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Friday, February 10 2012 @ 09:31 PM PST
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Good News about being Judged?

For many, the thought of "Judgement Day" conjures up fearful scenes, scenes that have drive women and men to hide whether it be in alcohol, sex, drugs or whatever sort of "fig leaf" that tailors to their needs. It is no wonder how a distorted view of who God really is can send the bravest soul scrambling for cover.

In the following article, author Brad Cole unlocks mysteries of The Judgement by supplying biblical evidence which points to a most startling conclusion. If you have struggled with how God might treat not just those who "trust and obey" but those who "rebel and reject" His love, then this one is for you:

What is the Good News?


While it certainly is good news that God has graciously provided for our personal salvation, this is not the Good News. Some might interpret these words in the quarterly as suggesting that the gospel is primarily about you and I:

“It’s the good news that Jesus died as our substitute; that at the Cross He paid the penalty for our sins; that through faith in Him we stand perfect in God now because we are covered with perfect righteousness; and that because of what He has done for us, we have the promise of eternal life. So the good news is that we have eternal life, as opposed to – what?”

And then the summary position is stated that the Good News is that we will not be punished: “Thus, the good news of the gospel is that we are spared condemnation.”

For those who are new in the faith and are perhaps growing out of a fearful picture of a God who needs to be appeased, it is natural to assume that the Good News is avoidance of punishment. But there are several problems that arise if we come to see the gospel only from a me-centered perspective. First, it places selfishness as a core tenant of Christianity: “I won’t be punished, I will be saved.” Secondly, if the message of Good News is ultimately that God won’t have to punish, then instead of developing a healthy fear of sin and the natural consequences of sin on the mind and character, the base is laid for a fear of God – a God who is coming to condemn and punish some of his children.

Imagine a child who is waiting to meet his Daddy face to face for the first time. They have talked together on the phone numerous times and the child is eager with anticipation to feel the warm embrace of his Father and to touch his face. You come to the child and say, “I have good news for you. When your Daddy comes home, he must, because he is very just and because of the bad behavior of many of your brothers and sisters, take a certain number of them out on the back lawn and burn them for a period of time. But don’t worry! There is good news because your Daddy will not do this to you. You will go to a beautiful mansion with him […and hopefully you won’t hear the screams of your brothers and sisters]….hey, what’s that sour look on your face? Aren’t you looking forward to meeting your Dad?”

Does this good news message create love for God or fear of God? Is this really the Good News?

The book of Mark opens by telling us who the Good News is about: “This is the Good News about Jesus Christ, the Son of God.” (Mark 1:1 – GN) Jesus is God, of course, which means that the Good News is ultimately about God. Paul opens the book of Romans by reinforcing the same message: “This Good News is about his Son, our Lord Jesus Christ…. Through him we have received God’s kindness.” (Romans 1:3,5 – GOD’S WORD). The Good News is about Jesus – God in the flesh – because He is the ultimate revelation of God’s gracious and kind character to the universe.

Spreading “the Good News…about Jesus Christ” was Paul’s mission (Romans 16:25 – GN): “I want to finish the race I’m running. I want to carry out the mission I received from the Lord Jesus - the mission of testifying to the Good News of God’s kindness…I am now entrusting you to God and to his message that tells how kind he is. That message can help you grow...” (Acts 20:24,32 – GOD’S WORD)

The Good News message of the great love and kindness of God – his righteousness – is the power that wins us to him for salvation, and like a salve, it leads to the healing of our own character: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes…For in it the righteousness of God is revealed…” (Romans 1:16,17 – NKJV)

We are to come to the world with “the Good News about the infinite riches of Christ” (Ephesians 3:8 – GN) The world needs to hear “…the Good News about the glory of Christ, who is the exact likeness of God…The God who said, ‘Out of darkness the light shall shine!’ is the same God who made his light shine in our hearts, to bring us the knowledge of God’s glory shining in the face of Christ.” (2 Corinthians 4:3-6 – GN)

The word “glory” in these verses is not used to convey a physical brightness or an intimidating power, but is referring to the character of God as revealed by Jesus. The Good News Paul is describing here is about the character of Christ, who is the exact likeness of God. The Good News is the knowledge of God’s character which we see most clearly shining in the face of Christ – God in the flesh.

The Good News is entirely about God! We worship a God who lived in the womb of one of His sinful creatures for 9 months, washed the dirty feet of his betrayer, and humbly forgave those who tortured him to death. As the veil of distortion and misrepresentation of God’s character is removed and we see Him as He is, our own individual salvation becomes of little consequence. Self interest and self concern about personal salvation dies at the feet of Jesus. But the wonderful thing about this whole process is that when self dies, a new person is reborn who then begins to reflect the character and the selfless love of God to others.

How does the Judgment relate to the Good News?

As the quarterly rightly points out, the Good News and the Judgment are very much linked together in scripture. First, who does the judging? “Nor does the Father himself judge anyone. He has given his Son the full right to judge…And he has given the Son the right to judge, because he is the Son of Man.” (John 5:22,27 – GN).

