One Way to God
Geoff Thomas
Jesus could not make it clearer; ‘I am the door,’ he said.
He could not make it more lucid, ‘I am the way . . . no man comes
to the Father but by me.’ One day in this world there was darkness
at noon and there at the epicentre of that cosmic gloom was God’s only
begotten Son, Jesus Christ. He had come forward under the constraint of
his love for us and in his office as our Redeemer and Saviour. The green
hill far away was a place of execution, and there the flaming sword was
destroying him. He was there receiving our sin and guilt and blame.
There on the cross of Golgotha while made sin for us he found this
principle still applied, that without the shedding of blood there was no
remission. It was not enough that he had become incarnate; it was not
enough that he had preached the Sermon on the Mount; it was not enough
that he had pleaded for men to repent of their sins and come to him. No,
there must be the shedding of blood. If Christ was to purchase our
pardon then there was only one place he could do that, on Calvary’s
tree. It was by the shedding of his own most precious blood. It was only
by his dying under the condemnation of God that Jesus Christ could
redeem us.
You take that great figure of the sword. It became a commanded sword,
one that must do the work its Creator gave it to do, and so we hear, ‘Awake,
O sword, against my shepherd, against the man who is close to me!
declares the Lord Almighty. Strike the shepherd’ (Zechariah 13:7).
That great flaming sword of God’s judgement against sin, turning every
way against every form of iniquity, buries itself at last deep in the
person of the Son of God.
‘Jehovah bade his sword awake:
O Christ, it woke ‘gainst thee;
Thy blood the flaming blade must slake,
Thy heart its sheath must be.
All for my sake, my peace to make;
Now sleeps that sword for me’
(Anne R Cousin, 1824-1906)
Only thus does Christ become a Saviour. Only thus is he perfected, as
he sheds his blood and the waters go over his soul, as the sword of
retributive righteousness turns this way and that upon the head of the
church and he receives double from God for all their sins. It is a
marvellous principle, the great God who condones nothing, and his great
Son in whose heart the sword of God is buried. That is the way to God.
That is why Christ was able to promise the dying thief, ‘Today you
will be with me in paradise.’ What the first Adam lost the last Adam
has regained.
I tell you when men approach God and come to his throne they still
find the flaming sword. He is a righteous God and never anything else,
but you will find something else, that if we go to him by Jesus Christ
alone then we are sprinkled with his blood and there is immunity from
the guillotine. We are inviolable if Christ has gone there first in our
place, with our sin and taken responsibility for our guilt and the sword
has fallen on him, then it cannot fall again on us. Punishment God
cannot twice demand for the same sin. Where do we stand today in regard
to this? As we approach the great white throne where do we find a
covering for our sins? Here is the great inviolable principle, ‘Without
the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins.’ Where do we
stand in the light of that? Do we cry, ‘I am saved from the sword of
wrath! The door to heaven is opened wide, the blood of Christ has been
shed for me, the sentries have become welcoming angels, there is
remission and so I can come boldly’? This is the way of peace with
God!
Is there one single person reading these words who is reconciled to
going to hell? And if I assume that not one of you wants to end in the
place of woe then let me ask you upon what is your hope and confidence
that it will not be so with you? On what are you basing your hopes of
heaven? On what? Have you taken into your reckoning the flaming sword?
Have you realised that the means of pardon and redemption have been
determined by the nature of the God who is light and a consuming fire?
The greatest impediment to your reconciliation is God himself. There is
the integrity of God and I am saying that all the greatest difficulties
are on his side. It is the glory of the gospel that it tells us that he
has also dealt with the difficulties. He has appeased his own wrath
against our sin while remaining a God of utter blamelessness. He has
imputed my sin to his own dear Son and willingly and lovingly Christ has
borne it and dealt with all its eternal consequences. He has been
condemned and I am pardoned. He has been judged and I am forgiven. The
sword fell on him and the kiss comes to me.
Have you fled to the Christ your substitute? Are you hiding in his
wounded side? This is the only way to God. This is the only way there
will be a new heavens and a new earth. Paradise will be restored one day
by this great work of the Son of God. You must do what this man did as
he sat in a car and heard the gospel. There was no priest and no church;
no baptismal font and no episcopal hands placed on his head. There was
just the word of the gospel of forgiveness of sins through Jesus Christ.
He trusted the word; he trusted the one who had come and spoken the
word, the Saviour who had bowed his head under the blow of the flaming
sword that we might bow our heads in submission and acknowledge him to
be our eternal Lord.