DGG Esv-2a
DGG Esv-2a
GOSPEL
PAUL DAVID WASHER
“As expected, Paul Washer is a faithful guide through the key gospel
doctrines in Discovering the Glorious Gospel. Here you will find faithful
exegetical and theological explanation as well as helpful, guided ques-
tions and Scripture readings. This will be a very helpful tool for individ-
ual or group study, enabling people to delve more deeply into the glo-
rious truths of who God is and how He has graciously acted to save us.”
— Ray Van Neste, Professor at Union University, Contributor to the ESV Study Bible
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner what-
soever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in
critical articles and reviews. Direct your requests to the publisher at the following address.
Published by:
www.heartcrymissionary.com
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Introduction
GOSPEL
METHOD OF STUDY
The great goal of this study is for the student to have an encounter with God through His
Word. Founded upon the conviction that the Scriptures are the inspired and infallible Word of
God, this study has been designed in such a way that it is literally impossible for the student to
advance without an open Bible before him or her. The goal is to help the reader obey the exhor-
tation of the Apostle Paul in II Timothy 2:15:
Each chapter deals with a specific aspect of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The student will com-
plete each chapter by answering the questions and following the instructions according to the
Scriptures given. The student is encouraged to meditate upon each text and write his or her
thoughts. The benefit gained from this study will depend upon the student’s investment. If the
student answers the questions thoughtlessly, merely copying the text without seeking to under-
stand its meaning, this book will be of very little help.
Discovering the Glorious Gospel is primarily a biblical study and does not contain much in the
way of colorful illustrations, quaint stories, or even theological commentaries. It was the desire of
the author to provide a work that simply points the way to the Scriptures and allows the Word of
God to speak for itself.
This workbook may be used by an individual, in a small group, for a Sunday school class, or in
other contexts. It is highly recommended that the student complete each chapter on his or her
own before meeting for discussion and questions with the group or discipleship leader.
ADDITIONAL NOTE
You may have noticed that this book is being sold at a strange price. Here’s why: one dollar ($)
from every copy sold will go directly to fund mission work through HeartCry Missionary Society
(heartcrymissionary.com). The rest of the sale price is just enough to cover the cost of printing,
publication, and distribution. The author is not profiting from the sale of this book, nor has he
profited from the sale of any other book. Over the years, we have utilized and explored many
avenues in order to publish these workbooks. Ultimately, we have reached the conclusion that
doing so in-house at a low cost, even with slightly lower quality, is the most effective way of
getting these useful tools into the hands of as many people across the globe as possible. We
hope and pray that the Lord continues to use these books to point His people to His Word unto
the edification of His Church.
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Introduction
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
Week Seven: The Importance of Christ’s Resurrection
Day 1: Chapter 24, Section 1
Chapter 24, Section 2, Main Points 1-2
Day 2: Chapter 24, Section 2, Main Points 3-4
Chapter 25, Sections 1-2
Day 3: Chapter 25, Section 3
Day 4: Chapter 26, Main Points 1-3
Day 5: Chapter 26, Main Point 4
Week Eight: The Son’s Ascension and Exaltation
Day 1: Chapter 27, Section 1
Chapter 27, Section 2, Main Point 1
Day 2: Chapter 27, Section 2, Main Points 2-4
Day 3: Chapter 28
Day 4: Chapter 29
Day 5: Chapter 30
Week Nine: The Son’s Rule and Reign
Day 1: Chapter 31
Day 2: Chapter 32, Main Points 1-4
Day 3: Chapter 32, Main Points 5-6
Chapter 33, Section 1
Day 4: Chapter 33, Sections 2-3
Day 5: Chapter 34
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 1: The Divine Dilemma
GOSPEL
and the Gospel
In the Scriptures, we learn that God is holy; righteous; and deserving of all love, reverence,
and obedience. We also learn that man, though created good, has corrupted himself, defied
God’s law, and exposed himself to divine judgment. In this study, we will discover the marvelous
work of God to reconcile fallen man to Himself.
1. In Exodus 23:7 and Romans 4:5, we find excellent examples of the divine dilemma—how can
God be just and yet justify the wicked?
NOTES: The word “acquit” comes from the Hebrew word tsadeq, which means, “to
justify, vindicate, or declare right.”
NOTES: The word “justifies” comes from the Greek verb dikaióō, which means, “to
declare right or acquit.”
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The Divine Dilemma and the Gospel
NOTES: Exodus 23:7 clearly affirms that God will not acquit or justify the guilty, but
will act with perfect justice toward him. However, in Romans 4:5, the Scriptures boldly
declare the great hope of every believer to be that God justifies the ungodly! How can
both statements be true?
2. In Proverbs 17:15 is found one of the most powerful illustrations in all of the Scriptures regard-
ing the divine dilemma.
NOTES: The word “abomination” comes from the Hebrew word tow`ebah, which
denotes something that is abominable, disgusting, or loathsome. It is one of the
strongest words in the Hebrew Scriptures!
b. How do the truth revealed in Proverbs 17:15 and the truth that God justifies the ungodly
(Romans 4:5) illustrate the divine dilemma?
NOTES: We have previously stated the divine dilemma in the rephrased words of the
Apostle Paul: “How can God be just and the justifier of the wicked?” Here the dilemma
is restated: “How can God justify the wicked in a way that is not abominable or detest-
able to His holy and righteous character?”
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
3. In Exodus 34:5-7 is found still another clear example of the divine dilemma. Read the text, and
complete the exercises.
a. In verse 7, God makes two seemingly contradictory declarations which powerfully illus-
trate the divine dilemma. Identify these declarations.
NOTES: How can both statements be true? The same Scripture that promises pardon
for all kinds of sin warns that God will not forgive the guilty or leave him unpunished.
4. To bring this chapter of our study to a close, we will consider one of the most beautiful
passages in the entire Bible. In Romans 4:7-8, the Apostle Paul quotes from Psalm 32:1-2.
Read over the passage in Romans until you are familiar with its contents, and then answer
the following questions.
a. According to Romans 4:7-8, what are the three characteristics of the man who is blessed
before God?
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The Divine Dilemma and the Gospel
NOTES: How can a just God forgive a man’s lawless deeds, cover his sin, and not take
it into account?
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 2: God’s Motive for Saving Man
GOSPEL
It is appropriate to ask what could have been God’s motivation for sending His only begotten
Son to die so that sinful men might be saved. In the Scriptures, we discover that God does not
save man because of some divine need, or because of man’s inherent worth, or because of some
noble deed that he might have done. Rather, God was moved to save for the praise of His own
glory and for the great love with which He loved us.
One of the most awe-inspiring truths about God is that He is absolutely free from any need.
His existence, the fulfillment of His will, and His good pleasure do not depend upon anyone
or anything outside of Himself. He is the only Being who is truly self-existent, self-sustaining,
self-sufficient, independent, and free. All other beings derive their life and blessedness from God,
but all that is necessary for God’s existence and perfect happiness is found in Himself. To teach or
even suggest that God made man or saves man because He was needy or incomplete is absurd
and even blasphemous.
“The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of
heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, nor is He
served by human hands, as though He needed anything, since He Him-
self gives to all mankind life and breath and everything.” (Acts 17:24-
25; see also Psalm 50:9-12)
One of the most humbling biblical truths about man is that he is absolutely destitute of virtue
or merit. Therefore, there is nothing in fallen man that could ever motivate a holy and just God
to love him; rather, there is only that which would heap judgment and condemnation upon him.
What, then, moved God to send His only begotten Son for the salvation of sinful men? According
to the Scriptures, God did so for the praise of His own glory and for the great love with which He
loved us.
1. According to Romans 11:36, what is the great purpose or “chief end” of all things?
2. According to the following Scriptures, what is God’s motivation for saving His people? Is it
their merit or His glory? Match each motivation with its corresponding text.
3. In Jeremiah 33:8-9 is found a text of such beauty and significance that it stands out even
among the Scriptures listed above. According to this text, why does God move to save men?
Is it because of their merit or for His glory?
4. According to the following texts from both the Old and New Testaments, what was the great
motive behind God’s work of salvation in both Jews and Gentiles?
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
a. God saved Israel to M__________ himself a N_____________ (II Samuel 7:23).
b. God saved the Gentiles for His N_____________ (Acts 15:14).
NOTES: Both of these phrases indicate that God saved man for the sake of His own
reputation, honor, and glory.
5. In Ephesians 1:3-14 is found one of the greatest declarations in the Scriptures with regard to
the purpose behind God’s work of salvation. According to this text, why was God moved to
save us? What is the end or great purpose of our salvation?
a. God saved us according to the P__________________ of His will (v.5). This phrase comes
from the Greek word eudokía, which can also be translated, “good pleasure” or “good
will.”
b. God saved us to the P_______________ of his G_________________ grace (v.6). Our sal-
vation is not the end but the means to the end—that God might be praised for the
grace that He has shown His people.
c. God saved us to the P________________ of His G______________ (vv.12, 14). The repeti-
tion of this phrase serves to emphasize that the ultimate divine purpose in our salvation
is the praise of God.
1. According to I John 4:9-10, what is the greatest manifestation of the love of God toward sinful
men? How does this text prove that it was not man’s merit, but God’s love that moved Him to
send His Son?
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God's Motive for Saving Man
2. In John 3:16-17 is found one of the best-known and most dearly loved passages in all the
Scriptures. According to this text, what was God’s motive for sending His Son for the salvation
of sinful men? Explain your answer.
NOTES: A literal translation: “For this way, God loved the world: He gave His only Son, so
that the one believing in Him might not perish, but have eternal life.”
3. According to Deuteronomy 7:6-8, what was God’s true motivation for redeeming the nation
of Israel? How can this truth be applied to us?
4. Based upon the following Scriptures, explain how it was God’s love and not man’s merit that
moved Him to save us.
a. Romans 5:6-10
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: Prior to conversion, men are described as being weak (v.6), ungodly (v.6), sin-
ners (v.8), and enemies of God (v.10).
b. Ephesians 2:1-5
NOTES: Prior to conversion, men are described as being dead in sins (vv.1, 5), allies
with the world and the devil (v.2), sons of disobedience (v.2), and children of wrath driv-
en by fleshly passions (v.3).
c. Titus 3:4-5
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 3: The Son’s Motive for
GOSPEL
Coming to Save
In this chapter, we will consider those things that moved the Son to lay aside His glory, robe
Himself in flesh, and give His life for the salvation of men. We will discover that He did so not
because of any merit found in man, but for the glory of His Father, for the great love with which
He loved us, and for the joy that was set before Him.
1. In Hebrews 10:7 is found a messianic prophecy quoted from Psalm 40:7-8. According to both
of these texts, what was the great purpose of the Son of God in coming into the world? What
was His great passion and priority?
2. What do each of the following Scriptures teach us about (1) the Son’s attitude toward the Fa-
ther’s will, (2) His passion for the Father’s glory, and (3) His earnest desire to manifest His love
toward the Father? Explain why it is appropriate to say that Christ accomplished all His works,
even His death, first and foremost for God.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
a. Christ’s Obedience to the Father’s Will (John 4:34)
c. Christ’s Earnest Desire to Manifest His Love for the Father (John 14:31)
3. In Romans 15:8-9, two reasons are given for Christ’s coming and His work of salvation among
both Jews and Gentiles. What are these reasons, and how do they demonstrate that Christ’s
coming was first and foremost for the glory of God?
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The Son's Motive for Coming to Save
NOTES: Christ came to fulfill all the promises that God made to the Jews, that they might
glorify Him for His faithfulness. Christ came also to the Gentiles, that they might glorify
God for His mercy.
1. In John 15:9 is found one of the most amazing declarations in the Bible. What does it demon-
strate to us about the motive for Christ’s redeeming work?
2. According to the Scriptures, it was love that led Christ to lay down His life for His people. How
do Galatians 2:20 and Ephesians 5:2 affirm this truth?
3. The measure of Christ’s love is that He gave Himself for us. There can be no greater expression
or illustration of love than this. What do the following Scriptures teach us about this truth?
How does this prove once again that the motive for the Son’s coming was not the merits or
worth of men, but His love?
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
a. John 15:13-14
b. I John 3:16
1. According to Hebrews 12:2, why was the Son of God willing to leave the glory of heaven, take
upon Himself human flesh, and endure the humiliation and pain of the cross?
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The Son's Motive for Coming to Save
2. Hebrews 12:2 clearly teaches that the motivation which led Christ to Calvary’s cross was the
joy that was set before Him. However, we must ask ourselves: of what did that joy consist?
What do the following texts teach us?
NOTES: The Apostle Peter quotes this text in his sermon on the Day of Pentecost as
a reference to Christ’s resurrection and exaltation (Acts 2:25-28), and the Apostle Paul
makes reference to it in his sermon in the synagogue in Antioch (Acts 13:35). It was an
immense trial for the Son of God to leave His Father’s dwelling place in heaven, but it
was an infinitely greater trial to bear the sin of His people and to suffer in their place. He
endured such indescribable agonies, even despised them, because He looked forward
to the future hope of once again dwelling with His Father and rejoicing in His presence.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: Part of the joy that moved Christ to offer Himself for the sins of His people
was His future glorification or exaltation to the place that was rightfully His even be-
fore the foundation of the world. He would return as Lord and Savior—the exalted
Victor who overcame every obstacle to obtain the redemption of His people.
c. THE JOY OF GAINING FOR HIMSELF A REDEEMED PEOPLE – Before the foundation
of the world, God ordained to save a people out of the multitude of sinful humanity,
that they might live for the glory, honor, and praise of the Son. In accordance with
the will of the Father and in view of this joy set before Him—the joy of redeeming a
people of His very own—the Son willingly, even joyfully, endured all for the sake of
His Bride and for the joy that she would ultimately bring Him. Through His incarnation
and death, He has secured a great congregation for Himself from every tribe, tongue,
people, and nation. He has made them to be a source of continuous joy, satisfaction,
and glory throughout all of eternity. What do the following texts teach regarding this
truth?
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The Son's Motive for Coming to Save
(3) Luke 15:10
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 4: The Son of God in Glory
GOSPEL
To understand the magnitude and majesty of the coming of the Son of God, we must first
consider both His divine nature and His eternal glory. In this chapter, we will learn that the Son of
God did not begin to exist at His birth in Bethlehem; rather, He has existed throughout eternity,
sharing equality with God the Father in both nature and glory. It was not a mere man or even an
archangel that gave his life for our redemption; it was the eternal Son of God—the Creator, Sus-
tainer, and Sovereign Lord of all. Only to the degree that we have a proper view of the Son will
we have a high view of the gospel and an appreciation for it.
1. In John 1:1-4 is found one of the clearest declarations of both the deity and eternality of the
Son of God. Identify the truths that are revealed in this text.
2. In Philippians 2:6, we find still another proof of Christ’s deity and eternality. Identify the truths
that are revealed in this text.
a. He W___________ in the F_________________ of God. The Son did not begin to exist
at His incarnation; He is eternal, without beginning or end. The word “form” comes
from the Greek word morphê, which refers not only to the outward or external ap-
pearance of a person but also to his or her essential character or underlying reality.
The Son did not merely seem to be God in appearance; rather, He was God in essence
or nature.
b. He did not count E______________________ with God a thing to be grasped. The word
“equality” comes from the Greek word ísos, which means, “to be equal in quantity
or quality.” In the Son, all the fullness (quantity) of deity (quality) dwelled (Colossians
2:9). He lacked nothing with respect to deity, but was equal in every way to the fullest
meaning of the term.
1. In Colossians 1:15-17 is found a powerful declaration of the Son’s eternal nature and the glory
that He shared with the Father from before His incarnation. Based upon the text, complete
each of the following declarations.
a. The Son is the I__________________ of the invisible God (v.15). This word comes from
the Greek word eikôn, which refers to an “image” or “likeness.” Only God can bear the
exact likeness of God. Hebrews 1:3 declares, “He is the radiance of the glory of God
and the exact imprint of His nature.”
b. The Son is the F_______________________ of all creation (v.15). This is neither a denial
of Christ’s deity nor evidence that He is a created being. In Psalm 89:27, God declares
the following concerning David: “I will make him the firstborn, the highest of the kings
of the earth.” It is clear that David was the “firstborn” of God only in the sense that he
was ranked above all other kings. The Son of God is “firstborn” in the sense that He is
exalted above all creation and is distinct from it. To Him belong all the rights and privi-
leges of a firstborn son.
c. The Son is B____________________ all things (v.17). The Son’s eternality, supremacy,
and preeminence are communicated in this declaration.
d. The Son is the C_____________________ of all things (v.16). All creation owes its exis-
tence to the Son, is directly related to Him, and stands in relation to Him.
e. The Son is the Sustainer of all things—in Him all things H____________ together (v.17).
All creation exists in utter and total dependence upon the Son. He “upholds the uni-
verse by the word of His power” (Hebrews 1:3). The Son is not like the mythological At-
las, who groans under the weight of a single world; on the contrary, He upholds count-
less worlds with the ease of a single word!
f. The Son is the Great End of all things—all things were created F_________ Him (v.16).
The eternal glory of the Son is seen in the fact that all things were made through Him
and for His glory and good pleasure.
2. In Isaiah 6:1-10 is recorded one of Scripture’s most graphic and majestic portrayals of God
and His glory; however, with further investigation we discover that Isaiah’s vision of God was
a vision of the Son! Read through Isaiah 6:1-5 until you are familiar with its contents, and then
answer the following questions.
NOTES: In verse one, the title “Lord” is translated from the Hebrew word adonay; but
in verse three, it is translated from the Hebrew word Yahweh or Jehovah. The One
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The Son of God in Glory
Isaiah sees is unquestionably God; however, John 12:39-41 identifies this Being as the
second Person of the Trinity, the Son of God, thus affirming Christ as God.
b. According to Isaiah verse 1, how is the Son of God described? What does this tell us of
His glory?
NOTES: The Son is described as lifted up above all creation in heaven and on earth. The
train of His robe filling the temple represents His universal, unlimited, and unhindered
sovereignty.
c. According to verses 2-3, what is the response of the seraphim (possibly the highest
ranking beings in creation) to the Son of God? What does this teach us about His glory
and preeminence?
NOTES: The most powerful and majestic creatures in the universe bow with reverence
in the presence of the Son of God. The word “holy” comes from the Hebrew word
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
qadosh, denoting separation. It refers to that which is set apart, separate, or unique.
In the midst of creation, God stands alone. No one is like Him, and no one can be com-
pared to Him (Isaiah 40:18). To compare the Son with even the most splendid created
being would be infinitely more absurd than comparing a miniscule spark to the midday
sun. The three-fold declaration of the Son’s holiness is the strongest form of the super-
lative in the Hebrew language. This text helps us to understand what Jesus meant in
John 17:5: “And now, Father, glorify Me in Your own presence with the glory that I had
with You before the world existed.” Is it not amazing that One like Him would die for
sinners like us?
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 5: The Son Became a Man
GOSPEL
Part One: The Old Testament Witness to the Incarnation
Having considered the eternal glory of the Son of God, we will now turn our attention toward
His incarnation. The word “incarnate” comes from the Latin verb incarnare [in = in + caro =
flesh], which means, “to make flesh” or “to become flesh.” In the Scriptures, the incarnation re-
fers to the great truth that, approximately two thousand years ago, the eternal Son of God was
conceived by the Holy Spirit in the womb of a virgin and was born Jesus of Nazareth—the God-
Man. He was the fullness of deity in bodily form (Colossians 2:9), yet like us in every way, except
without sin (Hebrews 4:15). He lived a perfectly righteous life under the Old Testament Law and
then offered Himself up as a sacrifice for the sins of His people.
The coming of the Son of God into the world of men is, beyond all doubt, the most significant
event in the history of mankind and stands at the very center of biblical Christianity. It is therefore
necessary that we give serious consideration to the doctrine of the incarnation.
1. In Micah 5:2, we find a powerful prophecy regarding the Messiah. Consider the text until you
are familiar with its contents, and then answer the following questions.
a. How does this prophecy prove that the Messiah would be a man?
NOTES: The Messiah would be of the tribe of Judah and the house of David. In Ro-
mans 1:3, the Apostle Paul affirms that Jesus “was descended from David according
to the flesh.” He would be fully divine and fully human. His humanity would come
from the line of David.
b. How does this prophecy communicate that the Messiah would be more than a man—that
He would be the eternal God?
2. In Isaiah 7:14 is found a prophecy that is quoted by Matthew as referring to both the incarna-
tion of Jesus Christ and the virgin birth (Matthew 1:22-23). What does this text predict?
NOTES: This prophecy most likely had its initial fulfillment in the birth of Isaiah’s son to the
prophetess (8:3), for it is said of the boy that before he would know how to cry out “My
father” or “My mother,” Judah’s enemies would have already begun to fall (8:4). However,
it also looks forward to a greater fulfillment in the person of the Messiah. Although Isaiah
used language that was appropriate for the immediate context, his prophecy is obviously
impregnated with meaning that goes far beyond any supposed complete fulfillment in his
time or in the time of his son. There are two Hebrew words that may be translated as “vir-
gin.” The first is almah, which refers to a virgin or a young woman of marriageable age; the
second is bethulah, which has no other meaning than “virgin.” It has often been speculated
why Isaiah used almah instead of bethulah, but the reason seems clear. The wisdom of the
Holy Spirit chose the Hebrew word that would be perfectly appropriate for both the par-
tial fulfillment in Isaiah’s time and the greater fulfillment in the Messiah. In Isaiah’s time, it
was a maiden who conceived by the natural means of intercourse and brought forth a son;
but in the greater fulfillment, it was a virgin who conceived by the Holy Spirit and brought
forth a Son who was both God and Man. It is important to note that when Jewish scribes
translated Isaiah 7:14 into the Greek language (the Septuagint LXX), they chose the Greek
phrase hē parthénos (i.e. the virgin) as a proper translation for the Hebrew word almah.
Matthew quotes from the Greek Septuagint in Matthew 1:22-23, employing the phrase hē
parthénos and giving testimony to the virgin birth of Jesus Christ. Those who would deny
the supernatural conception of the Messiah in the womb of the Virgin Mary cannot use
the New Testament for their support. The Gospel writers were unambiguous—Christ was
born of a virgin! In Matthew 1:23, the apostle gives us the proper translation of the title
“Immanuel”—“God with us.” In the immediate context of Isaiah 7:14, the name denotes
simply that the child’s birth would be God’s pledge and proof that He was with Judah and
would deliver them from the hands of their enemies—Israel and Syria. In reference to the
Messiah, and according to Matthew’s understanding, the name meant nothing less than
“the Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14).
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The Son Became a Man (Part One)
3. In Isaiah 9:6a, we are given one of the greatest Old Testament glimpses into the sheer wonder
and mystery of the coming Messiah. Read the text until you are familiar with its contents, and
then answer the following questions. How does this prophecy communicate the truth of the
incarnation—that the Messiah would be more than a man and that He would bear the fullness
of deity?
NOTES: The prophecy speaks of a real and natural human birth. Though conceived
supernaturally of the Holy Spirit in the womb of a virgin, the Messiah would be born
as any other human life entering into the world. Apart from some divine revelation,
no one would have recognized the infant in the manger to be the eternal and incom-
prehensible Son of God.
NOTES: Here we see behind the veil into the Holy of Holies of the Messiah’s person,
and we discover that He is both human and divine. The view from earth sees a child
born; but from heaven’s perspective, a Son is given! The baby born in time was the
eternal Son of God, given by the Father and sent from heaven.
c. How does this prophecy reveal the Messiah’s royalty and sovereignty?
NOTES: The mystery continues to unfold. The Child would take upon Himself the
totality of creation’s government. By His own power and wisdom, He would rule
the universe with absolute sovereignty. The responsibility of every realm would rest
upon His shoulders, and yet it would be to Him as a feather upon a rock of granite.
The requirements of such a government would be infinitely beyond the powers of
men or angels, but they would be nothing for the One who created all things and
upheld them by the word of His mouth (Hebrews 1:3). In all this, we have great
proof that the Messiah would be God incarnate. A work of such magnitude can only
be accomplished by the fullness of deity.
4. In Isaiah 9:6b, several names or titles are ascribed to the Messiah. What important truths do
they communicate to us about Him?
5. In the space remaining, summarize some of the most important truths revealed to us about
Christ through the Old Testament prophecies that we have just considered.
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The Son Became a Man (Part One)
IN THE FULLNESS OF TIME
The coming of the Son of God into the world of men is, beyond all doubt, the most significant
event in the history of mankind. It was clearly foretold in Old Testament Scriptures and occurred
at the precise moment ordained by the will of God. He did not come at random, but according to
God’s sovereign plan. This truth is especially revealed in Galatians 4:4-5:
“But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His Son, born
of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the
law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.”
This is a remarkable passage, and the phrase “the fullness of time” is replete with meaning.
Some may question the divine wisdom behind the great delay in sending the Savior. They may ar-
gue against the long wait that fell between the first promise of His coming (Genesis 3:15) and His
actual advent. However, the Scriptures teach that Christ came at the precise moment ordained by
God and at the very moment in human history when mankind was in greatest need.
It is important to note that the “fullness of time” indicates that Christ not only came at the
time of humanity’s greatest need, but that He also came at the time predicted by the Old Testa-
ment Scriptures and its prophecies concerning the Messiah. It can be clearly proven that the time
of the Messiah’s coming has passed. If Jesus of Nazareth was not the Messiah, then the Scriptures
have not been and cannot be fulfilled. Consider the following pertinent Old Testament prophe-
cies about the Messiah.
– According to Genesis 49:10, “The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the
ruler’s staff from between his feet, until tribute comes to him.” This promises
that a descendant of Judah would reign until the coming of the Messiah. In A.D.
70, the city of Jerusalem was destroyed, the political dominion and authority of
the Jews was taken away, and the nation was scattered. For nearly two millennia,
there has been no ruler from the tribe of Judah. If Jesus is not the Christ, then
God’s promise in Genesis 49:10 has failed, for the time is past, and the promise
can no longer be fulfilled.
– According to Daniel 9:24-27, the city of Jerusalem was to be rebuilt seven weeks
of years (i.e. forty-nine years) after the end of the captivity; and the Messiah
would appear sixty-two weeks of years (i.e. four hundred and thirty-four years)
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
after the rebuilding of Jerusalem. This prophecy coincides perfectly with the
life of Jesus. If Jesus is not the Christ, then God’s promise in Daniel 9:24-27 has
failed, for the time is past, and the promise can no longer be fulfilled.
– Malachi 3:1-3 teaches that the Messiah was to come while the second temple
was still standing. The second temple was destroyed in A.D. 70. If Jesus is not
the Christ, then this prophecy has failed, for the time is past, and the promise
can no longer be fulfilled.
– The Messiah was to be a son or descendant of David, and He was to come at
a time when the house of David was in low estate and held in contempt like a
tree that has been cut off to its very roots. In Isaiah 11:1, the Scriptures declare,
“There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch from his
roots shall bear fruit.” Jesus appeared as the Messiah in such a time. If He is not
the Messiah, then the Scriptures cannot be fulfilled, for even the root of Jesse
was “pulled up” at the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. At that time, all ge-
nealogical evidence was destroyed, and it would now be impossible to prove the
genealogy of any proposed “messiah.”
– According to Daniel 9:27, the Messiah would confirm the New Covenant and put
an end to the sacrificial system under the Old Covenant. The sacrificial system
ended with the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple in A.D. 70. If Jesus is
not the Christ, then the Old Testament sacrificial system has ended without the
coming of the Messiah.
