Chapter 1: What does it mean that Jesus became a curse for us?
I've heard a million sermons about the nails and the thorns. And granted, the physical agony of crucifixion is a ghastly thing. But there's been thousands of people who have died on the cross. But only one has received the full measure of the curse of God while on that cross. I doubt if Jesus was even aware of the nails and the spear. He was so overwhelmed by the outer darkness.
Jesus' death upon the cross at the hands of the Romans was torture. It was brutal. But what was inflicted by man cannot compare to His being forsaken by God the Father, Him becoming a curse for us. And that's what we'll reflect upon today on Renewing Your Mind. All week, R.C. Sproul has helped us to reflect on the cross of Christ, from our need for an atonement to Him being our ransom.
You can revisit those messages and study this topic in greater detail when you request this week's special resource offer. Simply call us at 800-435-4343 or go to renewingyourmind.org and give a donation, and you'll receive the series, the study guide, and two books. But be quick, as this offer ends tonight at midnight. So what was Jesus experiencing on the cross?
Why did He become a curse for us? Looking back to important Old Testament imagery and then returning to the New Testament, here's Dr. Sproul with a message titled, Blessing or Curse?
When we consider the cross of Christ, we see an event in history that stands out with so much importance and so much significance that it's easy to overlook the fact that the cross was not an isolated event in history that sort of sprung up spontaneously in a particular moment in time, sort of being
born full-grown like Athena from the head of Zeus, but the atonement of Christ is the culmination, the climax of centuries of redemptive history where God had set certain things in motion ages and ages before that then reached its acme with the death of Christ.
Now, to get a glimpse of one element of the atonement, I want to direct your attention for a moment way back in the Old Testament to the book of Deuteronomy. where part of the terms of the covenant that God makes with the people of Israel are spelled out.
If we do a study of the elements of a covenant in the ancient world, we see that though the content of covenants may differ from culture to culture, there were certain elements and aspects of a covenant that were virtually universal.
Whenever a legal agreement like this was entered into, the sovereign one in the covenant would identify himself and give a historical prologue where he would rehearse the history of his relationship to the subordinates in the covenant. This would be true among the Sumerians and the Kadians and other peoples of antiquity as it was with the Jews.
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Chapter 2: How does the concept of blessing and curse relate to Old Testament covenants?
If you obey, you're blessed. If you disobey, when you stand up, you'll be cursed. When you sit down, you'll be cursed. When you go in a city, you'll be cursed. In a country, you'll be cursed. In the sea, you'll be cursed. You know, your children will be cursed. Your sheep will be cursed. Your dogs will be cursed. Your cat will be cursed. Your baker will be cursed. Curse everywhere, right?
Now, to understand that, we have to understand what it means to be blessed. blessedness has to do to the Jewish mind with respect to proximity and remoteness of the presence of God. The closer you get to the immediate presence of God, the greater the blessedness. The further removed you are from the face of God, the less the blessedness.
Because when the people of Israel would encamp in the wilderness, they were to pitch their tents according to a structure that God gave them of the arrangements of the tribe. And, you know, Reuben would be in one place, and Simeon would be somewhere else, and Issachar would be somewhere else, and, you know, the rest of those tribes. The tribes would camp in a circle. What was at the center?
The tabernacle. Because God pitched his tent... in the middle, right in the midst of the people, saying, here I am. So again, the concept of blessedness is understood in terms of the nearness, the proximity, the presence of God. Conversely, the curse of the covenant is to be cut off from the presence of God. to never see the light of his countenance, to be cast into the outer darkness.
That's how the Jew understood the curse. Now, When the Jew would describe the situation of the Gentile in the Old Testament, he would say that the Gentile is a stranger to the covenant. He is a pilgrim. He's a sojourner. He's foreign to the household of Israel. When the Day of Atonement took place in the Old Testament ceremony, we know that the lamb was sacrificed on the altar.
It was a blood offering. But what happened to the scapegoat? The sins of the nation were ceremonially transferred to the back of the goat. And the significant thing is what happens to the goat? Why isn't the goat killed? That symbolism is taken care of with the lamb. But the goat is sent outside the camp.
He's driven into the wilderness, into the place of darkness, into the place that is removed from the light of God's countenance, into the outer darkness. Now, that, because of the constraints of time, is the tip of the iceberg, I hope you understand, of the dynamic that's going on in the Old Testament symbolism of blessing and curse.
But let's turn now quickly to the New Testament, to one of the most extraordinary statements that we read from the Apostle Paul with respect to the cross of Christ that we find in Paul's letter to the Galatians. In the third chapter,
He reminds us of the covenant that God made with Abraham and how that when God called Abraham, he called Abraham and blessed Abraham and said, Abraham, you are blessed for what? To be a blessing so that through you, all of the nations of the world will be blessed.
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Chapter 3: What is the significance of the cross in redemptive history?
Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us. As it is written, cursed is everyone who is hung upon the tree. What Paul now says is that in the cross, Christ becomes a curse for us. That all of the sanctions of the penalties of the law are born by Jesus. And he cites this strange statement, cursed is everyone who hangs upon the tree.
And if you go back into the Old Testament, there were certain negative sanctions that were imposed for certain kinds of situations that were considered sacrilegious or desecration, where a person was becoming unclean. The Gentile was unclean. He was outside the camp.
Now if you look at the intricacy of the drama of the events of the crucifixion of Jesus, there are some amazing things that take place so that Old Testament prophetic utterances are fulfilled to the minutest detail. In the first instance, the Bible says that the Messiah will be delivered to the Gentiles for judgment.
It just so happened in the course of history that Jesus is put on trial during a time of Roman occupation. where the Romans, though they allowed a certain amount of home rule to their conquered vassals, did not permit the death penalty to be imposed by the local rulers. And so the Jews did not have the authority to put Christ to death.
The only thing they could do would be to meet in council and deliver Jesus to Pilate. and get Pilate to do it. And so Jesus is delivered from his own people to the Gentiles who are where? Outside the camp. He is delivered into the hands of the pagan. Outside of where the face of God shines. Outside of where the light of his countenance falls. And he's delivered into their hands for judgment.
The Jews didn't kill or execute by crucifixion. They did it by stoning. But the Romans do it by crucifixion. And so the method of Jesus' death is by what? Hanging upon a tree. The Bible doesn't say, cursed be everyone who is stoned. Cursed is everyone who hangs upon the tree. Then, Where is the site of the actual execution? Outside of Jerusalem.
So that Jesus is first of all delivered to the Gentiles for judgment, and once he is judged, condemned to be executed, then he is physically led out of the fortress onto the Via Dolorosa outside of the walls of the city. And like the scapegoat is driven outside the camp, outside of Zion, outside of the holy city where the presence of God is concentrated. He is sent into the outer darkness.
And think again of the imagery of the cross itself. When Jesus is put on the cross, we have an astronomical perturbation that takes place. In the middle of the afternoon, it becomes dark, literally, physically dark. darkness descends upon the land.
And in the midst of the intensity of this darkness, which involves some kind of blotting out, obscuring, or perhaps even an eclipse of the sun, in the midst of that physical, literal darkness, Jesus cries. And what does he cry? My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? It's one of the most pregnant utterances that ever came from the lips of Jesus while he's on the cross.
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Chapter 4: How does Jesus' experience on the cross reflect God's presence?
It had two significances, a positive and a negative for the two sanctions. The symbolic gesture of the cutting of the foreskin was that God is cutting out this group of people from the rest, separating them, setting them apart to be a holy nation. to be a blessing.
The negative is that the Jew was saying this, oh God, if I fail to keep every one of the terms of this covenant, may I be cut off from you, cut off from your presence, cut off from the light of your countenance, cut off from your blessedness, just as I have now ritually cut off the foreskin of my flesh. Do you understand that the cross is the supreme circumcision?
Because when Jesus takes the curse upon himself, so identifies with our sin that he becomes a curse, God cuts him off. And justly so, because at the moment that Christ takes upon Himself the sin of the world, that figure that is on the cross is the most grotesque, most obscene mass of sin concentrated in the history of the world.
And God is too holy to even look at iniquity, and when Christ is hanging on the cross, the Father, as it were, turns His back He removes his face. He turns out the light. He cuts off his son. And so here is Jesus bearing the sin and touching his human nature who has been in perfect, blessed relationship with God throughout his ministry. Now, God forsakes.
I've heard a million sermons about the nails and the thorns. And granted, the physical agony of crucifixion is a ghastly thing. But there's been thousands of people who have died on the cross. But only one has received the full measure of the curse of God while on that cross. I doubt if Jesus was even aware of the nails and the spirit. He was so overwhelmed by the outer darkness.
Dear friends, on the cross, Jesus is in hell, right there, totally bereft of the grace and the presence of God, utterly separated from all blessedness of the Father. He becomes a curse for you so that you someday will be able to see the face of God so that the light of his countenance will fall on you. God turned his back on his son. No wonder he screamed.
He screamed from the depths of his soul. How long did he have to endure it? A second of it is of infinite value. It's enough. Finally, he says, it's finished. It's finished. It's over. What? His life? The pain of the nails? No. The lights come back on. And he says, into thy hands, I commend my spirit. Incredible. Look for it as you read the scriptures.
Look for the imagery of the curse and the blessing. Because again, this is the tip of the iceberg. And every time I read it, I'm just in awe of what happened there.
That was R.C. Sproul on this Thursday edition of Renewing Your Mind as we prepare for Good Friday tomorrow and Resurrection Sunday. Today's message was from Dr. Sproul's series, The Cross of Christ, and it's the last message you'll hear this week from that series, so be sure to request lifetime digital access so that you can revisit the messages and go even deeper in your study.
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