The death of Jesus Christ
For Paul, the death of
Jesus Christ on the cross was at the centre of preaching. We need to remember
that the dreadful sight of crucified men hanging from the large cross-posts, on
which they had been nailed, was not uncommon to people in the Roman empire.
Crucifixion was a Roman punishment for criminals, intended to deter other
potential wrongdoers from being a nuisance to the authorities, so when Paul
spoke of the cross he was speaking of something which was not an unfamiliar
spectacle of the times.
Paul believed that the
self-evident horror of the sinless Son of God hanging in agony on the
cross-posts until he died was sufficient to shock those to whom Paul preached
into realization of what sin meant without further elaboration from Paul. 'For
when I was with you, I made up my mind to forget everything except Jesus Christ
and especially his death on the cross .... I did not use big words and great
learning' (1 Corinthians 2: 1-2). 1 Corinthians 1:23
reminds us of the revolution in Paul's understanding after his conversion: 'As
for us, we proclaim the crucified Christ, a message that is offensive to the
Jews and nonsense to the Gentiles.' Paul believed that Jesus Christ had died on
behalf of all mankind (1 Corinthians 8:
11; I Thessalonians 5: 10; Romans 14: 15; Romans 3:23-24). It
was the death of Jesus Christ which achieved reconciliation between man and God
(Romans 5: 10, Ephesians 2: 13. Colossians 1:20).
Paul understood the death of Jesus Christ as a sacrifice and in 1 Corinthians 5:7 says this, 'Christ,
our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed'. At the Last Supper, of which
the first written account is in 1 Corinthians 11
:23-25, it was made clear that Jesus was giving his body, that
is, sacrificing himself, on behalf of mankind at the time that the great Jewish
festival of the Passover was being celebrated. On the night of the rescue of
the Israelites from their slavery in Egypt, through the power of God, their
first-born sons were saved from death by the blood of the sacrificed lamb,
sprinkled on the doorposts of their houses. Every subsequent Passover festival
was a commemoration by the Jews of what God, their Saviour, had done for them.
Another aspect of Paul's understanding of the death of Jesus Christ as a sacrifice
is connected with the sacrifices offered for the removal of sin by the Jews.
Paul understood the shedding of the blood of Jesus Christ and his death as the
supreme sacrifice, the divinely planned means of atonement for the sin of
mankind. 2 Corinthians 5 :21 says, 'Christ
was without sin but for our sake, God made him share our sin in order that in
union with him, we might share the righteousness of God.' Romans 3:25 says, 'God offered him so that by his
death he should become the means by which people's sins are forgiven through
their faith in him'. 'We were God's enemies but he made us his friends through
the death of his Son' (Romans 5: 1 0).
Paul interprets Christ's death as a vicarious act of expiation, reflecting the
interpretation by Jesus of his work in terms of the Suffering Servant of
Isaiah, according to the gospels.
Christ did not refuse
total identification with sinful man, and refuse to accept the cross on which
the sin of man nailed him. This shows, as nothing else could, the dreadful nature
of the sin from Christ was saving mankind. Nothing can be sharper in contrast
be the dreadfulness of sin and death, as seen on the cross of Calvary the
marvel of the victory over sin and death, in the Resurrection.
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