| EXPLORING CHRISTIANITY - CROSS |
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THE
BIBLE EYEWITNESS GOD
- MAN RESURRECTION RELIGIONS SUFFERING TRINITY SCIENCE FORGIVENESS GUIDANCE REPENTANCE BORN
AGAIN SAVING
FAITH ASSURANCE TRUTH MORALITY THE
CHURCH PURPOSE IDENTITY SELF-ESTEEM LIFE AFTER DEATHChristianity's Hope & Challenge. THE CROSS Grace
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The cross in 1 Peter Peter’s first letter was written to offer encouragement and guidance to Christians who were suffering persecution because of their faith. Because of this, it has a good deal to say about the sufferings of Christ and how his example should inspire, motivate and encourage us. For this reason he seems to prefer “sufferings” to “death” in speaking of Christ as perhaps having a more general application to our own lives. It is for this reason also that references to the cross tend to crop up incidentally in the letter and he does not set out to deliberately discuss a theology of the cross as does Paul and the writer of Hebrews. However, whenever he speaks of Christ’s innocence and patience in suffering, he moves on in every instance to Christ the sacrificial lamb, Christ the bearer of sin, Christ who died, the righteous for the unrighteous. He describes himself as “a witness of Christ’s sufferings” (5:1). The Greek word for “witness”, martus, from which comes our word “martyr”, is no doubt used here in its full meaning of not only one who is a spectator of something, but also of one who bears testimony to it.
Another point worth noting is that Peter was steeped in the Old Testament, and this comes through in the direct quotes, ideas and the phraseology that he uses. By the use of a phrase such as “sprinkled with his blood” (1:2) and in speaking of Christ as a “lamb without blemish or defect” (1:19—see Numbers 28:3, etc.), he demonstrates his belief in the death of Christ as the fulfilment of the symbolism inherent in the Old Testament animal sacrifices. In speaking of being sprinkled with his blood after his reference to obedience in 1:2, he no doubt has in mind the confirming of the covenant by Moses in Exodus 24:7, 8. In his use of Psalm 118:22, “The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone” (2:7), he sees the rejection of Christ by the Jewish elders as the fulfilment of Old Testament prophecy. Jesus himself had quoted this verse in the same context (Matthew 21:42) and no doubt Peter was present with him on this occasion. In particular, he saw Christ’s sufferings as the fulfilment of Isaiah’s prophecy in Isaiah 53. Chapter 2, verses 22-25 contain one direct quote and several phrases from this chapter of Isaiah. His statement that “’He himself bore our sins in his body on the cross” (literally “tree”), echoing Isaiah 53:11, could not express more clearly what he believed to be the true significance of the cross. The very order of the Greek words in this sentence puts emphasis on the fact that it was not his own, but our sins that were borne on Calvary. (The same point is clear from 3:18, “the righteous for the unrighteous”). The Greek word for “tree” here, xulon, which is used as a poetic term for the cross, no doubt with reference to the curse of Deuteronomy 21:23, is literally “timber” or dead wood. Paul singled out the death of Christ and his resurrection as the heart of the gospel message and the fulfilment of the Old Testament Scriptures (1 Corinthians 15:1-4). In a similar way, Peter mentions “the suffering of Christ and the glories that would follow” as the focus of Old Testament prophecy (1:10, 11). The “Spirit of Christ” or “the Holy Spirit” was the one who both inspired the prophets and who now inspired those who proclaimed this message (vv. 11, 12). As both Paul and John do, Peter speaks of the cross as providing the greatest motivation for godly living. It is because we have a Father who “judges each person’s work impartially” and because we were redeemed at such cost from our “empty way of life” “with the precious blood of Christ”, that we are to live “in reverent fear” (1:17, 18). Christ “bore our sins…so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness” (2:24). “It is better, if it is God’s will, to suffer for doing good than for doing evil. For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God” (3:17, 18). The verb “bring” here is the same word Paul uses as a noun to describe our access to God made possible by the cross and a reality by the Spirit (Romans 5:2; Ephesians 2:18; 3:12). In his instruction to slaves, Peter speaks of Christ’s behaviour
in the face of unjust suffering as an example for us to follow (2:18-23).
This is an emphasis found also in Paul and the writer of Hebrews. Peter
adds that we may be “called” to this suffering (2:21) and
that it may be “God’s will” (3:17; 4:19). If we are
so called to suffer, then we “participate in the sufferings of Christ,
so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed” (4:13). Scholars differ as to whether 2 Peter was written by the apostle of Jesus or not. There is no direct mention of the cross here. It is plain that the writer had it in mind, however, when he declared that if we are not growing in our faith and character we “have forgotten that [we] have been cleansed from [our] past sins” (1:9), and also when he speaks of those who “secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying the sovereign Lord who bought them—bringing swift destruction on themselves” (2:1).
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Foreword Part 1: What the Bible says about the cross Images
of the cross from the Old Testament The
cross in the Gospels The
cross in Acts Benefits
of the cross The
cross in Hebrews Why
the cross is not popular
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