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The Greatest Story Never Told

 
Life and Love
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04/18/2014 08:26 AM
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The Greatest Story Never Told
The young couple huddled together in the waiting room. They had chosen this hospital for their little girl because it was the best in the city and because the young man's Dad was Chief of Staff. The diagnosis was heartrending; their little girl was suffering from a rare blood disease.

As they heard footsteps approach, their eyes sought the doctor's, looking for any sign of hope in his face. Their fears were confirmed when he pulled up a chair to talk with them.

"The news isn't good," he told them. "We have researched the literature, discussed it with the staff, and brought in specialists as consultants. Nothing we could do would help."

"How long does she have?" asked the young dad.

"Just a few days. It depends on whether your daughter's body can make some antibodies, but so far that hasn't happened. It would only just delay the inevitable anyway."

They all sat in silence for awhile. Then the young man said, "The problem is that her body isn't making antibodies?"

"Yes. we could give her stronger medicine to help, but the medicine itself would kill her."

Silence again. And then after a long pause, the young man said, "How about me? Couldn't you give the disease to me and have my body make the antibodies for my little girl?"

"That would kill you!" exclaimed the doctor.

"But it would save my little girl, wouldn't it?" he shouted back.

"Yes," replied the doctor reluctantly. "Yes, it would. Your antibodies would cure her of the disease. But just as sure as it would cure her, the treatment will kill you."

"Then, do it!" cried the young man. "Do it! Save my little girl!"

"You don't understand," said the doctor. "This treatment is excruciating. You have never felt such pain. And we can't give you anything for the pain, or the treatment won't work."

Another long pause, and then quietly, "Do it."

"No," said the doctor. "It's unethical. I won't"

"Then let me talk to my Dad. He's the Chief of Staff here."

"You've got until tomorrow morning. After that, you little girl will be too far gone for your antibodies to do any good."

It was a long night. The young man talked with his Dad for most of it. His Dad confirmed that the treatment would work, but the price would be the life of his son.

"Is there any other way, Dad?" the young man asked.

"No, son. It's this or nothing."

"Then we have to do it! You have to help me, because the doctor told me that he wouldn't."

"OK, son. I'm in. I'll do it personally. I'll administer the medicine myself. That will protect the other doctors here."

The next morning everything was ready for the young man. Before going to the treatment room, he visited his little girl one last time. She was so weak and fragile, nothing like she had been just a few months ago. They didn't say much, but that short visit convinced the young man that his course of action was right: he would sacrifice his life so that his little daughter could live.

When the young man got to the treatment room, he was unnerved by what he saw, but having his Dad there by his side helped.

He got up on the table, resigned to his fate but convinced that his decision was the correct one.

They took his arms and strapped him down tightly, telling him that the pain would be so bad that he would thrash about wildly if they didn't.

Just before beginning, his Dad came close and whispered in his ear, "Are you sure, son?"

He answered, "I've never been more sure of anything in my life."

His Dad placed a call button in his son's restrained hand. "This is in case the pain gets intense and you change your mind. Press it, and the treatment stops."

"I won't use it, Dad. I know I won't."

When the procedure started, the young man didn't feel anything for a few moments. Then it hit him hard. The doctor was right. He had never felt such searing pain tearing through his body.

After awhile he looked up and asked, "How much longer, Dad?"

"Several hours," his Dad sobbed back.

The pain wouldn't let up. There was no relief anywhere. The only thing he could do was to press the button to stop the treatment, and he was determined not to do that.

Wave after wave of pain shot through his body. Every now and then he would lose focus, but the memory of his little girl would bring him back.

What sustained him through the treatment was her image. He saw her running and jumping, enjoying life like only a three year old can, totally cured of her disease.

He saw her going off to her first day of school; growing up into a young woman; going on her first date; graduating from school; getting married; having a family of her own. Over and over he relived those dreams, and each time they became more clear and life like.

But after awhile even this couldn't keep him focused. His mind was too dulled from all the pain. He would lose consciousness from time to time. "Where's my Dad?" he would ask, even though his father was standing by his side for the entire ordeal.

