March 21, 2004
The Word of Reconciliation
2 Corinthians 5:17-21
Theres a new world, beginning from tonight.
There probably has never been a time when people have not dreamed that
dream. Poverty, disease, oppression and war have been the human loss too
long for the hope of a new world not to have survived. That was the ideal
which inspired Alexander the Great when he set out on his campaigns. He
was less concerned with military conquest than with uniting the known
world into one world apparently one of his favorite
expressions. The Americas very rapidly came to be spoken of as the
new world. In our own time institutions such as the League of Nations
and the United Nations have dedicated themselves to the same vision.
Paul was evidently animated by the same idea. Indeed, he
said it was already happening. If any one is in Christ, he
wrote, there is a new creation; everything old has passed away;
see, everything has become new! (2 Corinthians 5:17). Not only did
he say it was already happening; he also explained how it was happening.
His very next words are: All this is from God, who reconciled us
to himself through Christ (18). In the remaining verses of the text,
he explains how reconciliation to God brings into being this new creation.
What he says can be spelled out in four simple statements.
First, reconciliation is needed. That may seem like a declaration
of the obvious in a world driven by hostility and enmity as this world
is. When people slaughter each other by the thousands in tribal warfare
in ethnic conflict, in ruthless terrorism, reconciliation is surely needed.
There are more polite forms of hostility which are hardly less destructive:
backbiting among associates, conflict within families, exclusion of the
unwanted. What is of special interest in Pauls words is that his
primary focus is on the need for reconciliation between the sinner and
God.
Recently, I preached in an old, inner-city church. I preached
on the assurance of the forgiveness of sins. Who will bring any
charge against Gods elect? It is God who justifies. Who is to condemn?
(Romans 8:33-4) Following the service the associate pastor who runs the
Alpha Group said to me: Every week in the Alpha Group the question
is raised by someone: How can I be sure that God will really forgive
my sins? How do I know that he will not dig them up again and use them
to condemn me?
Appearances to the contrary, and, indeed, with some exceptions,
it remains true that people are worried about their sins. Their consciences
of past and present wrongs, their enslavement to sin make them afraid
and despairing. They know that reconciliation with God is needed.
The second simple truth written plainly in the text is that
reconciliation is Gods doing. The emphasis on reconciling as Gods
activity is unmistakable (verses 18, 19, 20). The main part of the gospel
is to announce that God has made peace with the world. If we cannot say
that God has made peace, we have no gospel. It is certainly beyond the
power of the sinner to make peace unless God has made it first. The sinner
is alienated from God by sin, and under condemnation for it. The operative
factor in reconciliation is not something sinners do for God, but something
God does for them. Paul tells us clearly what that is: He does not count
their trespasses against them (19). Reconciliation with God is not something
we achieve; it is something we receive. We boast in God through
our Lord Jesus Christ through whom we have now received reconciliation
(Romans 5:10).
The third truth contained in these verses is that reconciliation
is costly. For our sake [God] made [Christ] to be sin who knew no
sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God (21).
Reconciliation is always costly wherever it is morally real. Where friends
have quarreled, there will be reconciliation only when the offender is
prepared to say: I am sorry, I was wrong. The cost is paid
in the coin of humility. In cases of marital infidelity there is pain
on both sides if there is true reconciliation: the pain of the faithful
partner over having been betrayed: and the pain of the offender at confessing
the depth of the wrong he or she has done. Reconciliation can never be
earned. It is always free, but it is never cheap.
The cost of the reconciliation of sinners to God is beyond
computation. It involved the death of the sinless one as a sacrificial
offering. This is the probable meaning of the phrase: God made him
to be sin for us who knew no sin(21). The phrase made him
to be sin in Hebrew idiom means made him to be a sin-offering,
as in Romans 8:3 and Isaiah 53:6,10. In his death, the sinless one bore
the condemnation of our sin so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God.
Bearing shame and scoffing rude,
In my place condemned he stood,
Sealed my pardon with his blood,
Hallelujah! What a Savior!
(Fanny Crosby)
The fourth simple element in Pauls teaching about
reconciliation is that it must be accepted. It must be accepted, that
is, if it is to have effect for the sinner. Here Pauls teaching
in the passage links with the wider context in which it is set, namely
his ministry as a proclaimer of reconciliation. He has been given the
ministry of reconciliation (18); entrusted with the message
of reconciliation (19). So we are ambassadors for Christ,
since God is making his appeal through us, we entreat you on behalf of
Christ, be reconciled to God (20). This is really the central thrust
of these verses: Be reconciled. God has already acted in the
death of Christ to remove all barriers to reconciliation. But before it
can be morally real, morally effected, spiritually realized, it must be
accepted by the sinner.
Across the years there have been reports of lone soldiers
in remote islands and jungles, who have lived at war for forty years and
more: in enmity, in fear, in solitude, on meager rations, because they
had never heard that the Second World War ended in 1945. There are sinners
who are still at war with God, because the truth has not got through to
them that the war is over. He has made peace through the death of his
son. All they need to do is accept it.
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