– According to the prophets Amos and Isaiah (among others), the Messiah’s com-
ing was to be marked by the ingathering of the nations or Gentiles (Isaiah 2:2-3;
11:10; 42:1-6; 49:6; 60:3; Amos 9:11-12; see also Genesis 17:5; 49:10; Psalm 2:8;
22:27, 30; Zechariah 8:22; Acts 15:15-18). For nearly two thousand years (since
the death and resurrection of Jesus), countless multitudes of Gentiles from every
nation have identified themselves with the God of Israel and the Hebrew Scrip-
tures. This has no parallel in prior history.
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 6: The Son Became a Man
GOSPEL
Part Two: The New Testament Witness to the Incarnation
The incarnation of the Son of God through the virgin birth is an essential doctrine of the
Christian faith and the gospel. It is impossible to deny this doctrine without denying the clear tes-
timony of the Scriptures and the longstanding witness of the Church. If Christ’s conception was
not supernatural, then He was not God incarnate, the gospel is a lie, and the cross has no power
to save! For this reason, it is necessary for us to give close attention to this foundational doctrine
and to hold to it with absolute fidelity!
What does it mean to say that Jesus Christ is God incarnate or God in the flesh? It is ex-
tremely important that we understand that the Son of God did not cease to be God at the incar-
nation, nor did He take upon Himself an intermediate nature somewhere between God and man.
Instead, the Son of God became something He had never been before. He added humanity to His
deity and became the God-Man, one Person with two distinct, yet indivisible natures—divine and
human. He did not give up any of His divine attributes, but willingly submitted the use of them to
the Father’s will. He did not merely take the outward form of a man or simply appear as a man;
He became a real Man, like us in all ways, except without sin.
1. In Matthew 1:18-25 is found the first account of the miraculous conception of Jesus Christ.
What truth is declared in verse 20? What is its significance?
NOTES: The word “conceived” is translated from the Greek word gennáō, which means,
“to beget or engender.” It is the common term used to describe the conception of life in
the womb. It is the testimony of the Scriptures that Jesus had no earthly father, but was
conceived supernaturally of the Holy Spirit.
2. In Luke 1:26-38 is found an even more detailed explanation of the supernatural conception of
the Son of God. Read the text, and then answer the following questions.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
a. According to verse 34, what was Mary’s reaction to the angelic announcement that she
would be the mother of the Messiah? How does her reaction reinforce the truth that
Christ’s conception was supernatural?
NOTES: Mary’s virginity is declared five times in the Gospels: Matthew 1:23, 25; Luke
1:27 (twice), 34. Although one may reject the apostles’ testimony to the virgin birth, it
cannot be denied that it was their testimony. Mary’s question did not stem from unbe-
lief, but from the fact that she was a virgin. She wondered how conception could even
be possible.
b. What was the angel’s response in verse 35? What does it teach us about the miraculous
conception of Jesus?
NOTES: The same word “overshadow” [Greek: episkiázō] is used of the bright cloud
that overshadowed Peter, John, and James on the Mount of Transfiguration (Matthew
17:5; Mark 9:7; Luke 9:34). The language also reminds us of the creation account, when
the Spirit of God hovered over the waters (Genesis 1:2). Since the Holy Spirit was a pri-
mary agent in the creation of the universe, it would not be beyond His power to create
life in the womb of a virgin.
c. In verse 37, the angel Gabriel makes an important declaration about God. How is this
truth foundational to one’s belief in the miraculous conception of Jesus?
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The Son Became a Man (Part Two)
3. In John 1:14 is found one of the most powerful and beautiful texts regarding the incarnation.
Meditate upon the text until you are familiar with its meaning, and then write your thoughts
on each of the following phrases.
NOTES: The “Word” is a reference to the eternal Son of God (v.1). The verb “became”
indicates change or transition. The eternal Son was not always flesh, but “became”
flesh when conceived in Mary’s womb. Upon becoming flesh, He did not stop being
God; rather, He added humanity to His deity and became the God-Man. The word
“dwelt” comes from the Greek word skēnóō, which refers to dwelling in a tabernacle
or tent. In the incarnation, God “pitched His tent” or “tabernacled” among men.
b. And we have seen His glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and
truth.
NOTES: The word “glory” [Greek: dóxa] refers to the Son’s divine majesty. The word
“only” [Greek: monogenês] could be better translated as “the one and only.” To say
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
that Christ was full of grace and truth is an undeniable declaration of His deity, because
it ascribes to Him the fullness of two characteristics that are commonly ascribed only
to God (see Colossians 2:9).
4. In Philippians 2:6-8, the Apostle Paul takes us from the eternal existence of the Son of God
in glory, through the incarnation, to the cross of Calvary. Based upon this text, complete the
following declarations about the incarnation.
c. But E_________________________ Himself (v.7). In His incarnation, the Son laid aside
the glory and privileges of His deity and became a Man. It does not mean that He
became something less than God, but that He laid aside the glory and privileges that
were rightfully His as God (John 17:5).
5. In II Corinthians 8:9, we find one of the most beautiful texts in all of Scripture regarding the
incarnation of the Son of God. Write your thoughts on this verse.
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The Son Became a Man (Part Two)
NOTES: It is one thing for a rich man to take upon himself a vow of poverty and walk
among the poor. It is quite another thing for the very God of the universe to take on flesh
and live among the lowliest of men as one of them. We must remember that there was a
definite and certain redemptive purpose in the Son’s self-imposed poverty—He left the
glories of heaven so that we might enter in.
6. In I Timothy 3:16 is found one of the most concise and beautiful statements in all the Scrip-
tures regarding the incarnation. What does the Apostle Paul declare about the incarnation in
the first phrase of this text?
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 7: The Son Lived a Perfect Life
GOSPEL
It was not enough for the Son of God to become a Man; it was required that He live a life of
perfect obedience under the law of God. If He had been found guilty of even one violation of
the law in thought, disposition, word, or deed; He would have disqualified Himself as a sacrifice
for sin. For this reason, it is correct to say that without Christ’s perfect obedience throughout
the full course of His life, all other aspects of His life and ministry would be of no effect. Only
a perfectly obedient Second Adam could undo what the first Adam caused by his moral failure
(Romans 5:12-19). Only a Lamb unblemished and spotless could give His life for the sins of the
world (John 1:29; I Peter 1:19). Only the just could give Himself for the unjust that He might
bring them to God (I Peter 3:18). Only a sinless Savior could give His life as a ransom for many
(Mark 10:45).
1. Before we advance any further, we must consider Romans 8:3. What does it teach us about
Christ’s incarnation?
NOTES: In the incarnation, the Son of God did not take upon Himself the body of pre-fall
mankind; rather, He took a body that, though untainted by sin, was subject to all the ter-
rible consequences of our fallen race. As a Man, He was subject to the same limitations,
frailties, afflictions, and anguish of fallen humanity. It would have been a great humiliation
if He had taken the nature of humanity before the fall, when it was in its full glory and
strength. However, He was sent in the “likeness of sinful flesh”!
2. According to Luke 1:35, how is it that Jesus was conceived without the depraved Adamic na-
ture that has led to the moral ruin of the rest of the human race?
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The Son Lived a Perfect Life
NOTES: The word “holy” is the same word used of the Spirit. He was the “Holy Child”
(NASB) because He was conceived of the “Holy Spirit.”
3. In Scripture, a person’s name has great significance in that it often describes who he is and
reveals something about his character. What is the name given to the Christ in Acts 3:14, and
what does it teach us about His nature?
NOTES: Peter is quoting from Psalm 16:10. The word “holy” [Greek: hágios] refers
to one who is undefiled by sin, free from wickedness, and morally pure. The word
“righteous” [Greek: díkaios] denotes conformity to the nature and will of God. It is
significant that this title, which is ascribed uniquely to God in the Old Testament (Isaiah
24:16), is ascribed to Jesus three times in the book of Acts (Acts 3:14; 7:52; 22:14).
4. What does the Father testify concerning Jesus in Matthew 3:17? What does His testimony
communicate to us about Christ’s nature and deeds?
NOTES: This declaration is first found in the Messianic prophecy recorded in Isaiah 42:1. It
was declared at Christ’s baptism (Matthew 3:17; Mark 1:11; Luke 3:22) and transfiguration
(Matthew 17:5; Mark 9:7). God’s testimony concerning Christ proves His sinlessness. The
Most Holy can only delight in the Most Holy. The slightest sin would have turned God’s
smile to a frown.
5. According to the following texts, what did Jesus testify concerning Himself and His obedience
to the will of God?
a. John 8:29
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: The most amazing aspect of Christ’s claim is the adverb “always.” Fallen man
cannot even make a claim to periodic perfect obedience, but Christ claims an obedi-
ence that is not only perfect but also perpetual or unbroken. He was obedient, without
even the slightest flaw, throughout the entire course of His life.
b. John 17:4
NOTES: To claim perfection before men is a bold thing, but to do the same before God
is quite another. With full and unflinching confidence, Jesus stands before the Father
and claims perfect obedience in heart and deed. The best of God’s servants among
men cannot make the claim that Jesus made, but must admit, “We are unworthy ser-
vants; we have only done what was our duty” (Luke 17:10).
6. According to the Gospel accounts, even those who most opposed Christ were forced to rec-
ognize His righteousness. What do the following texts teach about this truth?
_____ Matthew 27:3-4 a. The thief saw that Christ had done nothing wrong.
_____ Matthew 27:19 b. Pilate’s wife called Christ a righteous man.
_____ Matthew 27:23-24; Luke 23:4 c. Judas recognized Christ’s innocence.
_____ Luke 23:39-41 d. The centurion testified that Christ was innocent.
_____ Luke 23:47 e. Pilate found no guilt in Christ.
7. In the following, we will consider some of the most important texts in the Epistles regarding
the sinlessness of Jesus. Summarize each text in your own words.
a. II Corinthians 5:21
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The Son Lived a Perfect Life
b. Hebrews 4:15
NOTES: Jesus was tempted in all things common to our frail human condition. In our
weakness, we usually fall before lesser temptations, and we are therefore rarely con-
fronted with greater ones. Christ prevailed over the lesser temptations common to all
and over the greatest that no other man has ever faced.
c. Hebrews 7:26
NOTES: The word “holy” [Greek: hósios] indicates the state of one who is undefiled by
sin, free from evil, and morally pure. The word “innocent” or “harmless” [Greek: áka-
kos] refers to one who is innocent of destructive evil or malice. The word “unstained”
[Greek: amíantos] can also be translated, “unsoiled” or “undefiled.” The phrase “sep-
arated from sinners” refers to the great distinction between Christ and mankind—He
was without sin.
d. I Peter 1:19
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: Christ’s blood was precious because He was the Lamb unblemished and spot-
less. The phrase “without blemish” [Greek: ámōmos] denotes that which is faultless
or without blame. The phrase “without spot” [Greek: áspilos] denotes that which is
“unsullied or unstained, free from censure or reproach.” According to the law, the sac-
rificial lamb had to be free from all defect (Leviticus 22:20-25; Numbers 6:14; 28:3, 9).
Thus the Christ had to be free from all sin.
e. I Peter 2:22
NOTES: This entire verse is taken from the Messianic prophecy found in the Septua-
gint’s version of Isaiah 53:9. It is a strong and clear declaration of the sinless perfec-
tion of the Lord Jesus Christ. In Scripture, the mouth or speech of an individual is an
indicator of the condition of the heart (Isaiah 6:5; Matthew 15:18). Christ’s speech was
without deceit because His heart was without deceit. James writes, “If anyone does not
stumble in what he says, he is a perfect man, able also to bridle his whole body” (James
3:2). The logic is simple: Jesus did not stumble in what He said because He was perfect.
f. I John 3:5
NOTES: Christ knew no sin (II Corinthians 5:21), and in Him there was no sin (I John 3:5).
38
DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 8: The Son Bore Our Sin
GOSPEL
The cross of Christ brings to mind the insults and physical pain He suffered. To die on a cross
was the worst of all humiliations and tortures. Nevertheless, the physical pain and shame heaped
upon Christ by men were not the most important aspects of the cross. We are saved not merely
because men beat him with whips and nailed Him to a cross. We are saved because He bore our
sin and was crushed under God’s judgment.
“But when he heard that Archelaus was reigning over Judea in place
of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there, and being warned in a
dream he withdrew to the district of Galilee.” (Matthew 2:22)
“Even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to
give His life as a ransom for many.” (Matthew 20:28)
“For this is My blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many
for the forgiveness of sins.” (Matthew 26:28)
“In this is love, not that we loved God but that He loved us and sent
His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.” (I John 4:10)
1
See also Mark 10:45 for another example of the use of this preposition.
2
See also I John 2:2 for another example of the use of this preposition.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
Christ Died “on behalf of” His People
The Greek preposition hupér (or hypér) is employed with regard to the death of Christ on
the cross for His people.3 The preposition means, “on behalf of.”
“I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down His life for
the sheep.” (John 10:11)
“And He died for all, that those who live might no longer live for
themselves but for Him who for their sake died and was rasied.”
(II Corinthians 5:15)
“For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrigh-
teous…” (I Peter 3:18)
“For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though He was
rich, yet for your sake He became poor, so that you by His poverty
might become rich.” (II Corinthians 8:9)
1. In the Old Testament, the sacrificing of animals in the place of God’s people was only a shad-
ow or type that pointed to and found its ultimate fulfillment in Christ. Nevertheless, these
animal sacrifices provide an excellent illustration of how Christ bore the sins of God’s people
and offered His own life as a sacrifice in their place. Read Leviticus 16:21-22; explain how it
relates to the sacrifice of Christ.
3
See also Mark 14:24; Romans 5:6, 8; Galatians 3:13; Ephesians 5:2; I Timothy 2:6; Titus 2:14; and I John 3:16 for more
examples of the use of this preposition.
40
The Son Bore Our Sin
NOTES: Since it was impossible for a single offering to fully typify or illustrate the twofold
purpose of the Messiah’s atoning death, an offering involving two sacrificial goats was put
before the people (Leviticus 16:5-10). The first goat was slain as a sin offering before the
Lord, and its blood was sprinkled on and in front of the Mercy Seat, behind the veil in the
Holy of Holies (vv.9, 15, 20). It is a wonderful illustration of Christ’s death as a propitia-
tion—He shed His blood to satisfy the justice of God, appease His wrath, and bring peace.
The second goat was presented before the Lord as the scapegoat (v.10). Upon the head of
this animal, the High Priest laid “both his hands…and confess[ed] over it all the iniquities
of the people of Israel, and all their transgressions, all their sins” (v.21). The scapegoat was
then sent away into the wilderness, bearing on itself all the iniquities of the people into
a solitary land (vv.21-22). It typified Christ, who “bore our sins in His body on the tree” (I
Peter 2:24) and suffered and died alone “outside the gate” (Hebrews 13:11-12). It is a won-
derful illustration of Christ’s death as an expiation—He carried away our sin. The psalmist
wrote, “As far as the east is from the west, so far does He remove our transgressions from
us” (Psalm 103:12).
2. The sacrifices in the Old Testament were only shadows or types that pointed to and found
their ultimate fulfillment in Christ. He is the great Sin-Bearer who offered His life for our sins.
What do the following Scriptures teach us about this truth?
a. Isaiah 53:6
NOTES: The Lord [Hebrew: Yahweh] imputed the sins of His people to His only begot-
ten Son. The word “laid” indicates falling upon or striking. The sins of God’s people
fell upon the Christ with an overwhelming, rushing violence, as an attacking army or a
sudden and relentless storm (see also Isaiah 53:11-12).
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
b. II Corinthians 5:21
NOTES: Christ was made sin in the same way that the believer is made “the righteous-
ness of God.” The moment a person believes in Jesus, he is pardoned of his sin, and the
righteousness of Christ is imputed to him or placed in his account. God legally declares
the believer to be righteous and treats him as righteous. When Christ hung upon the
cross, He did not actually become corrupt or unrighteous; but God imputed our sins to
Him, legally declared Him to be guilty, and treated Him as guilty.
c. Hebrews 9:27-28
NOTES: The purpose of Christ’s incarnation and death was that He might bear the sins
of His people. The word “bear” comes from the Greek word anaphérō, which means
literally, “to lift up.”
d. I Peter 2:24
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The Son Bore Our Sin
NOTES: The word “bore” comes from the Greek word anaphérō, which means literally,
“to lift up.” The cross was the cruelest instrument of torture ever conceived by de-
praved humanity, yet this was the altar upon which the Son of God made His sacrifice.
The purpose of Christ’s death on the cross was not only to restore us to a right rela-
tionship with God, but also to enable us by the power of God to die to sin and live to
righteousness. Peter quotes Isaiah 53:5, not with reference to physical healing, but to
healing from sin and its consequences.
3. To conclude this section, we will consider John 3:14-15, a very important passage. What does
this text teach us about Christ bearing the sins of His people?
NOTES: Jesus’ words must be understood in the context of Numbers 21:5-9. Because of
Israel’s nearly constant rebellion against the Lord and their rejection of His gracious provi-
sions, God sent “fiery serpents” among the people, and many died. However, as a result
of the people’s repentance and Moses’ intercession, God once again made provision for
their salvation. He commanded Moses to “make a fiery serpent and set it on a pole.” He
then promised that each person who was bitten, when he looked at this bronze serpent,
would live. The narrative provides a powerful picture of the cross. The Israelites were dying
from the venom of the fiery serpents; men die from the venom of their own sin. Moses was
commanded to place the cause of death high upon a pole; God placed the cause of our
death upon His own Son as He hung high upon a cross. He had come “in the likeness of
sinful flesh” (Romans 8:3) and was made “for our sake...to be sin” (II Corinthians 5:21). The
Israelite who believed God and looked upon the brazen serpent would live; the man who
believes God’s testimony concerning His Son and looks upon Him with faith will be saved
(I John 5:10-11).
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 9: The Son Became a Curse
GOSPEL
In the preceding lesson, we learned that Christ was “made to be sin” on our behalf. In this
lesson, we will consider the equally incomprehensible doctrine that Christ became a curse for us.
The Scriptures clearly teach that all who have sinned are under the curse of the law. To save us,
the Son of God became a Man, bore our guilt, and became a curse in our place.
1. What does Galatians 3:10 teach us about sinful, fallen man’s position before God?
NOTES: The phrase, “For all who rely on works of the law are under a curse,” is a refer-
ence to those who are depending upon their own moral virtue, personal righteousness, or
obedience to the law of God to make them acceptable before God. The Scriptures declare
that all such individuals are under a curse because the law requires a perfect and unbroken
obedience that no man has ever accomplished. The word “curse” comes from the Greek
word katára, which may also be translated, “imprecation,” “malediction,” or “execration.”
It denotes a violent denouncing of something or someone with intense disgust, loathing,
or hatred. From heaven’s perspective, those who break God’s law are vile and worthy of all
loathing; they are justly exposed to divine vengeance and devoted to eternal destruction.
Although such language is offensive to the world and even to many who consider them-
selves to be Christians, it is biblical language, and it must be stated. If for etiquette’s sake
we refuse to explain and illustrate these hard truths of Scripture, then God will not be held
as holy, men will not understand their dreadful predicament, and the price paid by Christ will
never be truly appreciated. Unless we comprehend what it means for man to be under the
divine curse, we will never comprehend what it meant for Christ to “become a curse for us.”
We will never fully understand the horror and beauty of what was done for us on Calvary!
2. According to Galatians 3:13, what has Christ done to redeem us from the curse?
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The Son Became a Curse
NOTES: The word “redeemed” comes from the Greek word exagorázō, which means,
“to buy or make payment in order to recover something or someone from the power of
another.” It was often used with regard to the buying of freedom for a debtor or slave. To
accomplish this on behalf of His people, Christ took upon Himself our sin and became the
object of divine malediction. He was violently denounced as guilty and felt the full displea-
sure of the holy God against sin. He came under the severest sort of divine judgment and
condemnation for our sake.
3. The divine curse is the antonym (i.e. it carries the opposite meaning) of divine blessing. In
the Beatitudes of Matthew 5:3-12, we discover several descriptions of what it means to be
blessed before God. By identifying these blessings and then considering their antonyms (or
opposites), we can learn something of what it meant for Christ to become a curse in our
place.
a. The blessed are granted the K__________________________ of heaven (v.3), but the
cursed are refused entrance.
b. The blessed are C___________________________ by God (v.4), but the cursed are ob-
jects of divine wrath.
c. The blessed I____________________________ the earth (v.5), but the cursed are cut off
from it.
d. The blessed are S_____________________________ (v.6), but the cursed are miserable
and wretched.
e. The blessed receive M_______________________ (v.7), but the cursed are condemned
without pity.
f. The blessed shall see G__________________ (v.8), but the cursed are cut off from His
presence.
g. The blessed are S___________________ of God (v.9), but the cursed are disowned in
disgrace.
NOTES: On the cross of Calvary, Christ bore the sins of His people and suffered the
full force of the divine curse. He was forsaken of God (Matthew 27:46) and drank the
cup of divine wrath in the place of His people (Matthew 26:39, 42; Psalm 75:8; Jere-
miah 25:15-16). He bore our sorrows and was stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted
(Isaiah 53:4). For our sakes, the Lord was pleased to crush Him, putting him to grief
(Isaiah 53:10).
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
4. In Numbers 6:24-26, we find one of the most beautiful promises of blessing that has ever
been given by God to man. However, this blessing presents us with a great theological
problem. How can a righteous God grant such blessing to a sinful people without compro-
mising His righteousness? The answer again is found in the cross of Christ! The sinner can
be blessed only because Christ was cursed in his place! Any and every blessing from God
that has ever been granted or ever will be granted to His people is only because Christ be-
came a curse for us on the cross. By identifying each blessing in Numbers 6:24-26 and then
considering the antonyms, we can learn something of what it meant for Christ to become a
curse in our place.
a. The Lord B_________________ you and K_________________ you (v.24). This is only
possible because the Father made Christ a curse and gave Him over to destruction.
b. The Lord make His face to S_______________ upon you and be G___________________
to you (v.25). This is only possible because the Father took the light of His presence
away from Christ and condemned Him with perfect justice and without pity.
c. The Lord lift up His countenance upon you and give you P__________________ (v.26).
This is only possible because the Father turned His face from Christ and poured out
His wrath upon Him. The Psalmist describes “the blessed” as those who are made
joyful with gladness in God’s presence (Psalm 21:6), who know the joyful sound of
the festal shout, and who walk in the light of His countenance (Psalm 89:15). For our
sakes, Christ was made sorrowful with the absence of His Father’s presence, He came
to know the terrifying sound of judgment’s trumpet, and He hung in the darkness of
God’s unbearable frowning countenance. Because of Adam’s fateful choice, the entire
creation groaned under the curse and was enslaved to corruption and futility (Romans
8:20-22). To liberate creation, Christ (the Last Adam) took upon Himself the sins of His
people and groaned under the dreadful yoke. We have peace with God (Romans 5:1)
only because Christ suffered the full force of God’s war against our sin on the cross of
Calvary.
5. In Psalm 32:1-2 (see also Romans 4:7-8), how does David describe the man who is truly blessed
by God? How is such blessing possible?
6. In Deuteronomy 27 and 28, God divided the nation of Israel into two separate camps. He
placed one camp on Mount Gerizim and the other on Mount Ebal. Those on Mount Gerizim
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The Son Became a Curse
were commanded to declare the blessings that would come upon all who diligently obeyed
the Lord their God (Deuteronomy 28:1-14). Those on Mount Ebal were commanded to declare
the horrific curses of divine judgment that would fall upon all who disobeyed (Deuteronomy
28:15-68).
a. In light of what the Scriptures teach with regard to our sin, which of the two mountains
most pertains to us? In light of our deeds, should divine blessings or divine curses be
pronounced upon us? Explain your answer.
b. In Deuteronomy 29:20-21, God restates and summarizes the judgments that were to be
declared from Mount Ebal. According to this text, what does God declare against any-
one who disobeys His law and breaks covenant with God?
c. How does Christ’s suffering and death on Calvary save us from such judgment?
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: At Calvary, the Messiah was “singled out” for adversity, and “the curses writ-
ten” in the book of the law fell upon Him. Though Christ had every right to the bless-
ings of Gerizim, it was from Mount Ebal that His own Father thundered against Him
as He hung from Calvary’s tree. He was cursed as a man who makes an idol and sets it
up in secret. He was cursed as one who dishonors his father or mother, who moves his
neighbor’s boundary mark, or who misleads a blind person on the road. He was cursed
as one who distorts the justice due an alien, orphan, or widow. He was cursed as one
who is guilty of every manner of immorality and perversion, as one who wounds his
neighbor in secret or accepts a bribe to strike down the innocent. He was cursed as
one who does not confirm the words of the law by doing them (Deuteronomy 27:15-
26). Proverbs 26:2 declares, “A curse that is causeless does not alight.” However, the
curse did alight upon sinless Christ, because He bore the sins of His people before the
judgment bar of God.
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Chapter 10: The Son Suffered
GOSPEL
the Wrath of God
In the previous two chapters, we have discovered that Christ bore our sin and our curse before
God as He hung on the cross. In this chapter, we will learn that Christ bore our sin in order that
He might suffer God’s wrath against it. In doing so, He would satisfy the demands of God’s justice
and make it possible for God to be both just and the justifier of sinful men (Romans 3:25-26).
2. According to Isaiah 59:2, how does sin affect God’s relationship with man? Can God have fel-
lowship with the wicked?
NOTES: Man’s continued fallen state and misery is not due to some deficiency in God.
It is man’s sin that creates the great abyss between him and God; it is sin that builds the
impenetrable wall. The true culprit of man’s misery is man himself—because of his enmity
toward God’s person and his rebellion against God’s law.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
3. How is the sinner described in Ephesians 2:12?
a. S___________________________ from Christ. From the Greek word chōrís, which de-
notes separation and independence. The sinner lives in separation or independence
from the Giver of all life, joy, and peace.
b. A___________________________ from the commonwealth of Israel. From the Greek
word apallotrióō, which means, “to alienate or estrange.” The sinner is estranged from
God’s people.
c. S____________________________ to the covenants of promise. From the Greek word
xénos, which denotes an alien or foreigner. The sinner is a stranger to all the promises
of God.
d. Having no H_______________ and without G______________ in the world. This is possi-
bly the most terrifying result of man’s sin.
4. The sin of God’s people stood as an impenetrable wall that made fellowship with God im-
possible. To mend this great separation between God and His people, Christ stood in our
place, bore our sin, and was forsaken of God. He suffered estrangement from God and was
cut off from His favorable presence until the penalty was paid. How is this truth illustrated in
Matthew 27:45-46?
NOTES: The cry of Jesus from the cross is recorded here in Hebrew and Aramaic. Eli is
Hebrew, but the rest is Aramaic. Mark records the entire lament in Aramaic (Mark 15:34).
The word “forsaken” is translated from the Greek word egkataleípō, which means, “to
abandon, to desert, or to leave in the straits.”
5. In Matthew 27:46, Jesus was quoting from the words of David in Psalm 22:1-18. Read this text
in full, and then answer the following questions.
a. What was the cry or complaint of the Christ in verses 1-2? What does it mean?
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The Son Suffered the Wrath of God
NOTES: The word “forsaken” comes from the Hebrew word azab, which means, “to
leave, desert, abandon, or forsake.” In his time of trial, David sensed something of the
absence of God; but only Christ experienced the full measure of total abandonment.
The word “groaning” comes from the Hebrew word shehagah, which literally denotes
a “roaring” like that of a lion. Christ’s cries of anguish from the cross broke forth as
terrible roars. His seeking was relentless; His cry was incessant; His anguish was beyond
measure. But the heavens were like bronze. There was no response from God; there
was only silence and the absence of His favorable presence. We were separated from
God because of our sin. To end this separation and bring us back into the favorable
presence of God, it was necessary that Christ suffer the terrible forsakenness of God
that we deserved.
b. According to the words of the Christ in verses 3 and 6, why did God forsake or turn
away from Him?