Somehow he knew when the end was near and the treatment about to finish, because as he breathed his last, he had a smile on his face.

The doctors worked quickly to gather the antibodies from the young man's blood and inject them into his daughter. It took awhile, but after a couple of hours everyone could tell the difference, and in a day or two she had recovered. She was going to be fine and live a normal life. But oh at what cost.

--------------------------------

We are here this evening to remember what happend on the cross. As viewed from the foot of the cross the events are well documented in the Gospels.

But what happened on the cross as viewed from the cross itself is less well known. That was the purpose of the story I told... one that I made up -- an imperfect analogy. I dno't know of any disease like the one I've described, and I don't think that there's a doctor in the world who would have agreed to such a procedure. But the story grabs us because we as parents, grandparents, and great grandparents understand why. Why the young man would sacrifice his own life so that his daughter could live hers.

The story is far from perfect, but nonetheless it does illustrate some of what happened on the cross... and hwy.

We, like the little girl, have a disease -- something abnormal -- and and just like the little girl, our "disease" is fatal, too. That disease is what we call "sin." We are powerless before it. In fact, nothing can destroy the power of sin except the wrath of God, and if God's wrath were ever poured out directly on us, then, yes, the sin would be destroyed, but the price would be our lives. Just like the little girl.

What happened in my story was that the young man who didn't have the disease, took his little girl's disease into himself. He became that disease, so that his father's medicine could destroy the disease's power, and it killed him.

Likewise, Jesus who was without sin took our sins upon himself so that their power could be destroyed by the only thing that could: the wrath of God. And it killed him.

The Apostle Paul says it this way:
"God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God." (2 Cor 5:21 NIV)

Just like the Dad in my story never deserted his son, neither did the Father desert Jesus on the cross.

Just like the young man refused to push the call button to stop the painful treatment, neither did Jesus call down hosts of angels from heaven to rescue him from the cross.

The young man's love for his little girl moved him to make the sacrifice he made. And in our story of Good Friday it was the love not the nails that kept Christ on the cross.

Christ our Passover is sacrificed... for us. for us... not just because of us... but proactively for us.

It's almost too much to grasp! But once we get a glimpse of what really happened on the cross, so much more of our Christian life falls into place. We understand why the Apostle Paul was so eager to preach "Christ crucified" We understand the hymn writer's words: "In the Cross of Christ I Glory." Jesus' directions to us to take up our cross and follow him akes a little more sense.

The little girl didn't understand what had happened for a long time. She was only three. At first all she knew was that she had been sick and now was well.... and missed her Daddy terribly.

Every year on his birthday and on the anniversary of his death, she'd do something special to remember him. At first her mom had to help, but as the years passed, it all became clearer to her: she had an incredible Dad who loved her with an incredible Love that brought forth an incredible sacrifice... that save her life.

So do we.

[Amen]
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
Cavaignac

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04/18/2014 08:31 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Why not just bump it from the last time you posted this crap 3 years ago.

Thread: The Greatest Story Never Told
The Game
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 08:32 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Why not just bump it from the last time you posted this crap 3 years ago.

Thread: The Greatest Story Never Told
 Quoting: Cavaignac


If you will compare the two, you will see that this one has been updated in places.

Thank you for reading my "crap" as you put it; twice, in fact!

hf
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
nobody
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04/18/2014 09:13 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Why not just bump it from the last time you posted this crap 3 years ago.

Thread: The Greatest Story Never Told
 Quoting: Cavaignac


hesright
Lost Angel

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04/18/2014 09:18 AM

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Jesus Loves All


Lion and Lamb


Light of world
I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through me. Jesus Christ
Stay small(in ego), stay teachable(in life), stay in the basics(keep it simple) and pay attention(to guidance). me
Your beliefs don't make you a better person, your behavior does. anonymous
in5d

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04/18/2014 09:23 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
THIS is The Greatest Story Never Told


[link to www.youtube.com (secure)]
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 09:27 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Why not just bump it from the last time you posted this crap 3 years ago.

Thread: The Greatest Story Never Told
 Quoting: Cavaignac


If you will compare the two, you will see that this one has been updated in places.

