Kota Kemuning Church of Christ

The Cross

We have reference to a single cross . . . the one  on which the Son of God gave His life. No one  snatched Jesus’ life from Him. He willingly laid it  down. “He humbled Himself and became obedient to  the point of death, even the death of the cross”  (Philippians 2:8).

What Jesus endured on the cross was death by  crucifixion: “And when they had come to the place  called Calvary, there they crucified Him . . .” (Luke  23:33). No details are supplied about what happened  to His body from the point the nails/spikes were  pounded into Him until He stopped breathing. The  biblical brevity is amazing: “there they crucified  Him.”

It was a cross made out of wood. It would not  have been the type of finely-finished wood which is  employed inside homes today. It would have been  rough stuff. In Bible language, it was a tree. The  apostle Peter accused a Jewish audience with these  words: “The God of our fathers raised up Jesus  whom you murdered by hanging on a tree” (Acts  5:30). His body hung on the tree for about six hours  before He died (Mark 15:25,34). Yes, the  cross/crucifixion was used to kill humans. And, yes,  in the case of Jesus, what happened to Him was  murder. The Bible says so. 

The foretelling of the cross – Jesus said that as  Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, He  would be lifted up also (John 3:14). Shortly before  His death, He spoke about Himself being “lifted up  from the earth” (John 12:32). Hear the Bible’s  explanation: “This He said, signifying by what death  He would die” (John 12:33). The reference was to  dying on a cross.

The Romans’ employment of the cross – The  Roman Empire used crucifixion as a means of  carrying out capital punishment for certain offenses.  They used that form of penalty both before and after  the death of the Christ, so the cross was not  something that the Romans employed exclusively in  Jesus’ case. For the Roman soldiers who drove the metal spikes into the sinless Lamb of God (John  19:23), it was “just another day’s work . . . just  doing our job.”

The One on the cross – The one who suffered at  Golgotha was the spotless Lamb of God (1 Peter  1:19), who “gave Himself a ransom for all” (1 Timothy 2:6). The Roman centurion and others who were with him observed that day’s happenings and  properly concluded, “Truly this was the Son of  God!” (Matthew 27:54). 

The pain of the cross – Before Jesus made it to  the cross, He first was scourged by the Romans  (Mark 15:15), a process that often left the body of  the one who was beaten in shock or even dead. In a  Messianic psalm, the message was, “They pierced  My hands and My feet” (Psalm 22:16). There is no  painless placing of hardened metal through human  skin. The pain was unimaginable. Jesus’ love for us  and commitment to the Father’s plan caused Him to  stay on that cross.

The shame of the cross – The Bible says Jesus  “endured the cross, despising the shame” (Hebrews  12:2). What shame was associated with crucifixion?  “He was numbered with the transgressors” (Isaiah  53:12), though He was innocent of any crime. Under  the old law, there was a stigma connected with the  type of death Jesus suffered: one who was killed by  hanging on a tree was considered as “accursed of  God” (Deuteronomy 21:22,23). 

The power of the cross – “For the message of  the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing,  but to us who are being saved it is the power of  God” (1 Corinthians 1:18). The Christ and His cross  are “the power of God and the wisdom of God”  (1:24). In Bible language, we are reconciled to God  “through the cross” (Ephesians 2:16). Jesus’ blood  still has the power to do something that ten thousand  kind deeds, the blood of ten thousand animals, or ten  thousand U.S. dollars could never do: wash away  humans’ sins.

The proper response to the cross – When a  person learns the Bible truths that Jesus is the Son of  God and by His death on the cross He can provide  forgiveness for sinners, it is decision time. Will he  accept it or reject it? Those who truly accept the cross  are willing to submit to the One who paid the ultimate  price on it. The cross saves believers. What kind of  believers? Those who obey Jesus (Hebrews 5:9). 

Thank God for Calvary! For Christians, it is not  enough to know what the Bible says about the cross.  It is not enough to believe it . . . We must go forth  and teach the cross to the lost!

Roger D. Campbell