Feb 27, 2012

This is War But Don't Be Afraid

(This message has linkage to the Dec 21 posting below)

Yesterday in a message at Hope, I sought to convey the larger story of what is happening on the cross. Isaiah 53 offers the most sublime, poignant, beautiful and tragic rendition I've ever read. I've read it over and over and I will keep doing so.

In our day, we like to talk a lot about peace and tolerance. I appreciate both, but like anything these can become imbalanced to the point where we are no longer dealing with reality. I think most honest adults would recognize that we live in a world where there is a battle between dark and light, evil and good, sin and love. We see it all the time, everywhere. And most honest people see aspects of it in their own hearts and lives, thoughts and perspectives. We wish all of this wasn't a reality, but it is. To say otherwise is in my mind, foolish.

There is a thread of war throughout the Bible. It begins in Genesis 3:15 where God tells satan that he will be enemies with Eve's offspring but one day God will raise up a redeemer, and while Satan will bruise his heel, the Redeemer will crush satan's head. Unpleasant, confrontational, warring words. In Isaiah 9:6, a wonderful Christmas verse, we are told that a child will be given to us and he will make the peace and there will be no more warrior's boots stained with blood. More war talk. Then we come to the birth of Christ and Luke says that an angelic army (yes, the greek word 'stratia' is army, not 'host') filled the skies. This might explain why the shepherds were terrified. Essentially, the angels said to the shepherds "We know you're scared, but our news is good. The messiah is born today. Don't be afraid." This announcement coming from a legion of warrior angels.

Okay - so then we get to Jesus on the cross, where he gives his life for ours. When he died he said, "It is finished." What's finished? The decisive battle is finished, the battle that wins the war. So here is one of the most amazing of paradoxes - and the life of Jesus is full of them: Jesus wins the war by giving life. That is not the way we understand wars - because the tragic reality of wars is that normally, the side that can kill the most people wins. Not so with Jesus - in this war He wins the war by giving life not taking it. That said, the wise Christian also knows that someone did die in this war, and it was of course Jesus himself.

So with all this talk of enemies, the great conflict between God and Satan, Satan and people, darkness and light, evil and good, sin and love - God sent Jesus for the purpose of winning the war. He was born humbly in a manger, he died humiliatingly on a cross. A friend of mine who is a bible scholar said to me recently, "David, what the angels were really saying to the shepherds was "This is war, but don't be afraid."