Thank you for reading my "crap" as you put it; twice, in fact!

hf
 Quoting: Life and Love


More than twice, if he remembered it from before.

It must be an effective story!
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 09:35 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
THIS is The Greatest Story Never Told


[link to www.youtube.com (secure)]
 Quoting: in5d


Alien worshipper alert!

alien03
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04/18/2014 09:36 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
THANK YOU OP, NICE.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 10:00 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
John 14:1-4 “Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also. And you know the way to where I am going.”

Romans 8:16-17 The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs—heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him in order that we may also be glorified with him.

2 Corinthians 5:6-8 So we are always of good courage. We know that while we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord, for we walk by faith, not by sight. Yes, we are of good courage, and we would rather be away from the body and at home with the Lord.

smile_kissgrouphug
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04/18/2014 10:02 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.


John 15
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 10:05 AM
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Thanks OP. This story helped me focus on the significance of Good Friday.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 10:29 AM
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bsflag
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 10:30 AM
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bsflag
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 51691602


Thank you for reading my story though obviously it was less helpful to you than to some of the others.

hf
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 11:16 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
cool story, bro.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 11:32 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Please post this every year.I loved it.

blwkss
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 11:33 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Please post this every year.I loved it.

blwkss
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 6243772


Thank you!

hf
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 11:43 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
If it's the greatest story never told, then why did you ruin it's reputation by telling us?
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 11:45 AM
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I doubt this story is true and the Christian BS made me stop reading it. Why does everything have to be made up.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 11:45 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
fvcking vaccines!

sick of hearing about childhood "leukemias, cancers, blood disorders"

shit like that doesn't happen to children except now a days with the increase of doses they are given.
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 11:53 AM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
I doubt this story is true and the Christian BS made me stop reading it. Why does everything have to be made up.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 54253740


This story is fictional as clearly stated in the text. There are, however, any number of true stories of overwhelming, self-sacrificing love. I chose the story I did because it closely parallels what happened on the cross.

The story is meant to illustrate, not to "prove" anything. It is more easily grasped sometimes than the story of the crucifixion, because those of us with children and grandchildren would not hesitate to make the sacrifice the young dad did in my story.

Thanks for reading as far as you got. Perhaps the "Christian BS" as you call it will one day be a little clearer to you.

hf
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
beebee

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04/18/2014 12:23 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
[link to thegreateststorynevertold.tv]
beebee
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 12:24 PM
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Not exactly the same story! :)
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 12:29 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
THIS is The Greatest Story Never Told


[link to www.youtube.com (secure)]
 Quoting: in5d


Debunked years back.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 12:31 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Christ is King.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 12:36 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Sorry guys, but this story is much better.

[link to rosariofatima.wordpress.com]

Nobodies' prayers are turning hell upside down.
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 12:37 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Sorry guys, but this story is much better.

[link to rosariofatima.wordpress.com]

Nobodies' prayers are turning hell upside down.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 57012803


Is this the link you intended? I don't see how it relates to the topic at hand.
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 12:49 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
Why not just bump it from the last time you posted this crap 3 years ago.

Thread: The Greatest Story Never Told
 Quoting: Cavaignac


If you will compare the two, you will see that this one has been updated in places.

Thank you for reading my "crap" as you put it; twice, in fact!

hf
 Quoting: Life and Love

haha!!! good point and good story.
Anonymous Coward
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04/18/2014 01:07 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
I doubt this story is true and the Christian BS made me stop reading it. Why does everything have to be made up.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 54253740


This story is fictional as clearly stated in the text. There are, however, any number of true stories of overwhelming, self-sacrificing love. I chose the story I did because it closely parallels what happened on the cross.

The story is meant to illustrate, not to "prove" anything. It is more easily grasped sometimes than the story of the crucifixion, because those of us with children and grandchildren would not hesitate to make the sacrifice the young dad did in my story.