NOTES: Though He was the perfect Man, He had been made sin (II Corinthians
5:21) and had become a curse (Galatians 3:13). Though He was the Lamb without
spot (I Peter 1:19), He had become the serpent lifted up in the wilderness (John
3:14), a worm and not a man. Though all the blessings of Mount Gerazim should
have been lavished upon Him, all the judgments of Mount Ebal were poured out
on His head.
NOTES: The word “indignation” comes from the Hebrew verb zaám, which means, “to
denounce, to express indignation, or to be angry toward what one abhors.” Being holy
and righteous, God must abhor and come with wrath against all that contradicts His na-
ture and will. God’s indignation is as much a part of His character as His love or His mercy.
If a man continues in his opposition to the person and will of God, then God’s righteous
wrath is certain. The references to the bent bow and the sharpened sword denote the
readiness of God to judge. Preparations have been made: His sword is sharpened, His
bow is strung, and His arrows are set aflame. The Captain of the hosts of heaven has
prepared for holy war. Only the forbearance of God keeps His wrath from breaking forth
upon the world.
2. In Psalm 7:11-13, the psalmist assures us that the wrath of God is a biblical reality, and he
employs metaphors such as the war bow and the sharpened sword to communicate its se-
verity. Whenever the justice and holiness of God are confronted by the evil of man, the result
is divine indignation and wrath. To save us from the sword of God’s justice, it was necessary
that God’s own Son take the blow on our behalf. What does God command His sword to do
in Zechariah 13:7? Against whom is the command given? What does this tell us about the suf-
fering of Christ on Calvary?
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The Son Suffered the Wrath of God
NOTES: The sword is a reference to God’s judgment as in Psalm 7:11-13. The phrase “My
shepherd” refers to the Messiah. He is the Good Shepherd (John 10:11, 14), as opposed to
the foolish shepherd of Zechariah 11:15-17. The phrase “the man who stands next to me”
is translated from the Hebrew word amith, which denotes a companion, friend, or neigh-
bor or “Associate” (NASB). With reference to Christ, the term takes on special meaning.
He is the Father’s Son, Associate, and intimate Companion. He and the Father are One
(John 10:30). The Son’s death was an act of God’s sovereign will. It was the Father who
called His sword to awake against His Son. Matthew quotes this text in Matthew 26:31
with reference to the death of Christ and the scattering of His disciples.
3. In Isaiah 53, we find a graphic portrayal of Christ’s sufferings under the wrath of God for the
sins of God’s people. According to the following Scriptures, Christ was:
4. Christ’s prayer in Gethsemane prior to His arrest and crucifixion is related to us in the Gospels.
Possibly no other event in the life of Christ so clearly demonstrates the terrible suffering un-
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
der the wrath of God that awaited Him on the cross of Calvary. What do the events recorded
in Luke 22:41-44 communicate to us about the suffering that awaited Christ on Calvary?
NOTES: The unspeakable suffering that awaited Christ on Calvary can be clearly inferred
from the following observations: (1) Christ’s petition to have the cup of suffering removed
from Him; (2) the presence of angels to strengthen Christ in preparation for the cross;
(3) the fact that Christ wrestled in prayer with great fervency and agony (the word “agony”
comes from the Greek word agōnía, which was often used with reference to gymnastic
exercises or wrestling; it can also be translated, “anguish”); and (4) the fact that Christ was
sweating drops of blood. The medical term for this last point is hermatidrosis. It occurs
when blood actually mingles with perspiration during times of terrible mental anguish or
physical suffering.
5. What horrible thing did the cup contain that moved Christ to pray three times in anguish that
He might not have to drink from it? It was not merely the cruelties that would be heaped upon
Him by the hands of evil men; it was the wrath of God! The following Scriptures represent
God’s wrath as poured out from a cup, indicating that this wrath is what Christ had to drink on
the cross. Summarize each text in your own words.
a. Psalm 11:5-6
NOTES: As blessing is the cup or portion of the righteous (Psalms 23:5), so wrath is
the cup or portion appointed for the wicked. It is a terrible cup and contains a deadly
potion. Upon the cross, the Son of God took the cup that belonged to God’s people
and drank it down to the dregs.
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The Son Suffered the Wrath of God
b. Psalm 75:8
NOTES: It is God who ordains and prepares wrath for the wicked. The word “dregs”
comes from the Hebrew word shemer, which may also be translated, “lees.” It refers to
the sediment or settlings at the bottom of a wine bottle. Every drop will be swallowed
down by the wicked until they are filled with the bitter sediments at the very bottom of
the cup. Upon the cross, the Son of God stood in place of God’s people, took the cup
of wrath from the hand of God, and drank down every drop. The cup containing the
wrath of God against sin was drained out on Him.
6. Having considered the terrible wrath that Christ suffered upon the cross, we must once again
emphasize that His suffering was the very will of God and the means by which salvation was
provided for God’s people. What does Isaiah 53:10 teach us about this truth?
NOTES: The title “Lord” is translated from the Hebrew word Yahweh (or Jehovah). It is
a reference to God Himself. According to Acts 2:23, Christ was delivered up “by the pre-
determined plan and foreknowledge of God.” The phrase “will of the Lord” is translated,
in part, from the Hebrew word chaphets, which means, “to delight in, be pleased with, or
desire.” The Father did not obtain some sadistic pleasure from crushing His own Son under
the full weight of His wrath; but through Christ’s suffering and death, the will of God was
accomplished, the way of salvation was opened for His people, and thereby the Father was
pleased. The word “crush” comes from the Hebrew word daka, which means, “to crush,
smite, or break in pieces.” Christ was crushed by the Father and put to grief so that His peo-
ple might be saved through His suffering and death.
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DISCOVERING
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Chapter 11: The Son Died
GOSPEL
The incredible suffering that Christ endured on Calvary was not enough to pay for our sins.
The wages of sin is death; therefore, it was also necessary that Christ die.
1. According to Romans 5:12, how did death enter into the world that God had made?
NOTES: The “one man” is a reference to Adam. It is the clear witness of the Scriptures
that death is not a natural phenomenon, but a result of the judgment of God against sin.
It entered into the world through Adam’s sin and has passed on to every one of Adam’s
descendants because of sin (see also verses 15 and 17).
2. We must understand that death is not just a natural consequence of sin from which God is
far removed. According to the Scriptures, the death of each man is in accordance with the
sovereign decree of God. He has not only appointed the day of every man’s death, but He
Himself will also bring it to fruition. What do Deuteronomy 32:39, I Samuel 2:6, and Hebrews
9:27 teach us about this truth?
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The Son Died
3. Throughout the Scriptures, death is seen as the result of man’s sin. Whether it is the imputed
sin of Adam or the personal unrighteousness of every person, the principle is the same: all
men die because all men sin. What do the following Scriptures teach us about this truth?
a. Ezekiel 18:4, 20
b. Romans 6:23
4. In Isaiah 64:6, the relationship between death and man’s sin is illustrated in poetic fashion.
Read the text until you are familiar with its contents. How is man’s moral corruption described?
What are the inevitable consequences of man’s moral corruption and active pursuit of sin?
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
THE NECESSITY OF CHRIST’S DEATH
We have violated God’s law and deserve death and hell. Our pardon is impossible unless the
penalty for our sins is paid and the just demands of God’s law are satisfied. This is the heart of
the gospel of Jesus Christ. He carried our sin and died in our place, suffering the punishment
demanded by a holy God and His righteous law.
1. On the cross, Christ bore our sin and suffered under the wrath of God as our Substitute. His
death satisfied the demands of the law that we had violated, and it made our pardon possible.
The following summary from the Scriptures will help us to understand this truth.
b. We were under a C____________________ for our sin (Galatians 3:10), but Christ re-
(Isaiah 59:2), but on the cross, Christ was F_______________________ in our place (Mat-
thew 27:46).
d. We deserved the punishment and wrath of a holy God, but on the cross, Christ was
cross, Christ S__________________ for our sins, the R_____________________ for the
2. In I Corinthians 15:1-4, we find the most complete and concise definition of the gospel in the
Scriptures. According to this text, what are the three main elements of the biblical gospel?
a. Christ D______________ for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures (v.3). Here we see
that it was necessary not only that Christ suffer the wrath of God upon Calvary, but
also that He actually die for our sins.
b. Christ was B_________________ (v.4). It would be wrong to see this as nothing more
than a transitional phrase connecting Christ’s death and resurrection. Christ’s burial is
mentioned in order to add emphasis to the reality of His death. He really was buried
because He really did die.
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The Son Died
c. Christ was R_____________________ on the third day according to the Scriptures (v.4).
The resurrection of Jesus Christ should never be tacked on to the end of our gospel
presentation as though it were an afterthought or a nonessential. In the book of Acts,
the proclamation of the resurrection is given priority!
3. All four Gospel writers are careful to narrate the death of Jesus. Even though their de-
scriptions are concise, they are nonetheless certain. Read each of the following accounts:
Matthew 27:50; Mark 15:37; Luke 23:46; John 19:30. What are some of the major thoughts
communicated?
NOTES: In the Gospel accounts, there are two things that are being communicated: (1)
the reality of Christ’s death—the wages of sin is death, and Christ paid that penalty for His
people by dying in their place—and (2) Christ’s sovereignty over His death—He yielded or
gave up His spirit (Matthew 27:50; John 19:30); He committed His spirit into the hands of
His Father (Luke 23:46). Christ did not die as an unwilling martyr; rather, He willingly gave
His life as an atoning sacrifice in His people’s place.
4. The following verses are some of the most important in Scripture with regard to Christ’s death
and its significance for His people. Summarize the meaning of each text in your own words.
a. Romans 5:6
b. Romans 5:8
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
c. Romans 5:10
6. We will conclude this lesson with a view of heaven and eternity. According to Revelation 5:8-10,
what will be the great song of angels and the redeemed throughout all the ages?
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Chapter 12: Christ Our Propitiation
GOSPEL
The word “propitiation” comes from the Latin verb propiciare, which means, “to propiti-
ate, appease, or make favorable.” In the English New Testament, the word “propitiation” is
translated from the Greek word hilasmós, which refers to a sacrifice that satisfies the demands
of God’s justice and appeases His wrath. To fully understand the meaning and significance of
propitiation, we will review some of the central truths we have already learned in previous
chapters.
In the Scriptures, the greatest of all dilemmas is set before us: God is righteous; therefore,
He must act according to the strictest rules of justice, acquitting the innocent and condemning
the guilty. If He pardons the guilty and does not punish every infraction of the law and every act
of disobedience, then He is unjust. However, if He does act with justice toward every man and
gives to every man exactly what he deserves, then all men will be condemned. This brings us to
one of the greatest questions in all the Scriptures: “How can God be just and yet show mercy to
those who ought to be condemned?” Or, as we previously rephrased the words of the Apostle
Paul in Romans 3:26, “How can God be just and the justifier of sinful men?”
The answer to these questions is found in the word “propitiation” as it relates to the gospel
of Jesus Christ. The same God who in righteousness condemns the wicked became a Man and
died in place of the wicked. God did not ignore, forego, or pervert the demands of His justice
in order to justify the wicked; but He satisfied the demands of divine justice against them and
appeased His own wrath through the suffering and death of His Son. Christ is our propitiation
in that His sacrifice has made it possible for a holy and just God to be merciful toward us and
pardon our offenses against Him.
Commercial Satisfaction: The debt is satisfied only when the exact amount is paid.
A debt of $50 is not satisfied by a payment of $25, nor can a debt of ten ounces of
gold be satisfied with a payment of the same weight in clay.
Forensic or Penal Satisfaction: The debt is satisfied when the criminal serves the
sentence decreed by the judge. The sentence is not required to be of the same na-
ture as the crime. All that is required is that it should be a just equivalent. For theft,
it may be a fine; for murder, imprisonment; and for treason, banishment.
From the above illustrations, it is evident that Christ’s sufferings were not commercial, but
forensic or penal in nature. Christ did not pay the exact penalty under which His people were
condemned—He did not suffer eternal condemnation in hell. But His sufferings were exactly what
a holy and just God determined should be paid in order to satisfy divine justice and release the
guilty from the penalty of sin.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
SATISFACTION AND CHRIST’S INFINITE VALUE
Whenever reference is made to Christ’s satisfaction of the demands of divine justice, it is
also necessary to consider the doctrine of the infinite worth of Jesus Christ. How can one Man
suffering on a cross for a few hours make payment for the sins of a nearly countless multitude
of sinners and save them from an eternity of suffering in hell? How can the life of that one Man
satisfy the justice of an absolutely holy God? The answer is found in the nature of the One who
suffered and died. Since the Son of God was the fullness of deity in bodily form (Colossians 2:9),
His life was of infinite worth—of infinitely greater worth than all those for whom He died. This is
one of the most beautiful truths in all of Scripture.
1. What do the following texts teach us about Christ as the propitiation for our sins?
a. I John 2:2
NOTES: The word “propitiation” comes from the Greek word hilasmós (see defini-
tion in the introduction to this chapter). The sacrifice of Christ was not limited to the
Jews, but also includes a people from every tribe and tongue and people and nation
(Revelation 5:9).
b. I John 4:10
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Christ Our Propitiation
NOTES: The word “propitiation” comes from the Greek word hilasmós. God’s moti-
vation for sending His Son was His sovereign and unconditional love for His people,
which is totally independent of their merit or worth. The ultimate seal or proof of
God’s love is the propitiating death of His Son for us.
c. Hebrews 2:17
NOTES: The phrase “make propitiation” comes from the Greek word hiláskomai, the
verb form of the noun hilasmós. To give help to men, the Son of God had to take
upon Himself their nature. It was necessary for a man to die for men (Hebrews 10:4),
and only the God-Man could both represent God before man and represent man be-
fore God.
2. Like no other text in the Scriptures, Romans 3:23-28 explains the meaning of Christ’s death as
the propitiation for our sins. Write your comments on each of the following phrases.
NOTES: The phrase “put forward” comes from the Greek word protíthemai, which
means, “to place before or expose to public view.” It was God’s decree that His Son
be publically crucified in order to clearly reveal His righteousness to all. Here, the
word “propitiation” comes from the Greek word hilastêrion, which refers to a sacri-
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
fice made to expiate, appease, or placate wrath and to obtain favor from an offended
party. On the cross, God displayed His Son before the whole world as the propitiation
for sin.
NOTES: The most natural interpretation of this phrase is that the benefits of Christ’s
propitiation are received by faith. We are reconciled to God through faith in Christ and
His sacrificial (bloody) death on our behalf.
c. This was to show God’s righteousness, because in His divine forbearance He had passed
over former sins (v.25).
NOTES: The great purpose behind God’s public display of His Son’s death was to
demonstrate or prove His righteousness. But why was such a demonstration necessary?
The clause cited above reveals to us the answer: “because in His divine forbearance He
had passed over former sins.” The mercy and forbearance that God has demonstrated
toward sinful humanity since the fall of Adam would seem to cast doubt upon His claim
to be righteous. Adam and Eve deserved death, but they were granted life; the entire
world should have been destroyed during the time of the flood, but sinful Noah and
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Christ Our Propitiation
his family were spared; Israel’s constant rebellion against the law of God should have
resulted in the nation’s destruction; David should not have been forgiven his crimes of
adultery and murder. How then can God be righteous and yet demonstrate mercy to
those who should be condemned? The answer to this question is found in the suffering
and death of Christ. God’s long forbearance of His people’s sin since the fall of Adam
was not the result of His apathy or unrighteousness, but was founded upon the future
coming of Christ to die for their sin. The mercy, forbearance, and pardon that God
lavished upon Old Testament saints who believed in Him were possible only because
Christ would come and die for them all! God’s past, present, and future mercies are all
possible because of the death of Christ. “Although the work of redemption was not ac-
tually wrought by Christ until after His incarnation, yet the virtue, efficacy, and benefits
thereof were communicated unto the elect in all ages successively from the beginning
of the world.”4
d. It was to show His righteousness at the present time, so that He might be just and the
justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus (v.26).
NOTES: In the suffering and death of Jesus Christ on Calvary, every obstacle that would
prohibit a righteous God from forgiving His sinful people has been swept away. God
demonstrated His righteousness by punishing the sins of His people, satisfying the
demands of His justice and appeasing His wrath. He made a way of salvation for His
people by standing in their place, bearing their sin, and extinguishing the wrath that
was due them in His own body. For this reason, God can justify His people with no con-
tradiction to His own holiness and righteousness.
4
Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter VIII, Article 6
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 13: Christ Our Redemption
GOSPEL
Three of the most important and beautiful words used in the Scriptures to describe God’s
work of salvation through Jesus Christ are redeem, ransom, and redemption. In the previous
chapter, we considered at length the biblical truth of propitiation. Our present consideration of
redemption is no less important to our understanding of the cross. Both truths are foundational
to biblical Christianity and are to be proclaimed and defended.
1. Christ is the Redeemer of His people, and His very life was the ransom that He paid. What do
the following Scriptures teach us about this truth?
a. Christ came to give His life as a R___________________ for many (Matthew 20:28). From
the Greek word lútron, which is derived from the verb lúō (“to loose”). It was used
with regard to the loosening of clothing, armor, bonds, and so forth. In the context of
Matthew 20:28, it refers to the price paid for redeeming a slave or captive. The ransom
that Christ paid for His people’s redemption was His own life.
b. Christ gave Himself as a R______________________ for all (I Timothy 2:5-6). The word
comes from the Greek word antílutron, which refers to the price that is paid in ex-
change for the freedom of another. The phrase, “the testimony given at the proper
time,” refers to the fact that Christ came and gave Himself as a ransom according to
the perfect will of God and at the divinely appointed time in history.
2. The following texts are two of the most beautiful Scriptures that deal with the price that was
paid to redeem God’s people. Summarize their truths in your own words.
a. Acts 20:28
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Christ Our Redemption
NOTES: Christ did not just redeem the Church; He redeemed her for Himself. The
Church is here called the “church of God, which He [God] obtained with His own
blood.” This is a strong reference to the deity of Christ. The Man who shed His blood
on Calvary was the fullness of deity in bodily form (Colossians 2:9). The blood He gave
for our redemption was of infinite value.
b. I Peter 1:18-19
NOTES: The word “precious” comes from the Greek word tímios, which refers to some-
thing of great price, something worthy of honor and esteem, or something especially
dear. The precious blood of Christ stands in stark contrast to all the perishable things
that men might attempt to offer for their redemption. The phrase “without blemish”
comes from the Greek word ámōmos, which denotes that which is faultless and without
blame. The phrase “without spot” comes from the Greek word áspilos, which denotes
that which is unsullied, irreproachable, and without censure.
3. What do the following Scriptures teach us about our redemption? Is it an accomplished fact?
Has our sin debt been paid in full?
a. John 19:30
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: The words “It is finished” make up the most powerful declaration of liberation
that the world has ever known. The phrase comes from the single Greek word teléō,
which means, “to finish, accomplish, or fulfill; to bring to an end or to closure; to per-
form the final act or deed which completes a process.” The same word was used just
two verses earlier in John 19:28, “After this, Jesus, knowing that all was now finished,
said (to fulfill the Scripture), ‘I thirst.’”
b. Hebrews 9:12
NOTES: By virtue of His death, Christ ascended into heaven to be the Mediator for
God’s people. From the phrase “securing an eternal redemption,” we glean two great
truths. First, our redemption is not temporary, but eternal and immutable. Secondly,
our redemption has already been obtained; it is secure.
1. How is the penalty of the law described in Galatians 3:10? Who is under this penalty? What
does it mean?
NOTES: The law requires perfect obedience. Paul uses the words “abide” and “do” to em-
phasize that the law requires continuous, perfect, and practical obedience. The slightest
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Christ Our Redemption
deviation brings man under the curse of the law. The word “curse” comes from the Greek
word katára, which may also be translated, “imprecation,” “cursing,” or “malediction.”
It denotes divine judgment and condemnation of the severest sort or the act of devoting
someone to punishment or destruction.
2. According to Galatians 3:13, from what have God’s people been redeemed, and how did
Christ achieve this redemption?
NOTES: The word “redeemed” comes from the Greek word exagorázō, which means, “to
buy, to make payment of a price, or to recover something or someone from the power of
another.” It was often used with regard to the buying of a slave’s freedom. Christ bore our
sin, became a curse, and suffered the wrath of God to accomplish our redemption. The
word “tree” comes from the Greek word xúlon, which is literally translated, “wood.” It was
used in classical Greek with reference to poles and stakes upon which the bodies of victims
were impaled. Under the Old Testament Law, criminals were hung upon trees and stakes
as a sign that they were accursed of God (Deuteronomy 21:23).
a. By canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
NOTES: The word “record” comes from the Greek word cheirógraphon. It was often
used with reference to a written note acknowledging a money debt or a written in-
dictment against a criminal. The phrase “legal demands” comes from the Greek word
dógma, which refers to a public decree or ordinance. In this context, it probably refers
to the legal demands of the law that were against us as a result of our disobedience.
The word “canceling” comes from the Greek word exaleíphō, which means, “to wipe
away, erase, or blot out.” Christ wiped out or erased all our debt to God and His law.
NOTES: By His death on Calvary, Christ paid our debt and satisfied every demand against
us. The phrase, “nailing it to the cross,” is open to various interpretations. Some believe
it refers to the custom of posting one’s certificate of debt in a public place for all to see,
once the debt was paid. The purpose was to vindicate the debtor and to ensure that no
other demands might be made against him. Our debt was paid by Christ’s death; the law
can no longer make a demand against us. Others believe it refers to the custom of nailing
the indictments against a criminal above his body (e.g. on a cross) to publicize his crimes
and make known to all the reason for his execution (Matthew 27:37). Christ bore our sin
on Calvary and bore the penalty of the law in our place.
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Chapter 14: Christ Our Liberation
GOSPEL
The Scriptures teach not only that fallen man lives under the penalty of the law, but also that
he is in bondage to the rule of Satan. Christ redeemed His people from this terrifying reality by
dying in their place, thereby both paying the penalty they deserved and disarming Satan of his
power.
Before we proceed with our study, it is very important to understand that, although Christ
redeemed His people from the power of Satan, the ransom was paid not to Satan but to God.
Down through the ages of Christian history, some have wrongly believed that Christ paid a ran-
som to Satan and thus freed His people from slavery. This clearly contradicts Scripture, dimin-
ishes the glory of Christ’s redemptive work, and gives to Satan a grossly unbiblical status. The
Scriptures teach us that Christ offered Himself as a sacrifice to God in payment for the sins of
His people. His death satisfied God’s justice and canceled our sin debt, thereby disarming Satan
of his power to accuse.
1. In Luke 4:5-6, Satan makes a declaration about himself and his relationship to this fallen world.
What does he declare, and what does it mean?
NOTES: At the fall, the world and its inhabitants came under the dominion of Satan. How-
ever, we must keep in mind that this dominion is subject to the will of God.
2. Satan’s declaration in Luke 4:6 was no idle boast. There is a real sense in which this fallen world
lies under his dominion. What does I John 5:19 teach us about this truth?
NOTES: The word “whole” refers not only to mankind collectively but also to every
individual outside of Christ. The word “lies” comes from the Greek word keímai, which
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means, “to lie or recline.” Mankind in general is not fighting to break free from Satan’s
rule, but he lives instead in conformity to it.
3. In the Scriptures, a name often communicates something about the person who bears it. What
are the names or titles given to Satan in the following Scriptures?
a. The R____________ of this W________________ (John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11). The word
“ruler” comes from the Greek word árchōn, which may also be translated, “command-
er” or “chief.” This “world” refers to the great mass of humanity that lives in alienation
from God and in rebellion against His will.
b. The G________ of this W_______________ (II Corinthians 4:4). There is only one true
God (I Corinthians 8:4-6), yet this fallen world follows Satan as though he were its god.
Though Satan does not possess the attributes of God, he parades himself as God and
desires to be worshiped as God.
c. The P___________________ of the P______________ of the A________ (Ephesians 2:2).
Satan is a spirit and is unhindered by the material restraints of man. His power and au-
thority go far beyond any “earthbound” prince. He possesses real power and influence
over the spiritually dead (see verse 1).
4. How is fallen man described in the following Scriptures? What is the relationship between
fallen man and Satan?
a. Fallen man is a child of the D_______________ (I John 3:8, 10; John 8:44). Fallen man is a
child of the devil in that he reflects the character and will of the devil. In John 8:44, Je-
sus declared that the Pharisees were of their father the devil and that they wanted “to
do [their] father’s desires.”
b. Fallen man lives under the P___________________ of Satan (Acts 26:18). The word
comes from the Greek word exousía, which may also be translated, “dominion” or “au-
thority.” Fallen man exists under the authority and power of Satan. In Colossians 1:13,
Satan’s domain is described as one of spiritual and moral darkness.
c. Fallen man F______________________ Satan (Ephesians 2:2). Fallen man is marked by
disobedience to God and by walking according to the will of the devil. Fallen men are
rightly called “sons of disobedience” in whom the devil is working. The phrase “at
work” comes from the Greek word energéō, which means, “to be operative; to work
effectually or energetically with power.”
d. Fallen man is B_________________ by the devil (II Corinthians 4:4). Those men who re-
fuse to believe the testimony of God come under a terrifying judgment—they are given
over to Satan to be spiritually and morally blinded by his lies and deceptions.
e. Fallen man is caught in the S________________ of the devil (II Timothy 2:26). The word
comes from the Greek word pagís, which refers to a snare, trap, or noose in which prey
would be entangled and captured. It was usually hidden from view and would spring
upon its victims and catch them unawares. Fallen men are unknowingly caught in the
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devil’s snare until by the grace of God they come to their senses and escape through
the light of the gospel.
f. Fallen man has been C____________________ by the devil (II Timothy 2:26). The phrase
comes from the Greek word zōgréō, which means, “to capture or take alive.” By reject-
ing the benevolent authority of God, fallen man comes under the enslaving authority
of Satan. Satan offers fallen man freedom from God’s moral law, but this “freedom”
always leads to the bondage of sin.
g. Fallen man has S___________________ after Satan (I Timothy 5:15). The word “strayed”
comes from the Greek word ektrépō, which means literally, “to turn or twist out.” It was
used to describe the act of turning aside to avoid meeting or associating with someone.
In a medical context it was used to describe dislocated limbs. Those who turn aside from
the will of God demonstrate that they want no part or association with Him. By default,
they become “followers” of Satan. Although fallen man may follow Satan ignorantly, he
does not follow unwillingly. There is a natural affinity between Satan and fallen man. They
are of the same corrupt nature and manifest the same disposition of enmity toward God.
1. In Genesis 3:15, we find an extremely important prophecy regarding the work of the Messiah
who would come. According to this prophecy, what would the Christ do to the person and
work of the devil? How would He bring about the devil’s defeat?
NOTES: This passage is often referred to as the protoevangelium [Latin: proto = first
+ evangelium = gospel] or “first gospel.” The “offspring” of woman refers to the Son
of God, who, becoming incarnate, would wage war against Satan and conquer him. The
Messiah would bruise Satan on the head—He would inflict him with a mortal wound. Satan
would bruise the Messiah on the heel—Christ would suffer in His battle with the serpent
(Isaiah 53:4-5), but the wound would not ultimately be fatal: the Messiah would rise again!
According to Romans 16:20, God’s people will share in the Messiah’s victory: “The God of
peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.”
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2. What does I John 3:8 teach us about the purpose of Christ’s coming?
NOTES: The word “destroy” comes from the Greek word lúō, which refers to loosening,
undoing, breaking up, or destroying. Christ’s coming destroyed the works of the devil,
especially with regard to the bondage of His people.
