Delivered Up For Us All
Our Bible passage, introduction to Sunday 17th November service and hymns are below.
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Our principal verses are:
Rom 8:28 And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.
Rom 8:29 For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren.
Rom 8:30 Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.
Rom 8:31 What shall we then say to these things? If God be for us, who can be against us?
Rom 8:32 He that spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?
Delivered Up For Us All
In coming to the world to save sinners our Lord Jesus Christ was not spared humiliation, contradiction of sinners, cruel suffering or the loss of divine fellowship with His Father. He was given as our Substitute and delivered up in our behalf to bear our sins, endure our punishment and die in our place. Substitutionary atonement is a central gospel truth and the Lord Jesus died as our Substitute. The price of our salvation was paid by Christ and our Redeemer bore our grief and carried our sorrow in His own body on the tree.
Knowing your audience
Here Paul speaks of ‘us all’. He is referring to all for whom Christ died. The ‘all’ refers to God’s elect whom He foreknew, predestinated, called, justified and glorified and for whom all things work together for good. They are the very same individuals who were committed to the care of the Son in the everlasting covenant of grace and represented by Him in the eternal councils of peace. For the salvation of ‘us all’ God the Son was delivered into the hands of cruel men. He willingly surrendered Himself as Substitute for ‘us all’ who were chosen and set apart ‘in him before the foundation of the world’.
Given, and taken
The word ‘delivered’ leaves no doubt about God’s active role in the giving up, or yielding up, of His Son to suffer and die. It complements Paul’s previous description of the Father not sparing the Son but sending Him to accomplish redemption, secure pardon and effect the work of reconciliation. The Saviour was not taken until He was given. The Lord Jesus Christ was always the divinely appointed Substitute; ever the Lamb of God. His death was always intended for the salvation of the elect, no more and no less.
A consistent apostolic message
Paul taught the believers at Rome how satisfaction for sin and justification for righteousness comes by Christ’s death, ‘Who’, says Paul, ‘was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification’. Here, God is expressly declared to deliver His Son. This is consistent with the Apostle Peter’s message in Acts chapter 2. There Peter speaks of God’s eternal purpose to save His people from their sins by delivering the Messiah for the suffering of death.
Wicked hands
The Jews, says Peter, by wicked hands had crucified and slain Jesus. Responsibility and culpability for Christ’s death lay with them. Yet, Peter makes it equally clear that the crucifixion was no unforeseen event on God’s part. The covenant of grace is God’s purpose to save and the only begotten Son was ‘delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God’ in order that His blood be shed in lieu of His people’s. Had not Isaiah said, ‘For the transgression of my people was he stricken’?
The fact and the effect
It is important that God’s people know and understand the nature of Christ’s substitutionary work and the significance of the atonement. Many preachers give lip service to the facts of Christ’s death yet deny or neglect the benefits secured by it. They preach of a ‘sufficiency’ in Christ’s sacrifice for everyone but an ‘efficiency’ for only a few, confounding God’s clear covenant purpose and ignoring His intent.
A mongrel message
When pressed, many agree Christ secured forgiveness only for the elect yet they persist in offering salvation to everyone. They speak of cleansing for sin, imputed righteousness and a new creation, which we applaud, but then add that men must continue working to honour God by their obedience to the law of Moses. They look to the work of Christ for justification and the work of man for sanctification.
Freely given ‘all things’
In tomorrow’s service we shall reflect upon the success of the Lord’s work on the cross and the implication of His death, resurrection and ascension into heaven. We shall note how being not spared by the Father but delivered up for us all has secured every covenant blessing and fulfilled every covenant obligation laid upon the Great Substitute and Representative by Jehovah God. We shall thank the Lord for His gift to the church of free grace and His assurance that all things are ours by faith in the completed work of Jesus Christ.
Amen
Our hymns are below.
Hymn 1
Gadsby selection 179
Jesus our All. John 10. 17; 1 Cor. 2. 2; Phil. 3. 7, 8
J. Hart 7s
1
Jesus is the chiefest good;
He has saved us by his blood;
Let us value nought but him;
Nothing else deserves esteem.
2
Jesus, when stern Justice said,
“Man his life has forfeited,
Vengeance follows by decree,”
Cried, “Inflict it all on me.”
3
Jesus gives us life and peace,
Faith, and love, and holiness;
Every blessing, great or small,
Jesus freely gives us all.
4
Jesus, therefore, let us own:
Jesus we’ll exalt alone;
Jesus has our sins forgiven,
And will take us safe to heaven.
Hymn 2
Gadsby selection 171
“Him hath God exalted.” Acts 5. 31; Phil. 2. 9
S. Medley L.M.
1
Join, all who love the Saviour’s name,
To sing his everlasting fame;
Great God! prepare each heart and voice
In Him for ever to rejoice.
2
Of Him what wondrous things are told!
In Him what glories I behold!
For Him I gladly all things leave;
To Him, my soul, for ever cleave.
3
In Him my treasure’s all contained;
By Him my feeble soul’s sustained;
From Him I all things now receive;
Through Him my soul shall ever live.
4
With Him I daily love to walk;
Of Him my soul delights to talk;
On Him I cast my every care;
Like Him one day I shall appear.
5
Bless Him, my soul, from day to day,
Trust Him to bring thee on thy way;
Give Him thy poor, weak, sinful heart;
With Him, O never, never part;
6
Take Him for strength and righteousness;
Make Him thy refuge in distress;
Love Him above all earthly joy,
And Him in everything employ.
7
Praise Him in cheerful, grateful songs;
To Him your highest praise belongs;
’Tis he who does your heaven prepare,
And Him you’ll sing for ever there.