Thanks for reading as far as you got. Perhaps the "Christian BS" as you call it will one day be a little clearer to you.

hf
 Quoting: Life and Love


I don't mean any disrespect, but why 'make up' a story to make people understand a book that a lot think is fictional as well?
Whether one is a Christian or not, if there are plenty of stories about this self-sacrifice (which is true) then why not share the ones that actually happened instead of making one up?
Spiritual Atheist
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04/18/2014 01:09 PM
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Re: The Greatest Story Never Told
The young couple huddled together in the waiting room. They had chosen this hospital for their little girl because it was the best in the city and because the young man's Dad was Chief of Staff. The diagnosis was heartrending; their little girl was suffering from a rare blood disease.

As they heard footsteps approach, their eyes sought the doctor's, looking for any sign of hope in his face. Their fears were confirmed when he pulled up a chair to talk with them.

"The news isn't good," he told them. "We have researched the literature, discussed it with the staff, and brought in specialists as consultants. Nothing we could do would help."

"How long does she have?" asked the young dad.

"Just a few days. It depends on whether your daughter's body can make some antibodies, but so far that hasn't happened. It would only just delay the inevitable anyway."

They all sat in silence for awhile. Then the young man said, "The problem is that her body isn't making antibodies?"

"Yes. we could give her stronger medicine to help, but the medicine itself would kill her."

Silence again. And then after a long pause, the young man said, "How about me? Couldn't you give the disease to me and have my body make the antibodies for my little girl?"

"That would kill you!" exclaimed the doctor.

"But it would save my little girl, wouldn't it?" he shouted back.

"Yes," replied the doctor reluctantly. "Yes, it would. Your antibodies would cure her of the disease. But just as sure as it would cure her, the treatment will kill you."

"Then, do it!" cried the young man. "Do it! Save my little girl!"

"You don't understand," said the doctor. "This treatment is excruciating. You have never felt such pain. And we can't give you anything for the pain, or the treatment won't work."

Another long pause, and then quietly, "Do it."

"No," said the doctor. "It's unethical. I won't"

"Then let me talk to my Dad. He's the Chief of Staff here."

"You've got until tomorrow morning. After that, you little girl will be too far gone for your antibodies to do any good."

It was a long night. The young man talked with his Dad for most of it. His Dad confirmed that the treatment would work, but the price would be the life of his son.

"Is there any other way, Dad?" the young man asked.

"No, son. It's this or nothing."

"Then we have to do it! You have to help me, because the doctor told me that he wouldn't."

"OK, son. I'm in. I'll do it personally. I'll administer the medicine myself. That will protect the other doctors here."

The next morning everything was ready for the young man. Before going to the treatment room, he visited his little girl one last time. She was so weak and fragile, nothing like she had been just a few months ago. They didn't say much, but that short visit convinced the young man that his course of action was right: he would sacrifice his life so that his little daughter could live.

When the young man got to the treatment room, he was unnerved by what he saw, but having his Dad there by his side helped.

He got up on the table, resigned to his fate but convinced that his decision was the correct one.

They took his arms and strapped him down tightly, telling him that the pain would be so bad that he would thrash about wildly if they didn't.

Just before beginning, his Dad came close and whispered in his ear, "Are you sure, son?"

He answered, "I've never been more sure of anything in my life."

His Dad placed a call button in his son's restrained hand. "This is in case the pain gets intense and you change your mind. Press it, and the treatment stops."

"I won't use it, Dad. I know I won't."

When the procedure started, the young man didn't feel anything for a few moments. Then it hit him hard. The doctor was right. He had never felt such searing pain tearing through his body.

After awhile he looked up and asked, "How much longer, Dad?"

"Several hours," his Dad sobbed back.

The pain wouldn't let up. There was no relief anywhere. The only thing he could do was to press the button to stop the treatment, and he was determined not to do that.

Wave after wave of pain shot through his body. Every now and then he would lose focus, but the memory of his little girl would bring him back.

What sustained him through the treatment was her image. He saw her running and jumping, enjoying life like only a three year old can, totally cured of her disease.

He saw her going off to her first day of school; growing up into a young woman; going on her first date; graduating from school; getting married; having a family of her own. Over and over he relived those dreams, and each time they became more clear and life like.

But after awhile even this couldn't keep him focused. His mind was too dulled from all the pain. He would lose consciousness from time to time. "Where's my Dad?" he would ask, even though his father was standing by his side for the entire ordeal.