3. What does Colossians 2:15 teach with regard to Christ’s triumph over the devil and His work
of redemption on behalf of His people?
NOTES: The phrase “rulers and authorities” is a reference to Satan and the fallen angels.
The basis for Satan’s power over God’s people was their sin, which separated them from
God, brought them under the curse, and exposed them to the penalty of death. When
Christ interposed and paid the penalty or debt for His people’s sin, Satan’s power over
them was undone. The word “disarmed” comes from the Greek word apekdúomai, which
means, “to strip off, despoil, or disarm.” The phrase “open shame” comes from the Greek
word deigmatízō, which means, “to make an example of or to show as an example.”
Christ was publically displayed as our propitiation (Romans 3:25), and His death on Calvary
brought about Satan’s public defeat. Christ’s triumph over the devil and his angels was
through the cross, where He bore our sin, suffered in our place, and canceled the certifi-
cate of debt against us. The removal of sin brought an end to death and the devil’s power
to inflict it!
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4. What does Hebrews 2:14-15 teach us regarding Christ’s triumph over the devil and His work
of redemption on behalf of His people?
NOTES: The word “share” comes from the Greek word koinōnéō, which means, “to fel-
lowship, take part, or commune together.” All men share a common fellowship in flesh
and blood and a common communion in its fallen sorrows. The eternal Son of God joined
our fellowship of flesh and blood and drank from our communion cup of misery. The devil
had power over death in that he could rightly accuse mankind of sin and demand the just
penalty of death. Christ paid that penalty and silenced all accusations.
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Chapter 15: Christ Our Reconciliation
GOSPEL
Part One: The Doctrine of Reconciliation
The one question that most world religions have in common is: “How can a sinful man be rec-
onciled to a just God?” While all other religions point to man’s works as a means of reconciliation,
the Scriptures point away from man to the person and work of Jesus Christ. Sinful man may be
reconciled to God only through Christ’s work on Calvary.
WHAT IS RECONCILIATION?
The word “reconcile” comes from the Latin word reconciliare [re = again, anew + conciliare
= to assemble, unite, win over]. It means, “to bring together again, to unite anew, to bring into
agreement, to make favorable or receptive, to restore friendship or harmony.” In the New Testa-
ment, “reconcile” and “reconciliation” are translated from the following Greek words.
1. In Romans 5:10-11 is found one of the most important texts in the Scriptures with regard to the
doctrine of reconciliation. Read the text until you are familiar with its contents, and then write
your thoughts on the following phrases. What do they teach us about biblical reconciliation?
NOTES: The word “enemy” comes from the Greek adjective echthrós, which refers to
someone who is hostile, hateful, or in bitter opposition to another. In the Gospels, it is
used to describe the devil (Matthew 13:39; Luke 10:19); in Romans 8:7 and Colossians
1:21, it is used to describe the “hostile” mind or thoughts of fallen man. It is often
held that man is the enemy of God, but God is never the enemy of man. However, this
statement is very misleading. Although the enmity or hostility described in verse 10 is
mutual, many theologians place the emphasis on God’s holy hostility or righteous indig-
nation toward sinful man. Charles Hodge writes, “There is not only a wicked opposition
of the sinner to God, but a holy opposition of God to the sinner.”5 Robert L. Reymond
writes, “The word ‘enemies’ does not highlight our unholy hatred of God but rather
God’s holy hatred of us.”6 Matthew Henry writes, “This enmity is a mutual enmity, God
loathing the sinner, and the sinner loathing God.”7
5
Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, p.138
6
A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith, p.646
7
Matthew Henry Commentary, Vol.6, p.397
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NOTES: The word “reconciled” comes from the Greek word katallássō (see definition
above, under “What Is Reconciliation?”). The death of Christ is the grounds or founda-
tion for the believer’s reconciliation to God. With regard to God: Christ’s death satis-
fied the just demands of God’s law, appeased the wrath of God, and made it possible
for God both to maintain His justice and to justify the sinner. With regard to man:
Christ’s death removed the obstacle of sin and its penalties and opened the door for
God’s transforming work of salvation in the sinner’s heart. Through the regenerating
work of the Holy Spirit, the sinner’s hatred or enmity toward God is changed to love,
and his disdain for God’s law is changed to reverence and a desire to obey.
c. Much more, now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by His life (v.10).
NOTES: The believer has been reconciled. The believer’s reconciliation is a completed
reality founded upon the once-and-for-all death of Christ. We are not waiting to be
reconciled, but are fully and completely reconciled the moment we believe. Question:
If we are reconciled by His death, how are we saved by His life? Answer: Christ’s death
is the sole foundation of our reconciliation to God. But it is the risen and exalted Christ
who calls us, enlivens us, keeps us, perfects us, and lives forever to make intercession
for us before the throne of God (Hebrews 7:25).
d. More than that, we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we
have now received reconciliation (v.11).
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Christ Our Reconciliation (Part One)
NOTES: Those who recognize that their reconciliation is through Christ alone are
moved to exult or boast in God alone. The word “exult” comes from the Greek word
kaucháomai, which indicates a glorying or even boasting on account of something or
someone. In Philippians 3:3, the Apostle Paul describes the true Christian as one who
glories “in Christ Jesus and put[s] no confidence in the flesh.” In I Corinthians 1:31, Paul
writes, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”
a. For in Him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell (v.19).
NOTES: Christ is God in the flesh. Therefore, there is nothing deficient in His person or
work; there is nothing that can fail; there is no weak link in the chain of our salvation.
Our reconciliation is accomplished and inalterable.
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NOTES: Christ alone is God’s appointed Reconciler, and there is no other. Here and in
verse 22, the word “reconcile” comes from the Greek word apokatallássō (see defi-
nition above, under “What Is Reconciliation?”). The phrase “all things” is further de-
scribed in verse 20 as all things on earth and in heaven.
NOTES: Several truths can be gleaned from this text. First, sin has affected all cre-
ation (Romans 8:19-21). Only through the cross of Christ can sin be removed and its
devastating effects be put right. Secondly, Christ’s work brings reconciliation not only
between God and man, but also between man and man. Finally, Christ will eventually
bring peace to the entire universe. He will banish the fallen angels and the unredeemed
so that they will no longer bring disunity and hostility to God’s creation.
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Christ Our Reconciliation (Part One)
NOTES: Reconciliation and peace with God are possible only through the vicarious suf-
fering and death of Christ. Any “gospel” that denies or diminishes the importance of
this truth is a false gospel. Through the death of Christ alone, our debt of sin has been
paid, God’s justice has been satisfied, and His wrath has been appeased.
e. And you, who once were alienated and hostile in mind, doing evil deeds (v.21).
NOTES: The words used to describe the Christian’s former state are the very opposite
of reconciliation. The word “alienated” comes from the Greek word apallotrióō, which
denotes one’s being shut out from fellowship and intimacy with another. The word
“hostile” comes from the Greek word echthrós, which refers to one who is hostile,
hateful, opposing, and at enmity.
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NOTES: Two truths come to the forefront. First, reconciliation is possible only through
the vicarious suffering and death of Christ. Secondly, the believer’s reconciliation is an
accomplished fact or reality.
g. In order to present you holy and blameless and above reproach before Him (v.22).
NOTES: Here is described one of the great goals or ends of our reconciliation—to be
holy, blameless, and beyond reproach before God. This not only refers to the believer’s
positional standing before God in Christ, but also to the real and personal transforma-
tion of the believer. The process through which God transforms those whom He justi-
fies and reconciles is called sanctification [Latin: sanctus = holy + facere = to make].
The process begins at the moment of conversion, continues through the believer’s
entire life, and is perfected when the believer is glorified in heaven.
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Chapter 16: Christ Our Reconciliation
GOSPEL
Part Two: The Ministry of Reconciliation
In the previous chapter, we considered the meaning of the word “reconciliation,” looked
at the biblical interpretation of the doctrine of reconciliation, and studied two biblical passag-
es that deal with the subject. In this chapter, we will take a close look at one more text that
sheds light on both the doctrinal and the practical importance of our reconciliation in Christ
and details the ministry of reconciliation that has been entrusted to us. How should our being
reconciled to God affect the way we live our lives? What should our response to God’s gift of
reconciliation be?
1. In II Corinthians 5:17-20 is found an important text about both the doctrine of reconciliation
and the ministry of reconciliation that is given to the believer. Read the text until you are fa-
miliar with its contents, and then write your thoughts on the following phrases.
NOTES: The word “reconciled” comes from the Greek word katallássō (see definition
in the previous chapter, under “What Is Reconciliation?”). There are three principal
truths in this phrase. First, the believer’s reconciliation is an accomplished reality. Sec-
ondly, reconciliation is a work of God that He initiated and accomplished—man has
no power to bring about reconciliation. Finally, reconciliation is brought about only
through the person and work of Christ.
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NOTES: Those who have been reconciled to God have been given a great stewardship
or responsibility to share the gospel with others, so that they also might be reconciled.
God has chosen to reconcile men to Himself through the preaching of the gospel.
c. That is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses
against them (v.19).
NOTES: Here is another evidence of the deity of Christ. In Christ, God came to earth
to effect our reconciliation. Reconciliation is only possible because Christ removed the
one great obstacle to peace—our trespasses. He accomplished this by dying for the
sins of His people, satisfying the demands of God’s justice and appeasing His wrath.
NOTES: The gospel of Jesus Christ is the work of reconciliation. The word “entrust-
ing” comes from the Greek word títhēmi, which means, “to appoint, commit, or or-
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Christ Our Reconciliation (Part Two)
dain.” Believers have been entrusted with a great charge or stewardship: preaching
the gospel to their generation.
e. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making His appeal through us (v.20).
NOTES: God uses men to make His work of reconciliation known to others. It is a royal
calling. Those who preach the gospel are dignitaries communicating God’s appeal to
men.
NOTES: The word “implore” comes from the Greek word déomai, which means, “to
entreat, implore, beg, ask, or pray.” In imploring men to be reconciled to God, we are
calling them not merely to put away their hostility toward God, but to take advantage
of God’s offering of reconciliation through the person and work of Christ. God will ex-
tend an olive branch of peace for only a certain number of days. The offer will be with-
drawn at the death of every man and at the second coming of Christ. There should be
great urgency in our pleading with men to come to Christ. For this reason, the Apostle
Paul declares, “Behold, now is the favorable time; behold, now is the day of salvation”
(II Corinthians 6:2). Again, the writer of Hebrews declares, “Today, if you hear His voice,
do not harden your hearts” (3:15; 4:7).
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Chapter 17: Christ the Sacrifice
GOSPEL
The word “sacrifice” comes from the Latin verb sacerfacere [sacer = sacred or holy + facere =
to make]. In Hebrew and Greek respectively, the primary words employed are zebah and thusía.
Both words refer to something that is slaughtered or killed as an offering in the place of another.
God’s justice demands the sinner’s death; the sacrifice is killed and offered in the sinner’s place to
satisfy God’s justice and appease His wrath.
In the Old Testament, every violation of the Law required a substitutionary sacrifice. An un-
blemished animal was slaughtered and offered to God in the place of the one who had violat-
ed His commandment. It is important to note that the “blood of bulls and goats” was pow-
erless to take away the sin (Hebrews 10:4). Such sacrifices served only as illustrations of the
following things: (1) the seriousness of sin and its punishment—“the wages of sin is death”
(Romans 6:23); (2) the need for a substitutionary sacrifice to satisfy the demands of God’s jus-
tice; and (3) the need for a great and final sacrifice made by One of infinite value—the Son of
God.
1. Read Hebrews 10:1-4; what does this passage teach us about the inability of animal sacrifice
to remove sin?
a. According to verse 1a, why was animal sacrifice, which was required by the Old Testa-
ment Law, unable to take away the sins of God’s people?
(1) The Law and its sacrifices were only a S______________________ of the good things to
NOTES: The word “shadow” comes from the Greek word skía, which may refer to
a shadow or an outline. The word “form” comes from the Greek word eikôn, which
denotes a form or image. The Old Testament sacrifices were only a faint shadow or
rough outline of the true image: the sacrifice of Christ.
b. According to verses 1b-2, how do we know that the Old Testament animal sacrifices
were unable to take away sin and cleanse God’s people?
NOTES: The logic is easy to follow. If the animal sacrifice had been able to purify
God’s people, there would have been no need to offer them “continually year by
year.” Once would have been enough. As these sacrifices continued to be offered
every year, they reminded the people of their outstanding sin or guilt.
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c. According to verse 4, animal sacrifices are entirely incapable of taking away the sins of
God’s people and cleansing them from defilement. From what we have observed in the
previous verses, explain in your own words why this is so.
NOTES: Man has sinned against God; therefore, man must die. Sacrificial animals could
never satisfy the demands of divine justice against man. The only sufficient sacrifice
must be a Man of infinite perfection and worth—the God-Man Jesus Christ!
2. Hebrews 10:5-10 is one of the most important Scriptures regarding the superiority of Christ’s
sacrifice. Read the text, and answer the following questions.
a. According to verses 5-6, what did Christ declare regarding animal sacrifices?
NOTES: Christ is not denying that God ordained animal sacrifices under the Law of
Moses; He is simply declaring that they were powerless to take away sin. Their purpose
was to point to Christ.
b. According to verses 5-7, what did Christ declare to be the replacement for the ineffec-
tive animal sacrifices?
(1) But a B___________ You have P___________________ for Me (v.5). The writer of Hebrews
is quoting from Psalm 40:6 in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Hebrew Old
Testament). Applied to Christ, it refers to His incarnation and entire devotion to doing
the will of God.
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(2) I have come to D_____ your W___________, O God (v.7). This is a reference not only to
Christ’s disposition to do the will of God, but also to His perfect completion of it.
c. According to verse 10, what was the will of God, and what did it accomplish?
NOTES: The will of God was for Christ to offer His body once and for all as the Sin-Bear-
er of His people. His perfect offering is what sanctifies His people or makes them holy
before God (I Thessalonians 3:13).
d. According to verse 9, when Christ died for the sins of His people, what change occurred
in God’s dealings with His people?
(1) He did away with the F____________ in order to establish the S________________.
NOTES: Christ’s incarnation and work of redemption brought an end to the sacri-
ficial system of the Old Covenant with its priests and ceremonies. He is the Fulfill-
ment of all of the Old Testament promises and types and the Foundation of the
New Covenant; through Him, the believer draws near to God.
3. Hebrews 9:11-14 is another wonderful text that shows the superiority of Christ’s offering.
How is the superiority of Christ’s priesthood and sacrifice demonstrated in these verses?
a. Verse 11
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NOTES: The Old Testament priests entered into the earthly sanctuary with the blood
of animals. Christ offered the sacrifice of Himself on the cross of Calvary and entered
into the very presence of God.
b. Verse 12
NOTES: Having shed His blood at Calvary, Christ appeared before God in heaven as
His people’s Representative. This verse does not teach that Christ presented His blood
to God in heaven.
c. Verses 13-14
NOTES: If the blood of animals offered by sinful priests in an earthly sanctuary provid-
ed ceremonial or external cleansing for the unclean, then the blood of Christ is able to
do much more! Our good works cannot quiet our nagging conscience, which declares
us to be sinners in spite of all our futile attempts to be righteous. The once-and-for-all
sacrifice of Christ is able to take away every sin, cleanse the conscience of all guilt, and
free us to serve God with peace and joy.
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4. One of the most important truths regarding Christ’s sacrifice is that it was offered once and
for all for every sin of the people of God. In the book of Hebrews, this truth is a recurring
theme. Write your thoughts on each of the following texts.
a. Hebrews 9:25-26
NOTES: The great superiority of Christ’s sacrifice as compared to those of the Old Cov-
enant is that His one sacrifice put an end to His people’s sin once and for all.
b. Hebrews 9:27-28
NOTES: Christ’s sacrifice for sin is so complete that His return for His people will be to
bring salvation, without any reference to their sins.
c. Hebrews 10:12
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NOTES: The contrast is made between the priest, who “stands daily,” (v.11) and Christ,
who has “sat down.” That Christ has sat down at the right hand of the Father is evi-
dence that His work is complete.
d. Hebrews 10:14
NOTES: To be in a right relationship with God, a man must be perfect, entirely sepa-
rated from sin and separated to God. What is impossible for sinful man has been made
possible in Christ. All those who trust in Christ and His sacrifice are given a perfect
standing before God, one that is unchanging and eternal. Their sins and lawless deeds
He will remember no more (v.17).
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Chapter 18: Christ the Lamb
GOSPEL
Closely associated with the theme of sacrifice is the Scripture’s reference to Christ as the
“Lamb of God.” The lamb played an important role in the history and worship of Israel. Under
the Old Testament sacrificial system, a lamb without spot was offered in the daily morning and
evening sacrifices (Exodus 29:38-39). On the Sabbath, the number of offerings was doubled
(Numbers 28:9-10). Also, it was a lamb that was slain in the Passover, the religious festival that
commemorated God’s deliverance of Israel from the land of Egypt and the terrible bonds of
slavery.
Although the metaphor of a lamb certainly suggests the gentleness and meekness of Christ’s
demeanor, this is not its primary significance. In light of the historical background, the picture of
Christ as the “Lamb” points primarily to Him as the atoning sacrifice for the sins of His people.
1. How does John the Baptist refer to Jesus Christ in John 1:29 and 1:36? What are the truths
communicated? Write your thoughts.
NOTES: Being a member of the priestly family, John the Baptist was more than familiar
with the themes of the sacrificial lamb and the lamb of the Passover. The fact that John’s
designation appears twice is very significant (1:29, 36). John the Baptist saw Jesus not as
a political deliverer or merely a role model, but as the sacrificial Lamb appointed by God
to take away the sins of the world. The phrase “takes away” comes from the Greek word
aírō, which carries the idea of lifting or taking up. With reference to Christ, it means that
He took up our sins and bore them away. The verb is in the present tense, indicating a con-
tinuous action. The power or efficacy of Christ’s death continues to the end of the world.
The word “sin” is in the singular, indicating sin as a whole—the totality of every kind and
type of sin.
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2. In Isaiah 53:6-7 is a description of God’s people and the work of the Messiah on their behalf.
How does Isaiah’s description parallel that of John the Baptist in John 1:29?
NOTES: The word “astray” comes from the Hebrew word ta`ah, which means, “to err, go
astray, wander about, or stagger.” It is sometimes used with reference to intoxication. All
men have strayed from God and are as intoxicated men who stagger in their drunkenness.
The phrase, “we have turned—every one—to his own way,” proves that all men have fol-
lowed a way that seems right to them, but its end is the way of death (Proverbs 14:12).
To save us, it was necessary that Christ bear our iniquity and be led to the slaughter as
our Substitute. Here we see that John the Baptist was not the first prophet to refer to the
Messiah as the Lamb who would bear the sin of His people.
3. In I Peter 1:18-20, we find one of the most beautiful texts in all of Scripture regarding the
person and work of Christ. In this text, how does Peter refer to Jesus Christ and His work of
salvation on behalf of His people? Read the text several times until you are familiar with its
contents, and then write your thoughts on the following verses.
a. Knowing that you were not ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefa-
thers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold (v.18).
NOTES: The word “ransomed” comes from the Greek word lutróō, which means, “to
buy back someone or something from slavery or captivity.” In this context, the believer
is ransomed, or redeemed, from the futile or vain way of life that he has inherited from
his forefathers. This can apply to the pagan or Jew. The traditions, religious rituals, and
moral codes of Jew and Gentile alike have no power to save.
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b. But with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot (v.19).
1. In Exodus 12:1-24, we are given the biblical account of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt through
the death of the Passover lamb. Read the text until you are familiar with its contents, and then
answer the following questions.
a. How is the Passover lamb described in Exodus 12:5? How does this description apply to
Christ as the Lamb of God?
NOTES: This phrase comes from the Hebrew word tamiym, which denotes that
which is whole, healthy, unimpaired, or innocent. As a result of sin, man is undone,
impaired, and guilty. The physically unblemished lamb was a type or symbol of the
sinless Christ, who would offer Himself as a sacrifice for the sin of His people.
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b. According to Exodus 12:21, what was to be done to the Passover lamb? How does this
same truth apply to Christ as the Lamb of God?
NOTES: The word “kill” comes from the Hebrew word shachat, which may also be
translated, “to slaughter.” The slaughtering of the Passover lamb prefigured the death
of Christ for the redemption of His people. In Revelation 5:9, the heavenly hosts wor-
ship Christ, saying, “Worthy are You to take the scroll and to open its seals, for You
were slain, and by Your blood You ransomed people for God from every tribe and
language and people and nation.”
c. According to verse 22, what was to be done with the blood of the Passover lamb? What
was each Israelite commanded to do after the blood was applied? How does this same
truth apply to Christ as the Lamb of God and the Christian’s response and relationship
to Him?
NOTES: First, it was necessary that the Israelites believe God and trust in the means
of salvation that He had prescribed. It was through the blood of the Passover lamb
that they would be saved from the coming judgment. In the same way, we must be-
lieve God’s testimony concerning His Son (I John 5:9-12)—that His sacrifice for our sin
is the only means of redemption and reconciliation with God. Secondly, it was neces-
sary that the Israelites remain inside their homes under the protection of the blood;
to be caught outside would be certain death. In the same way, the believer has no
salvation outside of Christ and His atoning work on Calvary. It is only “in Christ” that
all the blessings of a renewed relationship with God come to man. Notice how many
times the phrase “in Christ” (or “in Him” or “in the Beloved”) is used in Ephesians 1:3-
13, where Paul describes the blessings of salvation (vv.3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13 [twice]).
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
d. According to verse 23, what was the significance of the blood of the Passover lamb?
How does this truth apply to Christ’s sacrifice and the judgment of God?
NOTES: The blood was the only difference between the Egyptians, who were destroyed
by the wrath of God, and the Israelites, who were delivered from His judgment. In the
same way, it is not the believer’s character or deeds that save him from the judgment
of God, but Christ and the blood that He shed on the believer’s behalf on Calvary.
2. In I Corinthians 5:7, we find an extremely important reference to Christ. What does it teach us
about Him?
NOTES: Here, the Scriptures make a direct reference to the Passover lamb as a type or
shadow of Jesus Christ and His atoning work on Calvary. The word “sacrificed” comes
from the Greek word thúō, which may be translated, “to sacrifice, slay, or slaughter.”
For the individual Christian and the Church at large, Christ is “our” Passover, by whose
blood we are justified and saved from the wrath to come (Romans 5:9). It is important
to note that Christ’s sacrificial death as our Passover is also our motivation for living
a holy life uncluttered by sin. The Israelites were commanded to eat only unleavened
bread and to remove all leaven (a symbol for sin) from their homes during the Passover
(Exodus 12:15). In a similar fashion, the Christian is to seek to remove sin from his or her
life as a correct response to Christ, our Passover sacrifice.
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 19: Christ the Scapegoat
GOSPEL
THE DAY OF ATONEMENT
The Day of Atonement was the holiest day on the Hebrew calendar, for on that day was made
the annual atoning sacrifice for the sins of the people. It was the only day of the year in which the
High Priest actually passed through the veil of the temple and entered into the Holy of Holies,
where the very presence of God dwelled. On that day, various sacrifices were offered, but one
act in particular stands out as a powerful illustration of the atoning work of Christ: the selection
of two goats—one to die on the altar as a sacrifice or payment for sin, and the other to be sent
out into the wilderness carrying away the sins of God’s people.
It is not difficult to see how both the goat that was sacrificed and the one that was sent away
are shadows or types of Christ. One offering could not fully illustrate or typify the twofold pur-
pose of Christ’s atoning work. Therefore, the first goat was slaughtered on the altar, modeling
Christ as the Sacrifice who died to pay the sin debt of His people; and the second goat was sent
into the wilderness to bear away the sin of the people, also modeling Christ as the Sin-Bearer who
carried His people’s iniquities far away.
1. In Leviticus 16:8, Aaron was required to cast lots for the two goats. Read the text until you are
familiar with its contents, and then answer the following questions.
NOTES: Proverbs 16:33 declares, “The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is
from the Lord.” The casting of lots denoted the Lord’s choice or sovereignty in a matter
to be decided. In an infinitely more profound way, Jesus Christ was God’s choice even
before the foundation of the world (I Peter 1:20). He is God’s one chosen instrument
of redemption. Everything regarding Christ’s death on Calvary was according to God’s
decree. The Apostle Peter declared to the Jews in Jerusalem, “This Jesus, delivered up
according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by
the hands of lawless men” (Acts 2:23).
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b. How are the two goats described?
NOTES: No single offering could fully illustrate the two aspects of the atoning work
of Christ. The goat that was “for the Lord” was slain as a sacrifice in order to typify
Christ in His dying to pay the sin debt of His people. The other goat, which is often
called the “scapegoat” (NASB/KJV/NKJV), was sent into the wilderness in order to
typify Christ in His bearing of the sin of His people and carrying it away. The word aza-
zel has been interpreted in various ways throughout history. Some scholars believe it
to be derived from two Hebrew words [‘ez = goat + azal = turn off] and understand
it as “the goat that departs.” Other scholars believe it to be derived from the Arabic
word ‘azala, meaning, “to banish or remove.” Still others believe it to be a personal
name referring to the devil. In this last view, one goat is supposedly offered to God
and the other to the devil—a gross violation of all that Scripture teaches about the
atonement. It was not the devil who needed to be appeased, but a righteous and holy
God! Although there may always be uncertainty regarding the exact meaning of the
term, the most probable understanding is that it refers to a scapegoat—the goat that
was destined to be cast out of the camp in order to symbolically carry the sins of the
people into the wilderness.
1. According to Leviticus 16:9, what was the purpose of the goat that was for the Lord?
NOTES: The phrase comes from the singular Hebrew word chattah, which may refer
to sin itself or an offering for sin. In this context, it refers to an offering made to God to
remove the guilt and penalty of sin. It is a clear type or shadow of the one true sacrifice
of Christ for the sins of the world.
2. According to Leviticus 16:15-16, what did God command the high priest regarding the goat
for the Lord? How does this typify Christ and His atoning work?
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Christ the Scapegoat
NOTES: From the Hebrew word shachat, meaning, “to slaughter or beat.” It was com-
monly used with reference to sacrificial animals. In Isaiah 53:7, the Messiah would be
like a lamb that is led to the slaughter [Hebrew: tevach]. In the New Testament, Jesus
is the Lamb that was slain (Revelation 5:6, 9, 12; 13:8).
NOTES: The high priest was to enter the Holy of Holies, where the presence of God
dwelled, to offer the blood sacrifice for the sins of the people. The writer of Hebrews
tells us that, having shed His blood as a sacrifice for sin, Christ entered into the very
presence of God in heaven (Hebrews 9:11-12). When Christ died, the veil of the tem-
ple was torn in two, demonstrating that the way had been opened for His people’s full
pardon and unhindered communion with God (Matthew 27:51).
c. He shall sprinkle its blood on and in front of the M____________ S__________ (v.15).
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NOTES: The phrase “mercy seat” is translated from the Hebrew word kapporet, which
may also be translated, “place of atonement.” It was a golden cover, approximately
forty-five inches by twenty-seven inches, that rested on top of the Ark of the Covenant.
On the mercy seat were the sculptures of two angelic creatures, known as cherubim;
they faced each other, their outstretched wings touching each other and covering the
entire seat. It was located inside the temple in the Holy of Holies, which was an earthly
representation of the very throne room of God (see Isaiah 6:1-3). It was from above
the mercy seat that God had promised to meet with His people (Numbers 7:89); and
it was there that the blood of the sacrifice was sprinkled, atonement for sin was made,
and mercy was obtained. In the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testa-
ment), the word kapporet is translated by the Greek word hilastêrion, which refers to
a place or object of propitiation. The word hilastêrion is applied to Christ in Romans
3:25: “whom God put forward as a propitiation by His blood, to be received by faith.”
