8. Calvary
the ultimate priceMatthew 26:47-75; 27 & 28; Mark 14:32-72; Luke 22-24
Gifford RhamieIt’s hard to stand in court when all the evidence is stacked against you. We live in a country that prides itself in a judicial system that springs from the philosophy of the freedom of the individual: that you are ‘innocent before proven guilty’. But it’s hard to appear innocent when all the evidence compellingly conspires against you. In fact, then, you are guilty before you are even tried — ‘guilty before proven innocent’.
I’ve been there! I committed a traffic offence. I drove faster than my guardian angels, but not faster than the speed camera. It caught me. The photographic evidence was there. I was, my friends, ‘guilty before proven innocent’. There was no one between my soul and the magistrate, no one between except the court clerk, and what a stickler for the law she was. [In Great Britain, the magistrates’ court handles petty crime and the court clerk is the expert on the law who duly advises the magistrates.]
“Why are you here?” She interrogated, “You broke the law didn’t you?” “The penalty is mandatory – a £70 fine!” “You’re guilty aren’t you?” “Have you seen the photographic evidence?” “Then why are you here?” “Pay the fine!”
She not only said what she had to say, her entire frame embodied what she had to say. She threw the whole book at me, without reservation, without even an ounce of mercy – even though she knew I was a pastor! (In fact, I thought she had something against pastors!) The photographic evidence for her was enough – I was guilty as charged.
I felt silly and foolish before the little woman. By the time she was finished with me, my tall frame shriveled up to nothingness before her petite frame. Her face looked like the long face of the law, which rendered me defenseless. I would have been sent to the gallows had it not been for the words of the magistrate, “Have you got anything to say?” That came like a breath of fresh air! And all I could say was, “I had to pay the price of speeding to set her free!”
My experience serves as a parable of the human standing before heaven. You and I are charged by the arch-enemy, Satan, of a crime worthy of the ultimate death penalty. We are guilty, because we were “born in sin an shaped in iniquity”. Indeed, “in sin did our mother conceive us”. The penalty for our condition is death – eternal separation from God, eternal damnation. Now in the face of our condemnation, has God got anything to say? Well, what God has to say comes like a breath of fresh air, because it comes in the person of Jesus Christ. When I said to the magistrate, “I had to pay the price. . .,” I was talking about a speeding ticket. When God says, “I have paid the price,” God is talking about the ultimate price paid on Calvary to set everyone free.
Calvary is the answer to the charge of Satan. Calvary is what gives the human pardon from the penalty of death. Calvary is what makes us free. Calvary is the ultimate price for any pardon. But why Calvary? What makes Calvary the ultimate price?
The Man of CalvaryCalvary is the ultimate price simply because of the Man of Calvary. He is Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God. God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself (Philippians 2:4-6). “He who knew no sin became sin for us,” 2 Corinthians... Jesus is the God-man. Only the God-man could save man. Only the Creator Himself, is qualified to save His creation. That’s why the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth (John 1:14). No angel would do, no other created being could do. He had to be the God-man called Jesus Christ. Only He who personally knew the height and depth of the love of God could accomplish our redemption.
But know this that God Himself chose to rescue us through Jesus. Jesus chose to give His life as a substitute for us. He didn’t have to. He didn’t simply and passively lose His life as though He had no control. He actively gave it.
It is told that in the First World War there was a young French soldier who was seriously wounded. His arm was so badly smashed that it had to b amputated. He was a magnificent specimen of young manhood, and the surgeon was grieved that the youngster had to go through life without a limb. So he waited beside his bedside to tell him the bad news when he recovered consciousness. When the lad’s eyes opened, the surgeon said to him: “I am sorry to tell you that you have lost your arm.” “Sir,” said the lad, “I did not lose it; I gave it – for France.”
Do you see the point? Jesus did not lose his life, he gave it! When Jesus was taken from Pilot’s court to Herod’s and back again, Jesus was not helplessly caught up in a mesh of circumstances from which he could not break free. We are told that He could have called upon 10,000 angels to intervene and save His life. He did not lose His life; He gave it. The Cross was not thrust upon Him; He willingly accepted it — for you and me.
And guess what, it was the ultimate price, though He did it for free. You see, there are some things that money cannot by.
Money can buy a bed but not sleep, a hammer but not a carpenter, “things’ but not friends, a toy but not a child’s happiness, a pen and paper but not an author, a pencil but not an idea, a house but not a home, a wedding but not peace, paints but not an artist, eyeglasses but not eyesight, a chair but not rest, a computer but not wisdom, a flag but not patriotism, a gun but not a soldier, a book but not knowledge, a machine but not a skill, a name but not a man, a church but not a religion, an altar but not salvation, and a cross but not a Saviour.’ There are some things that money cannot buy. Money cannot buy love.
There is not price tag on love. The sacrifice of one’s life is the ultimate price. Moreover, money can’t buy a Saviour. So it’s Jesus the God-man that makes Calvary so special.
What is your picture of Jesus today? So often we picture Jesus without the cross. We picture Jesus without the nail-print scars in His hands. We prefer a Jesus who looks like a big brother, or even an unclelike figure, but not the Jesus of Calvary.
But did you know that the more we study and contemplate Jesus in light of the cross, the more we see mercy, tenderness, and forgiveness blended with equity and justice. The more we walk and talk with this figure of Jesus who has fresh nailprints in His hands, the more we see Jesus in our mind’s eye as the One who died in our place, as the One who died to save us, the more we would have the assurance that we are justified through the merit of his sacrifice. It is the Jesus of Calvary, not the Jesus of the womb or the tomb; but the Jesus of Calvary who gives the sinner another chance.
