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If Christianity Is Your Religion, Don't Thank God for the Cross By: Tom Gilson|Published: November 23, 2011 8:22 AM Topics: Religion/Spirituality, Worldview If Christianity were my religion, I wouldn't thank God for the Cross. But it's not my religion, and on Thanksgiving Day here in the U.S. tomorrow, I will be giving God all the thanks I can give him for the Cross of Jesus Christ. I know I need to explain that, and I will. First I must clarify what I mean by "my religion." Choosing Our Religions I take it that those 57% believe their choice of Christianity is an expression of their personal preference. Maybe it has to do with their culture, upbringing, friends in church, or what they're comfortable with. As far as spiritual life goes, though, they think they have a choice, and the choice they've made is evangelical Christianity. They picked it out, and it's their religion. For my part, I follow Jesus Christ and his teachings, to the best of my capacity in Christ. I am a Christian. I do not, however, consider Christianity my chosen religion. I didn't choose it off some religious clothes rack; I didn't say, "I don't really feel like a Buddhist or a Muslim for this life; I'm a traditional American, so the Christian thing just seems to fit me better." No, I didn't buy it and make it my own. Christianity is too big, too grand, too filled with God for that. I am a Christian because the one God has called me to relate to him in that unique way. So as you see, my opening statement hinges on what i mean by "my religion." If Christianity were my choice from a list of options, if it were my religion in that sense, I wouldn't thank God for the cross. History's Most Despicable Act of Injustice? Why? Because he loved us and wanted to bring us to God, and because there was no other way. What if there had been another way? What if these 57% believe correctly that Christianity is one of many true ways to God? Then it should never have happened. The cup should have passed from the hand of the Son of God. There would have been no need for his brutal passion experience. Far from being something to thank God for, the Cross would have to been the worst of all needless atrocities in history. Do not, I repeat, do not say, "All religions lead to God, but since I've grown up a Christian, I'll follow that path for myself." Do not make Christianity your religion that way. If you do, it is as if you are glorifying history's most despicable act of cosmic cruelty. If you think there are multiple paths to God, then for Christ's sake (I mean that reverently and literally), don't choose Christianity! Don't choose the religion that includes his torture and execution! Or History's Most Astonishing Declaration of Love and Justice I am convinced he did it because it was the only way we could come to God. He did it for love; for the joy set before him, knowing the life it bring to us whom he loves. He was willing to endure it because it was necessary in order to reconcile humans to God. The Cross was good, but it was only good because it was the only good way to bring us to God. I do not follow Christ because Christianity is my religion of choice. I have chosen to follow Christ, yes; but that doesn't make Christianity my religion. It's God's. It's his initiative, it's his action, it's his grace, it's his revelation, it's his plan; and I'm thankful he has given me grace to enter into the relationship he has called me to. For that reason, tomorrow on Thanksgiving, as an every other day, I will humbly and heartily thank God for the Cross of Christ, where I was rescued from death. I thank God, too, that the story did not end in death, but in resurrection, glory, and a mission for us to pursue until Christ returns. Also at Thinking Christian |
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