SHE PROCLAIMS FOR ALL MEN
FELLOWSHIP IN CHRIST
By Jim Massey
Christ's church is Christ's people. "Called out" from other
people who are not Christ-like. Jesus loved all men of all
races and tasted death for "every man" (Hebrews 2:9). His
death was God's means of overcoming the broken fellowship
between God and man, caused by sin.
Because God and Christians have wonderful companionship
when sins are forgiven in Christ, this fellowship provides the
way for all races and segments of society to be one with each
other. All colors, economic levels, and social distinctions
become "one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). Christ's church
shows Christ's oneness to all men.
God's plan to forgive all men in Christ required selection
of a special race, the Jews, the descendents of Abraham, to
bring Christ into the world. These Jews missed the point of
their special privilege and became proud racists in their vain
superiority over other nations (the Gentiles). But godliness
(God-like-ness) opposes national or personal self-elevation,
because "God is no respecter of persons" (Acts 10:34).
No racial prejudice ever surpassed Jewish hatred for
Gentiles. But Ephesians 2:14 shows that Jesus "is our peace,
who made both one, and broke down the middle wall of
partition." Verse 15 says that he abolished in his flesh the
hatred, that he might create of Jew and Gentile "one new man,
so making peace." Verse 16 explains how Jew and Gentile were
both reconciled to God and to one another by the cross and in
one body, the church.
The church of Jesus Christ, therefore, is God's eternal
plan for human and divine togetherness for all men. The
universal leveling produced by a common salvation in Jesus'
death results in a universal fellowship of Christ-like love
and concern. Early Christians "had all things common" (Acts
4:32) and functioned unselfishly for the good of each other as
do parts of a human body (Romans 12:5).
Today's world is full of hatred between races, castes,
religions, colors, economic levels, and proud individuals. All
hatred comes from our separation from God, but love comes from
God. "He that loveth not knoweth not God, for God is love" (1
John 4:8). God's love is the only source of genuine fellowship
to heal our world's bigotry and hatred.
The good news (gospel) message that God so loves the whole
sinful world that he gave his only-begotten Son to die for it
(John 3:16) is the only basis for peace among men. No
legislation by law-makers nor sincere efforts by social
peacemakers can solve the real problem -- man's sin and
necessary separation from God's holiness.
God is holy and pure. He cannot stand sin. His presence
before Moses made ordinary dirt "holy ground" (Exodus 3:5).
His name is holy and reverend (Psalm 111:9). Angels sing,
"Thou alone art holy" (Revelation 15:4). Man must be holy
because God is holy (1 Peter 1:16). Without holiness no man
can have fellowship with God (Hebrews 12:14).
But man is not holy by nature, he is sinful. He is
basically un-God-like, or ungodly. The thoughts of man's heart
are only evil continually (Genesis 6:5). There is not a just
man on the earth that doeth good and sinneth not (Ecclesiastes
7:20). There is none righteous, no not one (Romans 3:10). All
men have sinned and come short of the glory of God (Romans
3:23). Man is fleshly, sold under sin (Romans 7:14). In his
flesh dwells no good thing (Romans 7:18).
Because God's nature is angered by sin, He must punish
every sin. He has eyes too pure to look upon sin (Habbakuk
1:13). Evil is an abomination to God (Proverbs 15:8). His
wrath is revealed against all ungodliness and unrighteousness
(Romans 1:18). Every sin must receive a proper punishment
(Hebrews 2:2). If God failed to punish a single sin, he would
be imperfect in justice. He would be like an unfair judge,
partial and corrupt. But because he is perfectly just, God
must punish every sin.
This shows why Jesus had to die for sinners. The very
nature of God cannot stand sin. But the very nature of man is
to practice sin. Because God is perfectly just, he must punish
man's sin. And a perfect standard of right and wrong doesn't
remedy man's sin problem. Law only exposes man's guilt and his
need to be forgiven of sin. By the basic nature of God and
man, the only way man could be forgiven by God was for God to
find a way to punish sin and yet to forgive man, the sinner.
Jesus' death was the answer.
Christ suffered in the place of sinners. Because God must
punish sin, man's sins were punished upon Jesus. His death was
a substitute sacrifice for us. He has borne our griefs and
carried our sorrows. He was stricken, afflicted, and smitten
of God. He was wounded for our transgressions. He was bruised
for our iniquities. He was chastened so that we could have
peace with God. With his stripes we are healed. God has laid
upon him the sins of us all. God's demand for sin's punishment
was satisfied when he saw the travail of his soul (Isaiah
53:4-12). Christ suffered sin's penalty in man's place.
The word "atonement" means "at-one-ment." It is the price
paid which enables peace to be restored between enemies. Him
who knew no sin, God made to be sin on our be- half that we
might be made righteous because of him (2 Corinthians 5:21).
Jesus bore our sins in his body on the cross, and by his
stripes we are healed (1 Peter 2:24). Christ suffered for
sins, the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God
(1 Pet. 3:18). All have sinned and come short of the glory of
God, but forgiveness of sins freely justifies or makes man
righteous in Christ (Romans 3:23, 24). This is possible
because God has given Jesus as a sin-offering that satisfies
God's anger against sin. God now can both punish sin and also
forgive the sinner who trusts in Jesus (Romans 3:25,26).
A man from Ethiopia was riding in his chariot, reading the
prophet Isaiah about God's suffering Lamb upon whom man's sins
were laid (Acts 8:28). The preacher Philip began at this
Scripture and preached unto him Jesus (verse 35). The
Ethiopian then wanted to be baptized (verse 36). They stopped
the chariot, went down into the water, and the man was
baptized (verse 38). He then came up out of the water
rejoicing because his sins had been forgiven in the death of
Jesus (verse 39).
The Ethiopian African had been taught by Philip, a Jew -
racism had been erased by the atonement message of Jesus. The
death of Jesus erased hatred between God and man and between
men and other men. Christians have all things common in
Christ's one body, the church. Men of different races and
status become new men in Christ, who then proclaim the saving
message of the cross to a world of sinners of all races
alienated from God and from one another.
QUESTIONS
What causes the separation of fellowship between God and
man?
What was God's purpose for the Jews, and how did they
corrupt this purpose?
What body is God's plan for human togetherness?
Where does hatred come from?
Where does love come from?
Name two characteristics of God which cause him to separate
from man.
Explain the meaning of "atonement."
What was the Ethiopian reading, what did he hear preached,
what did he do, and why did he rejoice?
Why would Philip, a Jew associate with an Ethiopian?
What message will saved sinners give their lives to
proclaim?