Christ’s death was a propitiation in that it satisfied the demands of divine justice and
made it possible for a just God to show mercy toward sinners without compromising
His justice. The blood of the goat sprinkled upon the mercy seat in the earthly temple
was a type or shadow of the blood of Christ that was shed to reconcile His people and
give them access into the very presence of God in heaven.
NOTES: The word “atonement” comes from the Hebrew word kipper or kippur. The
verb form kafar denotes purging or making atonement or reconciliation. Since “it is
impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins” (Hebrews 10:4), it is ob-
vious that this sacrifice, which was repeated year after year, was only a type or shadow
of the once-and-for-all sacrifice that would be made by Christ.
THE SCAPEGOAT
We have just considered the “goat for the Lord,” which typified Christ as the sacrificial pay-
ment of the people’s sin debt. One goat, however, was not sufficient to illustrate the double
nature of Christ’s future work. We will now consider the “scapegoat” (or the goat “for Azazel”),
which was sent into the wilderness in order to typify Christ as the Sin-Bearer of His people.
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1. According to Leviticus 16:21-22, what did God command the high priest regarding the scape-
goat, and how does this typify Christ and His atoning work?
a. And Aaron shall lay both his hands on the head of the live goat, and confess over it all
the iniquites of the people of Israel, and all their transgressions, all their sins. And he
shall put them on the head of the goat… (v.21).
NOTES: This is a powerful and beautiful illustration of the doctrine of imputation [Lat-
in: in = in or toward + putare = to reckon], in which God reckons the sin of His people
to be placed upon an innocent victim, who suffers the penalty in their place. The fact
that the high priest was to lay both his hands upon the goat and to confess over it all
the iniquities of Israel represents the full transfer of guilt from the people to the sacri-
fice. Isaiah prophesied that the Lord would cause the iniquity of us all to fall upon the
Messiah (Isaiah 53:6). The New Testament makes it clear that our sin was imputed to
Christ and that His righteousness was imputed to us (II Corinthians 5:21).
b. The goat shall bear all their iniquities on itself to a remote area, and he shall let the goat
go free in the wilderness (v.22).
NOTES: The goat bearing the sin of God’s people was banished from God’s presence
and made to dwell alone in the wilderness. On Calvary, Christ bore the sins of His peo-
ple and was forsaken of God in their place. It was for this reason that He cried out from
the cross, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Matthew 27:46). Like the
scapegoat that wandered in the wilderness and the bodies of sacrificial animals that
were burned outside the gate, so Christ suffered outside the gate of the city and was
left to die, cut off from God and God’s people (Hebrews 13:11-12).
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Chapter 20: Christ Was Buried
GOSPEL
In this chapter, we will consider one very important but often overlooked aspect of the gospel
that sets the stage for Christ’s resurrection—His burial.
CHRIST’S BURIAL
In I Corinthians 15:3-4, the Scriptures declare that “Christ died for our sins in accordance with
the Scriptures, that He was buried, that He was raised on the third day in accordance with the
Scriptures.” Lying almost hidden between the two great columns of the Christian faith—“Christ
died” and “He was raised”—is the reference to His burial. This reference was not included for
the simple purpose of tying the two great events together, but stands between them as a great
validation of both. Christ’s burial is proof that He truly died, which in turn proves the validity of
His resurrection! For this reason, it was important for the early Church to affirm Christ’s burial.
1. In Isaiah 53:9 is found a prophecy that is dramatic proof that the Man Jesus was the Christ and
that even the minutest detail of His life and death was in alignment with the Scriptures. What
does this prophecy declare to us about the coming Messiah? According to Matthew 27:57-60,
how was this prophecy fulfilled in Jesus?
NOTES: The word “made” may also be translated, “appointed” or “designated.” It was a
common practice for the bodies of crucified criminals to be thrown into a ditch to be eaten
by dogs and vultures. But God had determined that His Son would be buried with honor.
In John 19:39, we learn that about one hundred pounds of myrrh and aloes were used in
Christ’s burial. This was an extraordinary amount and extremely costly.
2. All four Gospel writers are careful to narrate the burial of Jesus (Matthew 27:57-66; Mark
15:42-47; Luke 23:50-56; John 19:38-42). Read the accounts, and identify the evidence sup-
porting the reality of Christ’s death and burial.
NOTES: If Christ had been alive, would not Joseph and Nicodemus have discovered it?
Everyone who came into contact with the body of Christ was convinced of His death—
Roman soldiers (Mark 15:44-45; John 19:32-34), Joseph (Luke 23:50-53), Nicodemus
(John 19:39), and the women who witnessed the crucifixion and burial (Luke 23:55-56).
Psalm 16:10
“For You will not abandon my soul to Sheol, or let Your holy one see corruption.”
The word “Sheol” is a transliteration of the Hebrew word and can be translated, “un-
derworld,” “grave,” “pit,” or “hell.” In the context, the psalmist is simply declaring that God
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would not allow the Messiah’s physical body to undergo physical corruption, but would raise
Him from the dead. This is the interpretation of Peter (Acts 2:27-31) and of Paul (Acts 13:34-
35).
In Acts 2:27, Peter quotes this text in defense of Christ’s resurrection: “You will not abandon
my soul to Hades.” The word hádēs is the Greek translation of sheol and refers to the same.
The simple meaning of the texts is that the Father would not allow the body of Jesus to de-
compose in the bonds of death, but would raise Him from the dead. Charles Hodge writes, “In
Scriptural language, therefore, to descend into Hades means nothing more than to descend to
the grave, to pass from the visible into the invisible world, as happens to all men when they die
and are buried.”8
Romans 10:7
“‘Who will descend into the abyss?’ (that is, to bring Christ up from the dead).”
Based on Paul’s own interpretation (“up from the dead”), it seems best to interpret the word
“abyss” as a reference to the realm of the dead and not as an assertion that Christ went to hell.
Matthew Henry writes, “This plainly shows that Christ’s descent into the deep, or into ábussos,
was no more than his going into the state of the dead.”9
Ephesians 4:9
“In saying, ‘He ascended,’ what does it mean but that He had also descended into the lower
regions, the earth?”
The context suggests that Paul is writing about the incarnation of Christ and not some de-
scent into hell. The Christ who went up to heaven (ascension) is the same who came down to
earth from heaven (incarnation). In Isaiah 44:23, we read, “Sing, O heavens, for the LORD has
done it; shout, O depths of the earth; break forth into singing, O mountains, O forest, and every
tree in it! For the LORD has redeemed Jacob, and will be glorified in Israel.” Here again, the
phrase “lower regions, the earth” simply refers to the earth in contrast to the heavens.
I Peter 3:18-20
“For Christ also suffered once for sins, the rightous for the unrighteous, that He might bring
us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit, in which He went and pro-
claimed to the spirits in prison, because they formerly did not obey, when God’s patience waited
in the days of Noah, while the ark was being prepared, in which a few, that is, eight persons, were
brought safely through water.”
Some interpret this text as teaching that Christ descended into hell when He died, so that
He might proclaim His victory to those who dwelled there. The more consistent interpretation
is that the Holy Spirit, who raised Christ from the dead, was the very instrument through whom
Christ spoke to Noah’s generation. Christ spoke to them through the Holy Spirit, by means of the
preaching of Noah. They did not believe the words of Christ preached by Noah; therefore, they
died in their sins and have remained in prison (i.e. hell) until now.
8
Systematic Theology, Vol.2, p.617
9
Matthew Henry Commentary, Vol.6, p.439
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I Peter 4:6
“For this is why the gospel was preached even to those who are dead, that though judged in
the flesh the way people are, they might live in the spirit the way God does.”
There is no reason to interpret this text as pointing to a descent by Christ into hell in order to
preach the gospel to those who dwell there. The Scriptures clearly teach that “...it is appointed
for man to die once, and after that comes judgment” (Hebrews 9:27). The text should be inter-
preted as a simple reference to the gospel that had been preached to certain individuals who, at
the time of Peter’s writing, had already died.
Luke 23:43
“And He [Jesus] said to him [the thief], ‘Truly, I say to you, today you will be with Me
in Paradise.’”
If Christ did not go to hell, where did He go? To answer this question, it is best to take Christ
at His own words. Jesus told the dying thief, “Truly I say to you, today you shall be with Me in
Paradise.” At Christ’s death, His spirit passed immediately into the presence of God. At the res-
urrection, His body and spirit were once again united. It is significant that the word “Paradise”
is used only two other times in the New Testament, and both times it refers clearly to heaven (II
Corinthians 12:4; Revelation 2:7).
Luke 23:46
“Then Jesus, calling out with a loud voice, said, ‘Father, into Your hands I commit My spirit.’
And having said this He breathed His last.”
In this brief but powerful declaration, we find further evidence that Christ went to be with the
Father at the moment of His death. It is a declaration of strong confidence, not unlike “Today,
you shall be with me in paradise.” Matthew Henry writes, “[Christ] commends His spirit into His
Father’s hand, to be received into paradise, and returned the third day.”10
John 20:17
“Jesus said to her [Mary], ‘Do not cling to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father; but
go to my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to My Father and your Father, to My God
and your God.’”
It is sometimes argued that Christ could not have ascended to heaven during His three days
in the tomb based upon His own words to Mary Magdalene in this passage. However, upon clos-
er consideration, it is clear that there is no contradiction between Christ’s statement to the thief
(Luke 23:43) and His words to Mary Magdalene (John 20:17). After three days, Christ reunited
with His physical body and was raised from the dead. Mary misunderstood the plan of God and
was unaware that Christ would ascend again (this time, bodily) to the right hand of the Father as
His people’s Intercessor. She expected Him to remain on earth and reign as an earthly Messiah. In
His interaction with Mary, Christ is not denying that His spirit had ascended to the Father follow-
ing His death on the cross, but is saying that He had yet to ascend bodily. Though Mary did not
yet realize it, this bodily ascension was absolutely necessary in the work of redemption.
10
Matthew Henry Commentary, Vol.5, p.830
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 21: Christ Has Risen
GOSPEL
The following statement is often used to summarize the fullness of the gospel message:
“Christ died for our sins.” This is a grave error! According to I Corinthians 15:1-4, the gospel of
Jesus Christ is not only that He died for the sins of God’s people, but also that He rose from the
dead on the third day. The resurrection of Christ stands beside His death as one of the two great
columns of Christianity. Without the resurrection, the death of Christ would not be good news!
The greatest declaration of hope that has ever been spoken by mortal or angelic tongue is,
“Christ has risen!” His resurrection was the great proof of His deity, the vindication of His person,
and the guarantee that God had accepted His death as payment for the sins of His people. There
are few doctrines more important, and none more attacked by the unbelieving world, than the
resurrection of Jesus Christ. The credibility of Christianity and the salvation of those who believe
hang upon this one doctrine.
A HISTORICAL EVENT
Webster’s Dictionary defines “historicity” as “the quality of being historic, especially as distinct
from the mythological or legendary.” The account of the advent of the Son of God recorded in the
four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) differs greatly from mythology in that it was an event
that actually occurred in the context of human history. The Son of God really came into our world at
a specific time and in a specific place. He was a real, historical person, and the account of His life was
recorded in writing by those who both knew Him and witnessed His life and teaching. To them, the
resurrection of Jesus Christ was neither a myth nor a spiritualized event; it was a historical reality.
To treat the resurrection as something other than real history is to deny the testimony of Scripture.
1. In Luke 1:1-4, we find powerful evidence that the writers of the Gospels were fully convinced
that they were relating historical fact based upon either their own personal witness or the care-
fully investigated testimony of others. How does this introduction to Luke’s Gospel demon-
strate that he believed that he was recording real history?
NOTES: The word “compile” (v.1) comes from the Greek word anatássomai, which means,
“to put together in order or to arrange.” Luke had taken it upon himself to write an orderly
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and historically correct account of the incarnation of the Son of God and His works. The
word “delivered” (v.2) comes from the Greek word paradídōmi, which means, “to deliver
something to another to keep or use; to commit or commend something to someone.”
The apostles who were with Christ “from the beginning” had been faithful to “deliver” the
truth about His person and works. The word “eyewitnesses” (v.2) comes from the Greek
word autóptēs, which refers to one who sees with his own eyes. The medical term “autop-
sy,” which refers to a detailed examination, is derived from this word. The “eyewitnesses”
and “ministers of the word” are probable references to the apostles. The word “followed”
(v.3) comes from the Greek word parakolouthéō, which means, “to follow after” or “to
attend one wherever he goes.” Metaphorically, it means to track down a matter or to
examine it thoroughly. Luke had carefully followed after the truth and recorded it in his
Gospel. The phrase “all things closely” (v.3) denotes that Luke’s investigation was both
exhaustive and diligent. He had examined all the available data. His goal was to report his-
torical truth without embellishments. The phrase “an orderly account” (v.3) comes from the
Greek word kathexês, which denotes succession and order. It does not necessarily refer to
chronological order, but to a logical and systematic coordination of the facts. The phrase
“certainty” (v.4) comes from the Greek word aspháleia, which denotes firmness, stability,
or certainty. Luke wrote so that Theophilus might have full certainty about the things he
had been taught.
2. In Luke’s writing of the book of Acts, he gives an introduction similar to that found in his Gos-
pel. How does Acts 1:3 demonstrate that Luke saw himself as recording historical fact when
he wrote about the resurrection?
NOTES: The word “proofs” comes from the Greek work tekmêrion, which may be translat-
ed, “solid evidence” or “plain indications.” There are thirteen post-resurrection appearanc-
es of Christ recorded in the New Testament. If Christ had made a single brief appearance
to one individual, there would be room for reasonable doubt; but several appearances to
many people over a period of forty days strengthens the testimony of the early disciples.
The phrase, “speaking about the kingdom of God,” is extremely important. Christ did not
simply appear and disappear; rather, He tarried with His disciples and taught them as He
had before His death. The apostles and early disciples did not base their testimony upon
phantom-like appearances, but upon real, personal fellowship with the risen Christ (see
also Luke 24:27).
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3. In Acts 10:38-42 is recorded the Apostle Peter’s sermon to those who would become the first
Gentile converts. Read the account, and follow the apostle’s reasoning in verses 40-42 for the
historicity of Christ’s resurrection.
a. God R__________________ Him on the T_____________ day (v.40). This was God’s val-
idation of the person and work of Jesus of Nazareth (Romans 1:4). All of Christianity
stands and falls on this truth. It is for this reason that the resurrection is so frequently
proclaimed in the New Testament.
c. Not to all the people but to us who had been C__________________ by G________ as
witnesses (v.41). Like all the miracles of His earthly ministry, Christ’s post-resurrection
appearances were under God’s sovereign direction and had a specific purpose—the
building up of His Church. Christ did not appear to the unbelieving masses in order to
vindicate Himself. This will, however, happen at His second coming.
d. Who A________ and D_______________ with Him after He rose from the dead (v.41).
Christ did not merely appear as an ethereal phantom or fleeting vision; He fellow-
shipped with His people and gave them certain proofs of His bodily resurrection (John
20:26-27; 21:9-14).
e. And He commanded us…to T___________________ (v.42). This phrase comes from the
Greek word diamartúromai, which denotes testifying with great earnestness, serious-
ness, and even gravity.
g. How does this passage demonstrate that Peter viewed Christ’s resurrection as a real
event in history?
4. In I Corinthians 15:3-9 is found still another account of the amount of evidence supporting the
validity of the resurrection. Fill in the blanks with those whom the Apostle Paul lists as having
seen the risen Christ.
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a. To C________________ (v.5). This is a reference to Peter (John 1:42). This appearance,
recorded in Luke 24:34, occurred the day of Christ’s resurrection.
b. To the T_________________ (v.5). Although Judas is no longer among the apostles and
their number has been reduced to eleven, they are still referred to as “the twelve.” This
post-resurrection appearance is one of several by Jesus to His disciples (see verse 7); it
occurred on the evening of the resurrection and is recorded in Luke 24:36-43 and John
20:19-23.
e. To one U_______________________ born (v.8). This phrase comes from the Greek word
éktrōma, which refers to a miscarriage or an abortive birth. Paul was not one of the orig-
inal twelve apostles who walked with Christ during His earthly ministry, but was convert-
ed later, when he was confronted by Christ while on his way to Damascus (Acts 9:3-6, 17).
f. In your own words, explain how this text demonstrates that Paul regarded the resurrec-
tion as a real, historical event.
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It is early morning on the third day after Jesus’ death. The women make their way timidly
to the garden where the body of Christ has been entombed. Theirs is an errand not of hope
but of pity. Their only desire is to honor the body of their beloved Jesus with a proper burial.
Their conversation is limited to what would become a minor technicality: “Who will roll away
the stone?” (Mark 16:2-4). Resurrection is the farthest thing from their minds. However, pity
turns to fear, fear to hope unquenchable, and hope to joy unspeakable and full of glory! They
are greeted with a displaced stone, an opened door, an empty tomb, and an angelic proclama-
tion of good news: “Why do you seek the living among the dead? He is not here, but has risen”
(Luke 24:5-6).
The women quickly depart from the tomb “with fear and great joy” (Matthew 28:8). They run
to bring His disciples the word, but their testimony appears as idle talk and nonsense to the very
ones who should have believed them (Luke 24:11). Then, hoping against hope, Peter and John
run to the empty tomb. After a brief and perplexing investigation, they return to the others with-
out a sure word: “For as yet they did not understand the Scripture, that He must rise from the
dead” (John 20:9).
In their quick departure, they leave behind the weeping Mary Magdalene, who becomes the
first to see the risen Lord. She is then commissioned by Him to return once more to the unbeliev-
ing disciples with still another confirmation of His resurrection (John 20:11-18). This is followed
by a second appearance, to the women returning from the tomb (Matthew 28:9-10), and then
a third, to Cleopas and another disciple on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-32). At last, He ap-
pears to Peter alone (Luke 24:34); then twice to the eleven apostles—first without Thomas (John
20:19-25) and then with him (John 20:26-29)—and again to seven of His disciples by the Sea of
Galilee (John 21:1-14). He even appears to His unbelieving half brother James (I Corinthians 15:7),
whose life is so altered by the encounter that he becomes part of the apostolic band (Acts 1:14)
and a pillar in the church of Jerusalem (Acts 15:13ff). Finally, He appears “to one untimely born” (I
Corinthians 15:8), to Saul (later Paul) of Tarsus on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:3-19). It is almost
superfluous to write about this encounter or its effect. The very man who had pledged himself
to the destruction of Christianity becomes its most ardent propagator and defender (Acts 9:1-2;
I Corinthians 15:10).
In the end, we have the sure word of Scripture that before His ascension our Lord appeared
to a great number of witnesses, both to individuals and “to more than five hundred brothers at
one time” (I Corinthians 15:6).
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 22: The Foundation of Our Faith
GOSPEL
in the Resurrection
THE REALITY OF THE RESURRECTION
This chapter is the briefest in this study, but it is one of the most important with regard to the
believer’s faith in Christ and His resurrection.
The enemies of Christianity are right in focusing their attacks on the historical resurrection of
Christ, because, as Paul points out in I Corinthians 15, the entirety of our faith depends upon it! If
Christ has not been raised, then our faith is utterly worthless (vv.14, 17): those of us who believe
are still in our sins, and those who have died have perished forever (vv.17-18). Furthermore, it
would logically follow that we who preach the resurrection are false witnesses of God, because
we testify that He has raised Christ when He has not (v.15). Finally, if Christ has not been raised,
then our lives are a pathetic waste: we suffer hardship for no reason and are hated for the sake of
a false prophet who has no power to save. As the Apostle Paul writes: “If in Christ we have hope
in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied” (v.19).
By our own admission, the resurrection is everything to the Christian faith. If Christ has not
been raised, our religion is false. Therefore, we would do well to ask ourselves a very important
question: “How do we know that Christ truly has been raised?” In these next two chapters, we
will break away from the workbook format so that we might consider two very important but
fundamentally different mediums through which the reality of the resurrection is made known to
us—it is revealed to us through the illuminating and regenerating work of the Holy Spirit, and it
is confirmed to us by the historical evidence that surrounds the event itself. The former is abso-
lutely essential. The latter is a strong confirmation of the Christian faith and an effective tool for
dialogue with the unbelieving world.
“For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us
who are being saved it is the power of God... For Jews demand signs
and Greeks seek wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
block to Jews and folly to Gentiles, but to those who are called, both
Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.”
(1:18, 22-24)
“And I, when I came to you, brothers, did not come proclaiming to you
the testimony of God with lofty speech or wisdom. For I decided to
know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified. And
I was with you in weakness and in fear and much trembling, and my
speech and my message were not in plausible words of wisdom, but in
demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your faith might not
rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God.” (2:1-5)
Secondly, the overwhelming majority of those who have converted to Christianity through-
out Church history, including its greatest intellectuals, were not brought to faith by studying the
historical and legal evidence regarding the resurrection, but by sitting under the proclamation of
the gospel.
Thirdly, if our faith in the resurrection is founded upon its historical and legal evidence, how
can we explain the faith of countless believers who lived and died for their faith without the
slightest knowledge of such evidence? How do we explain the tribal Christian who can barely
read and is unable to offer one historical argument for the resurrection, yet will endure the
most despicable persecutions and even martyrdom rather than deny the faith that he is unable
to logically defend? In light of these truths, we must conclude that although the historical and
legal evidence for the resurrection is helpful in many ways, it is not the foundation of our faith
in the resurrection.
What then is the foundation of the believer’s faith in the resurrection? How does he know
that Christ has been raised? The answer from the Scriptures is clear. We owe our knowledge
and unwavering faith in the resurrection to the regenerating and illuminating work of the Holy
Spirit! Our conviction regarding the reality of the resurrection of Jesus Christ and the validity of
the Christian faith is supernaturally imparted to us at the moment of the new birth (John 3:3).
We know that Christ has risen from the dead because the Holy Spirit has illumined our minds
to the truth of the Scriptures as they bear witness to Christ (John 5:39; I John 5:6-10). In short,
we believe because the Spirit regenerates our hearts, imparting faith and new affections for the
Christ who has been revealed to us. The Apostle Paul describes this miraculous work of the Spirit
in II Corinthians 4:6:
“For God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our
hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ.”
Those who have been born again can no more deny the resurrection of Jesus Christ than
they can deny their own existence. By God’s sovereign decree and the witness of the Holy
Spirit, it has become an incontestable reality to them (Matthew 11:25). As the persecutors
of the Christian faith have learned, “For those infected with the religion of Jesus, there is no
cure.”11
11
This is said to be the testimony of Soviet soldiers who sought to turn Christians from their faith in the living Christ.
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The Foundation of Our Faith
The truths we have learned serve as both a warning and a directive. Although apologetics12
has its place, the Kingdom of Heaven advances primarily through the proclamation of the gos-
pel. Men will come to faith not through our eloquence or logical arguments, but through our
faithful proclamation of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. We must never forget
that our mission is a fool’s errand and that our labor is a waste of time and effort unless the Spir-
it of God is working to illuminate the minds and regenerate the hearts of our hearers. For this
reason, we must refuse to lean upon the broken staff of human wisdom (Isaiah 36:6); we must
cling instead to the truth that the gospel alone is the power of God unto salvation for all who
believe (Romans 1:16).
12
Apologetics is a discipline often used to defend the Christian faith; its proponents employ logical or reasoned argu-
ments in order to demonstrate errors in the counterarguments of Christianity’s opponents.
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 23: Evidence for the
GOSPEL
Resurrection of Christ
An individual’s faith in Christ is not dependent upon his or her ability to recite the historical or
legal evidence regarding Christ’s resurrection. Nor does it stand or fall according to the believer’s
ability to defend its validity through the use of apologetics or classical logic. Nevertheless, it is
important to recognize and proclaim that the Christian faith is not contrary to history or to the
highest and most pristine use of reason. True Christianity finds no virtue in seeking to transform
myth into a useful narrative in order to promote some moral good in the world. Rather, the Chris-
tian faith and belief in the resurrection of Jesus Christ are grounded in actual events of history
that can be abundantly substantiated through the same types and kinds of proofs that are used
by the “secular historian.”
Those who reject the claims of Christianity as unhistorical or mythological do so because of
biased presuppositions that will not allow the evidence to speak for itself; and they do so, says
Robert Reymond, on “highly questionable critical and philosophical grounds with which they are
simply more comfortable psychologically and religiously.”13 Their logic is perilous: they have de-
cided beforehand that the resurrection is an impossibility; therefore, every piece of evidence in
favor of the legitimacy of this event must be fallacious, and every claim to its credibility must be
the deduction of a fool or the invention of a charlatan.
The adverseness of sinful men toward the gospel is one more reason to assert that apart from
the grace of God and the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit, no man will accept the claims of
Christ. Man will ignore the claims he can, distort the claims he cannot ignore, and resist the claims
he cannot distort. In other words, he will expend more energy denying the truth than he would
have expended by simply submitting to it.
Although it is beyond the scope of this workbook to consider all of the evidence that substan-
tiates Christ’s resurrection, we will explore in this chapter some of the legal and logical proofs
that are most beneficial to both the believer’s faith and the seeker’s inquiries.
A PREDICTED EVENT
The death and the resurrection of Jesus Christ were not unpredicted events that caught Him
unawares; each was clearly prophesied as a necessary fulfillment of the will of God. This is evident
in Jesus’ words in Luke 24:25-26, which He spoke to His doubting disciples after His resurrection:
“O foolish ones, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken! Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things
and to enter into His glory?”
The resurrection of the Messiah was clearly revealed in Old Testament prophecies written hun-
dreds of years before His coming. David predicted that God would not abandon the Messiah to
the grave, nor allow His body to undergo decay (Psalm 16:8-11). The prophet Isaiah looked ahead
13
A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith, p.581.
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Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ
and saw that God would greatly reward the Messiah after He had suffered the sins of His people
unto death (Isaiah 53:12). Christ Himself predicted His death and resurrection long before His
crucifixion. When the unbelieving Jews asked Him for a sign or proof of His authority to cleanse
the temple, He declared: “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up” (John 2:19).
When the scribes and Pharisees asked Him for further proof of His messianic claims, His rebuke
was accompanied by the promise of His future resurrection:
“An evil and adulterous generation seeks for a sign, but no sign will
be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah. For just as Jonah
was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the
Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.”
(Matthew 12:39-40)
These prophecies show that Christ’s disciples did not invent the resurrection as a desperate
attempt to keep the messianic dream alive. Christ declared it so clearly and so often (Matthew
16:21) that even His enemies knew of His predictions that He would rise again:
“The next day, that is, after the day of Preparation, the chief priests
and the Pharisees gathered before Pilate and said, ‘Sir, we remember
how that impostor said, while He was still alive, “After three days I will
rise.”’” (Matthew 27:62-63)
CREDIBLE WITNESSES
For an event to be confirmed as historical or real, three things are required: (1) there must
be eyewitnesses; (2) these eyewitnesses must be sufficient in number; and (3) they must demon-
strate integrity or trustworthiness.15 It is significant that all of these requirements are met in the
Scriptures’ testimony regarding the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
First, the Scriptures’ testimony is founded upon eyewitness accounts of Christ’s ministry, res-
urrection, and ascension. Every author of the New Testament stands with the Apostle Peter when
he declared in II Peter 1:16:
“For we did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known
to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were
eyewitnesses of His majesty.”
14
Robert Reymond, A New Systematic Theology of the Christian Faith, p.566.
15
Henry Thiessen, Lectures in Systematic Theology, p.246.
