In July 1941, 10 prisoners in the Auschwitz concentration camp were condemned to die by starvation. When one of them sobbed, “My wife, my children,” a priest named Maximilian Kolbe stepped forward and took the man’s place. Over the next two weeks, Kolbe and nine other men died slowly of starvation in an underground bunker. The man whose life Kolbe spared survived the war, was reunited with his wife and lived five decades longer.
Only a person of amazing selflessness and compassion would willingly give his life for another. History shows us that there once was such a man. Jesus Christ, the selfless and compassionate Son of God, gave His life for the entire human race.
A Plan, Not an Afterthought
You and I owe a debt we can never repay. It’s a debt we inherited from Adam and Eve—a moral and spiritual debt of sin.
But here’s the good news: We have the power of the cross on our side! As the Apostle Paul wrote, “For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians 1:18). When Jesus gave His life on the cross, He paid our debt in full.
Have you ever wondered who put Jesus on the cross? Some say it was Judas, who was paid to betray Jesus to the priests. Others say it was the priests, who delivered Him to Pontius Pilate. Others blame Pilate, who condemned an innocent man to death. And it can truly be said that you and I caused Jesus to be crucified for our sins.
But Jesus was crucified by the will of God, not the will of men. The cross was not an afterthought. It was God’s plan of salvation from the beginning. Jesus, who was God in the flesh, did not come merely to teach us to love one another. Jesus came to die. On the cross, God did not just find a solution to our sin. He became the solution.
The Blessing of Atonement
There are four blessings that the cross gives us: Atonement, Redemption, Justification and Reconciliation. Let’s look at the first blessing of the cross: Atonement.
What does atonement mean? It means the reunification of God and humanity through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. The word atonement comes from the phrase at one. On the cross, Jesus enabled us to be “at one” with God.
Because of sin, we were separated from God and subject to His wrath. In the Bible, wrath is not an outburst of rage, but God’s righteous, rational anger toward evil and injustice. If God were not offended by evil, He would not be a God of love and compassion. The wrath of God is inseparable from the love of God. Our loving Father sent Jesus the Son to be our Atonement and save us from wrath.