{"id":1800,"date":"2003-05-06T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2003-05-06T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/banneroftruth.co\/us\/resources\/articles\/2003\/the-ministry-of-reconcilication-1"},"modified":"2003-05-06T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2003-05-06T00:00:00","slug":"the-ministry-of-reconcilication-1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/staging.banneroftruth.org\/us\/resources\/articles\/2003\/the-ministry-of-reconcilication-1\/","title":{"rendered":"The Ministry of Reconcilication (1)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><P><strong> Dr. SINCLAIR FERGUSON: &quot;THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION.&quot;<\/strong>      <P><strong> RECONCILIATION (1)<\/strong>      <\/p>\n<p> by Dr Sinclair Ferguson      <\/p>\n<p> Our subject is reconciliation, its meaning, message and ministry. How        important in a conference like this to concentrate of the Lord Jesus and        his ministry. It is possible to go to the gospels and to preach        systematically but to major on the characters you identify with and so         fail        to preach on Christ. Reconciliation with God is one of the most central        motives for preaching Jesus Christ and him crucified. It is all-embracive.        In atonement imagery is the language of the law court, temple, slave        market, military conflict and the notion of a personal relationship with        Christ. Reconciliation embraces the fruition of all those things. The        broken relation with God through Satan and sin is restored through the        person and work of Christ. Reconciliation is important because it provides        for us a splendid way of preaching the gospel at the beginning of the         21st        century. The language of the ideologies of our times has been that of        alienation, whether Marxist or psychiatric or in interpersonal        relationships with the prevalence of marital breakdown. There is a        consciousness of a variety of alienations and non-Christian counseling         has        no answer. The New Testament stress is not on felt needs, but there is         a        need; and the result of the reconciling achievement of Christ is that        thanksgiving overflows to God.       <\/p>\n<p> This reconciliation is a grand theme for us to contemplate and a great         way        to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. Just preaching the gospel as Paul        does the apostle does not see propitiation and redemption as &#8216;theories&#8217;         of        the atonement, or &#8216;metaphors&#8217; of the atonement. Yet they are in a sense        metaphors but this is their reality. As the apostle expounds the cross         then        this message of Jesus Christ is the gospel. Why is Paul prompted to be         so        passionate about the preaching of reconciliation? Because, he says, that        the one who died died for all.      <\/p>\n<p> 1. Reconciliation &#8211; its Provision by God.      <\/p>\n<p> i] &#8216;Reconciliation&#8217; is a word for the death of Christ only used by Paul.       <\/p>\n<p> The apostle uses a variety of forms of one root word to describe it         &#8211;        &#8216;alasso&#8217; is that Greek word. In the gospel an exchange has taken place.         The        word is used in banking; we talk of &#8216;the exchange rate.&#8217; It is used of        reversing a situation. A couple can be &#8216;reconciled&#8217; after alienation.         The        fragmented situation is exchanged for love. This lies at the heart of         what        the gospel is and how it works. This is part of the wonder of the Christian        faith. In its essence it is so simple. A child can grasp it very early         on        in his life &#8211; &quot;I give my sin to Jesus and he gives his righteousness         to        me.&#8217; But we can hardly understand the motivation of it. This meaning of        reconciliation as an exchange.      <\/p>\n<p> ii] The need for reconciliation.       <\/p>\n<p> Paul is beseeching his readers to be reconciled to God. He once lived         unto        himself, and according to the flesh. He had lived under the bondage of         the        old age. Elsewhere he explains why we need this reconciliation. In        Ephesians 4:18 he speaks of men and women being darkened in their        understanding etc. They have given themselves over to sensuality. To the        Colossians (chapter 1) he says, &quot;you were alienated from God and         enemies in        your minds.&quot; In Romans 5:10 he talks of the privileges of receiving         the        reconciliation. Did Paul have a guilt complex before coming to Christ?         No.        You do not sense the judgment of God when you walk according to the flesh.        That ungodly mind set God broke through. All those aspirations and        achievements of Saul of Tarsus were nothing! Then he was brought to faith        in Jesus Christ. As a man he had made a wretched exchange &#8211; the glory         of        God for the dust of the earth. Think of Paul&#8217;s language: he does not say        that we have all sinned and fallen short of the law of God but of the         glory        of Christ, for which we were created. Paul has such a sense of how far         we        have fallen. We are now God&#8217;s enemies! At the end of the day the human        problem is God. God is God, and he is Judge, and no matter how far man        seeks to repress and obliterate that, the natural man cannot. A Russian        poet (who thought all the West was Christian) asked Kingsley Amis at some        ceremony was it true that he was an atheist? &quot;Yes, but it is more         than that        . . . I hate him.