How does Jesus judge those who accept his message?

“I am telling you the truth: those who hear my words and believe in him who sent me have eternal life. They will not be judged, but have already passed from death to life.” (John 5:24 – GN)

How does Jesus judge those who reject his message?

“If people hear my message and do not obey it, I will not judge them. I came, not to judge the world, but to save it. Those who reject me and do not accept my message have one who will judge them. The words I have spoken will be their judge on the last day!” (John 12:47-48)

What words, what message, what truth will be the judge?

The words that will be the judge is the message of Good News that Jesus came to reveal about the character of God. “If you have seen me, you have seen the Father.” (John 14:8 – CEV)

Our response to the Good News that God is kind and gracious will be our judge: “…according to the Good News I preach, this is how it will be on that Day when God through Jesus Christ will judge the secret thoughts of all.” (Romans 2:16 – GN)

For “those who refuse to respond to the Good News about our Lord Jesus” and instead separate from him to worship the image of a false God who is harsh and severe, there are disastrous natural consequences. (2 Thessalonians 1:8-9 – GOD’S WORD) To those who “exchange the truth about God for a lie” and “refuse to keep in mind the true knowledge about God, he has given them over to corrupted minds, so that they do the things they should not do.” (Romans 1:25,28 – GN)

Are we won to a God of love and meekness and of whom there is no reason to be afraid? It is the mission of God’s people to spread this message of Good News throughout the world. Jesus’ revelation of God’s character brings life by re-establishing trust and friendship with God. But if we are offended by a God whose ultimate power is His kindness, humility, and great condescension and instead prefer a God with harsh, severe, and arbitrary qualities, and who wields the power of force and coercion, the Good News message that Jesus came to reveal about God becomes a stench:

“God uses us to make the knowledge about Christ spread everywhere like a sweet fragrance. For we are like a sweet-smelling incense offered by Christ to God, which spreads among those who are being saved and those who are being lost. For those who are being lost, it is a deadly stench that kills; but for those who are being saved, it is a fragrance that brings life.” (2 Corinthians 2:14-16 – GN)

God himself on trial

But are we the only ones who are being judged? “He will be proved right in what he says, and he will win his case in court.” (Romans 3:4 – NLT) In the spectacle that is planet earth, the Creator Himself submits to the judgment of his creatures. And in the end, every knee will bow, not out of fear and intimidation, but because God’s character will have been 100% vindicated in the eyes of all. At that point in history, it will be clear that the sin problem with all its resulting pain and suffering, is the natural consequence of rebellion against God’s single principle of other-centered love. “An enemy has done this”, not God. This convincing evidence about God and the nature of rebellion will establish peace and love throughout the universe for all of eternity.

To see the comments of others on this topic click here

 

 

13 comments

The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Authored by: Greg on Monday, July 10 2006 @ 08:29 PM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Brad,

I noticed you partially quoted 2 Thessalonians 1:8-9 from a paraphrase translation and you used it to draw conclusions not supported from the actual text, which I will reproduce below. Incidentally, these five verses dismantle much of what you have posted above.

"This is evidence of the righteous judgment of God, that you may be considered worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you are also suffering—since indeed God considers it just to repay with affliction those who afflict you, and to grant relief to you who are afflicted as well as to us, when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire, inflicting vengeance on those who do not know God and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might, when he comes on that day to be glorified in his saints, and to be marveled at among all who have believed, because our testimony to you was believed." -2 Thessalonians 1:5-10 ESV

This needs no further comment, lest I be accused of twisting Scripture.

Greg

[ # ]
Authored by: Stan Ermshar on Monday, July 10 2006 @ 08:49 PM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Quote from SDA SS quarterly:

“It’s the good news that Jesus died as our substitute; that at the Cross He paid the penalty for our sins; that through faith in Him we stand perfect in God now because we are covered with perfect righteousness; and that because of what He has done for us, we have the promise of eternal life. So the good news is that we have eternal life, as opposed to – what?”

It seems that Brad was somehow criticizing this statement of the simple gospel. I say Amen to that statement! That is the message that truly saves sinners. It is an objective truth about what Christ accomplished at the cross. There is no more important message than this.

Stan
[ # ]
Dear Greg,

There is no such thing as objective thinking. As much as we struggle, we cannot produce one objective thought. At best, we can only produce objective thoughts from a subjective mind.

The only thing outside of myself that I choose to default to is the life of Christ - God in flesh. It is through that evidence that I filter everything else through.

Love and Peace,

Stacie
[ # ]
Authored by: Greg on Tuesday, July 11 2006 @ 09:09 AM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Stacie,

How do you know your thoughts about Jesus Christ are objective or accurate?

Greg
[ # ]
Authored by: Greg on Tuesday, July 11 2006 @ 05:38 PM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Stacie,

You said: "My thoughts on God are NOT objective" and "There is no such thing as objective thinking." If you don't believe your thoughts about God are objective, then how can you have any confidence that the Jesus you believe in is true?

