Why Jesus? (Part 2)
by james on Feb.25, 2010, under devotional thought
People often wrestle with the idea of God sending His Son Jesus to live on earth and die for sin. If God is all powerful, why would God choose this method for “saving” people? Why not “just forgive” people? Or why not do it another way? Why Jesus?
The Bible offers a simple answer to these difficult questions: Jesus’ coming and dying provided the ONLY sufficient solution to an infinite problem. Last time we began the answer with two important aspects of God’s nature and the obstacle created by man’s sin.
Before we can address the solution to this quandary, we must establish man’s contribution to the problem more firmly. Most people are happy to accept an infinitely perfect and loving God, but they fail to see the real problem introduced by man. Their misunderstanding of the situation emerges from a failure to grasp sinfulness.
From Adam forward all men and women have rejected God and His standard of perfection. Even if you believe that people are basically good, you must admit that even the basically good people aren’t perfect. All people - by virtue of their imperfection - raise an obstacle between themselves and God because their imperfection contradicts God’s perfection.
On the basis of God’s absolute perfection and man’s inability to maintain absolute perfection, every person is separated from God. Thus, three realities are colliding: God’s perfection, man’s imperfection, and God’s love.
God wants to know us, but He must deal with our sin. He has three options.
1. He could forget about humans altogether and move on.
2. He could ignore our sin and accept us anyway.
3. He could find a way to satisfy His perfection and His love.
The first two options present additional problems because each forces God to offend one of the two aspects of His nature I introduced last time. The first requires Him to ignore His love. The second requires Him to ignore His perfection. Therefore, the rest of the answer to our original question (Why Jesus?) centers on God’s plan for satisfying His perfection and love.
More to come…