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Summary: Why did Jesus have to die on a cross? This is a simple and fairly brief presentation of the gospel.

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Last week we looked at the story of Adam and Eve.

After God created humankind, Adam and Eve were initially in good relationship with God. But God warned them that if they ate the fruit of a certain tree they would die. It wasn’t that the fruit of this tree was poisonous. The issue was disobeying God. That, fundamentally, is what sin is.

But Adam and Eve went ahead and ate the fruit of the tree anyway. They disobeyed God, in other words. God then evicted them from the garden of Eden. Adam and Eve were, at this stage, physically alive. But they were out of relationship with God. They were spiritually dead.

Their disobedience had resulted in God evicting them from his presence.

Or, to put it another way, their sin had resulted in their death.

So the story of Adam and Eve establishes a core principle: THE CONSEQUENCE OF SIN IS DEATH.

Sin had created a barrier between Adam and Eve and God. And sin, having entered the human race, remained there. It continued to be a barrier between humankind and God. For every one of us it would lead to death unless something could be done. But what could be done?

The apostle Paul wrote this:

‘In him [that is, in Jesus] we have redemption through his blood, THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS, in accordance with the riches of God's grace that he lavished on us’ [Ephesians 1:7].

If our sins could be forgiven then we'd have hope! If our sins could be forgiven then we could once again be in relationship with God.

When Paul says, ‘We have redemption THROUGH HIS BLOOD’ he’s referring to Jesus’ death on the cross.

This word REDEMPTION is a great one-word explanation for WHY JESUS DIED. Jesus died for our redemption.

What is redemption? Let’s imagine you’re struggling to pay some bills. You need some cash for a couple of weeks. You scratch your head. How can you get some money quickly? You have an iPhone. So you go down to Cash Generator in Boscombe Precinct. They take your iPhone and give you some money. Two weeks later you go back, pay the amount you got for your iPhone for and some, and you get your iPhone back. Cash Generator calls it ‘buy back’. That’s the idea of redemption. You buy something back.

Of course, Paul wasn’t talking about an iPhone. He was talking about redeeming people. But the principle is the same. The dictionary tells us that redemption is ‘The action of freeing a prisoner, captive, or slave by payment.’

Now that we know what redemption is, we can ask some questions.

+ Why do we need to be redeemed?

+ Who was the price paid to?

+ How much was paid?

+ Do we have to do anything?

WHY DO WE NEED TO BE REDEEMED?

When Adam and Eve disobeyed God, the result was that God expelled them from his presence. The result of their sin was their death. That was the price they would have to pay. We also commit sin and we are in the same situation.

But if someone else was to pay that price, then we wouldn’t have to pay it. If someone else were to die then God would accept their death in place of ours. That is exactly what the Bible says that Jesus did on the cross.

Isaiah prophesied about Jesus: ‘All of us, like sheep, have strayed away. We have left God’s paths to follow our own. YET THE LORD LAID ON HIM THE SINS OF US ALL’ [Isaiah 53:6, NLT].

God removed the sin from us and placed it on Jesus. On the cross, Jesus called out, ‘My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’ [Psalm 22:1]. Jesus, bearing our sin, was now cut off from God. God accepted HIS death as settlement of OUR debt. The demand of the law was met; justice was done.

So, on the cross, Jesus paid the price to free us from our sin. Since the price has been paid, sin no longer has a hold over us.

WHO WAS THE PRICE PAID TO?

Let’s go back to our definition of redemption. It’s ‘the action of freeing a prisoner, captive, or slave BY PAYMENT’.

Scripture tells us that we were bought with a price [1 Corinthians 6:20]. But early Christians struggled with this. If Jesus made payment, who did he make it to?

A theologian in the early church called Origen asked that question. Origen thought that payment was made to Satan. But later theologians didn’t like the idea that God would do a deal with Satan. And they didn’t believe that Satan in any sense owned man. Man belongs to God alone. There was never a reason for God to pay Satan.

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