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Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ
“That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we
have seen with our eyes, which we looked upon and have touched with
our hands, concerning the word of life—the life was made manifest,
and we have seen it, and testify to it and proclaim to you the eter-
nal life, which was with the Father and was made manifest to us—that
which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you
too may have fellowship with us; and indeed our fellowship is with the
Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. And we are writing these things
so that our joy may be complete.”
It should be clear to any unbiased examiner that the apostles both possessed a personal,
first-hand knowledge of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection and recognized the importance of
affirming the nature of their knowledge as such. They wanted the world to know that they had
not been misled by hearsay, but had touched the hands, feet, and side of the resurrected Christ
(Luke 24:39; John 20:27). They had fellowshipped with Him (Luke 24:13-32, 36-43; John 21:12-
14), and they had been instructed by Him (Luke 24:44-49). Finally, they had worshiped Him as He
passed from their view into heaven (Luke 24:50-53).
Secondly, for an event to be confirmed as historical or real, there must be a sufficient number
of eyewitnesses. To put it plainly, the more eyewitnesses there are, the more credible the event
is. This same principle is found both in the Law of the Old Testament and in the New Testament
commands to the Church—an event is to be confirmed only on the testimony of at least two or
three witnesses (Deuteronomy 17:6; 19:15; Matthew 18:16).
In the case of Christ’s resurrection, this requirement has also been satisfied. The Scriptures
report that there were hundreds of credible witnesses who encountered the risen Christ in a
variety of situations and circumstances. On Resurrection Sunday, He appeared to Mary Magda-
lene in the garden (John 20:11-18), then again to the small group of women who were returning
from the tomb (Matthew 28:9-10). On the same day, He joined Cleopas and another disciple as
they walked together on the road to Emmaus (Mark 16:12-13; Luke 24:13-32). Before the day
had passed, He revealed Himself also to Peter (Luke 24:34) and then to ten disciples in the up-
per room (Luke 24:36-43; John 20:19-25). On the following Sunday, He appeared to all eleven
apostles and had His famous discourse with doubting Thomas (Mark 16:14; John 20:26-29; I
Corinthians 15:5). After that, He appeared to more than five hundred witnesses at one time (I
Corinthians 15:6) and to His half brother James (I Corinthians 15:7). At some undisclosed time,
He came again to Peter, John, and five other disciples as they were fishing on the Sea of Tiberias
(John 21:1-14). Finally, He ascended into heaven in the presence of His disciples on the Mount
of Olives (Luke 24:50-53; Acts 1:9-11).
In light of the testimony of Scripture, it is impossible to discredit the account of Christ’s resur-
rection based upon some false notion that it lacked a sufficient number of eyewitnesses. To this
truth, the great English preacher Charles Spurgeon eloquently testifies:
“Does it not strike you that very many events of the greatest importance recorded
in history, and commonly believed, could not in the nature of things have been wit-
nessed by one-tenth as many as the resurrection of Christ? The signing of famous
treaties affecting nations, the births of princes, the remarks of cabinet ministers,
the projects of conspirators, and the deeds of assassins—any and all of these have
been made turning points in history and are never questioned as facts, and yet but
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
few could have been present to witness them… If this fact [i.e. the resurrection] is to
be denied, there is an end to all witness, and we have said deliberately what David
said in haste: ‘All men are liars’; and from this day forth every man must become
so skeptical of his neighbor, that he will never believe anything which he has not
himself seen; the next step will be to doubt the evidence of his own senses; to what
further follies men may then rush, I will not venture to predict.”16
Finally, for an event to be confirmed as historical or real, the eyewitnesses must demon-
strate their integrity. In other words, they must prove themselves trustworthy. It is no secret that
throughout the history of Christianity, countless skeptics have done their best to discredit the
New Testament witnesses; however, they have never been able to disprove their sincerity or dis-
qualify them on ethical or moral grounds. For this reason, the skeptics have been forced to focus
their attacks on the possibility of self-delusion and mass hysteria.
It has been argued that the disciples and many of the first-century Jews were predisposed
to believe in the resurrection; therefore, they simply saw what they wanted to see. Proponents
of this view use the following line of reasoning. First, the Jewish nation struggled under the un-
bearable oppression of the Roman Empire. Because of this, the Jews of Jesus’ day were longing
for the coming of the Messiah and would have been easily deceived. Many among the Jews
had already followed several false messiahs who had arisen among the people (Acts 5:36-37),
proving they were willing to believe almost anything. Secondly, Jesus made many predictions
regarding His future resurrection. When combined with the disciples’ great love for their be-
loved teacher, such prophecies would have been perfect soil for the sprouting of self-delusion
and mass hysteria.
Standing against these popular theories are several facts. First, the vast majority of the Jewish
nation rejected Jesus of Nazareth as the Messiah. His earthly ministry and death were a stumbling
block to them (I Corinthians 1:23). Adding the resurrection to the already scandalous message
of the cross would not have made Jesus’ claims to be the Messiah any more compelling to the
Jew. Furthermore, this theory does not take into account the fact that within a few decades the
vast majority of believers were Gentiles who had no predisposition to believe anything about the
gospel. As Lewis and Demarest write:
“The event occurred in sharp antithesis to what they [i.e. the Jews] had expect-
ed theologically, and it was in genuine conflict with the framework of the secular
world view at the time. To the Jew it was a stumbling block and to the Greek non-
sense because the evidence required a Copernican revolution in their theology
and cosmology.”17
Secondly, the Jews and Gentiles were not the only ones who were not predisposed to be-
lieve in the resurrection; the same may also be said without reservation about the disciples.
Mary Magdalene was the first to see Christ after the resurrection; however, when she first en-
countered the empty tomb, she believed that someone had stolen the Lord’s body and moved
16
The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, Vol.8, pp.218-219.
17
Integrative Theology, Vol.2, p.466. Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) was the first to suggest a heliocentric cosmol-
ogy—a model of the solar system in which the sun replaced the earth as the center of the solar system. His theory was
a radical departure from the status quo and became a landmark in the history of modern science that is now known as
the Copernican Revolution. Thus, any theory that is considered similarly radical is often referred to as “Copernican”
or as a “Copernican revolution.”
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Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ
it to an unknown location (John 20:2, 13, 15). Even after reports of Christ’s resurrection began
to emerge, the disciples still did not believe. Luke records that the news of Christ’s resurrection
“seemed to them an idle tale” (Luke 24:10-11), and Mark writes that they “would not believe
it” (Mark 16:11). In their first encounters with the resurrected Christ, they believed Him to be a
gardener (John 20:15), a ghost (Luke 24:37), and a mere traveler on the road to Emmaus (Luke
24:13-16). These gross and rather comical misinterpretations were only resolved by further ap-
pearances of Christ and through His careful exposition of the Law and the Prophets (Luke 24:25-
27, 44-46). Before the doubt of Thomas could be removed, he considered it necessary to see
in Christ’s hands the imprint of the nails, put his finger into the wounds, and put his hand in His
side (John 20:24-29)! Christ even “rebuked them for their unbelief and hardness of heart” (Mark
16:14), and He scolded them as “foolish ones” who were “slow of heart to believe all that the
prophets [had] spoken” (Luke 24:25). These facts hardly substantiate the claim that the disciples
were predisposed to believe the resurrection!
Lastly, a specific delusion or hallucination is usually confined to a single individual. To think
that the hundreds of people who claimed to be eyewitnesses of the risen Christ all shared the
same hallucination is extremely improbable. Furthermore, mass hysteria usually requires the aid
of powerful political or religious institutions that hold sway over the masses. However, in the case
of Christ’s resurrection and the gospel, the powerful institutions of the day were combined in
their opposition to the message and did everything in their power to discredit it. The propagators
were, for the most part, uneducated and untrained men (Acts 4:13) with no political, religious, or
economic power to promote their cause.
Although they were threatened, beaten, imprisoned, and martyred, the disciples of Christ re-
fused to deny or cease from proclaiming what they had “seen and heard” (I John 1:1, 3). These men
and women, emboldened by the truth of the resurrection of Jesus, spread the gospel throughout
the entire known world in a single generation (Colossians 1:5-6). They had no political, religious,
or economic power; and they had no academic credentials; yet still they changed the world to a
degree that no political or military machine has ever equaled. If Christ had not risen, how could
this be explained? How could the success of their mission be understood? R.A. Torrey writes:
“Something tremendous must have happened to account for such a radical and as-
tounding moral transformation as this. Nothing short of the fact of the resurrection,
of their having seen the risen Lord, will explain it.”18
18
The Bible and Its Christ (Old Tappan, N.J.: Fleming H. Revell, n.d.), p.92.
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Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ
THE CONVERSION OF ENEMIES
The radical transformation of the followers of Jesus Christ after His resurrection is not the
skeptic’s only problem. He must also explain the subsequent conversion of those who opposed
Jesus and persecuted the movement that followed Him. Apart from the resurrection, how could
Christianity have impacted some of its earliest and greatest opponents—especially the half broth-
ers of Jesus and the infamous Saul of Tarsus?
The Scriptures clearly state that during Jesus’ life and ministry, neither James nor Jude (Jesus’
half brothers) believed in Him but were openly antagonistic toward His person and ministry (John
7:3-5). In fact, Jesus’ family once traveled from Nazareth to Capernaum in order to take custody
of Him because they thought He was “out of His mind” (Mark 3:21). However, after the resurrec-
tion, both brothers were radically converted and became leaders in the early Church.19 Their de-
votion to Christ and submission to His lordship is seen in the introduction to their epistles, where
they refer to themselves as bondservants of the Lord Jesus Christ (James 1:1; Jude 1). They had
been transformed from unbelieving antagonists into faithful bondservants who were willing to
submit their lives to His lordship. How was such a transformation possible apart from accepting
the testimony of Scripture? They had seen the risen Christ (I Corinthians 15:7)!
Another enemy of the early Church whose conversion adds weight to the apostolic proclama-
tion of the resurrection is Saul of Tarsus (later known as the Apostle Paul). In the book of Acts and
by his own accounts, Saul stands out as the greatest and fiercest enemy of primitive Christianity.
In his ignorance and unbelief, he saw Jesus of Nazareth as nothing more than an impostor and a
blasphemer, and he thought that all who followed Him were worthy of imprisonment and death (I
Timothy 1:13). We first see him in the book of Acts as he gives his hearty approval to the martyr-
dom of Stephen (Acts 7:58; 8:1). Afterwards, he goes to the high priest, “breathing threats and
murder against the disciples of the Lord” (9:1), and asks for letters so that “if he found any belong-
ing to the Way, men or women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem” (9:2). However, on the
road to Damascus, Saul is radically transformed—he becomes convinced that Jesus is the Messiah
of Israel! He receives baptism in His name and immediately begins to proclaim Jesus in the syna-
gogues, saying, “He is the Son of God” (9:18-20). His fellow Jews respond in amazement, saying:
“Is not this the man who made havoc in Jerusalem of those who called
upon this name? And has he not come here for this purpose, to bring
them bound before the chief priests?” (Acts 9:21)
After these events, the news quickly spread to all the churches of Judea that he who once
had persecuted and tried to destroy the faith was now preaching and proclaiming that same faith
(Galatians 1:22-23)! However, Saul had been such a violent adversary to the Church that no be-
liever dared associate with him. All were afraid of him until Barnabas brought him to the apostles
and confirmed his testimony (Acts 9:26-27). In this way, Saul of Tarsus, the greatest enemy of the
Christian faith, became its greatest defender and propagator. William Neil writes:
“What is beyond question historically is that the fanatical oppressor of the Naza-
renes, who left Jerusalem ‘breathing threats and murder,’ entered Damascus men-
tally shattered and physically blinded and became on his recovery the foremost
protagonist of the beliefs he set out to extirpate [i.e. destroy].”20
19
James (James 1:1; Acts 1:14; 12:17; 15:13ff; I Corinthians 9:5; 15:7; Galatians 1:19; 2:9) and Jude (Jude 1; Acts 1:14;
I Corinthians 9:5).
20
New Century Bible Commentary – The Acts of the Apostles, p.128.
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Because the skeptic cannot deny the historical realities of Saul’s conversion and radically trans-
formed life, he is obliged to offer a reasonable explanation for it. After two thousand years, the
Church is still waiting!
“Men of Israel, take care what you are about to do with these men. For
before these days Theudas rose up, claiming to be somebody, and a
number of men, about four hundred, joined him. He was killed, and all
who followed him were dispersed and came to nothing. After him Ju-
das the Galilean rose up in the days of the census and drew away some
of the people after him. He too perished, and all who followed him
were scattered. So in the present case I tell you, keep away from these
men and let them alone, for if this plan or this undertaking is of man, it
will fail; but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow them. You
might even be found opposing God!” (Acts 5:35-39)
Prior to the coming of Jesus Christ, two false messiahs had appeared to the nation of Israel,
and each had drawn a following. Yet after their deaths, their followers were quickly dispersed,
and nothing was ever heard of their movements again. Therefore, Gamaliel reasoned that if
Jesus of Nazareth were just a man and His resurrection a hoax, then the same fate would befall
His followers. However, Gamaliel also wisely concluded that if the resurrection story were true,
then Jesus was the Messiah, the movement would continue, and those who opposed it would be
fighting against God. The last two thousand years of history seem to have confirmed Gamaliel’s
argument.
One of the greatest proofs of the resurrection of Jesus Christ is the continuation of the Chris-
tian faith throughout history and throughout the nations, tribes, and peoples of the world. Since
the resurrection, hundreds of millions of people have testified to having a personal relationship
with Jesus Christ and have claimed that He has dramatically changed the course of their lives. It
is important to note that this group of people is not confined to any specific ethnic, political, eco-
nomic, or academic sub-group; rather, it includes individuals from every ethnicity, economic class,
and academic level. The early Church was made up of individuals who would have never come to-
gether in any other circumstance. There were Greeks and Jews, circumcised and uncircumcised,
barbarians, Scythians, slaves, and freemen; but Christ was all and in all (Colossians 3:11). The
same may be said of Christianity today.
It is also important to note that a countless multitude of men, women, and children who have
followed Christ have done so at great personal sacrifice. Some statisticians estimate that the
number of martyrs has reached more than fifty million believers. Others claim that this number is
much higher.
All of this evidence unrelentingly leads us to several thought-provoking questions. What is
the rationale behind such devotion and sacrifice? What is the explanation for the endurance of
the Church despite the countless enemies who have vowed to exterminate it? It does cause one
to think that something truly did happen on that Sunday morning when the stone was found
rolled away!
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DISCOVERING
THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 24: The Nature of
GOSPEL
Christ’s Resurrection
Having considered the historicity of Christ’s resurrection, it is now important to examine its
meaning in light of the Scriptures. What was the nature of the resurrection? The English word
“resurrection” comes from the Latin verb resurgere [re = again + surgere = to rise]. In the New
Testament, it is derived from the Greek noun anástasis [aná = up, again + stásis = stand].
CHRIST’S RESURRECTION
WAS NOT MERELY A REVIVIFICATION
In the Old Testament, the son of the widow of Zarephath (I Kings 17:17-24) and the Shu-
nammite’s son (II Kings 4:18-37) were supernaturally resurrected. The New Testament teaches
that Lazarus was resurrected (John 11:23-25, 43-44), along with Jairus’s daughter (Mark 5:41-
42; Luke 8:54-55), a young man from Nain (Luke 7:14-15), Tabitha (Acts 9:36-43), and Eutychus
(Acts 20:7-12). It is important to note that all of these were revived from the dead, but they all
were still subject to death—they would die again. Christ’s resurrection was different in that He
died once for sin but lives forevermore, never to die again. As He declared in Revelation 1:18:
“[I am] the living one. I died, and behold I am alive forevermore…”
1. It is important to establish what is meant by the term “resurrection.” The Scriptures teach
that the resurrection of Jesus was not merely spiritual, but material, physical, and corporeal.
The actual flesh-and-bone body of Jesus was resurrected. What do we learn about this truth
from Luke 24:36-43? Read the text, and then answer the following questions.
a. How should verses 36-37 be interpreted? Was there a supernatural element to Christ’s
entrance? What does this tell us about His resurrection body?
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NOTES: According to John 20:19, the disciples were gathered behind “locked” doors for
fear of the Jews. This fact, coupled with the frightened reaction of the disciples, indicates
that Jesus came into the room by supernatural means and that His resurrected body was
of a different order. This truth is also seen in Jesus’ encounter with the two disciples on
the road to Emmaus, where He “vanished from their sight” (Luke 24:31). The terms “star-
tled” and “frightened” come from the Greek words ptoéō and émphobos. Both terms
denote a very strong fear. They thought that they were seeing a disembodied spirit.
b. According to verses 39-40, what proof did Jesus give to convince His disciples that He
was not a spirit? What does this teach us about His resurrected body?
NOTES: Jesus makes two important declarations regarding His resurrected body: (1)
that He had flesh and bones; and (2) that He was not a disembodied spirit, as they had
first supposed. To give further evidence, Jesus invited His disciples to observe and
even touch His hands and feet. The fact that Christ’s resurrected body still bore the
scars of the crucifixion proved that it was indeed the same body that was crucified. The
fact that Christ went to such lengths to prove that He was not a mere spirit indicates
the extreme importance of the doctrine of His bodily resurrection.
c. What further evidence did Jesus give in verses 41-43 to prove to the disciples that He
was not a spirit? What does this teach us about His resurrected body?
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NOTES: The sudden appearance of Jesus in their midst caused great amazement.
They were uncertain about what they were seeing and what was happening among
them. When the patriarch Jacob was told that his son Joseph was alive, the Scriptures
declare that he responded in a similar manner: “And his heart became numb, for he
did not believe them” (Genesis 45:26). Because of their unbelief, Christ went to even
greater lengths to prove that His body, though transformed in marvelous ways, was
still the same real body that had hung on the cross—He asked them for a piece of fish
and ate it before their very eyes.
2. In John 20:19-23, we are given John’s account of Christ’s appearance to the disciples at a time
when Thomas was not present. In the verses that follow (vv.24-29), we are given the account
of Christ’s appearance to all of the disciples, including Thomas. Read the text, and then an-
swer the following questions.
a. According to verses 24-25, what was Thomas’s reaction when the other disciples de-
clared to him that they had seen the Lord? Why is Thomas’s reaction significant?
NOTES: Thomas’s reaction was one of doubt or disbelief. This proves that the disciples
were not men who expected Christ to rise again; therefore, they could not have simply
imagined the resurrection story as something they hoped to be true, for they clearly
did not initially believe it themselves! It also shows that they were not gullible men who
could be led to believe without sufficient proof. Even after reports of Christ’s resurrec-
tion began to surface, the disciples still did not believe. Luke records that the news of
Christ’s resurrection “seemed to them an idle tale” (Luke 24:9-11), and Mark writes that
“they would not believe it” (Mark 16:11).
b. In verse 26, we learn that Jesus appeared a second time to the disciples, this time while
Thomas was present. According to verses 27-28, what did Jesus command Thomas to
do, and what was Thomas’s reaction? What does this teach us about both the certainty
and the nature of Christ’s resurrection?
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NOTES: The fact that Thomas was commanded to examine the physical body of Jesus
indicates at least two things: (1) Thomas was not seeing a hallucination, but a real per-
son standing before him; and (2) Jesus was resurrected with the same body that had
been crucified—it bore the scars of the crucifixion and of the impalement by the lance.
Christ’s appearance in the same body which had been crucified resulted in the transfor-
mation of Thomas’s faith. He went from believing that Jesus was a martyred prophet to
proclaiming Him as the Lord and God of creation!
3. In I Corinthians 15:42-44, the Apostle Paul sets forth the differences between a mortal human
body and the same body after the resurrection. In this text, we can learn several truths about
the differences between Christ’s earthly body prior to His death and His resurrected body. Fill
in the blanks below according to the texts given.
4. In Philippians 3:21, we find a very important reference to the resurrected body of Christ. How
is it described?
a. A G____________________ B_________________.
NOTES: The phrase may also be translated, “body of His glory” (NASB). It is the same
body that was crucified in weakness but now exists in an exalted and glorified state.
During Christ’s earthly pilgrimage, the glory of His deity was veiled behind His human
body, which, though He was sinless, was subject to the weakness and death of mortal
man (Romans 8:3). After the resurrection, however, Christ’s body no longer veiled His
glory; it manifested and displayed it! Christ’s resurrected body is set in contrast with
our present “lowly body,” “the body of our humble state” (NASB), or “the body of our
humiliation” (ASV).
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Chapter 25: The Significance of
GOSPEL
Christ’s Resurrection
Jesus has risen from the dead, but what is the significance of the resurrection? What does
it mean to the world, the Church, the believer, and the unbeliever? We will learn in this chapter
that, together with the cross, the resurrection of Jesus Christ is indisputably the greatest event in
human history and has the greatest significance for all men.
1. What does Romans 1:3-4 teach us about the resurrection of Jesus as a vindication of His claim
to be the Christ and the Son of God?
NOTES: The word “declared” comes from the Greek word horízō, which means, “to
define, mark out boundaries, or determine.” Through Jesus’ resurrection from the dead,
God personally and publicly marked out or defined who Jesus truly was—the Son of God.
The resurrection was God’s powerful and public certification of Christ’s Sonship and deity.
This is also seen in the early apostolic preaching, which emphasized the Jews’ rejection
of Jesus and God’s vindication of Him through the resurrection: “this Jesus...you cruci-
fied and killed by the hands of lawless men. God raised him up” (Acts 2:23-24). “But you
denied the Holy and Righteous One, and asked for a murderer to be granted to you, and
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The Significance of Christ's Resurrection
you killed the Author of life, whom God raised from the dead. To this we are witnesses”
(Acts 3:14-15). The phrase, “according to the Spirit of holiness,” demonstrates that God
raised Jesus through the powerful agency of the Holy Spirit.
2. In I Timothy 3:16, we find an extremely important statement about the resurrection of Jesus
Christ. According to this text, how did the resurrection confirm the claims of Christ?
a. Throughout His life and through His resurrection, Jesus was V_______________________
by the Spirit.
NOTES: The word “vindicated” comes from the Greek word dikaióō, which means, “to
declare, evince, or show one to be right or righteous.” The phrase, “by the Spirit,” may
also be translated, “in the Spirit” (NASB). The Holy Spirit vindicated the person and
claims of Jesus Christ throughout His earthly ministry by performing signs and wonders
through Him (Luke 5:17) and, ultimately, by raising Him from the dead.
1. What does Romans 4:25 teach us about Christ’s resurrection as being proof of the believer’s
justification?
NOTES: In both of its occurrences in Romans 4:25, the phrase “for” is translated from the
Greek word diá, which denotes the grounds or reason for which something is done or not
done. It may also be translated, “for this reason” or “on account of.” The meaning is this:
Christ was delivered over to death on account of our transgressions, and God raised Him
from the dead because He accepted His sacrifice as full payment for our transgressions.
The resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead is the great sign that our sins have been
paid in full. If God had not accepted Christ’s sacrifice as payment, He would not have
raised Him from the dead.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
CHRIST’S RESURRECTION
GUARANTEES OUR RESURRECTION
The wages of sin is death. Christ’s resurrection was the confirmation that God had accepted
His sacrifice as the satisfaction of our sin debt, thus freeing us from the penalty of death. His
resurrection is the confirmation or guarantee of our resurrection. The empty tomb provides the
believer with the strong assurance that justice has been satisfied and death has been conquered.
This is the great hope of every believer.
1. Several great promises regarding Jesus’ resurrection and that of His people are found through-
out the Gospels and the New Testament Epistles. Meditate carefully on the following texts,
and then write your thoughts.
a. John 14:19
NOTES: After the resurrection, Christ revealed Himself “not to all the people but to
us who had been chosen by God as witnesses” (Acts 10:40-41). For the believers who
first saw Him and for those who believe their eyewitness testimony, the resurrection of
Christ is the great confirmation of their own future resurrection.
b. I Corinthians 6:14
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The Significance of Christ's Resurrection
c. II Corinthians 4:14
NOTES: The believer’s confidence in his own resurrection comes from the undeniable
fact that God has raised Jesus Christ from the dead.
a. But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen
asleep (v.20).
NOTES: Christ’s resurrection is one of the great columns of the Christian faith. Upon
this truth rests the believer’s hope. In Leviticus 23:10, the Scriptures declare that the
Israelites were to bring an offering from the very first part of their harvest. This “first-
fruits” offering was a recognition that the rest of the harvest that followed also be-
longed to the Lord. In a similar way, Christ’s resurrection is the first fruits of the har-
vest—it is representative of the entire harvest that will be gathered in after Him. His
resurrection is the forerunner and guarantee of the resurrection of His people.
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DISCOVERING THE GLORIOUS GOSPEL
b. For as by a man came death, by a man has come also the resurrection of the dead. For
as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive (vv.21-22).
NOTES: It was necessary that the sin and death brought to mankind by one man be
reversed by another Man. In Adam, all sinned and fell into condemnation and death. In
Christ, all who believe are justified and resurrected. Christ’s resurrection is the guaran-
tee of both the present justification and the future resurrection of His people.
c. But each in his own order: Christ the firstfruits, then at His coming those who belong to
Christ (v.23).
NOTES: The word “order” comes from the Greek word tágma, which refers to the
military order or arrangement of soldiers or troops. It may be that some in Corinth
were rejecting the doctrine of the resurrection by means of the following faulty logic:
“If the believer is so united with Christ in His resurrection, why is it that Christ has risen
while the bodies of the believers who have died continue to rot in the ground?” Paul’s
response is that everything has its order: Christ is the first fruits of the resurrection of
all believers on the final day. It is necessary that Christ have preeminence in all things.
Paul wrote to the church in Colossae, “He is the head of the body, the church. He is the
beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything He might be preeminent”
(Colossians 1:18).
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 26: The Essentiality of
GOSPEL
Christ’s Resurrection
It is impossible to overemphasize the importance of Christ’s resurrection. In light of the Scrip-
tures, this is no exaggeration. The resurrection is the foundational doctrine of Christianity and
one truth upon which the entire Christian faith either stands or falls. Thus, it is an absolutely es-
sential doctrine and a non-negotiable truth. To deny Christ’s resurrection is to reject the gospel.
1. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is so important to the Christian faith that being a witness of
the risen Lord was a requirement of apostleship. What do the following Scriptures teach re-
garding this truth?
a. Acts 1:21-22
NOTES: The word “must” comes from the Greek verb deí, which denotes necessity. In
this text, two requirements are given for apostleship. The first was to have witnessed
Jesus’ earthly ministry. The second was to have been an eyewitness of the resurrected
Christ. Even the greatest enemies of Christianity are forced by the facts of history to
acknowledge Christ’s extraordinary life and death; it is over the resurrection that the
great war is waged. Therefore, an apostle needed the authority of one who had actu-
ally seen the risen Lord. The apostles were called to propagate Christ’s teachings and
works, and these could only be validated by His resurrection. For this reason, they were
required to bear witness to this great and decisive event.
b. I Corinthians 9:1
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NOTES: Paul validated his calling and authority as an apostle by reminding the Corin-
thians that he was an eyewitness to the risen Lord (Acts 9:1-9; 22:6-16; 26:12-18). The
resurrection is the one doctrine upon which all the other claims of Christianity either
stand or fall. It is for this reason that the resurrection has been so severely attacked by
the enemies of Christianity.
2. In II Timothy 2:8, we find an important text that summarizes the gospel and demonstrates the
central importance of the resurrection of Jesus Christ in the preaching of the gospel. Write
your thoughts on this text and the truth it teaches us.
