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“Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross”

Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross is now available.

Knowing how easy it is for us to rush from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday without thoughtfully contemplating the cross and all that it means, editor Nancy Guthrie has compiled this special anthology to help us linger at the cross during the Lenten season—and stay close to it the whole year through.

Jesus, Keep Me Near the Cross draws from the works and sermons of classic theologians such as Luther, Edwards, Spurgeon, Ryle, and Augustine, and from leading contemporary teachers such as Francis Schaeffer, John Piper, R. C. Sproul, Alistair Begg, Kent Hughes, and Joni Eareckson Tada to help readers enter into an experience of Christ’s passion and anchor their hope in the power of his resurrection.

Combining a high view of Scripture and a multidimensional focus on the wonders and victory of Christ’s sacrifice, the brief meditations in this book are sure to draw you and your loved ones to the cross each Easter.

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To prepare for the Easter season, we will be posting a short article from Nancy Guthrie every Wednesday of Lent starting February 25. Stay tuned for personal stories and insights from Nancy about this book.

About the Editor:

NANCY GUTHRIE has a passion for sharing God’s Word through her growing national and international Bible-teaching ministry. She has worked in the Christian publishing industry for more than two decades and is the author of Holding On to Hope, The One-Year Book of Hope, Hoping for Something Better, and Crossway’s Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus.

February 9, 2009 | Posted in: Books,Death of Christ | Author: Crossway Staff @ 8:47 pm | 0 Comments »

Holy Subversion Saturdays

Trevin Wax is sharing an excerpt every Saturday from his future book, Holy Subversion: Allegiance to Christ in an Age of Rivals.

His first post:

True Christianity is not merely life-changing; it is world-changing.

Emphasize only the changing of individual lives and we will fail to call political systems, philosophies, and human structures to account under Jesus’ lordship.

Emphasize only political systems, philosophies, and human structures and we will compromise in our work for worldly progress while people remain dead in their sins.

But put the message of Jesus’ atoning death on the cross together with the biblical call to bring our world under the lordship of the Risen Jesus and we have an explosive message that rocks our world to its very core. It is the apostolic message of Christianity.

January 4, 2009 | Posted in: Author,Death of Christ,Faith,Resurrection of Christ,The Grace of God | Author: James Kinnard @ 1:29 pm | 0 Comments »

Pierced for Our Transgressions

Theology Network just posted an interview with Michael Ovey and Andrew Sach, co-authors of Pierced for Our Transgressions (2007).

When asked why he chose to write Pierced for Our Transgressions, Ovey explains,

“I think what influenced me was this, the thought that as Evangelicals…we were losing sight of one of the great central doctrines of the cross, the doctrine of penal substitution, the idea that the Lord Jesus bears our sin in our place out of the great love he has for us.”

Click here to listen to full interview.

December 12, 2008 | Posted in: Death of Christ,Interviews | Author: Crossway Staff @ 12:47 pm | 0 Comments »

Mark Driscoll at CCEF Annual Conference

This week, pastor Mark Driscoll will be a featured speaker at the annual Christian Counseling and Education Foundation (CCEF) conference in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. This year’s conference is focusing on “The Addict in Us All,” and the title of Mark’s session is “Death by Love. Addiction and Atonement.”

As a preview to Mark’s discussion, here’s an excerpt from his new book, Death by Love:

The Bible says that Jesus died for all, including dying my death for me personally. We’ve already seen substitution in 1 Corinthians 15:3–4, where “Christ died for our sins” has to mean that he died because of our sins. Similarly, we saw that Jesus took our curse in our place in Galatians
3:13. These are not isolated passages.

For example, 2 Corinthians 5:14–15 says, “For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has died for all, therefore all have died; and he died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake died and was raised.” Paul’s phrase “one has died for all” includes the fact that Jesus died for our benefit. But that does not exhaust the meaning of this text. It also says that Jesus’ death is our death, even though we weren’t even born yet. The only way Jesus’ death can be my death is if he took the penalty of my sin to himself, and in his death he took my place and suffered the death I deserve.

John gives us another clear teaching about substitution. The Jewish leaders were worried that Jesus was going to bring trouble on the people of Israel by claiming to be the Messiah. John 11:48–51 says:

“If we let him go on like this, everyone will believe in him, and the Romans will come and take away both our place and our nation.” But one of them, Caiaphas, who was high priest that year, said to them, “You know nothing at all. Nor do you understand that it is better for you that one man should die for the people, not that the whole nation should perish.” He did not say this of his own accord, but being high priest that year he prophesied that Jesus would die for the nation.

Caiaphas wanted Jesus dead so that the people of Israel would not have to die. John’s point is that this substitution is actually an unwitting prophecy of the substitution of Jesus taking our penalty in our place.

Also consider Hebrews 9:26–10:12, which makes the same point. There, the author says that Christ has appeared once for all to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. He was offered once to bear the sins of many. We have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all. After Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God.

Jesus’ death is not a tragedy perpetuated by oppressive Roman soldiers but a self-initiated sacrifice, an offering he came to make. In that offering, he, though sinless, bore or carried our sins. Through his sacrifice, guilty sinners are sanctified or cleansed of sin, defilement, and shame.

God says through his divinely inspired Scriptures that somehow Jesus’ death was my death and your death. We were helpless, spiritually dead, and separated from God. Yet, when Jesus died on the cross, his death was somehow ours so that we don’t have to be separated from God anymore. We no longer have to be lost in a maze of self-centeredness, living for ourselves. Because Jesus’ death was our death, we can live like, with, and for Jesus, spiritually alive and connected to the living God.”

November 13, 2008 | Posted in: Conferences,Death of Christ | Author: Crossway Staff @ 12:03 pm | 0 Comments »