My friends, if at any time you begin to fear that you will be lost, that Jesus does not love you, look to Him at Calvary. He says, “I am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive forevermore,” (Revelation 1:18). Further, he says when you are witnessing of him, “Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the ages,” (Matt. 28:20).
So Calvary is special because of the Man of Calvary, Jesus Christ.
The Cross of Calvary But Calvary is the ultimate price also because of the cross of Calvary. “The cross is the only ladder high enough to touch Heaven’s threshold.” “The cross is the only key to set man free.”
While taking a prisoner from a correctional centre to be arraigned on charges of attempted armed robbery, police constable John Bolton noticed a cross around the neck of the convict. Knowing the man was not religious, he took a closer look. The prisoner then attempted to hide something that was protruding from the top of the cross. When questioned, he said it was a good luck charm designed to look like a spoon for sniffing cocaine. But Constable Bolton was suspicious that it looked like a handcuff key. So he took it away and by experimentation found that this special cross could open most handcuffs. This discovery led to the exposure of an underground attempt by prisoners in Ontario, Canada to make a number of these cross-type-keys.
But friends while there have been attempts to make crosses that can set people free; there is only one cross that can set humans free! It frees them from the bondage and condemnation of the law, and that cross is the cross of Calvary. Unfortunately many are more concerned about freedom for the body than they are about freedom for the soul. Whether insid or outside prison, all men need the cross that sets us free.
We need to lift high the cross. We need to put the cross back where it belongs. I don’t mean around some pious neck, nor consigned to a rosary, or even confined to a church. All I’m saying is that the cross be raised again:
That the cross be raised again at the centre of the market place
as well as on the steeple of the church, I am recovering the claim that Jesus was not crucified in a cathedral between two candles:
But on a cross between two thieves; on a town garbage heap;
At a cross-road of politics so cosmopolitan that they had to write His title in Hebrew and in Latin and in Greek...
It was the kind of place where cynics talk smut, and thieves curse and soldiers gamble.
That’s where we need to raise the cross.
Because that is where He died, and that is what He died about.
And that is where Christ’s men ought to be, and what church people ought to be about.
In many communities, it is not fashionable to admit that you are a Christian. In fact, the cross is a symbol of shame and disgrace as it was 2000 years ago, although for different reasons. However, the same way Jesus turned the symbol from shame and disgrace to “amazing grace” by his sacrifice, so can we turn the symbol around today by our Christ-like sacrifice. The hallmark of Jesus-living is self-denial – sacrifice! So let’s put people first in our classes, in our apartments, in our neighborhoods, families, workplaces, initiatives, projects, plans – in our futures.
People need to see that it is the cross of Christ that makes the difference in our lives. They need to see that the cross has produced in us a new code of behavior. The things we used to do we don’t do them anymore. The things we used to wear ... read ... watch ... listen to ... places ... Why? Because the cross, which makes Calvary so special, has made a difference in our lives.
So Calvary is ultimate price not only because of the Man of Calvary but also because of the cross of Calvary.
Sinners of Calvary But Calvary is finally the ultimate price because of the sinners of Calvary. Calvary makes little sense without the sinners hanging there.
Hear me out. On the hill of Calvary were three crosses. One cross portrays a thief dying IN sin, and the other a thief dying TO sin. (Which sinner are you?) But the centre cross speaks of the redeemer dying FOR sin. Calvary divides all of humanity into one of two categories — those who reject Christ and die in sin and those who receive Christ and can die to sin. (But which category are you in?)
For if you are in the one dying to sin, Jesus says you have to pick up your cross daily, and follow me. “If any man will come after me,” He says, “let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me.” Mat 16:24.
The beauty about the decision that was made by the thief on the cross who accepted the grace of Jesus is that although it was a last minute decision, it was still accepted by heaven. There was no fanfare, no long altar call, no Bible study, not even time for baptism (though all these do have their places).
There was a mere, “Remember me...” that was affirmed by, “Today, you will be with me...”
Right now you have the opportunity to say in your heart, “Jesus, remember me!” In so saying, you are saying, “I accept the gift of Calvary, the ultimate price that heaven had to pay to redeem a poor sinner like me!” I now want the miracle of Calvary to empower my living, whether it be to kick a habit, to change my taste buds, to go to the next level of my personal development, to embrace the values of endurance, simplicity and selfless service — whatever it might be — I submit to the power that Calvary unleashes to empower my soul.
When I stood before the magistrate that day, I told you that all I could say was, “I had to pay the price of speeding to set her free!” But what I didn’t tell you was the whole story. You see, I went on to tell the magistrates that I got an emergency call from the local hospital that late evening that one of my parishioners was dying and could I get there immediately to pray with her before her last dying breath. Well, apart from taking the word “immediately” quite literally, I knew that my presence as an agent of God would not only bring her comfort, but permission to die in the freedom of peace and hope. So I negotiated the roads a little sharper and quicker than I normally did to get there, acknowledging that I did break the law to do this. I wanted to tell them further that I did get there just in time, and managed to hold Agnes by her lily, crispy hands and recite and pray that “God shall wipe away all tears from your eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things would be passed away,” (paraphrased, Rev 21:4). I wanted to tell them this, but the magistrates stopped me in my tracks in order to break for their deliberations over my case.
A few moments later, they returned from their chambers and pronounced the verdict, “Not guilty!” to my utmost surprise and delight. They did, however, record the offence against my name, but that for me was a small price to pay.
Jesus paid the ultimate price to set every human free.