NOTES: The word “remember” comes from the Greek word mnēmoneúō, which means,
“to be mindful of, to hold in memory, to think of.” The verb “risen” is translated from
the Greek verb egeírō. The verb’s perfect tense denotes the ongoing state of the Lord’s
resurrection. Christ was raised from the dead and lives forevermore. In Revelation 1:18,
Jesus refers to Himself as the “living one,” who was dead and now lives forevermore. The
phrase, “as preached in my gospel,” demonstrates that the resurrection of Jesus Christ
was foundational to the gospel of the apostles. The only Jesus the apostles knew was the
eternal Son of God, who became the incarnate Son of David, died on a cross for the sins
of His people, and was raised from the dead.
3. The importance of the resurrection is also seen in the fact that it is regarded as an essential
belief for a person’s salvation. According to Romans 10:9, is it possible for a man to be saved
apart from belief in the resurrection? How does the answer to this question demonstrate the
importance of the resurrection?
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The Essentiality of Christ's Resurrection
NOTES: The word “confess” comes from the Greek word homologéō, which means, “to
say or speak the same thing as another.” The phrase “with your mouth” refers to a public
profession or identification with Jesus as Lord. Paul does not have in mind a superficial
confession or a mere intellectual acceptance of a creed, but an open and public confession
coming from a sincere conviction of the heart. To believe “in your heart” is a reference to
a profound and genuine faith in the resurrected Christ. It is utter nonsense to claim faith in
Christ apart from belief in His resurrection.
NOTES: The word “vain” comes from the Greek word kenós, which literally means,
“empty.” The word is used to describe vessels or places that contain nothing. It is used
figuratively to describe that which is unprofitable, useless, delusory, false, or devoid
of meaning or importance. This is an amazing statement—the validity of all Christian
proclamation depends upon the validity of Christ’s resurrection. If Christ is not raised,
then nothing of Christian proclamation has even one shred of worth.
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NOTES: The word “vain” comes from the Greek word kenós (see definition above).
Christ is the Object, Author, and Finisher of the Christian faith (Hebrews 12:2). If He has
not risen, then faith in Him is useless, false, and devoid of purpose.
NOTES: The word “futile” comes from the Greek word mátaios, which refers to that
which is useless, worthless, and devoid of force or truth.
NOTES: God’s law commands, “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor”
(Exodus 20:16). How much more severe will be the penalty for those who bear false wit-
ness against God! In I Samuel 2:25, we read: “If someone sins against a man, God will
mediate for him, but if someone sins against the LORD, who can intercede for him?”
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e. Those who believe in Christ are still in their S_____________ (v.17).
NOTES: The resurrection is the great proof that God has accepted the sacrifice of
Christ and that the demands of His justice have been satisfied (Romans 4:25). If Christ
is not raised, we have no proof of pardon, imputed righteousness, or eternal life.
NOTES: The word “perished” comes from the Greek word apóllumi, which means, “to
be lost, ruined, or destroyed.” If the Captain of our Salvation could not overcome the
grave, what hope have we who follow Him?
g. Those who believe in Christ are to be P_______________ more than all others (v.19).
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NOTES: The word comes from the Greek word eleeinós, which may also be translated,
“miserable.” If Christ is not raised, then Christians are pitiful fools who lose the world
and waste their brief existence on earth only to gain nothing in return!
NOTES: These words are taken from Isaiah 22:13. If there is no resurrection, then there
is no hope for man. There is nothing left for men but to selfishly gratify the lusts of the
flesh until death consumes all.
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 27: The Son Ascended
GOSPEL
The Scriptures teach us that Jesus Christ is the eternal Son of God who left the glory of
heaven, was born of a virgin, and lived a perfect life in the flesh. He was then nailed to a cross,
according to the eternal will of God. He bore the sins of His people, suffered the wrath of God,
and died. On the third day, He rose again from the dead, demonstrating that He was the Son of
God and that His death obtained salvation for God’s people. Forty days after His resurrection,
Christ ascended to heaven, where He was seated at the right hand of God the Father and given
glory, honor, and dominion over all. There in the presence of God, He represents His people
and makes requests and special petitions to God on their behalf. The death and resurrection of
Christ are the two great columns of Christ’s work. His ascension and exaltation are its glorious
culmination.
THE ASCENSION
The Scriptures teach that Christ ascended into heaven forty days after His resurrection in the
presence of many eyewitnesses. This ascension is not a myth; it is a historical reality which was
recorded by eyewitnesses as a factual event. To treat the ascension as something other than real
history is to deny the testimony of Scripture.
1. One fact that gives great credibility to Christ’s ascension is that it was a predicted event. What
does John 16:28 teach us about this truth?
NOTES: In this one verse, Jesus speaks of His past eternal glory, His present incarnation,
and His future ascension.
2. In Luke 1:1-4 and Acts 1:1-3, we have powerful evidence that the Gospel writers were con-
vinced that they were relating historical fact. How does Acts 1:9-11 demonstrate that they
also viewed Christ’s ascension as an actual event in history?
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NOTES: In verses 9 and 10, Luke writes that the disciples “were looking on” and “were gaz-
ing into heaven.” Both phrases refer to the eyewitness accounts that Luke used as sources
for his Gospel. The word “gazing” comes from the Greek word atenízō, which means, “to
fix one’s eyes on, look straight at, or stare.” The same word is used in Luke 4:20, when
the Scriptures declare that “the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed [or fastened] on
Him [Jesus].” The disciples did not simply catch a momentary glance of something they
misinterpreted as Jesus. They had ample time to evaluate the event, even as they were
witnessing it. In verse 11, the disciples are mildly rebuked by the angels because they con-
tinued looking up to the sky even after Jesus had departed. Again, this demonstrates how
thoroughly they witnessed the event. Skeptics have attempted to discredit Luke’s account
by pointing out that his use of the phrase “was lifted up” is incompatible with our knowl-
edge of the universe. Such criticism is unnecessary. Luke uses the same terminology that
modern-day scientists use to describe the “lifting up” of a rocket.
3. It is clear that the New Testament writers saw the ascension of Jesus as a historical event.
Forty days after the resurrection, Jesus ascended from the earth, but to where did He ascend?
What do the following Scriptures teach us?
a. He was C___________________ U______ into heaven (Luke 24:51). The phrase “carried
up” comes from the Greek word anaphérō, which means, “to carry, bear, or bring up.”
In this context, the word “heaven” [Greek: ouranós] refers to the very abode of God.
Matthew Henry writes, “He was carried up into heaven; not by force, but by his own act
and deed… There was no need of a chariot of fire or horses of fire; He knew the way.”21
b. He P________________ T_____________________ the heavens (Hebrews 4:14). The
phrase “passed through” comes from the Greek word diérchomai, which means, “to
go or pass through, to walk or journey through a place.” Christ passed through all the
heavens until He reached the highest place, the very presence of God.
c. He A_____________________ F__________ A______________ all the heavens (Ephe-
sians 4:10). The word “ascended” comes from the Greek word anabaínō, which means,
“to ascend, climb up, or rise.” Christ ascended to the highest place in all the heavens.
d. He was T_____________ U_____ in G_______________ (I Timothy 3:16). The phrase “taken
up” comes from the Greek word analambánō, which means, “to take or receive up.” Christ
ascended to the glorious abode of God. He was taken up to this place and well-received.
e. He was taken up into heaven and sat down at the R________________ hand of God
(Mark 16:19). The phrase “taken up” comes from the Greek word analambánō (see
definition above). Matthew Henry writes, “He had not only an admission, but an abun-
dant entrance into His kingdom.”22 Having ascended, Christ “sat down at the right
21
Matthew Henry Commentary, Vol.5, p.846
22
Matthew Henry Commentary, Vol.5, p.572
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The Son Ascended
hand of God.” There is no place of greater exaltation than at God’s right hand, the
place of His favor and authority.
f. He went to the F__________________ (John 14:28). Christ returned to His greatest
love, to the One for whom He did this great work of redemption—the Father. He had
pleased the Father in all things, and now He returned home with His Father’s unre-
served approval.
g. He A____________________ to where He was B________________ (John 6:62). The word
“ascended” comes from the Greek word anabaínō, which means, “to ascend, climb up,
or rise.” Two things are taught in this text: (1) the Son’s eternal glory prior to His incar-
nation; and (2) the Son’s return to His previous exalted state, this time as the God-Man.
THE EXALTATION
The Scriptures teach that Jesus Christ not only ascended to heaven, but that He also was ex-
alted to the position of highest honor and authority at the very right hand of God. It is extremely
important to note that this exaltation was not a “new” or “strange” experience for the Son of
God. The Scriptures clearly teach that He was glorified together with the Father and shared His
Father’s glory before the world was (John 17:5). The uniqueness of the Son’s return to exaltation
is found in this: He who is now exalted at the right hand of the Father is both God and Man. In
the incarnation, the Son divested Himself of the honors and rights (though not the essence) of His
deity, took upon Himself our humanity, and was obedient to the Father’s will even to the point of
death on a cross. For this reason, He “won” the right to sit down at the right hand of God. The
One who has been crowned with glory and honor on the very throne of God is both God and
Man. The exalted Savior and King is one with God and one with His people.
1. In Isaiah 52:13-14 is found a powerful prophecy concerning the Messiah’s exaltation after suf-
fering for the sins of His people. Summarize the major truths of the text.
NOTES: The phrase “My servant” is a reference to the Messiah. God has had only one
true Servant—His Son Jesus Christ. The phrase “act wisely” comes from the Hebrew word
sakal, which often indicates prosperity or success. It denotes God’s favor or blessing and
is often the reward for obedience (Joshua 1:8). There has never been anyone as obedient
or pleasing to God as His Son—He was obedient to the point of death on a cross (v.14; see
also Philippians 2:8). Therefore, there would be no one more highly exalted or lifted up.
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2. In Isaiah 53:10-12 is found another detailed prophecy concerning the coming Messiah, His
suffering, and His glorious exaltation. Summarize in your own words what each verse commu-
nicates to us about the Son’s ultimate exaltation at the right hand of God.
a. He shall see His offspring; He shall prolong His days; the will of the Lord shall prosper in
His hand (v.10).
NOTES: As a result of His obedience, the Son would be resurrected and live forever
(“He shall prolong His days”); He would be given a spiritual offspring (“He shall see
His offspring”); and God’s will or “good pleasure” (NASB) would “prosper” perfectly
through Him.
b. Out of the anguish of His soul He shall see and be satisfied (v.11).
NOTES: The word “anguish” comes from the Hebrew word `amal, which denotes toil,
trouble, travail, grievous labor, vexation, misery, and pain. The Messiah would suffer
these things to the very depth of His being (physically, emotionally, mentally, and spir-
itually). However, as a result of His anguish, many would be justified; and He would be
satisfied with His reward. The word “satisfied” comes from the Hebrew word saba,
which means, “to be satisfied, sated, or fulfilled to the point of excess.”
c. Therefore I will divide Him a portion with the many, and He shall divide the spoil with
the strong (v.12).
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NOTES: God’s exaltation and reward would be the fruit of the Messiah’s obedience
unto death, even death on a cross. The references to the allotting of portions and the
dividing of booty portray Calvary as a great conquest or military victory. Christ the Vic-
tor is given the spoils of His victory.
3. In Philippians 2:6-11 is found one of the most important passages in all of Scripture regarding
the humiliation and exaltation of the Son of God. Read the text several times until you are
familiar with its contents, and then write your own commentary on each of the following por-
tions. What was Christ’s reward for His voluntary humiliation?
a. Therefore God has highly exalted Him and bestowed on Him the name that is above ev-
ery name (v.9).
NOTES: The word “Therefore” is important. God exalted Jesus above every name
“because of” or “on account of” [Greek: dió] His voluntary submission to God, which
He demonstrated in His incarnation, obedience, and atoning death. Upon His ascension
into heaven, the Son of God and Son of Man took the place that He had possessed
before the foundation of the world. He is exalted not only by divine right, but also as
a reward for His perfect obedience as a Man. The phrase “highly exalted” comes from
the Greek word huperupsóō, which denotes the act of exalting one to the highest
rank and power. The word “bestowed” comes from the Greek word charízomai, which
denotes giving something pleasant or agreeable to another and doing so graciously
and freely. The phrase “above every name” refers to the Son’s exalted state over every
created being in heaven and on earth.
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b. So that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under
the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father (vv.10-11).
NOTES: In Isaiah 45:23, God declares the following concerning Himself: “By myself
I have sworn; from my mouth has gone out in righteousness a word that shall not
return: ‘To me every knee shall bow, every tongue shall swear allegiance.’” That this
text is applied to Christ is great proof of His deity. The bowing of the knee represents
the recognition of worth, the giving of honor, and submission to authority. This text
communicates two great truths. First, Christ is worthy of all honor and submission.
Secondly, there is coming a day when all creation will recognize and acknowledge
Christ as Lord.
4. The following New Testament texts give us some important insight into Christ’s exaltation and
its purpose. Write your thoughts on each text.
a. Hebrews 1:3
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NOTES: The word “purification” comes from the Greek word katharismós, which may
also be translated, “cleansing.” It is a reference to Christ’s atoning work on Calvary
whereby His people have been purified from sin. The phrase “Majesty on high” is a
reference to God and His greatness. The fact that Christ has sat down at the right hand
of God demonstrates that He has been given the place of highest honor and favor, a
place and rank equal with God.
b. Hebrews 2:9
NOTES: Again, Christ’s humiliation and atoning death are viewed as a cause or basis
for His exaltation. The writer of Hebrews could not have chosen a more majestic phrase
than “crowned with glory and honor.” However, even this does not begin to describe
the glory that has been bestowed upon Christ.
c. Revelation 3:21
NOTES: The word “conquers” comes from the Greek word nikáō, which means, “to
conquer” or “to be victorious.” Christ’s submission to the Father’s will and His perfect
obedience were necessary precursors to His exaltation. In His obedience and submis-
sion, Christ overcame sin, Satan, and death. His exaltation is portrayed as a reward for
His obedience.
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 28: Our Exalted Savior
GOSPEL
The eternal Son of God divested Himself of the honors of deity and took upon Himself our
humanity. He walked upon this earth and lived a perfect life in unwavering submission to the
will of God. According to the foreordained plan of God, He was lifted up and nailed to a Roman
cross by the hands of wicked men. On that cross, He bore the sins of His people and suffered
the wrath of God in their place. By His death, He satisfied God’s justice and made it possible
for a just God to forgive the sins of His people and grant them a perfect standing before Him.
As a result of His obedience, the incarnate Son was raised from the dead and exalted to the
right hand of God as Savior. He alone bears the title of Savior, and in His name alone is salva-
tion found.
The Scriptures declare unapologetically that salvation is found in the name of Jesus Christ
alone. There is no other savior, mediator, or means by which a man may obtain forgiveness for his
sin and be reconciled to God; this work can only be accomplished through the person of Jesus
Christ and His perfect work on Calvary. This is one of the most scandalous truths of Christianity;
however, to harbor the slightest compromise of this truth is to deny the Scriptures, diminish the
glory of Christ, make void the cross, and drive a dagger into the very heart of the gospel. The
only faithful proclamation of the gospel is that which boldly and clearly declares Jesus Christ to
be the One and only Savior!
1. In John 14:6, Jesus made a bold declaration about Himself with regard to truth, life, and
reconciliation with God. In the mind of Christ, is there any possibility of finding truth, life, or
salvation in anyone or anything outside of Himself? Write your thoughts regarding each of the
following phrases.
a. I am the way...
NOTES: Christ is the “Way of Holiness” prophesied in Isaiah 35:8 and the “new and
living way” spoken of in Hebrews 10:20. He is the only Way upon which man and God
meet. There may be many roads that lead to Rome, but there is only one that leads to
pardon for sin and a right relationship with God—Jesus Christ.
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b. And the truth...
NOTES: Christ is more than a teacher of the truth; He is the Truth—the greatest man-
ifestation of truth to men and the standard by which all other thoughts, words, and
deeds are judged. His person and teaching represent the greatest embodiment of
truth ever given to man. Any teaching that contradicts Christ or exalts itself as superior
to Christ is false.
NOTES: John begins His Gospel by declaring that, “In Him [i.e. the Son] was life, and
the life was the light of men” (1:4). In John 5:26, Jesus taught not only that life was
through Him, but also that He had “life in Himself.” From the beginning, the Son has
been the Mediator of all life to men, both physically and spiritually. He is the True Vine,
who alone brings spiritual life to those who abide in Him (John 15:1-6). Apart from Him,
there is no true spirituality.
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NOTES: This is the great scandal of the Christian faith. True Christianity is very exclu-
sive in that it admits no one to heaven except through Christ and His atoning work on
Calvary. The Old Testament saints were justified by faith in the revelation of God that
they had received and in the promises of a future hope through the Messiah. Now that
the Messiah has come and has fulfilled all the Old Testament prophecies and promises,
salvation is found only in His name and in His work of redemption.
2. To ensure that our interpretation of the words of Jesus is correct, we only need to look to a
few bold declarations made in the preaching and writings of the apostles. According to the
following Scriptures, how did they interpret the person and saving work of Jesus Christ? Is He
a savior or the Savior?
a. Acts 4:12
NOTES: It would hardly be possible for Peter to speak more clearly regarding the
uniqueness of Christ and His ability to save. His words are reminiscent of God’s great
declarations spoken through the prophet Isaiah: “I, I am the LORD, and besides Me
there is no savior” (Isaiah 43:11); and, “There is no other god besides Me, a righteous
God and a Savior; there is none besides Me” (Isaiah 45:21b). This is the great banner of
Christianity. Every realm of creation may be searched, but none can be found worthy of
the title of Savior except the Lamb of God.
b. I Corinthians 3:11
NOTES: Throughout the Scriptures, Christ is referred to as the foundation and cor-
nerstone upon which salvation and the Church rest (Isaiah 28:16; Matthew 21:42; Acts
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Our Exalted Savior
4:11; Ephesians 2:20; II Timothy 2:19; I Peter 2:6). God has laid only one foundation
stone, and it is Christ. He alone has God’s seal.
c. I Timothy 2:5
d. I John 5:12
NOTES: Again, the clarity of this text cannot be questioned. All true spiritual life and
any hope of eternal life resulting from a reconciled relationship to God are determined
by one’s relationship with Christ. “In Christ alone” is the consistent maxim and motto
of the writers of the New Testament. A person can disagree with their testimony that
Christ is the only Way, but one cannot disagree that it was their testimony!
3. In Acts 5:31 and 11:17-18 are found two important declarations regarding the claim that salva-
tion is found in Christ alone. They prove that Christ is neither simply the Savior of the Jews to
the exclusion of the Gentiles nor the Savior of only the Gentiles to the exclusion of the Jews,
but that He is God’s appointed Savior for all peoples.
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a. In Acts 5:31, what does the Apostle Peter declare regarding Christ’s relationship to the Jews?
b. According to Acts 11:17-18, what did the Jewish Christians concede after they heard Pe-
ter’s account of God’s saving work among the Gentiles? Is Christ God’s appointed Savior
to the Jews alone or also to the Gentiles?
4. In Romans 1:16, the Apostle Paul makes a very important statement regarding the gospel of
Jesus Christ as the one and only means of salvation for all people. Consider the text, and write
your thoughts.
NOTES: It takes great power [Greek: dúnamis] to regenerate the spiritually dead, justify
the sinner, and sanctify the unclean. Such power is found in the gospel alone, which points
to Christ alone as the only Savior by whom men can be saved.
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 29: Our Exalted Mediator
GOSPEL
The saving work of Christ does not end with His death on the cross; it continues in His exal-
tation. Christ is the Great High Priest who offered the perfect sacrifice of Himself to satisfy the
justice of God and save His people from wrath; but He is also the Great High Priest who stands
in heaven on their behalf and lives forever to intercede for them before God. In the incarnation,
the Son took upon Himself the humanity of His people so that He might die in their place. The
Son now stands in heaven robed in the same humanity now glorified, representing His people
before God as their Mediator and Advocate. In the next two chapters, we will look closely at
these two roles—Mediator (this chapter) and Advocate (next chapter).
The word “mediator” comes from the Latin verb mediare, which means, “to be in the mid-
dle.” The Greek word for “mediator” is mesítēs (derived from the verb mesiteúō, meaning, “to
bring about agreement”). The following definitions of “mediator” are helpful.
“One who causes or helps parties to come to an agreement, with the implication of
guaranteeing the certainty of the arrangement.” (Louw & Nida Greek Lexicon)
“One that acts between two parties; one who interposes to reconcile two adverse
parties; an arbitrator; one who is the medium of communication between two par-
ties, a mid-party.” (Mounce Greek Dictionary)
Webster defines a mediator as “one who is qualified and able to interpose between two
parties in order to reconcile them to one another.” In order to be a proper Mediator between
God and man, it was necessary that Jesus of Nazareth be both God and Man in one person.
He must be fully Man so that He might lay His hand upon man, reveal God to him, and bring
him comfort. He must be fully God so that He might lay His hand upon God, be the full revela-
tion of divine majesty, and interpose on man’s behalf. It would be the worst sort of blasphemy
to ascribe such power to even the most exalted creature. The majestic seraphim that inhab-
it the very throne room of God would not even venture to claim to be His reflection, much
less stretch forth their hands to claim to be His mediator! Splendid as they are, they dare do
little more than bow their heads, cover themselves, and cry out that He alone is holy, holy, holy
(Isaiah 6:2-3)!
Mediation is a work beyond the ability of any creature. It is an office that belongs only to
Christ! He alone qualifies to stand before God on our behalf, because He alone is the fullness
of God in bodily form. He is God in the strictest sense, and He also is a Man like us except
without sin.
1. Since the fall of Adam, mankind’s greatest need has been someone who could represent
them before God and act as a mediator. Such a representative was man’s only hope for rec-
onciliation with God. This ancient dilemma is clearly portrayed in the book of Job. What was
Job’s great complaint in Job 9:29-33? Write your thoughts on the following quotes from this
passage.
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a. I shall be condemned; why then do I labor in vain? If I wash myself with snow and
cleanse my hands with lye, yet you will plunge me into a pit, and my own clothes will ab-
hor me (vv.29-31).
NOTES: Job recognized two very important truths. First, like all men, he was a sinner
before God. Second, all his toil to justify himself before God was in vain. In Jeremiah
2:22, God declares, “Though you wash yourself with lye and use much soap, the stain
of your guilt is before Me.” This is the dreadful reality of those who understand some-
thing of both the holiness of God and their own extreme moral failure. Apart from
Christ, His atoning sacrifice, His imputed righteousness, and His perpetual mediation,
man is without hope.
b. For He is not a man, as I am, that I might answer Him, that we should come to trial to-
gether (v.32).
NOTES: Job recognized that God is holy—separated from sinners and beyond the
reach of man. This is one of the great “first truths” or “foundational truths” regarding
the true knowledge of God. God told Moses, “You cannot see My face, for man shall
not see me and live” (Exodus 33:20). Job recognized this truth. How could he even dare
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to imagine that he could enter into God’s presence? The question remains for Job and
us: “How can we approach God?” A mediator is required: One who is comfortable in
the very presence of God and One with whom we can find comfort.
c. There is no arbiter between us, who might lay his hand on us both (v.33).
NOTES: The word “arbiter” is translated from the Hebrew word yakach, which refers
to an umpire, mediator, or arbitrator. Job recognized his need for a mediator who was
qualified to stand between him and God. In I Samuel 2:25, we read, “If someone sins
against a man, God will mediate for him, but if someone sins against the LORD, who
can intercede for him?” This truth is the basis of Job’s complaint. The proper Media-
tor would have to be a Man in order to lay His hand upon Job, but He would also have
to be God that He might lay His hand upon God. Both of these qualifications are met
in Jesus. He is a Man who can sympathize with our weaknesses; and He is also the Son
of God who has passed through the heavens and is seated at the right hand of God,
daily making intercession on behalf of His people.
2. The Scriptures declare that the greatest need of all men is that of a mediator to stand be-
tween them and God. Scripture also teaches that God has met this need in the person of
Jesus Christ. What does I Timothy 2:5 tell us about this truth?
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NOTES: The declaration of “one God” is the great confession of Israel and the Church
(Deuteronomy 6:4). To deny that Christ is the only mediator is equal to denying that the
God of the Scriptures is the only God. As stated above, the word “mediator” comes from
the Greek word mesítēs, which refers to a mediator or intermediary. It denotes one who
intervenes between two parties in order to make or restore peace, to form a treaty, or to
ratify a covenant. By mentioning the two parties (“God and men”) in a conjunctive rela-
tionship, Paul demonstrates the unique requirements of the Mediator. He must possess
the fullness of deity in order to draw near to God and be our Advocate (I John 2:1). Howev-
er, He must also be fully human that He might stand in our legally rightful place and make
atonement for our sin, that He might not overpower us with His majesty, that He might
make God known to us, and that He might sympathize with our weaknesses (Hebrews
4:15). By placing “man” before “Christ Jesus,” the Apostle Paul is not intending to deny
or even diminish Christ’s deity; rather, he is simply giving greater emphasis to Christ’s hu-
manity in His role as the Mediator through whom frail men can draw near to God. Without
denying Christ’s deity, Paul is intent on demonstrating that Christ is like us.
3. The Scriptures teach that Jesus Christ is uniquely qualified to be the Mediator between God
and man. As the God-Man, He is able to represent both parties and bring about reconciliation
between them. What does Hebrews 4:15-16 teach us about this truth?
a. For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but
one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin (v.15).
NOTES: Christ is the Great High Priest, the ultimate and greater fulfillment of the Le-
vitical high priesthood (Hebrews 4:14). The word “sympathize” is translated from the
Greek word sumpathéō [sún = with + páschō = suffer], which means, “to be affected
with the same feelings or weaknesses of another.” The KJV translates it, “touched with
the feeling of our infirmities.” The word “weaknesses” is translated from the Greek
word asthéneia [a = no + sthénos = strength], which denotes weakness, infirmity, fee-
bleness, incapacity, or inability. The Scriptures teach that Christ came in the likeness of
sinful flesh (Romans 8:3). This does not mean that His body was sinful, but only that it
was subject to all the frailties of fallen humanity. Christ’s body was not a glorious, pre-
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fall, Adamic body as is often and erroneously supposed. The word “tempted” comes
from the Greek word peirázō. Positively, the word refers to trying or testing for the
purpose of determining the quality of something. Negatively, it refers to the act of
enticing so as to cause one to sin. The latter meaning is clearly intended here. Christ
was tempted in all things by the devil and every fallen instrument (man and demon) at
his disposal. It is important to note that the verb peirázō appears in the perfect tense.
Christ has already been fully and completely tempted in all things as we are. This does
not mean that we have faced or will face every temptation imaginable, but that He has.
Therefore, He is able to help us in all our circumstances. There is no temptation that
He has not already faced and overcome. For this reason, He is said to be “without sin.”
This is possibly the most astounding characteristic of the Man Jesus of Nazareth—He
was entirely without sin! Christ is the sole person among all of humanity about whom
this claim can be made.
b. Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy
and find grace to help in time of need (v.16).
NOTES: The word “confidence” comes from the Greek word parrhēsías, which de-
notes openness, freedom, full assurance, and even boldness. Because Christ truly en-
tered into our fallen human reality, because He was tempted in all things, because He
has done away with our sin through Calvary, and because He is truly sympathetic to
our plight, we may now draw near with confidence! The Throne of Judgment has been
transformed into a Throne of Grace. Since Christ came in the likeness of sinful flesh
(Romans 8:3) and was tempted in all things, yet without sin, He is uniquely qualified to
sympathize with our weakness and to provide us with the exact kind and measure of aid
we need to face every test of our faith and every temptation of the devil.
