Jesus Died on the Cross. It Matters.

Bell tower of a white church with a white cross at the top

I recently heard about heretical teaching
from an evangelical pulpit. The preacher taught that Jesus didn’t really die on
the cross. He declared that God took Jesus’ place on the cross at the moment of
death. So, God the Son didn’t die. God died instead, for Jesus and God are one
in the same. Or so it was preached.

My dad listened from the pews in unwelcome
surprise. In horror, really, because all hope and life hangs on the fact that
God’s Son died on the cross to satisfy the penalty of sin – to satisfy His
Father’s righteousness. Jesus asked His Father if there was any other way to pay
the penalty of sin, but He submitted to His Father’s plan.

For
God so loved the world
that he gave his one and only Son,
that whoever believes in him shall not perish
but have eternal life.

John 3:16

I was as shocked as my dad as he
shared about this errancy. We both listed biblical truths that depend on the
fact that Jesus, Himself, was crucified on that fateful cross.

The following is an interview with
my father. He has been teaching, preaching, and leading for as long as I can
remember. His specialty is Greek and Hebrew.

Simple picture of a microphone

So, Dad, what is the gist of the
preacher’s message about Jesus’ crucifixion?

The preacher said that Jesus didn’t die on the
cross – that God took His place. He said Jesus and God are one in the same. So,
it was actually God who died on the cross.

The preacher told the story of Abraham who was
about to sacrifice his son Isaac. As he raised the knife to kill his son, God
stopped him and provided a ram to take his place. Similarly, as the preacher
claimed, God’s son didn’t actually die, but God Himself died instead.

This “Replacement Theology” may have roots in false
teaching by the United Pentecostal Church, also known as the Pentecost Holiness
Church, also known as Oneness Faith. It is monotheism and it renders the Old
Testament obsolete and irrelevant.

Is this a modern teaching or was it
taught in other settings, e.g., biblical times, during the early church, or in
other religions?

In the Bible we see the denial of Jesus
Christ, but not this more modernistic false doctrine. This is different – this monotheistic
idea that Jesus and God are one in the same. It started a while ago, but it
seems this preacher mixed in the new concept that Jesus didn’t die on the
cross.

What is the error in this teaching?

If you believe this false teaching, you deny
all the teachings of the New Testament that involve the cross of Jesus Christ.
You also deny all of the Old Testament prophecies about the Messiah and the
birth of a Savior. When you remove the cross of Jesus, you push aside eternal
redemption, and if this is true, our belief in the cross of Jesus is in vain.
We forfeit the practical, relational aspects of the gospel.

What is the danger in believing that
Jesus did not actually die on the cross?

We would be eternally lost. Technically, there
is no salvation or personal relationship with Christ. We’d speak only of doctrine,
and not hope or forgiveness. We would be lost and everyone who heard the gospel
from us would also be lost.

There is no joy or excitement when Jesus is
not in the picture. Our learning would become more philosophical and less
practical.

Why is it critical that Jesus
Himself died and not God His Father?

This is God’s design. The Father planned it. The
Son paid for it. The Holy Spirit applies it. This is His plan throughout the
Bible beginning in Genesis and into the New Testament.  The Apostles, including Stephen, Peter, and
Paul, affirm it. The gospels affirm it. You can’t remove the Son because He’s
part of the program. There is nothing in the Bible that suggests that God the
Father died in His place.

Also, the Jews today call Jesus “Yeshua
Messiah.” If they refer to Him as Yeshua Messiah, then they know He is Jesus –
the Jesus who died on the cross. Long ago the Jews looked forward to the coming
of the Son and Messiah, and today they look back at Jesus as the Son and
Messiah prophesied.

What Bible verses explain that Jesus undoubtedly died
on the cross? What is the message of these verses?

John3:16-18 tops the list of many Bible references and it is the one quoted by
evangelists. Jesus is the Son of God who died as payment for our sins. He died
to give us life. In John 1:14 and 18 we read that Jesus is God, but He is distinguished
from His Father:

The Word became flesh and
made his dwelling among us.
We have seen his glory, the glory of the one and only Son,
who came from the Father, full of grace and truth…
No one has ever seen God, but the one and only Son,
who is himself God and is in closest relationship with the Father,
has made him known.

John 1:14 and 18

In
Acts 6 and 7, Stephen acknowledged the three members of the Godhead while he listed
significant events in Israel’s history. And Paul repeatedly explained the
gospel – that Jesus came, died, and rose from His grave – throughout his
epistles, including Galatians 4 that describes how and why Jesus came to earth.
Paul in his epistles assures us that Jesus Christ is the Son of God who died
for our sins.

What areas of Christian living should be influenced by the fact that Jesus died on the cross?