Perhaps we've been approaching this from the wrong direction. Do you believe there is such a thing as objective truth, and if so, can man comprehend it? If yes, then objective thinking must exist as an extension of objective truth. If objective truth does not exist, then this whole conversation is meaningless, because we're just making it up as we go along.

So, does objective truth exist?

Greg

[ # ]
Authored by: Greg on Wednesday, July 12 2006 @ 06:40 AM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Stacie,

You said: "I do believe God exists outside my mind but even that in itself is subjective ;) How can I think outside of my own thoughts? See how we as Christians (or not) paint ourselves into corner when discussing obj. vs subj.?"

I know I've been prodding you a bit with my questions, but they were for a purpose. If we can't affirm that objective truth exists, despite our subjective minds, then the purpose of this website and every other argument here is so much wasted talk.

What I haven't heard you articulate fully yet but what I believe is that objective truth exists and is possible for man, even in his subjectivity, to know. I believe God's word is the infallible and objective revelation of Himself. All of Scripture is literally "God-breathed" (2 Timothy 3:16). Jesus said of His Father, "Thy word is truth" and Jesus is the Word in the flesh (John 1:14). Whereas the law came through Moses, grace and truth came through Jesus Christ (John 1:17).

But we have a problem, because many different ideas and philosophies exist about who Jesus really is, as the myriad discussions on this website will attest to. If we really believe that all truth must be measured by Jesus Christ, we must accept what the Word says about Him, not just what we would like him to be. This includes His love surely, but also his justice, righteousness, anger and warnings of the wrath to come.

If we ignore the attributes of Jesus revealed in Scripture, we have essentially created a Jesus in our own image.

To finally answer your question about how I met Jesus, I repented of my sins, confessing my unrighteousness and lack of understanding, and asked for God to reveal Himself to me. He did that by opening my eyes to the precious truth found in Scripture where the objective truth of His Son has been revealed. Every word of Scripture is true and it all points to Jesus (John 5:39-40).

Greg
[ # ]
Authored by: brad on Wednesday, July 12 2006 @ 01:01 PM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Thanks Stacie! Hi Greg, your comments on the Thessalonians text I think warrant starting a new thread on the topic. Those verses are very stimulating and require bringing together many passages in the Bible for clarification and with the rule that the Bible explains itself and we take the Bible as a whole to explain God's wrath, vengeance, and punishment. Comments on center section articles don't lend themselves very well to an on-going discussion that involves more than just a few people (although I see that the 1844 discussion really exploded!). Hi Stan, What do you think about the multiple texts I listed which simply state that the Good News is about Jesus/God? Why add to the texts and interject parenthetically that the Good News is about what Jesus did for ME, ME, ME? The verses in 2 Corinthians I quoted make such a strong case that the Good News is about the glory (character) of God which we see most clearly shining in the face of Jesus. This is the glory of God that Moses saw in Exodus 33 - his character. The Gospel has power when it becomes about the kind of Person God is. We've had some threads on the past about "What is the Good News?". I would encourage you to resurrect one of these or start a new one if you'd like to say more. Brad

---
I accept truth, no matter how humble the instrument

[ # ]
Authored by: Stan Ermshar on Wednesday, July 12 2006 @ 01:18 PM PDT Good News about being Judged?
Stacie,

Thanks for your article and appreciate your spirit in this dialogue.

I would like to go back to a quotation from Brad Cole in which he seemed to minimize this message of the basic gospel that was even published in the quarterly:

“It’s the good news that Jesus died as our substitute; that at the Cross He paid the penalty for our sins; that through faith in Him we stand perfect in God now because we are covered with perfect righteousness; and that because of what He has done for us, we have the promise of eternal life. So the good news is that we have eternal life, as opposed to – what?”

You also seemed to say that this statement of the gospel never really made much sense to you. You also asked Greg how he met Christ, so I will relate a little of the story of how I met Christ.

While in medical school at LLU, I would sit in the Bible classes of Jack Provonsha and listen to the "Good News about God" gospel, but I kept thinking to myself, 'this doesn't sound like the same gospel I heard at SDA campmeetings'. But at the same time, I was not moved by what I heard in those Bible classes, and at least the message was non-threatening.

But six years later, I was living like God didn't exist, and was progressing in my career, and enjoying life, and while we were living it up on a cruise ship in '82, I was irresistibly drawn to a Gideon Bible in a drawer, and started with Matthew, and as soon as I got to the story of the crucifixion, I was convicted that I was a sinner, and that I had sinned against the law of God, and I realized that Christ specifically took the penalty due me, and took it upon Himself. Christ came into my life that night after realizing this basic message of the gospel as stated above.

This is the message that moved John Newton, and inspired him to write "Amazing Grace". This has always been the inspiring message of the cross for so many through the ages.

To God Alone Be The Glory,

Stan
[ # ]

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