&quot; So reported Martin Amis his son, speaking at his        father&#8217;s funeral &#8211; to much merriment from the congregation.      <\/p>\n<p> iii] The Author of Reconciliation.      <\/p>\n<p> We will not have a sense of grace in our evangelism without a concept         of        reconciliation. The apostle does not consider man as its author but God,        one who reconciles because of his love. He reconciled and he was not        counting to men their sins, he is making Christ sin for us, and he is        proclaiming the reconciliation to the world. God the Father is its author,        and why is that important? It is obvious to you, but why is it important?        It kills the idea that a dying Son persuades a reluctant Father to be        reconciled to sinners. The Father did not have a slightly different agenda        to the Son. We need to understand with the apostle Paul that reconciliation        is the expression of the passion in God&#8217;s heart that sinners might be        saved. In our preaching we are not reflecting the heart of the Father         if we        are failing to offer Christ to sinners as fully and freely as we should.        How few of us are experientially equipped as we should be in holding deep        fellowship with God. Is the only grace there is to be found in the Lord        Jesus Christ alone? No it is in the bosom of the Father.      <\/p>\n<p> iv] The Mediator of Reconciliation.      <\/p>\n<p> The Mediator is Christ &#8211; all of reconciliation comes to us through him.         God        was not counting men&#8217;s sins (v.19) against them, but against Christ his         Son        (v.21). That is the most basic thing in the Bible. His righteousness ours,        and our sin his. That is the background of all the OT; the scapegoat        expressing to us the alienable mystery of the double experience of Jesus        Christ, on earth and before God. R.A.Finlayson draws out from the passion        narrative the cup that Jesus gives to his disciples and the other cup         which        he takes from the Father&#8217;s hand. He is charged with our crimes of which         he        was innocent. Why was he dying? It was in my place condemned he stood.         God        tells it to us in such simplicity.      <\/p>\n<p> v] The Perfection of this Reconciliation.      <\/p>\n<p> It is a finished and completed work. God has reconciled sinners to himself        in Christ. God has before him that finished work. &quot;Receive the        reconciliation of God,&quot; is the appeal. It is not a potential reconciliation        which is mine if I will only add to what Jesus has done. The reconciliation        is not accomplished when I actually receive it. No. It is already        accomplished and I do not participate in it at all, or add to it at all.         I        am active in the process only as I stretch out empty hands of faith to        receive an accomplished reconciliation. I do the believing (which anyway         is        God&#8217;s gift) in the grasping of that gift. Reformed people, for all their        theology, still want to contribute to their salvation. &quot;It is finished&quot;,         is        the theme of reconciliation &#8211; &quot;so now receive it!&quot;      <\/p>\n<p> Reconciliation is a complete gift. It is entirely outside of yourself,         and        it is simply to be received. It is a glorious exchange. Our three and         four        year olds can understand it can&#8217;t they? The blessing of the older and         the        younger sons was reversed in Genesis 50. That is what God has done. &quot;You        Lydia, are standing before God with a sinful heart, but to his well-beloved        Son he gave your sin and to you he gave your righteousness.&quot; Augustine        said, &quot;I see the depth. I cannot reach the bottom,&quot; said Augustine.      <\/p>\n<p> RECONCILIATION (ii)      <\/p>\n<p> What is the application of the finished work of Christ to our own lives         and        work, and indeed to the universe? The work of atonement was perfect, not         a        potential work which we do or which is manifested in our response. The         work        is accomplished in Christ and complete in him. This is the heart of the        gospel in which we glory. He finished the work and sat down at the right        hand of the throne on high.       <\/p>\n<p> But there is a dimension of the work of Christ which is unfinished.         In his        ascension there is a work which he continues to do which one day he will        bring to completion. God in his grace has caught us up in his love and        kingdom purposes so that we might serve in Christ in his completed work.        The message of reconciliation has been entrusted to Paul and ourselves         so        that through us the work of reconciliation is continued. The &#8216;super        apostles&#8217; were degrading Paul&#8217;s personality and labours. &quot;If we are        ecstatic .. . . out of our minds . . .&quot; (as his enemies were saying),         then        &quot;all he has was his experience on the Damascus Road. All he has is         this        private conversion experience.&quot; And Paul is replying to that, saying         that        it is not the Damascus Road that is essential to his work but the gospel         he        preaches of the person and work of Christ.      <\/p>\n<p> How did the apostle Paul view the effect of the finished work of Christ?       <\/p>\n<p> i] On a Personal Level the Application of Reconciliation is Profoundly        Radical.       <\/p>\n<p> The exchange has been made by God, sin removed and righteousness imputed.        