THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Surely, This Was the Son of God!”"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) April 9, 2006; No. 3301 |
Dear radio friends,
Shortly before His
cross, our Lord Jesus Christ prophesied in
John 12:32
, “And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto
me.” The cross is God’s divine
magnet. It is the power of God to bring
to Himself His people out of darkness and bondage. It is the real Red Sea, the real
The power of that
cross was to be seen in one repentant thief — a young man who was born of
believing parents within the covenant of God, and fallen back. But he was redeemed and drawn back out of the
fires of hell by the power of the cross of Jesus Christ.
But the power of
the cross of Jesus Christ to draw to Him all of His own is also seen in a
centurion. This centurion was born in
darkness. His parents were pagan, and
for his whole life he had been under the thinking of a depraved world. But the power of the cross drew the centurion
to saving faith in Jesus Christ.
It is that same
power of the cross that is at work in your salvation and in mine. Do you confess with the centurion: “Truly this man is the Son of God, truly He
is my Savior; He is God in the flesh; He is given to bear my guilt, to be my
Moses, to bring me out of the bondage of my Egypt of sin”? Do you say, “Truly I know the Son of God
loved me and gave Himself for me”? That
is your confession because of the glorious power of the cross to draw you to
Jesus. It is not the result of some
decision that you made out of your own will.
It was not simply because you were born and you had the right
chromosomes, the right genetic makeup, to be a believer. It is due to God’s sovereign, gracious,
irresistible power — the power of the cross to draw to Jesus Christ all of His
own.
That is the power
we are shown in the amazing confession that the centurion made as he stood
before the dead Christ upon the cross.
The centurion’s
amazing confession is the believing response to the word that God had been
speaking about His dying Son. In the
last weeks we have seen that no sooner did Jesus Christ yield up His life upon
the cross and shout out with triumph, “It is finished,” than God came down to
Golgotha to speak — not in words and sentences, but in a language of miracle, a
language clear, eloquent, and unmistakable.
He spoke three times. The rending
of the veil declaring that the way to the Holiest, to the presence of God, is
open through the blood of His Son. In
the earthquake and the rending of the rocks He spoke of the great power of
Jesus Christ to redeem and to judge. He
spoke when the graves were opened and the saints arose and went out and
appeared unto many of the glorious power of Christ’s death to overcome our
death and the grave.
Many heard God
speak. That is, what God was saying in
the death of His Son was unavoidably put before the consciousness of men. The priests in the temple could not have
missed the tearing of the veil in the temple.
When the earth trembles under men’s feet and the rocks break open, that
gets people’s attention. When the tombs
are opened and the bodies come out, an impression is made.
But all did not
believe. All did not confess. All did not experience the joy and the power
of the cross — because Jesus must, by His irresistible grace, draw one to
Himself for one to believe. And one of
those who believed was the centurion who made an amazing confession. We read in
Mark 15:39
, “And when the centurion, which stood over against him, saw that he
so cried out, and gave up the ghost, he said, Truly this man was the Son of
God.”
Who was the
centurion? He was a soldier. He was a captain in the Roman army, placed
over one hundred men. Most centurions in
He had witnessed
many things — all the things that you have to witness concerning Jesus Christ
of Nazareth who was crucified. Mark
emphasizes what he saw and heard. “And
when,” we read, “the centurion, which stood over
against him, saw that he so cried out, and gave up the ghost.” The last moments of the cross had a profound
effect upon this man. That is, the
manner in which Jesus died. He heard Him
cry out, “It is finished.” He saw Him
dismiss His spirit into the Father’s hand, to commend His soul to God, and then
deliberately die.
Matthew and Luke
tell us that there were other things that he saw that powerfully influenced
him. Luke makes a general statement,
including all that was done. We read in
Luke 23:47
, “Now when the centurion saw what was done, he glorified God, saying,
Certainly this was a righteous man.” Matthew tells us that he saw the miracles
that God did at the moment that Christ died.