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Chapter 30: Our Exalted Advocate
GOSPEL
In His role as Mediator, Christ acts as the Advocate for His people. The word “advocate”
comes from the Latin word advocatus [ad = to, toward + vocare = to call] and refers to one who is
called to another in order to plead their case or cause. In the Greek, the word translated as “advo-
cate” is paráklētos. It refers to someone summoned or called to another’s side to help or to plead
another’s cause before a judge or king. The word may also be translated, “pleader,” “defender,”
“counsel for defense,” or “lawyer.” Jesus Christ is the Advocate for His people, and He lives for-
ever to make intercession before the throne of God on their behalf. One of the best explanations
of Christ’s role as Advocate is found in the Westminster Larger Catechism, Question 55:
Before we continue with our study of the Scriptures, it is important to point out that the truth
of Christ’s continuous intercession for His people does not mean that He is on His knees before
the throne of God begging for mercy on our behalf. He intercedes as One seated at the very right
hand of God, as One who is omniscient and knows every need of His people, as One who has all
authority to speak on their behalf, and as One who annuls every accusation against them. The
following quotes from J. I. Packer (1926-), William Ames (1576-1633), and Louis Berkhof (1873-
1957) are helpful:
“The essence of Christ’s intercession is intervention in our interest (from His throne)
rather than supplication on our behalf (as if His position were one of sympathy with-
out status or authority).”23
“His kingly priesthood is the pleading of our cause, not by suffering and humble
supplication on bended knee, as it were, but by gloriously bringing to mind the
things which He did and suffered.”24
“Christ presents Himself before God as our representative. His perfect manhood,
His official character, and His finished work plead for us before the throne of God.
All that the Son of God as incarnate is, and all that He did on earth, He is and did for
us; so that God can regard us with all the favor which is due to Him. His presence,
therefore, is a perpetual and prevailing intercession with God in behalf of His peo-
ple, and secures for them all the benefits of His redemption.”25
23
J. I. Packer, Concise Theology, p.128
24
William Ames, The Marrow of Theology, p.148
25
Louis Berkhof, Systematic Theology, Vol.2, p.593
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Our Exalted Advocate
1. Hebrews 9:24 communicates the power and efficacy of Christ’s intercessory ministry on behalf
of His people. According to this text, how does Christ’s ministry differ from that of the priests
of the Old Covenant? How near is Christ to God? How does this prove the power of His ad-
vocacy on behalf of His people?
NOTES: The priests in the Old Testament entered yearly into an earthly temple to offer
animal sacrifices and to intercede on behalf of the people. Having offered Himself once
and for all as a sacrifice of infinite value, Christ entered permanently into the very throne
room of God and now lives to make intercession to God on our behalf.
2. I John 2:1-2 is one of the most important texts in all of Scripture regarding Christ’s work as
Advocate. Read the text until you are familiar with its contents, and then write your thoughts
on each of the following phrases.
a. My little children, I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin (v.1).
NOTES: The fact that we have an Advocate before the Father should not make us ap-
athetic about holiness or careless about sin. On the contrary, it should motivate us to
obedience because of the great work Christ has done for us.
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b. But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous
(v.1).
NOTES: Even the most mature Christian is still subject to moral weakness and sin.
Therefore, it is our great consolation that we have an Advocate with the Father. The
word “advocate” comes from the Greek word paráklētos, which denotes a “helper” or
one who is called to speak on another’s behalf. Jesus is uniquely qualified for this role
because He is righteous and worthy to stand before God.
c. He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole
world (v.2).
NOTES: The word “propitiation” comes from the Greek word hilasmós, which in-
dicates appeasement or satisfaction; it refers to a sacrifice given to appease an of-
fended party. Christ is our propitiation in that He offered His life in our place as a
sacrifice for sin. His sacrifice satisfied the demands of God’s justice against us and
appeased His wrath. The sacrifice of Christ was not limited to the Jews or any one
people group, but encompasses every tribe and tongue and people and nation
(Revelation 5:9).
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3. In Romans 8:33-34, we find another important Scripture passage regarding Christ’s interces-
sory ministry. According to this text, what is the result of Christ’s saving work and intercessory
ministry?
NOTES: The questions, “Who shall bring any charge against God’s elect?” and “Who
is to condemn?” are one and the same. It is as though God were issuing a challenge
to every being in the universe, including Satan himself. The reason why no charge or
condemnation can be brought against God’s people is two-fold. First, God has justified
His people or given them a perfect legal standing before Him. This was accomplished
through the perfect life that Christ lived and the death that He died on behalf of His
people. Secondly, Christ now sits at the right hand of God as His people’s Intercessor
and Defender.
4. In Hebrews 7:23-25, the writer describes not only the power and efficacy of Christ’s interces-
sory ministry but also its permanence. Summarize the text in your own words.
NOTES: This text leaves little to be explained. By the power of Christ’s endless life, He
is able to save forever those who draw near to God through Him. The Reformer Francis
Turretin wrote that Christ appears in heaven as a Lamb that was standing “as though it
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had been slain” (Revelation 5:6) because “His blood is ever fresh and living—of eternal
virtue and efficacy.”26
5. Although the Scriptures do not reveal the exact nature of Christ’s heavenly intercession be-
fore the throne of God, some clues may be found in His “High Priestly Prayer” that He
prayed on behalf of His disciples during His earthly ministry (John 17:1-26). Below is a list
of the petitions that Christ made for His people in that prayer. Match each petition with its
corresponding text.
_____ John 17:11-12 a. Christ intercedes for the future glorification of His people.
_____ John 17:13 b. Christ intercedes for the unity of His people.
_____ John 17:15 c. Christ intercedes for the sanctification of His people.
_____ John 17:17-19 d. Christ intercedes for the protection of His people from all
satanic forces (see also Luke 22:32).
_____ John 17:21-23 e. Christ intercedes for the perseverance of His people.
_____ John 17:24 f. Christ intercedes for the joy of His people.
26
Institutes of Elenctic Theology, Vol.2, p.485
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THE GLORIOUS
Chapter 31: Christ the King
GOSPEL
The Scriptures teach that the Son of God emptied Himself of His divine glory and privileges,
took up our lowly humanity, and was scandalously crucified on a Roman cross as a sacrifice for sin.
The Scriptures also teach that this same Jesus was raised from the dead, taken up into heaven,
and exalted to the very throne of God as the King of kings and the Lord of lords.
Upon ascending into heaven, Christ was glorified with the glory that He had with the Father
before the foundation of the world (John 17:5). However, there are important differences be-
tween His exalted state prior to the incarnation and His present exalted state in heaven. First of
all, Christ now reigns as the God-Man. The One who sits upon the throne of the universe is flesh
of His people’s flesh and bone of their bone. Secondly, Christ now reigns as the Redeemer King.
Through His death, He has redeemed a people for Himself from every tribe and tongue and peo-
ple and nation, and they will reign with Him forever and ever (Revelation 5:9-10).
1. There are many Old Testament prophecies that predicted that the coming Messiah would be
a great King who would rule over the nations. Write your thoughts on the following proph-
ecies.
a. Genesis 49:10
NOTES: King David and the kings that succeeded him were descendants of the tribe of
Judah. The Messiah was to come from this lineage (II Samuel 7:12-17). Jesus of Naza-
reth was a descendant of David (Matthew 1:1, 6; Romans 1:3). The phrase, “until tribute
comes to him,” comes from the Hebrew word shiloh, which most scholars translate as
“until he comes to whom it belongs” and interpret as a reference to the Messiah, the
great King of whom David was only a faint shadow or type.
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b. Numbers 24:17-18
NOTES: In Balaam’s final oracle, God gave him a revelation of the rise of the Messiah
in the distant future. He would not only conquer and rule Moab and Edom, but would
also possess and rule over all the nations.
c. Micah 5:2
NOTES: The prophet Micah predicted that a messianic “ruler” would be born in the
same town as King David (I Samuel 16:1-13). However, the Messiah would be greater
than David. Although He would be a Man from David’s line, He would also be God,
whose goings forth are from the days of eternity.
2. In II Samuel 7:16, a very special promise is given to David and his house (i.e. his descendants)
regarding the establishment and endurance of his reign. In Luke 1:31-33, it is clear that this
promise was fulfilled through Jesus Christ. Read both texts; explain how Jesus Christ is the
fulfillment of the promise made to David.
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3. The writers of both the Old and New Testaments made reference to Jesus of Nazareth as
King. However, it is important to ask what Jesus Himself taught regarding the matter. What
did He declare to Pilate in John 18:37? What is the significance of His words?
4. In the Scriptures, a name or title often communicates important truths about a person. In the
following passages, what are the names and titles ascribed to Jesus Christ, and what do they
communicate to us about His kingship?
CHRIST’S CORONATION
The word “coronation” comes from the Latin verb coronare, which means, “to crown or adorn
with a garland.” According to the Scriptures, the Christ who died for the sins of His people has
been raised from the dead and exalted to the right hand of God. He has been crowned as the
great King of heaven and earth, and His scepter rules over all.
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1. Having witnessed first-hand the ascension of Jesus, the apostles were bold in proclaiming its
truth to all who would listen. In Acts 2:36 is found a very important declaration made by Peter.
What does it teach us about the authority of Christ?
NOTES: The omnipotent God of the universe has appointed Jesus of Nazareth to be both
Lord and Christ. His decision will not be overturned (Psalm 2:1-6). Jesus is the Messiah of
Israel, and He is the Lord over all.
2. In Psalm 110:1 is found an important prophecy concerning the exaltation of the Messiah to
the right hand of God as Lord and King.27 Meditate carefully upon the text, and then write
your thoughts.
NOTES: The Lord (Yahweh) spoke to David’s Lord (the Messiah) and granted Him the right
to sit at His right hand and share His authority. This not only demonstrates the superiority
of the Messiah over King David, but also is proof of His exalted position as Lord of heaven
and earth. Additionally, it assures us of the ultimate victory of Christ over all the forces that
oppose Him and His people.
3. Daniel 7:13-14 is one of the most glorious accounts of Christ’s exaltation as King that can be
found in the Scriptures. Read the text several times until you are familiar with its contents, and
then write your thoughts on the following sections.
27
See Jesus’ explanation of this text in Matthew 22:41-45.
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Christ the King
a. I saw in the night visions, and behold, with the clouds of heaven there came one like a
son of man, and He came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before Him (v.13).
NOTES: Jesus is the Son of Man (Matthew 26:64; Mark 14:62). When applied to men,
the term “ancient” denotes decrepitude, feebleness, and weakness. However, when
the term is applied to God, it notes His eternality, wisdom, and power.
b. And to Him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and
languages should serve Him (v.14).
NOTES: Here we see the extension of Christ’s sovereignty. One term is heaped upon
another to communicate that Christ has been given all power over all peoples.
c. His dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and His kingdom
one that shall not be destroyed (v.14).
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NOTES: Here we see the eternality of Christ’s sovereignty. The same limitless sover-
eignty that Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, ascribed to the Most High God (Dan-
iel 4:34-35) is now ascribed to the Son of Man, Jesus of Nazareth. An interesting paral-
lel is found in Pharaoh’s exaltation of Joseph in Genesis 41:44. Joseph was taken from
the prison and exalted to the right hand of Pharaoh, so that no one could raise his hand
or foot in all the land of Egypt without his permission. In a similar but infinitely greater
manner, Jesus was raised from the dead and seated at the right hand of God in heaven,
so that no one can raise a hand or foot in the entire universe without His permission!
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Chapter 32: Christ the Lord
GOSPEL
Directly related to the kingship of Christ is His sovereignty. He is not merely a figurehead; His
lordship is absolute in its authority, infinite in its power, and limitless in its extension. There is no
place or creature beyond the reach of His scepter. As Peter boldly declared on the Day of Pen-
tecost, “Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God has made Him both Lord
and Christ, this Jesus whom you crucified” (Acts 2:36). One day, every knee will bow, and every
tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord!
1. In the Scriptures, a name or title often communicates important truths about a person. What
are the titles given to Jesus Christ in the following texts, and what do they communicate to us
about His sovereignty or lordship?
a. L_____________ (John 13:13; Acts 2:36; Romans 10:9; II Corinthians 4:5). This comes
from the Greek word kúrios, which denotes a person with authority, such as a chief,
a master, or an owner. It was often used as a title of respect, equivalent to the title
“sir.” In the Scriptures, the word is used to translate the Hebrew idea of God as Lord. It
was even used to translate the personal name for God: Yahweh (or Jehovah) (Matthew
1:22; 5:33; Mark 5:19; Luke 1:6, 9, 28, 46; Acts 7:33).
b. L_____________ of A______ (Acts 10:36; Romans 10:12). This title communicates the in-
clusive nature of Christ’s sovereignty—there is nothing beyond His reign.
c. L_____________ of L______________ (Revelation 17:14; 19:16). The greatest among
men, angels, and demons are subject to Christ. He is seated far above all rule, authori-
ty, power, and dominion (Ephesians 1:20-21).
d. L_____________ of G________________ (I Corinthians 2:8). Elsewhere, God is called the
“King of glory” (Psalm 24:7-10) and the “God of glory” (Psalm 29:3; Acts 7:2). This title
therefore communicates not only Christ’s sovereignty but also His deity.
e. L_____________ both of the D______________ and of the L_______________ (Romans
14:9). The truth communicated here is that there is no state or realm beyond the reach
of Christ’s authority. Death provides no escape from His rule.
f. H_______________ of all R_______________ and A______________________ (Colos-
sians 2:10). The word “head” comes from the Greek word kephalê, which denotes a
physical head. Used metaphorically, it refers to one who is superior, a chief, a leader,
or one to whom others are subordinate or subject. By using the two words “rule” and
“authority,” Paul is pointedly stressing that every other type and kind of authority is
subject to Christ.
g. M_________________ and L______________ (Jude 4). The title “master” comes from
the Greek word despótēs, from which we derive the word “despot.” The term refers to
someone who holds complete or absolute power and authority over another. It is used
of God in Luke 2:29, Acts 4:24, and Revelation 6:10.
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2. In Matthew 28:18, the resurrected Christ made an important declaration to His disciples just
before His ascension into heaven. What does His declaration teach us about His rule? What
are its implications?
a. II Chronicles 20:6
NOTES: The question is rhetorical. King Jehoshaphat does not doubt God’s absolute
sovereignty over all; rather, he is declaring it.
b. Job 23:13
NOTES: The phrase, “He is unchangeable,” means literally, “He is one.” It may refer to
God’s uniqueness (NASB) or to the truth that He is immutable or unchangeable. In any
case, it is clear that no one can turn God from what He has purposed to do.
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c. Psalm 103:19
4. The New Testament writers are clear about Christ’s exalted position as supreme and sover-
eign King. What do the texts below tell us about the extent of His sovereignty?
NOTES: Again, the Apostles Paul and Peter heap one term upon another in an attempt
to demonstrate that every creature of every realm is subject to Christ’s lordship.
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b. Philippians 2:9-11
5. In Psalm 2, we find one of the most majestic prophecies in all of Scripture regarding the king-
ly office of the Messiah. Write your thoughts on each section of the Psalm. What does this
prophecy teach us about Christ’s sovereignty? What does it tell us about man’s great need to
make a proper response?
a. Verses 1-3
NOTES: Here the psalmist portrays the rebellion of the nations and their unrelenting
hostility toward God’s sovereign rule and the King that He has chosen.
b. Verses 4-6
NOTES: The rebellion of the nations is futile in light of God’s unrestricted authority and
infinite power.
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c. Verses 7-9
NOTES: Verse 7 is not a denial of the Son’s eternal existence; rather, it is a reference to
His coronation day as the Messianic King.
d. Verses 10-12
6. Romans 14:7-9 is an extremely important passage regarding the lordship of Jesus Christ. Read
the text until you are familiar with its contents, and then answer the following questions.
a. According to verse 9, what was one of the great purposes of Christ’s death and resurrection?
b. According to verses 7-8, what does Christ’s lordship mean for the believer?
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Chapter 33: Christ the Judge
GOSPEL
We have learned that the Scriptures boldly declare that Jesus Christ is the King of kings and
that His is the only name by which men may be saved. In this chapter, we will see that the Scrip-
tures further teach that Christ has been exalted to the right hand of God as the Judge of all men.
Although this office may be considered an extension of His role as King, it is so prominent in
Scripture that it truly ought to be considered separately. A day is coming when all of mankind,
without exception, will be judged; and their eternal destinies will be determined only by the Man
Jesus Christ. The gospel cannot be understood apart from this truth.
1. The truth of Christ’s return and the judgment of all men through Him is by no means second-
ary; it is an essential part of any true proclamation of the gospel. How do Paul’s words in Ro-
mans 2:16 confirm this truth?
2. The Scriptures make it clear that the setting forth of Christ as Judge and the affirmation of
future judgment are not optional in true gospel preaching—they are utterly crucial. What does
Peter’s declaration in Acts 10:42 teach us about this truth?
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Christ the Judge
1. How does the Apostle Paul describe the Lord Jesus Christ in II Timothy 4:1? Write your
thoughts on the significance of his declaration.
NOTES: The phrase “living and the dead” encompasses all of humanity. As Christ is
the Lord of the dead and the living (Romans 14:9), so He is also their Judge. Not even
death provides an escape from His sovereignty or His sentence.
2. As already stated, God the Father has determined that He will judge the world in righteous-
ness through His Son Jesus Christ. What does John 5:22-27 teach us about this truth? Read
the text, and write your thoughts.
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NOTES: Jesus is not denying that the Father judges; He is explaining that He does so
through His Son (Romans 2:16). The Father has given the Son power and authority to judge
all of mankind. This great honor bestowed upon the Son is a demonstration of His deity
and a reason for us to be careful to give the Son the honor that is due Him. According to
verse 23, not only does the Father judge through the Son, but also mankind honors the
Father through honoring the Son whom He has appointed as Judge. In Daniel 7:13-14, it
was prophesied that the Son of Man (a designation for the Messiah) would be given do-
minion, glory, and a kingdom—all the peoples, nations, and men of every language would
serve Him. His dominion would be an everlasting dominion that would never pass away or
be destroyed. Jesus is that Son of Man.
3. We find still another powerful passage regarding Christ’s divine appointment as Judge of all
men in Acts 17:31. Read the text until you are familiar with its contents, and then write your
thoughts.
NOTES: God has sovereignly established a day in which all mankind will be judged, and
human history is rushing toward it. This judgment will not be arbitrary or unfair, but will be
marked by perfect justice. God has not only appointed a Day of Judgment, but He has also
appointed the Man through whom He will judge. That Man is His Son (see also Acts 10:42).
The resurrection and ascension of Jesus of Nazareth is proof and validation that He is the
Christ, the Son of God, the Supreme Lord, and the Judge of all creation.
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THE RIGHTEOUS AND OMNISCIENT JUDGE
To be without error in His judgments, God must be perfectly righteous (without the slightest
moral flaw) and omniscient (entirely aware of each and every fact).
The word “righteous” is translated from the Hebrew word tsaddiq and the corresponding
Greek term díkaios. Both terms denote the rightness, correctness, or moral excellence of God.
According to the Scriptures, God is an absolutely righteous Being and always acts in a way that is
perfectly consistent with His nature. He will never be or do anything that would justify any accu-
sation of wrongdoing. On the day when God judges all men through His Son Jesus Christ, even
the condemned will bow their heads and declare that His judgment is right!
The word “omniscience” comes from the Latin word omnisciens [omnis = all + sciens, from
scire = to know] and refers to the attribute of possessing all knowledge. God possesses a perfect
knowledge of all things past, present, and future; and He possesses this knowledge immediately,
effortlessly, simultaneously, and exhaustively. There is nothing hidden from Him. There is never
the slightest difference between His knowledge and what actually is. He not only knows all the
facts, but He also interprets each of them with perfect wisdom. On the Great Day of Judgment,
Christ will judge every man according to His perfect knowledge of all the facts—no sin will be
hidden or forgotten. Every creature, every deed, and every thought is always before Him like an
open book.
1. In the Scriptures, a name has great significance in that it communicates something about the
character of the one who bears it. What are the names given to the Lord Jesus Christ in the
following Scriptures? What do these names communicate to us about the righteousness of
Christ’s judgment?
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2. In Acts 17:31 is found an important promise regarding the character of God’s judgment
through His Son Jesus Christ. Identify this promise, and then explain its significance.
3. In order for the judgment of Christ to be perfectly just, He must be both righteous and om-
niscient. He must possess a perfect knowledge of the facts of every man’s life. Does Christ
possess sufficient knowledge to judge all men with perfect justice? What do the following
Scriptures teach us regarding Christ’s omniscience?
a. How does Christ describe Himself in Revelation 2:23? What does this description com-
municate to us about the thoroughness or exactness of His judgment?
b. How does the Apostle Paul describe Christ’s judgment in I Corinthians 4:4-5? What does
this description communicate to us about the thoroughness or exactness of His judgment?
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Christ the Judge
c. What does the Apostle Paul declare in Romans 2:16 concerning the thoroughness and
perfection of Christ’s judgment? Will anything be hidden from Christ on the day He judg-
es the world?
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Chapter 34: The Certainty of Judgment
GOSPEL
We will bring our study of the gospel to a close with a consideration of the certainty of
judgment and a brief description of it. In general, mankind seeks to avoid or even reject the
biblical truth of a future judgment. Even among Christians, there is a tendency to ignore the
subject in fear of being offensive. For this reason, we must constantly and consistently affirm
that, according to the Scriptures and the teaching of Jesus Christ, there will be a future judg-
ment that will determine the eternal destiny of every man. As we have already stated, to be
true to Scripture, we must proclaim that the same Christ who came to die for the sins of His
people will come a second time to judge and condemn those who have rejected His work of
salvation.
1. The judgment of the world through the one Man whom God has appointed (Acts 17:31) is a
great and unchangeable certainty. What does Romans 14:10-12 teach us about this truth?
NOTES: In verse 11, God swears by His own person and name not only that everyone will
be judged, but also that everyone will bow their knee and acknowledge both His authority
to judge and the rightness of His judgment.
2. It is important to understand that the judgment of all men through Jesus Christ is as immi-
nent as it is certain. God’s judgment being “imminent” means that it could happen at any mo-
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The Certainty of Judgment
ment. This truth is brought forth powerfully in James 5:9. What does this text communicate
to us about Christ’s imminent return and the judgment that will follow?
NOTES: Christ the Judge is here portrayed as standing right at the door, poised to push it
open and pass through without the slightest warning. This truth demonstrates the urgency
with which Christians ought to preach the gospel to the lost and the urgency with which
men ought to seek reconciliation with God.
1. In Matthew 16:27 is a brief but powerful description of Christ’s second coming and His judg-
ment of every man. Read the text, meditate on its contents, and write your thoughts.
NOTES: The title “Son of Man” is a reference to the Messiah or Christ (Daniel 7:13-14;
John 5:26-27). The earth’s history will come to an abrupt end with the coming of the Lord
Jesus Christ to judge the living and the dead. In Jude 14-15, the Scriptures declare that the
Lord will return with many thousands of His holy ones. At that time, Christ will judge every
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man according to his every thought, word, and deed. Those who have not been justified
by faith will be condemned.
2. In Matthew 25:31-33, we find one of the most majestic Scriptural descriptions of the second
coming of Christ and the universal judgment that will follow. Read the text until you are famil-
iar with its contents, and then write your thoughts.
NOTES: As stated above, the title “Son of Man” is a reference to the Messiah or Christ (Dan-
iel 7:13-14; John 5:26-27). There is no contradiction between the Son coming in the Father’s
glory (Matthew 16:27) and coming in His own glory (25:31), for the Son is the radiance of His
Father’s glory (Hebrews 1:3). We see here, as in Matthew 16:27, that Jesus will return with
an entourage of angels in a spectacular display of power and glory. At His return, He will
establish His absolute authority; and every individual, from Adam to the last person born
upon the earth, will be summoned to stand before His tribunal. Not one nation, race, peo-
ple, or individual will be absent. At that time, the great mass of humanity will be separated
into two distinct groups: (1) the people of God, who will inherit the eternal kingdom that was
prepared for them “from the foundation of the world” (v.34); and (2) the wicked, who will be
sent away into “the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels” (v.41).
3. In Revelation 20:11-15 is found the most awesome and complete description in all the Scrip-
tures of the Day of Judgment. Our considerations of Christ as Judge would not be complete
without a thorough consideration of this text. Read the text until you are familiar with its con-
tents, and then write your thoughts on each of the following phrases.
a. Then I saw a great white throne and Him who was seated on it (v.11).
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NOTES: Who is on the throne? From Scripture, we know that both the Father (Revela-
tion 4:2, 9; 5:1, 7, 13; 6:16; 7:10, 15; 19:4; 21:5) and the Son (Hebrews 1:3; Revelation
3:21) sit upon the throne. We know that the throne is referred to as the judgment seat
of Christ (II Corinthians 5:10) and the judgment seat of God (Romans 14:10). We know
that God the Father has appointed a day when He will judge the world in righteous-
ness through the Man Christ Jesus (Acts 17:31). This great revelation before us is not
concerned with making a distinction between the Father and the Son—the Father has
determined to judge all men through His Son. Its purpose is to prove that man’s final
confrontation will be with God Himself.
b. From His presence earth and sky fled away, and no place was found for them (v.11).
NOTES: The old world order, which has been defiled by sin and corruption, will pass
away; and a new heaven and earth will take its place.
c. And I saw the dead, great and the small, standing before the throne (v.12).
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NOTES: No one is so great that he can refuse the summons to appear before the
throne of God, and no one is so small or insignificant that he can hide. Everyone—
without exception—will be there on that Great Day.
d. And books were opened. Then another book was opened, which is the book of life. And
the dead were judged by what was written in the books, according to what they had
done (v.12).
NOTES: Those who have refused the pardon offered through the gospel of Jesus Christ
will be judged according to their deeds. The fact that the phrase “according to what
they had done” is repeated again in verse 13 is significant. It is as though the Apostle
John were making every effort to awaken men’s consciences to the utter sinfulness of
their deeds and the terrifying reality that they will undoubtedly be judged according to
them.
e. And the sea gave up the dead who were in it, Death and Hades gave up the dead who
were in them, and they were judged, each one of them, according to what they had
done (v.13).
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NOTES: There will be no place to hide on the Great Day of Judgment. The Scriptures
declare that men will cry out for the mountains and rocks to fall upon them to hide them
from the presence of the One who sits on the throne (Revelation 6:16). However, their
pleas will go unanswered. There will be no place to hide.
f. Then Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the
lake of fire. And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was
thrown into the lake of fire (vv.14-15).
NOTES: This is the tragic end of all those who refuse the will of God and His offering
of salvation through His Son—eternal separation from the favorable presence of God
in hell.
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HeartCry Missionary Society at a Glance:
The HeartCry Missionary Society began in 1988 in the country of Peru with a desire to aid indig-
enous or native missionaries so that they might reach their own peoples and establish biblical
churches among them. Since then, the Lord has expanded our borders to include not only Latin
America but also Africa, Asia, Eurasia, Europe, the Middle East, and North America.
The goal of our ministry is to facilitate the advancement of indigenous missionaries throughout
the world. Our strategy consists of four primary components: financial support, theological train-
ing, Scripture and literature distribution, and the supply of any tool necessary to facilitate the
completion of the Great Commission.
We currently support approximately 250 missionary families (along with a number of ongoing
projects) in over 40 nations around the globe.
Introduction to HeartCry
HeartCry Missionary Society was founded and still exists for the advancement of four major goals:
The Challenge
As Christians, we are called, commissioned, and commanded to lay down our lives so that the
gospel might be preached to every creature under heaven. Second only to loving God, this is
to be our magnificent obsession. There is no nobler task for which we may give our lives than
promoting the glory of God in the redemption of men through the preaching of the gospel of
Jesus Christ. If the Christian is truly obedient to the Great Commission, he will give his life either
to go down into the mine or to hold the rope for those who go down (William Carey). Either way,
the same radical commitment is required.