Read an Excerpt
The Cross Centered Life
By C.J. Mahaney with Kevin Meath Multnomah Publishers
Copyright © 2002 Sovereign Grace Ministries
All right reserved. ISBN: 1590520459
Restating the Obvious The Most Important Truth Is the Easiest to Forget
TIMOTHY'S HANDS TREMBLED as he read. He almost cradled the letter, as though his gentleness with the parchment would somehow be conveyed to its author, now chained in a cold Roman dungeon.
The letter came from the apostle Paul; it would be his last.
For years Timothy had pushed the thought of losing Paul out of his mind. Paul had been like a father. A friend and mentor who guided and instructed the young pastor. How could he minister without Paul's reassuring words, his confidence, his prayers? But now, Timothy knew Paul's death was imminent.
"I am already being poured out like a drink offering," Paul wrote, "and the time has come for my departure" (2 Timothy 4:6).
Timothy read the closing lines of the letter through his tears. But then he stopped and pushed them away abruptly. How could he wallow in grief when his old friend faced death so boldly?
He could almost hear the voice of Paul through the words on the page: "Keep your head in all situations, endure hardship ... discharge all the duties of your ministry" (2 Timothy 4:5).
Now Timothy began to read the letter again. He read slowly, deliberately. His eyes bored into each word, each sentence. In the closing moments ofPaul's life, would God give him a flash of insight that he would pass on to Timothy? Paul was the apostle to the Gentiles, a man who had been swept up into heaven itself (see 2 Corinthians 12:2-4). What special insight, like a long forgotten key, would he now reveal?
As Timothy read, heart pounding, the truth-the key-hit him with piercing clarity. He saw more clearly than ever what Paul had given his life to-and for which Timothy, too, would spend himself.
The message of Paul's final letter revealed no new truth, no hidden knowledge, just "one truth" he had given his life to spread. The good news. The news of the cross.
And now the letter, which at first reading had been to Timothy the obituary of his dearest friend, became a joy-filled, bold restatement of all Paul had lived for, and all he would soon die for.
"Of this gospel I was appointed a herald and an apostle and a teacher.... I am not ashamed, because I know whom I have believed" (2 Timothy 1:11-12).
The words seemed to shout from the page: "What you heard from me, keep as the pattern of sound teaching, with faith and love in Christ Jesus" (2 Timothy 1:13).
Timothy could almost see Paul's fiery eyes blazing into his own, feel his gnarled fingers gripping his arm. "Guard the good deposit that was entrusted to you-guard it with the help of the Holy Spirit who lives in us" (2 Timothy 1:14).
You don't need a new truth, he heard his old friend saying. Guard the one truth. Keep the one message.
"Remember Jesus Christ, raised from the dead, descended from David. This is my gospel" (2 Timothy 2:8).
THE MESSAGE
The apostle Paul recognized the universal danger of forgetting what is most important. He refused to be pulled away from the gospel.
The cross was the centerpiece of Paul's theology. It wasn't merely one of Paul's messages; it was the message. He taught about other things as well, but whatever he taught was always derived from, and related to, the foundational reality that Jesus Christ died so that sinners would be reconciled to God and forgiven by God.
Theologian D. A. Carson writes of Paul, "He cannot long talk about Christian joy, or Christian ethics, or Christian fellowship, or the Christian doctrine of God, or anything else, without finally tying it to the cross. Paul is gospel-centered; he is cross centered."
From his first epistle to his final letter to Timothy, Paul kept the atoning death and resurrection of Jesus at the center of his teaching. He "resolved to know nothing ... except Jesus Christ and him crucified" (1 Corinthians 2:2).
And this wasn't a cold theological formula, either. Paul lived a cross centered life because the cross had saved and transformed his own life.
Writing thirty years after his conversion, Paul's memory of what he had once been, and what God had done for him, remained at the forefront of his mind. "Even though I was once a blasphemer and a persecutor and a violent man," he wrote Timothy, "I was shown mercy" (1 Timothy 1:13).
NEVER FORGET
I can relate to Paul's amazement at being shown mercy. I've lived in the same part of Maryland since I was a boy. Hardly a month goes by that I'm not reminded of who I once was.
Before God saved me in 1972, I, too, was a blasphemer. I lived for myself and my own pleasure. I lived in rebellion against God and mocked those who followed Him. I spent my high school and college years deeply immersed in the local drug culture.
Sometimes, late at night, my friends and I would seek out quiet, isolated places where we could come down safely from drug highs. On more than a few occasions it was a D.C. monument. Other times a peaceful street under thick, deep trees. Or even the terminal at what was then a little-used airport called Dulles, where the doors stayed open long after the day's flights had ceased and we could move through the nearly deserted canyon of a building.