Matthew 27:54
: “Now when the centurion, and
they that were with him, watching Jesus, saw the earthquake, and those things
that were done, they feared greatly, saying, Truly
this was the Son of God.” He had
witnessed many things.
It is quite
probable that he saw most, if not all, that had transpired in the arrest and
the death of Jesus Christ. As we said,
he may well have been involved in the arrest in
He witnessed what
we have witnessed. For all of these
things are recorded for us upon the pages of God’s Word. And God’s Word is more sure
than anything else. It is the word that
penetrates deeper into the eye and into the ear. It is the power to write upon the conscience
with indelible ink. Behold the cross of
Jesus Christ. You have heard and you
have seen all of those things.
And the centurion,
by God’s grace, confessed “this was God’s righteous Son — this was my Savior.”
The centurion was
an elect child of God. He was being
drawn by that irresistible, powerful, wonderful grace of God to confess
Jesus. He had heard, he saw. And now, by grace, he believed unto the
saving of his soul. And all of this,
because the sovereign love of God drew him to Jesus.
We read in the
Scriptures (I Cor. 12:3), “No man can say that Jesus
is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost.” We
read again in I
John 4:2
, “Hereby know ye the Spirit of God:
Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ
is come in the flesh is of God.” There
were many others who saw what the centurion saw and heard what he heard. And today, many millions have heard the living
word of Christ crucified, the truth of the Holy
Scriptures. In the centurion’s day,
there were many who were shaken. But
they were not changed. For salvation is not simply to be shaken, but it is to be changed. Salvation is the arrow that the Holy Spirit
aims and shoots, piercing the heart.
The power of the
cross is necessary to pull anyone out of darkness. The grace of God is indispensable. It is the only power to bring us out of
spiritual darkness.
So the power of the
cross pulled the centurion out of his darkness.
The grace of God brought him through years of mental obstacles, supressing the lust that once controlled him, the ignorance
that blinded him, and the rebellion that chained him down. The word of the cross goes forth to conquer
him. Jesus said, “If I be lifted up, I,
even I, will draw all men unto me.”
Do you today
confess that this is God’s righteous Son upon the cross dying in your
place? Do you see the divine, amazing,
glorious, free love of God? That is the
result of the invisible, irresistible, mysterious, wonderful, free grace of God
through the cross of Jesus Christ. Give
God the glory. By grace we are drawn to
Christ.
The centurion
confessed, first of all, that Jesus Christ crucified was a righteous man. We read in
Luke 23:47
, “Now when the centurion saw what was done, he glorified God saying, Certainly this was a righteous man.” As a centurion, he knew that crucifixion was
reserved for the vilest criminals. Two
malefactors had been crucified with Jesus.
They were muggers, killers, heartless, ruthless. Now he has watched Jesus upon the cross. And he has heard His words when
crucified: “Father, forgive them for
they know not what they do.” He had
heard His cry rending the air around
What is saving
faith that God works in our heart? It is
this. It is the knowledge that I am the
sinner and Christ is the righteous One.
This was the same confession that the thief, the penitent thief,
gave. Remember, he spoke to the other
thief these words, “That we, indeed, are justly condemned. But this man hath done nothing amiss.”
The centurion
glorified God, saying, “Truly this was a righteous man.” It does not mean that he cried out, “Glory to
God.” No, it means that in saying that
Jesus was a righteous man he glorified God.
He spoke the truth about Christ.
He spoke the truth about himself.
And that glorifies God. He agreed
with God. He gave glory to God. How did he give glory to God? By grace he confessed, “I’m the sinner and
Jesus is the righteous one.” And
remember, the centurion made that confession before men. That took courage. The chief priest and the scribes and the
Pharisees are milling around the cross.
They have cried out for His death.