The flesh. I am crucified with Christ (Galatians 2:20). Our daily walk and relationship with people. We need to reflect the character of Christ. And it should affect our relationships at church. We are commanded to walk in unity. When we trust Jesus as Savior, we are a new creation. Now we walk in the Spirit.

What affect has this had in your
Christian circles and in your geographical community in general?

It has made me a better person. My emotions.
My conversations. My private and social life. Jesus is my power.

In my Christians circles, it strengthened the
teaching, the gospel presentation – that God has a Son and gave Him on the
cross. We have joy.

At the church where this was taught, it seems
that something is missing. There used to be joy. With Jesus out of the picture,
there is no joy. I’ve gone back to preach and it’s not the same. But the pastor
continues to promote this false doctrine, so I don’t preach there anymore.

And this false doctrine can creep into megachurches
because they need to accept all kinds of teaching. They can’t just preach the
Bible. There’s a very famous one here in town. They don’t ask, “Are you born
again? Do you know Christ as your Savior?,” like we did when I was growing up.
Now it’s, “Do you need a healing? Do you need to be prayed for?” I’ve been
around them. They’ve tried that with me and I thought, “How come you don’t want
to talk about Jesus Christ and the cross and the resurrection?” They don’t do
that. And I don’t want them to pray for me. I don’t want them coming around
because that’s all they do. What I’m trying to say is: It’s not the life of
Christ. It’s about a fix, a bandage, a band-aid. Don’t heal my problem. Just
give me a band-aid. They don’t want a full deliverance of healing for the whole
life – body, soul, and spirit. They just want a little touch. Give me an
aspirin. Give me a religious aspirin and that’ll take care of my problem.

Is there anything else you would
like to add?

One thing I’m so thankful for, and this is
because of the relationship with Christ – I’m so thankful for all of you who
have Christ in your heart. And it’s not only you. It’s your children, and now
I’m hearing about the grandchildren of family members. (Lord, I thank you.)
That’s what makes the gospel real. We’re not preaching a figment of our
imagination. We’re preaching a real, genuine gospel, supported by the Bible,
based on the Bible, and we’re seeing the fruits of it. You’re seeing the fruits
of it. Look at your children. If the power of Jesus Christ is not real, then it
wouldn’t affect our children, our grandchildren; it wouldn’t affect our
relatives, our uncles, our aunts. People around us are affected by this gospel.
It’s the power of the Holy Spirit working through the gospel of Christ. That’s
really an excitement in my spirit when I know what’s happening in you, Steve. I
know what’s happening with my children. We’re still praying for some. But I’m
excited.

I love how you bring it back to what’s
important and praiseworthy, despite the erroneous teaching. Jesus affects
people. We see it. It’s so logical.

Right. And just look what it’s done to your
family. You can look at your whole family: your dad, your uncles, your aunts,
you know. If this gospel is not real, then how come they’re excited? But it’s
real, and you know it’s real, and now your children know. I’m thinking, “Wow. This
is marvelous!” Uncle Ralph calls me a lot and that’s what keeps us excited. We
look at our families and we think, “Wow.” My mother was the only candle in our
family, but then she lit up 4 boys. And now 4 boys have candles. And 4 boys lit
up how many families now, children and grandchildren. So, all of you have a
candle, the light of Jesus. And I can rest secure. Joyous.

I’m always saying now when I go to preach, “Lord,
it’s exciting to serve you. Lord, it’s a joy to serve you.” Some people serve
the Lord and say, “Well, I have to go preach, or I have to go do this.” No, no,
no. When it comes to the Lord, we ought to be excited. The Holy Spirit’s going
to be upon us. He’s going to work through us to help people. So, I’m excited.

Simple picture of a microphone

Dear readers. Jesus is God’s one and
only Son. He came to us in human flesh and died on the cross to pay the penalty
of our sins so that we can be reconciled to God the Father. Jesus’ love is
intentional and it led Him to the cross. His love is not reckless.

Truth matters. Many cry that
legalism is bad, but maybe it’s because they don’t want to pay attention to the
truth. We need more than just a band-aid. As my dad said, we need healing for
our whole lives – body, soul, and spirit. And God expects obedience in return.
We shouldn’t have a flippant or as-needed relationship with Jesus. Our service
and obedience to Him is our logical response to His intentional love and
sacrifice. You can read more about this in my next post.

Did this interview speak to you? I’d
love to hear about it in the comments below.

Do
you have questions about the fact that Jesus was both man and God? Do you have
questions about the fact that, while He is 100% God, He is part of a Godhead
(“the Trinity”) that consists of God the Father, God the Holy Spirit, and God
the Son? Do you want to know more about why He died on the cross? Do you want
to know how you can have a personal relationship with the true, living,
compassionate God? If so, please email me at authordlv@att.net.

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more blog posts
here.

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