Someday soon I'll be near one of those places again, and the memories will flood back in. I'll remember what I once was, and be reminded of what I now am.
Often my eyes fill with tears at the memories of my foolishness and sin. And in the same instant, my heart will be filled with an unspeakable, holy joy. I am no longer the same! By the finished work of Jesus Christ on the cross, I've been forgiven of the countless sins I've committed.
"Blessed is the man," David wrote, "whose sin the Lord does not count against him" (Psalm 32:2). This truth echoes through my soul, resonating in places far deeper than any drug can go.
Many people today try to run from the past. I suppose I could try to as well, by leaving the hometown that holds so many reminders of my sinfulness. But I consider living here a gift from God. The regular reminders of my past are precious to me.
Why? Because, like Paul, I never want to forget the great mercy shown me.
WE ALL NEED THIS
If you're a Christian, you don't need to live in the same place all your life to remember who you once were. And you don't need a background in drugs, or any other dramatic conversion experience, for the cross to be dear to you.
Regardless of our pasts, we've all sinned and fallen short of God's glory (Romans 3:23). My nine-year-old son Chad's life is very different from mine. He's being raised in a Christian home. He has been taught God's Word. And unlike his father, he is surrounded by people in a local church who respect godliness and humility, not worldliness and pride.
But as Chad enters young adulthood, the most important thing I can teach him is that, even though he's being raised in a Christian family and is leading a moral life, he's a sinner who desperately needs the substitutionary death of Christ to be forgiven by God.
And so I'm teaching him the gospel, day by day. I tell him that he's a sinner just like his dad, and that sin is a serious problem. I put it in words that his young mind can understand, but I don't ignore or minimize the seriousness of sin. Through his actions and attitudes he has rebelled against his Maker. And this great God is perfectly holy and must respond with fierce opposition to sin. He must punish it.
Some might find it surprising that I would teach a nine-year-old about God's wrath toward sin. But I find it surprising that any loving person would withhold this truth from another person they love. Because only when we understand God's wrath toward sin can we realize that we need to be saved from it. Only when we hear the very bad news that we're deserving of judgment can we appreciate the very good news that God has provided salvation through His Son.
And this is what I hold out to my young son as the hope of his life: that Jesus, God's perfect, righteous Son, died in his place for his sins. Jesus took all the punishment; Jesus received all the wrath as He hung on the cross, so people like Chad and his sinful daddy could be completely forgiven.
THE ONLY ESSENTIAL MESSAGE
I hope to teach my son many other things as well, but the gospel is the one essential thing for him to know.
"The gospel," writes Jerry Bridges, "is not only the most important message in all of history; it is the only essential message in all of history. Yet we allow thousands of professing Christians to live their entire lives without clearly understanding it and experiencing the joy of living by it."
Author John Stott agrees. "All around us we see Christians and churches relaxing their grasp on the gospel, fumbling it, and in danger of letting it drop from their hands altogether."
Sometimes the most obvious truths are the ones we need to be reminded of the most.
George Orwell once noted that "sometimes the first duty of intelligent men is the restatement of the obvious." Perhaps the purpose of this book is to restate the obvious, yet oft-neglected, truth of the gospel, to bring it before you one more time.
On the other hand, maybe you're thinking, "I already know this truth-I've known it for years." That's good, but let me ask you this:
Is your life cross centered?
The symptoms that arise from not being cross centered are easy to spot. Do any of these describe you?
You often lack joy.
You're not consistently growing in spiritual maturity.
Your love for God lacks passion.
You're always looking for some new technique, some "new truth" or new experience that will pull all the pieces of your faith together.
If you can relate to any of these symptoms, let me encourage you to keep reading. As you learn to live a cross centered life, you'll learn:
How to break free from joy-robbing, legalistic thinking and living
How to leave behind the crippling effects of guilt and condemnation
How to stop basing your faith on your emotions and circumstances
How to grow in gratefulness, joy, and holiness
These aren't the overhyped promises of an author wanting to convince you to read his book. These are God's promises to all who respond to His wonderful plan of salvation.
Too many of us have moved on from that glorious plan. In our never-ending desire to move forward and make sure that everything we do, say, and think is relevant to modern living, too many of us have stopped concentrating on the wonders of Jesus crucified.
Too many of us have fumbled the most important truth of the Bible, and therefore we've suffered the consequences.
But it's not too late to change. It's not too late to restate and reestablish the obvious truth as the most important truth in your life.
The message that Paul had for Timothy is the same message God has for you. You need to rediscover the truth that first saved you. The key to joy, to growth, to passion isn't hiding from you. It's right before your eyes.
It's the gospel.
Excerpted from The Cross Centered Life by C.J. Mahaney with Kevin Meath Copyright © 2002 by Sovereign Grace Ministries
Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.