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Octavius Winslow

Luke 24:26

Luke 24:26
Octavius Winslow July, 10 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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July, 10 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about Christ's suffering and glory?

The Bible teaches that Christ's suffering was essential for His exaltation and glory, as seen in Luke 24:26.

Luke 24:26 emphasizes that Christ, as the faithful servant of the covenant, had to suffer before entering into glory. His humiliation and suffering were not in vain but were a just reward for His redemptive work. Through His suffering, He brought glory to God, and this glory culminated in His exaltation at the right hand of the Father, which is confirmed in Hebrews 12:2, where it states that 'for the joy set before Him, He endured the cross.' The cross is intrinsically linked to the crown; one leads to the other, showcasing the depth of God’s redemptive plan through suffering.

Luke 24:26, Hebrews 12:2

How do we know Christ's resurrection is true?

The resurrection of Christ is validated by His exaltation and the Father's acceptance of His sacrifice.

The resurrection of Christ is not only a historical event but also a divine affirmation of the efficacy of His atonement. According to the content, the resurrection serves as the Father's public seal of acceptance of Christ's work. This is crucial because His exaltation further affirms God's delight in His Son's completed mission. When Jesus was raised and ascended, it demonstrated God's perfect satisfaction with the work of redemption—the atonement was complete, as referenced in Romans 4:25. Hence, the resurrection stands as a cornerstone of our faith and is crucial for understanding our justification.

Romans 4:25

Why is Christ's glorification important for Christians?

Christ's glorification is vital because it signifies God's acceptance of His work and assures believers of their acceptance in Him.

The glorification of Christ is paramount for Christians as it underscores the completion of His redemptive work. As He ascended to the right hand of the Father, it marked not merely an end but a profound beginning of glory, which believers share in through their union with Him. In John 17:5, Jesus prays for glorification, which illustrates that glorification brings believers into a relationship characterized by honor and acceptance. Paul, in Ephesians 1:6, emphasizes that as believers, we are accepted in the Beloved; thus, Christ's glorification directly impacts our identity and standing before God. His ascent is a precursor to our ultimate glorification together with Him, promising Christians eternal joy and perfect fellowship with the Father.

John 17:5, Ephesians 1:6

“Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?”

— Luke 24:26

As the faithful servant of the everlasting covenant, it was proper, it was just, it was the reward of His finished work, that Christ's deepest humiliation on earth should be succeeded by the highest glory in heaven. "For the joy that was set before Him,"—the joy of His exaltation, with its glorious fruits—"He endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God." How proper, how righteous does it appear, that the crown of His glory should follow the cross of His humiliation! Toilsome and faithful had been His life; ignominious and painful had been His death. From both there had accrued to God—is now, and will yet be accruing, through the countless ages of eternity—a revenue of glory, such as never had been His before. He had revealed the Father gloriously. Drawing aside the veil as no other hand could do, He caused such Divine glory to beam forth, as compelled every spotless spirit in heaven to cover Himself with His wings, and fall prostrate in the profoundest humility and homage.

The glorious perfections of God!—never had they appeared so glorious as now. The mediatorial work of Jesus had laid a deep foundation, on which they were exhibited to angels and to men in their most illustrious character. Never before had wisdom appeared so truly glorious, nor justice so awfully severe, nor love so intensely bright, nor truth so eternally stable. Had all the angels in heaven, and all creatures of all worlds, become so many orbs of divine light, and were all merged into one, so that that one should embody and reflect the luster of all, it would have been darkness itself compared with a solitary beam of God's glory, majesty, and power, as revealed in the person and work of Immanuel. Now it was fit that, after this faithful servitude, this boundless honor and praise brought to God, His Father should, in return, release Him from all further obligation, lift Him from His humiliation, and place Him high in glory. Therefore it was that Jesus poured out the fervent breathings of His soul on the eve of His passion: "I have glorified You on the earth; I have finished the work which You gave me to do: I have manifested Your name, and now, O Father, glorify You me."

The ascension of Jesus to glory involved the greatest blessing to His saints. Apart from His own glorification, the glory of His church was incomplete—so entirely, so identically were they one. The resurrection of Christ from the dead was the Father's public seal to the acceptance of His work; but the exaltation of Christ to glory was an evidence of the Father's infinite delight in that work. Had our Lord continued on earth, His return from the grave, though settling the fact of the completeness of His atonement, could have afforded no clear evidence, and could have conveyed no adequate idea, of God's full pleasure and delight in the person of His beloved Son. But in advancing a step further—in taking His Son out of the world, and placing Him at His own right hand, far above principalities and powers—He demonstrated His ineffable delight in Jesus, and His perfect satisfaction with His great atonement. Now it is no small mercy for the saints of God to receive and to be well established in this truth, namely, the Father's perfect satisfaction with, and His infinite pleasure in, His Son. For all that He is to His Son, He is to the people accepted in His Son; so that this view of the glorification of Jesus becomes exceedingly valuable to all who are "accepted in the Beloved." So precious was Jesus to His heart, and so infinitely did His soul delight in Him, He could not allow of His absence from glory a moment longer than was necessary for the accomplishment of His own purpose and the perfecting of His Son's mission; that done, He showed His Beloved the "path of life," and raised Him to His "presence, where is fullness of joy," and to "His right hand, where there are pleasures for evermore. "

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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