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Homer Hoeksema

The Cross of Christ and Boasting

Homer Hoeksema 3 min read
#Atonement #Justification #Grace
1 Article
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Homer Hoeksema
Homer Hoeksema 3 min read
1 articles

Homer Hoeksema expounds on Galatians 6:14, arguing that believers should glory exclusively in Christ's cross rather than in worldly achievements, personal righteousness, or moral reformation. The cross functions as the efficient cause that severs believers from the world's dominion by accomplishing what Christ's teaching and example alone cannot—namely, the vicarious death that satisfies divine justice, removes guilt, and destroys the power of sin and death for the elect. Hoeksema emphasizes that salvation's power resides solely in Christ's crucifixion at Calvary, which imputes His righteousness to believers and effects their mystical crucifixion to the world, making boasting in anything other than this redemptive work a fundamental violation of the gospel.

What does the Bible say about the power of the cross?

The Bible teaches that the cross of Christ holds the power to break the dominion of sin and death.

The cross of Christ is central to the Christian faith, signifying the power that decisively breaks the fellowship between believers and the world. This power is not derived from Christ's teachings or example but is fundamentally found in His death by crucifixion. Through the cross, believers experience deliverance from sin’s hold, making it a victorious symbol of salvation. It is essential to glory in the cross, recognizing that it is the efficient means through which God accomplishes redemption and reconciliation with Himself.

Galatians 6:14, 1 Corinthians 1:31

How do we know the doctrine of substitutionary atonement is true?

The doctrine of substitutionary atonement is affirmed in Scripture, showing that Christ’s death satisfied God’s justice for our sins.

The doctrine of substitutionary atonement is rooted in the belief that Christ died in the place of His people, bearing their guilt and the punishment they deserved. This is articulated in passages that emphasize Christ's vicarious suffering, which removes the guilt that binds believers to sin and death. The satisfaction of divine justice is achieved through His death, thus restoring righteousness to all who believe. The complete blotting out of guilt for all the elect demonstrates God’s unwavering plan of salvation through the cross, which serves as the foundation for our faith.

Isaiah 53:5, 2 Corinthians 5:21

Why is boasting in the cross important for Christians?

Boasting in the cross emphasizes reliance on Christ’s work for salvation, not our own efforts.

Boasting in the cross is crucial for Christians as it shifts the focus from self-reliance to reliance on Christ's sacrificial work. This act of glorying in the cross acknowledges that our salvation is not based on personal merit or righteousness but solely on what Christ has accomplished through His crucifixion. The cross signifies the defeat of sin and the securing of eternal life for believers, reinforcing the need for humility and gratitude in our faith. By recognizing that our standing before God is entirely due to the cross, we avoid the pitfalls of self-boasting and acknowledge God's grace.

Galatians 6:14, 1 Corinthians 1:31

    Glorying of that wonderful fact of salvation, of deliverance from the  dominion of sin and death, I glory in the cross of our Lord Jesus  Christ, and in naught else!

    God forbid that I should glory in ought else! For it is by, or through, that cross that this mutual fellowship between me and the world is killed.

    Very little difference does it make whether you read the text "by which", referring to the cross, or "by whom," referring to the Crucified One. The meaning remains the same. The death by crucifixion of our Lord Jesus Christ has the power, is the efficient cause of the cessation of the fellowship of life between me, and the world.

    Mark you well,  the crucified Lord Jesus Christ has that power. Not His teaching is that power, so that the breach between me and the world is a matter of moral persuasion. Not His example brings about the break, so that it is a matter of habit and attraction. Not His reformatory work, so that this change is a matter of changed environment. But as always, the cross of Christ stands at the center of it all. It is His crucifixion. And that cross, the cross of Calvary, means that there is a victorious power, a power that is able to cut the tie between the world and me. In the cross of Christ I glory!

    In it I glory to the exclusion of all else! God forbid that I should glory save in it!

    According to the flesh, indeed, I may put my confidence in many other  things,—countless things. But in my deepest heart I hate that very inclination, and I say, "Far be it from me." Also that proceeds from the fact that I am crucified to the world, and the world to me. And I attribute all to the cross of Jesus. In it only I trust. On it I rely in life and death, with body and soul, for time and eternity. It is the death of my death, the power of my power, the life of my life! Only in it do I boast!

    You ask why? The reason is simple, but wonderful. For the death of Jesus is the killing of the power of sin.

    The power of sin, that which binds me to the power and dominion of sin and death, is guilt, a mountain of it. Guilt is liability to the punishment of death. And the death of Jesus Christ is the satisfaction for, the removal and blotting out of guilt, the restoration of that state of righteousness in which I have a right to life. Still more: His death on the cross was vicarious. It is the death of Jesus Christ, our Lord. It is for that reason the removal of our guilt, the death of our death.  In His cross is the righteousness and life of all that are His. They were all crucified to the world of sin and death when He was crucified. The power of sin and death were forever put to naught by His cross for all the elect. For at Golgotha all the guilt of all His own, past, present, and future, was completely blotted out.

    Would you boast? Boast, then, not in your own work, not in your own righteousness. But, he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord!

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