thegospelkiss
Member
Here's why the crucifixion was necessary:
Jesus' primary message was the Kingdom of God, in other words God's sovereignty. If God is sovereign, there can be no free will and no such distinction as good and evil. God, after all, created everything and declared it good.
By "eating from" the tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil, Man came to believe he could, and had, violated God's will (sin). From there unity fell away (good) and was replaced throughout the earth by conflict (good vs. evil). Man now judged himself and others as either good or bad, taking credit for the good and laying blame for the bad. Division ruled, and all manner of 'evils' were perpetrated in the name of fighting 'evil' and trying to appease an 'angry' God. Religions were, of course, the primary conduits of this thinking but, naturally, political leaders found it helpful to promote it in order to divide and conquer. Abraham was a turning point.
Jesus was a man uninfected by the idea of Sin. He condemned no one as 'evil', but he was surrounded by those who did. He lived in the Kingdom of God and never took credit for anything, always giving the 'glory' (credit) to God. These two contrary views of God were intended to clash and come to a head in his life; that was the purpose of his coming. He willingly submitted to crucifixion to demonstrate to the world and to history that his understanding of God was the truth, and was not the one lying and plotting and killing and blaspheming. It was instead the world's understanding - the one still at the root of virtually all of today's religions, modern Christianity included - that was the persecutor. He was a sacrifice for our 'sins' in the sense that because we believed we were sinners in God's eyes something had to show this to be false. Only by preferring to die for what he believed rather than to kill for it could this be accomplished, highlighting the stark difference between the two competing belief systems. And it was world-changing. For the first time since Adam there was an alternative to the world-view that had dominated history.
Jesus' primary message was the Kingdom of God, in other words God's sovereignty. If God is sovereign, there can be no free will and no such distinction as good and evil. God, after all, created everything and declared it good.
By "eating from" the tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil, Man came to believe he could, and had, violated God's will (sin). From there unity fell away (good) and was replaced throughout the earth by conflict (good vs. evil). Man now judged himself and others as either good or bad, taking credit for the good and laying blame for the bad. Division ruled, and all manner of 'evils' were perpetrated in the name of fighting 'evil' and trying to appease an 'angry' God. Religions were, of course, the primary conduits of this thinking but, naturally, political leaders found it helpful to promote it in order to divide and conquer. Abraham was a turning point.
Jesus was a man uninfected by the idea of Sin. He condemned no one as 'evil', but he was surrounded by those who did. He lived in the Kingdom of God and never took credit for anything, always giving the 'glory' (credit) to God. These two contrary views of God were intended to clash and come to a head in his life; that was the purpose of his coming. He willingly submitted to crucifixion to demonstrate to the world and to history that his understanding of God was the truth, and was not the one lying and plotting and killing and blaspheming. It was instead the world's understanding - the one still at the root of virtually all of today's religions, modern Christianity included - that was the persecutor. He was a sacrifice for our 'sins' in the sense that because we believed we were sinners in God's eyes something had to show this to be false. Only by preferring to die for what he believed rather than to kill for it could this be accomplished, highlighting the stark difference between the two competing belief systems. And it was world-changing. For the first time since Adam there was an alternative to the world-view that had dominated history.