For the point is that God has once and for all reserved for himself the business of your salvation.
There is nothing you can do now but, as the words of the old hymn have
it, ‘climb Calvary’s mournful mountain’ and stand with your helpless
arms at your side and tremble before ‘that miracle of time, God’s own
sacrifice complete! It is finished; hear him cry; learn of Jesus Christ
to die!’
At the cross, God has stormed the last bastion of the self, the last
presumption that you really were going to do something for him…He has
died in your place! He has done it. He made it. It is all over,
finished, between you and God! He died in your place that death which
you must die; he has done it in such a way as to save you. He has borne
the whole thing! The fact that there is nothing left for you to do is the death of self and the birth of the new creature” (Gerhard Forde).
What if the gospel is not offensive because of what it demands, but
because of what it supplies? Is it possible that grace is not offensive
because of what it asks of us, but because it asks for nothing? This is why most Christians are offended at grace.
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