Accomplished on the cross, this reconciliation is preached to us in the        gospel so that men are pleaded with to receive it. The idea of the exchange        in Jesus Christ gathers together a series of mini-exchanges &#8211; the status         of        sinner is exchanged for the holy righteousness of God imputed to him and        imparted in sanctification. The believer then can stand before the judgment        seat of Christ as confident as Jesus himself can stand there because it         is        in the righteousness of Christ he stands. We will not wince when we stand        before God because of that righteousness. In the reconciliation of the        gospel as expounded in chapter 5 of Romans Paul moves from rejoicing in         the        hope of glory to rejoicing in God himself. So the old status has been        exchanged for the new.      <\/p>\n<p> The old view of the things of Christ has been replaced. In 2 Cors. 5:16        Paul says he once regarded Christ from a human point of view. Then this        marvelous exchange of sin and righteousness takes place and everything         is        different. If you have come to repentance and faith in Christ you see         all        things according to the Spirit. The exercises of godliness become a        delight. The old views of Christ are exchanged for the new. We used to         view        others from an earthly point of view, but not any longer. When a youngster        is converted in a non-church-going family then he begins to love them         for        Jesus&#8217; sake. I have seen a wife converted, and then the father and then         the        three children: the whole family has been transformed in a six month period        so that they love one another and the things of God. It doesn&#8217;t get much        better than that for the watching preacher.      <\/p>\n<p> Then there is a new view of living, no longer for self but for God.         To die        to self and to live to him (v.15). These are all combined in the words         &quot;new        creation&quot;. Here Paul begins to explore, in the way he does, &#8216;the         powers of        the world to come&#8217; rolling into our lives. A new day has dawned. We can        never see this world in the same way again. &#8216;What is the difference,&#8217;         we        are asked in the USA, &#8216;from life in our country to life in your country?&quot;        The only sensible response is that everything is a little different.       <\/p>\n<p> ii] At a Cosmic level reconciliation involves a transformation that         is        universal.       <\/p>\n<p> In what areas? Let me suggest:      <\/p>\n<p> It is effected in the salvation in all of the elect through the        proclamation of the gospel. Sinclair was once sitting in a Baptist church        at a Christmas service hearing an Arminian preacher and he was reading         the        Scriptures, but the way he read &quot;He will save his people from their         sins.&quot;        resulted in all the issues I had been grappling with for months over        limited atonement fell into place. This passage in 2 Corinthians 5 is        replete with universals &#8211; &#8216;all,&#8217; and &#8216;the world&#8217;. Why should one hang         on        to limited atonement in the light of these universal terms? Because of        Paul&#8217;s understanding of the nature of the atonement. It is effected by         the        substitution of Jesus Christ in our place. He has affected the atonement.        So payment God cannot twice demand . . . The very nature of the atonement        implies and demands that this atonement is effectual. Either the atonement        would be incomplete, or God would be unjust.       <\/p>\n<p> Again the effectiveness of the atonement is implied by the intention         and        design it has. In Colossians 1 Paul speaks of presenting us without sin         to        God. But those who are reconciled he goes on to describe as continuing         and        living a new life. The inner logic of the atonement compels it to be so.        One died for all and therefore all died, Paul tells the Corinthians here.        The inner logic is that he died for all so that those who live are the         ones        who have died. He died therefore . . . what? That all do not need to die?        No that is not what Paul says. He says, therefore all died. That is the        inevitable implication. He says the same things in such passages as Romans        6. The &#8216;all&#8217; for whom Christ died are those who in Christ died with Christ.        I can understand why some preachers want to say to a whole congregation,        &quot;Christ died for you all,&quot; but none of them want to say, &quot;You         all died in        Christ.&quot; So Paul is not talking of none without exception but Jew,        Gentile, the world, without distinction.      <\/p>\n<p> How do we preach the gospel? One of the biggest obstacles is how we        Calvinists preach the gospel in the light of our views of the limited        purpose of the atonement? I cannot say &quot;Christ died for you.&quot;         Show me a        single place in the apostolic testimony where there is this phrase &quot;Christ        died for you.&quot; Rather he has died and risen so that we can say that         Christ        is able to save those who come to God by him. The gospel is not, &quot;Did         you        believe Jesus was doing this for you?&quot; Rather, God was in Christ        reconciling the world to himself and the only way you can benefit from         it        is to call on him for his grace.      <\/p>\n<p> So the apostle says &quot;We preach Christ crucified&quot;: never are         the fruits of        his work separated from the offer of the gospel. The warrant of our offer        of salvation in Christ is the command of God to everyone to believe. The        reprobate has the same warrant to believe as the elect. All for whom Christ        died will be saved. The universalist believes that Jesus died for        multitudes who will never be saved, so how can he know that Jesus died         for        him? What comfort is such a doctrine of the cross to him?      <\/p>\n<p> iii] There is another universal dimension too.       <\/p>\n<p> The cross reconciles so that at the end it makes a cosmic impact on         the        entire universe. In Colossians 1:15-20 Paul develops it in this way: Christ        is the head of the body, the church, and all things in earth and heaven        will be reconciled. What is the meaning of this? In the last analysis         it is        the outworking of Paul&#8217;s Adamic Christology. Adam named the creatures         as        God&#8217;s vicegerent; heaven&#8217;s rule and earth&#8217;s joy comes together. God&#8217;s         will        is being done on earth as it is in heaven. The community of God in heaven        among the elect angels and the things on earth are now alienated. Then         the        last Adam comes to the earth, is in a wilderness where wild and untamable        beasts surround him. He comes, lives, dies, reconciles and is exalted         so        that every tongue glories in him. In that sense Christ reconciles        everything to himself. He raises the dead, and transforms the new heavens        and earth, saying, &quot;Here I am Father, and the children you have given         to        me.&quot; In our humanity, as our mediator, he bows his head before a         Father of        infinite majesty. He give back to the Father all that the Father has given        to him. Then in that glorious reconciliation God will be all in all. So         the        reconciliation has that universal dimension which will be seen only in         the        new heavens and earth.      <\/p>\n<p> iv] At a ministerial level the reconciliation is deeply effective.       <\/p>\n<p> The minister has a sense of dignity. We are ambassadors for Christ.         We are        even prepared to be fools for Christ. In &quot;Living Fields: Killing         Fields&quot; we        meet a polio man who is a prisoner and has to turn excrement into        fertilizer. He was a deeply intelligent man, with a Bible hidden in his        mattress. There in that place, doing that, he has to be an ambassador         for        God. We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ to receive         the        things done in his body, good or bad. The judgment throne will be the         place        where the rewards of grace flow to his faithful people. &quot;I will put         you in        charge of 5 or 10 cities. You will govern them &#8211; all those cities &#8211; London,        Edinburgh, Inverness, Aberystwyth, Glasgow. Five cities.&quot; &quot;If         I had known        you were this gracious I would have served you with much more effort,&quot;         you        will reply, and God will say, &quot;No more of that here, Come, well done,         good        and perfect servant.&quot;      <\/p>\n<p> RECONCILIATION (iii)      <\/p>\n<p> [In an introduction Sinclair Ferguson said that the three theologians         who        had influenced him the most are these three Johns &#8211; Calvin, Owen and        Murray.]       <\/p>\n<p> 2 Corinthians 5 describes the greatness of redemption. The ministry         of        reconciliation is the theme of this final message. In 6:11 Paul is opening        wide his heart to the Corinthians because their arteries are closing to        him. The pattern made plain in the Saviour, and then the apostles, is         to be        followed by all his servants. The apostle is taking us as it were into         the        factory or engine room in which true gospel ministry is carved out, as         the        principles of Christ&#8217;s ministry are inscribed in the depths of our hearts.        The Spirit rewrites it in our hearts. Precisely the same principles will        produce the same fruit.      <\/p>\n<p> 1. THE CONTEXT OF THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION      <\/p>\n<p> This is dealt within the opening verses of the fourth chapter &#8211; &#8216;we         do not        lost heart.&#8217; Paul appears to have come very close to this. He is preaching        to his own soul in these words. Luther said, &quot;If I were to write         about the        burdens of the preacher . . . I would scare everybody off&quot;. There         is        something quite scary about the great apostle&#8217;s danger of himself losing        heart. In Corinth he was in danger of losing heart. God had once said         to        him before Corinth, &quot;Do not be afraid,&quot; because Paul was terrified         and in        danger of being wearily caving in. Paul knew he had to labour like a woman        weary after hours of labour pains to effect new life in people: &quot;I         travail        again in birth.&quot;       <\/p>\n<p> Paul was concerned about the spiritual condition of those to whom he        preached. The gospel was veiled to those who are perishing. That veiledness        of the gospel cannot be attributed to any lack of perspicuity in the        message. The reason for the veil is the spiritual darkness of the human        condition. There is a realistic discouragement of the preacher of the        gospel. You preach as clearly as you can but your unregenerate hearers        cannot see it. There is behind that blindness an additional blinding by         the        god of this age preventing men perceiving the glory and greatness of the        Lord. Satan has blinded the best of believers. So Paul saw that and was         in        danger of losing heart.       <\/p>\n<p> You can pass through a great city ghetto and wonder how those thousands         are        going to hear the gospel and receive deliverance, and you can get        discouraged. But that is exaggerated in Paul&#8217;s case by the additional        personal humiliations of those who were preachers. He says that the        treasure of the gospel is placed in jars of clay &#8211; the cheap vessels.         We        are garbage cans. We are set at the end of the procession. This is how         it        is, and this is how we are viewed. The Christian ministry has been guarded        by the Constantinian settlement for centuries &#8211; the ministry was one of         the        professions that had some respect. Not any longer. But that should not        discourage us because that is simply a NT situation with NT resources        adequate for it. Preachers can imagine how great it would be to be able         to        refer to oneself as a Christian dentist or Christian educationalist, but         a        Christian minister has no standing.       <\/p>\n<p> How is it that Paul doesn&#8217;t lose heart? Paul tells us first to deal         with it        the context of our ministry of reconciliation. We do not lose integrity         in        the ministry &#8211; that is the main response. We have renounced certain things        &#8211; the cryptic things of shame, that have made us cave in. They need to         be        renounced. Cunning and deception is also to be renounced. Pragmatism is        also to be renounced. There are practices that do not fit the gospel.         The        distortion of the message is to be rejected &#8211; we do not tamper with the        message of the gospel. There are a number of ways to tone it down. There         is        much imbalance in understanding the gospel in the professing church, and        most of us in our ministries are under pressure to tone down our message        with its emphasis on judgment, and on the cross, or the costliness of        discipleship.       <\/p>\n<p> So the apostle unveils Christ as Lord and unlocks the truth of Scripture,        and lives a credible godly life in his ministry. There is a match in the        preaching between judgment, discipleship and the sheer grace of God in         the        gospel      <\/p>\n<p> 2. THE ENCOURAGEMENTS IN THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION.      <\/p>\n<p> He does not lose heart because of an absence of pressure. The gospel         does        not deny our proneness to fail Christ, but Paul first speaks of the        privilege of Christian service. All of the charisma of the Christian church        is an expression of the mercy of God. We as preachers have such blessings        in our lives, reading, attending conferences, talking with brethren in         the        ministry &#8211; extraordinary pleasures. &quot;O God you made me a minister!&quot;         There        are great privileges and much encouragement not to lose heart.      <\/p>\n<p> Then there is the power of the gospel which we share with all believers        (v.6). Paul revels in the language he uses: we have been given the light         of        the knowledge of the glory of God in the FACE of Jesus Christ! We are         not        to make our experience the basis of our salvation. Past experiences have        their place in our lives &#8211; the piece ground where Whitefield was converted                 he went back to from time to time and kissed the spot.       <\/p>\n<p> The providential workings of God encourages me (v.7). This is not        accidental. It is the pattern God himself has designed for us. Paul has        settled absolutely his priority. It is the glory of God whose end he        serves. At his conversion he saw the glory of God in Jesus Christ. In         his        evangelism the eternal glory was the end. You minister to the glory of         God.        Zeal for the glory of God is your chief motive to enter this ministry         you        acknowledged when you entered the ministry.      <\/p>\n<p> Paul saw the transience of the visible and the glories of what was        invisible. God enables us to fix our eyes on what is not seen. The        connection between suffering and glory in the gospel is a causal        connection. The sufferings are the materials out of which God crafts the        glory. In the present world he is preparing and shaping us. Our sufferings        polish our graces and make them shine. The ungodly can only look back         at        the past, but the Christian looks ahead.       <\/p>\n<p> Finally, with our hearts and mind submitted to the fundamental pattern         of        gospel working we carry in our bodies the dying of Jesus so that the life        of Jesus may be known in us. The seed needed to fall into the ground to        bear fruit. The resurrection glory was Christ&#8217;s only because he went        through humiliating death. At the end of this letter Paul urges them to        examine themselves.       <\/p>\n<p> Maybe Stephen and Saul had belonged to the same synagogue in Jerusalem         and        at the end, as Saul looked at Stephen his face was like that of an angel.        Saul had to begin to wrestle with this question of how he could possibly        see such power in that weakness, and such glory in that shame, and such        divinity in evident mortality. &quot;Death works in us, that life may         work in        you.&quot; he says.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Dr. SINCLAIR FERGUSON: &quot;THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION.&quot; RECONCILIATION (1) by Dr Sinclair Ferguson Our subject is reconciliation, its meaning, message and ministry. How important in a conference like this to concentrate of the Lord Jesus and his ministry. 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