Somehow he knew when the end was near and the treatment about to finish, because as he breathed his last, he had a smile on his face.

The doctors worked quickly to gather the antibodies from the young man's blood and inject them into his daughter. It took awhile, but after a couple of hours everyone could tell the difference, and in a day or two she had recovered. She was going to be fine and live a normal life. But oh at what cost.

--------------------------------

We are here this evening to remember what happend on the cross. As viewed from the foot of the cross the events are well documented in the Gospels.

But what happened on the cross as viewed from the cross itself is less well known. That was the purpose of the story I told... one that I made up -- an imperfect analogy. I dno't know of any disease like the one I've described, and I don't think that there's a doctor in the world who would have agreed to such a procedure. But the story grabs us because we as parents, grandparents, and great grandparents understand why. Why the young man would sacrifice his own life so that his daughter could live hers.

The story is far from perfect, but nonetheless it does illustrate some of what happened on the cross... and hwy.

We, like the little girl, have a disease -- something abnormal -- and and just like the little girl, our "disease" is fatal, too. That disease is what we call "sin." We are powerless before it. In fact, nothing can destroy the power of sin except the wrath of God, and if God's wrath were ever poured out directly on us, then, yes, the sin would be destroyed, but the price would be our lives. Just like the little girl.

What happened in my story was that the young man who didn't have the disease, took his little girl's disease into himself. He became that disease, so that his father's medicine could destroy the disease's power, and it killed him.

Likewise, Jesus who was without sin took our sins upon himself so that their power could be destroyed by the only thing that could: the wrath of God. And it killed him.

The Apostle Paul says it this way:
"God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God." (2 Cor 5:21 NIV)

Just like the Dad in my story never deserted his son, neither did the Father desert Jesus on the cross.

Just like the young man refused to push the call button to stop the painful treatment, neither did Jesus call down hosts of angels from heaven to rescue him from the cross.

The young man's love for his little girl moved him to make the sacrifice he made. And in our story of Good Friday it was the love not the nails that kept Christ on the cross.

Christ our Passover is sacrificed... for us. for us... not just because of us... but proactively for us.

It's almost too much to grasp! But once we get a glimpse of what really happened on the cross, so much more of our Christian life falls into place. We understand why the Apostle Paul was so eager to preach "Christ crucified" We understand the hymn writer's words: "In the Cross of Christ I Glory." Jesus' directions to us to take up our cross and follow him akes a little more sense.

The little girl didn't understand what had happened for a long time. She was only three. At first all she knew was that she had been sick and now was well.... and missed her Daddy terribly.

Every year on his birthday and on the anniversary of his death, she'd do something special to remember him. At first her mom had to help, but as the years passed, it all became clearer to her: she had an incredible Dad who loved her with an incredible Love that brought forth an incredible sacrifice... that save her life.

So do we.

[Amen]
 Quoting: Life and Love

The day when someone else can take someone else's sins it will be the most disastrous day for humanity. The people who suffer the disease will force others to get the disease injected to form the antibodies and kill the the donor by force to increase their lives. You showed the deed of compassion but it will become forced.
Today people kill others for smallest reasons. This will give them a big one.
Life and Love  (OP)

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04/18/2014 01:17 PM
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I don't mean any disrespect, but why 'make up' a story to make people understand a book that a lot think is fictional as well?
Whether one is a Christian or not, if there are plenty of stories about this self-sacrifice (which is true) then why not share the ones that actually happened instead of making one up?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 30492845


No disrespect taken. I appreciate your comments.

The reason for the story is the method of exposition, which in this case is illustrative, not analytical.

You can find all sorts of analytical expositions, and it was not my intent to do that. Instead, I chose a story that clicked with me and let me go deeper into the mysteries of the Cross. Perhaps a real story would have done the same, but the real stories of which I was aware didn't do it for me.

As I've posted above, this is not a thread to convince anyone of anything or to prove anything to anyone.

Hope this helps.

And thank you for your interest.

hf
We become like that to which we are devoted. - Choose wisely.





GLP