you, I'm not interested in you, and you pursued me? Oh, the love that drew salvation's plan! Oh, the mystery that Christ suffered nothing by accident, suffered nothing because he was somehow or another powerless to deal with it, but rather he suffered at the hands of cruel men in fulfillment of the covenant of redemption and in direct accord with the set purpose and foreknowledge of God." In relationship to God is justice and mercy. In relationship to man, it is murder and cruelty. In relationship to Christ, it is obedience and humility. And loved ones, never forget this.

Two things to finish. Truths that look contradictory to us are not so in the light of heaven. Truths that are contradictory to us are not so in the light of heaven. And it is not the pastor's responsibility to explain the unexplainable. You're listening to Alistair Begg on Truth for Life, and Alistair is encouraging us to think carefully and biblically about the crucifixion.

Of course, the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus is the central message of the Bible, and our mission at Truth for Life is to teach the Bible verse by verse. Along with teaching from the Bible, we also carefully select books to recommend to you to help you grow in your faith. Today's book is intriguing. At some point in our lives, many of us have been advised to dream big, to reach for greatness, aim for the stars. The book we're recommending today encourages just the opposite. It challenges us to dream small. In fact, that's the title of the book. And as you read the book, you'll be reminded that in the end, God won't consider your fame or the size of your house or the number of followers you had on social media.

He'll be more interested in the interactions you have with people you meet in the unassuming, seemingly ordinary moments of life. This is a great book that will point you to God's measure of success so you can discover the contentment that comes when we dream small. Request your copy of the book Dream Small when you donate to support the teaching ministry of Truth for Life. Go to truthforlife.org slash donate or call us at 888-588-7884.

I'm Bob Lapine. In the face of tragedy and chaos, there are people watching to see how we, as followers of Christ, respond. Tomorrow we'll see how God can use our response as an example of the power of the Gospel in our lives. The Bible teaching of Alistair Begg is furnished by Truth for Life, where the Learning is for Living.
Whisper: medium.en / 2023-07-10 11:08:15 / 2023-07-10 11:16:26 / 8

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