The centurion exposes them. His
words say to them, “You stirred up fury against an innocent man.” No, he said more: “This is the Righteous Man — God’s
Word could well get
back to Pilate and to his superiors. The
soldiers were not supposed to express their opinions. They were told to do what they had to do and
to keep their mouth shut. This centurion
now confesses publicly: “A righteous man
has been crucified.”
But he confessed
more. He confessed that Jesus Christ was
God in the flesh. He confessed, truly
this man was the Son of God.
Now immediately an
objection is brought. How could he know
the miracle that this was God’s eternal Son in the flesh — the truth of the
divinity of Jesus Christ — that Jesus Christ was the second person of the
sacred Trinity? Beloved, maybe he could
not articulate it in all of its wonder and beauty as we are now given to do. But this is Scripture. And this is grace. Put away those questions about how he could
know and bow before the Scriptures. He
knew that the man on the cross was the Son of God — that He was God of God, who
had died to secure his salvation. That
is salvation. And that is the knowledge
that irresistible grace brings to the heart.
Salvation is to know: God so
loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in
Him should not perish but have everlasting life. How did he know that? Did not the very words of the Jews who hated
Jesus sow the seed of this knowledge?
Did not the scribes cry out before the cross: “He maketh himself
to be the Son of God”? Did he not
silently witness Jesus confess before the interrogation of Caiaphas,
when Caiaphas said, “I adjure thee, tell us whether
you are the Son of the living God,” could he not have heard Jesus say, “Thou
hast said”?
I do not know
exactly the means that God used to enlighten his mind and to bring him to this
saving knowledge. But I know this. It was grace.
What else could it be? Do you
truly believe that the One upon the cross is the eternal Son of God in the
flesh, God of God, given of grace in the flesh to bear the eternity of
punishment for your soul? That is possible
only by the wondrous, mysterious, real experiential grace of God. No, that is experienced, that is known when
Jesus Christ, the living Lord, is drawing you by His love personally.
That work of grace
continues the same today. Jesus said,
“And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to me.” So a thief only a few hours from death, some
mother’s covenant son receiving the consequences of his willfulness, is brought
to faith in Jesus Christ.
Now
a centurion. There was nothing
there to cause you to pick him out as the one who would be the one to make this
confession. But God’s grace had picked
him out — by grace, from all eternity, alone.
So it
continues. We will read still of an
honorable counselor, a rich man, called Joseph of Arimathaea. Then we will read of a Pharisee named
Nicodemus. Later on we will read of a
hundred and twenty disciples and then three thousand at Pentecost. And then we will read in the Scriptures of a
man who was consumed by hate against Jesus Christ — Saul of Tarsus — and he
will be brought to faith. Then we will
read of two tentmakers in
The work of grace
gives us to confess Jesus as Savior and Lord.
Savior: He died for me upon that
cross — for the unrighteous who were given to Him by
His Father. For my foul sins He died,
and He washed them all away. And He is
Lord: for truly this man is the Son of
God! He stands now over us with royal
authority, with divine majesty, and in awesome beauty. He holds sway in the principle, in the center
of our being, so that our thoughts, our desires, our goals, our aspirations now
are all unto Him! Unto Him who is
Lord! Son of God, my Lord! And as Lord He works by
grace in us obedience, repentance, love, and devotion to Jesus Christ.
Let us take our
place with the centurion before the cross.
And let us confess: Jesus is all
the righteousness that I need. Let us
confess before God His grace at work in our hearts: The crucified Jesus is my Savior, my Lord,
and my God!
Let us pray.
Father, we again thank Thee for Thy Word. And we pray that it may enter into our hearts in this day. We praise Thy name for irresistible grace. And we glorify Thee, knowing that salvation is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God who shows mercy. We thank Thee that that power of the cross will bring to Jesus all of His own. And we glorify Thy name that it has brought us, by faith, to Him. Forbid, Lord, that we should glory in ourselves, but may we boast only in Thee. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Last modified: 04-may-2006