Christ Crucified + Christ Glorified
Tom left a portion of this quote in the comments to a previous post. It’s worth pulling out.
This originates from Thomas Goodwin’s [1600-1680] excellent book, Christ the Mediator. Note how carefully his cross-centerness focuses both on what Christ has done and what he continues to do. Beautiful in balance!
Rest on Christ alone, especially as crucified. Paul desired to know Christ, and him crucified especially. As they preached so are we to believe. It is the serpent as lifted up that is the object of faith, so Christ present in the sacrament, not simply the person of Christ, but Christ as crucified and as broken for our sins. Otherwise Christ, considered in the excellency of his person, so he might be an object for the faith of angels, who would have been glad of such a husband; but Christ, as crucified, so he is fitted for sinners, and he becomes not an object of love for the excellency of his person, but of faith and confidence as a means and ordinance for the salvation of sinners; and though we are to look on him as glorified, yet withal as once crucified. So that faith is to look at once with one eye to heaven, to Christ there as risen, ascended, interceding, so to look down with another eye to that Christ as once crucified and hanging on the cross, as made sin and a curse.
-Thomas Goodwin, Christ the Mediator in The Works: Volume 5 (RHB) p. 292.
The entire chapter—the uses of the cross—is worth reading. See pages 286-295 here. Thank you TB for this gem of a quote from an often neglected cross-centered puritan!

Love of music + iPhone 2.0 = Shazam!
For the music lover, Shazam is the single greatest iPhone application I’ve seen to date. If you’re in Starbucks and you hear a song being played, you open this program, it listens for 10 seconds or so, and then tells you the artist and song title. And it’s free!
Download app for iPhone 2.0 here (iTunes).
Shazam!
Edwards, Cross-Centeredness, and Application
One unmistakable indication that a preacher has placed the cross at the center of his life and preaching is when the cross remains central to successfully living out the Christian life. A cross-centered preacher extends the gospel’s centrality beyond the conveyance of salvation to all the sin struggles of the Christian life. He injects the gospel into parenting, marriage, and counseling—and brings the hope of the cross to all of life’s experiences.
And the cross-centered preacher understands that the gospel substantiates one of the deepest levels of Christian experience–God’s love to the Christian. As Jonathan Edwards aptly taught in a sermon,
So with what inexpressible joy may those that love Christ think of his bowing the heavens and coming down in the form of a servant: of his lying in a manger, of his suffering the reproach of men, of his agony and bloody sweat, of his dying on the cross for their sakes. How pleasing must it be to read over the history of all those wonderful [things] that their well-beloved has done for them while on earth, as it is recorded in the Scriptures, and to think that Christ has done all this for him: that he was born for his sake and lived for his sake, sweat blood for his sake and died for his sake. This must needs beget an uncommon delight.[1]
To take the cross of Christ and show a congregation that those were tears of sweat dripping down Christ’s face for them individually—for you! for me!—is enough to beget uncommon delight. The cross, truly understood personally, will fill your heart with joys that the fleeting offerings of this world cannot match.
Here on display is the cross-centered worldview of Edwards.
Earlier in the week I posted a cross-centered excerpt from a letter by Edwards written at the very end of his life to the trustees of Princeton. He attempted (unsuccessfully) to shake the possibility of presidential duties for a life of writing, and specifically to write a book to prove that all of God’s thoughts, actions, and intents center in the cross. He died soon thereafter.
But if we rewind his life to the warm summer of 1722 in New York City we peek into the early months of Edwards’s preaching career and see there a young, cross-centered teenager. It was during this summer in NYC that he penned his sermon “Glorious Grace,” a wonderful sermon centered based upon Zechariah 4:7. Edwards closes the message with these words of application:
Let those who have been made partakers of this free and glorious grace of God, spend their lives much in praises and hallelujahs to God, for the wonders of his mercy in their redemption. To you, O redeemed of the Lord, doth this doctrine most directly apply itself; you are those who have been made partakers of all this glorious grace of which you have now heard.
Tis you that God entertained thoughts of restoring after your miserable fall into dreadful depravity and corruption, and into danger of the dreadful misery that unavoidably follows upon it; ’tis for you in particular that God gave his Son, yea, his only Son, and sent him into the world; ’tis for you that the Son of God so freely gave himself; ’tis for you that he was born, died, rose again and ascended, and intercedes; ’tis to you that there the free application of the fruit of these things is made: all this is done perfectly and altogether freely, without any of your desert, without any of your righteousness or strength; wherefore, let your life be spent in praises to God.
When you praise him in prayer, let it not be with coldness and indifferency; when you praise him in your closet, let your whole soul be active therein; when you praise him in singing, don’t barely make a noise, without any stirring of affection in the heart, without any internal melody. … Surely, if the angels are so astonished at God’s mercy to you, and do even shout with joy and admiration at the sight of God’s grace to you, you yourself, on whom this grace is bestowed, have much more reason to shout.
Consider that great part of your happiness in heaven, to all eternity, will consist in this: in praising of God, for his free and glorious grace in redeeming you; and if you would spend more time about it on earth, you would find this world would be much more of a heaven to you than it is. Wherefore, do nothing while you are alive, but speak and think and live God’s praises.[2]
This second excerpt models the importance of the cross in the experience of the individual Christian. Grateful cross-centeredness should shape our prayers, our private worship, our public worship, and our lives in every way.
And Edwards models here a robust cross-centeredness, careful not to neglect important themes of the Father’s love, the incarnation, humiliation, death, resurrection, ascension, and intercessory role of Christ.
As I read more sermons by Edwards, I’m increasingly impressed with Edwards’s cross-centeredness–his ability to balance the work of Christ (what he accomplished on the cross in the past) with the person of Christ (where he is now and that we are going to see him in the future). This cross-centered balance on the work and person of Christ is quite obvious in Edwards’s sermons, even as a teenager.
Overall, Edwards is one of the finest examples of Puritan cross-centered preaching. He displayed his emphasis on the centrality of the death of Christ from the beginning of his ministry to the very end of his life. He is a man who believed a true understanding of the cross would (in experience) bring heaven down to us until the day we would be taken up to enter the eternal praise of Lamb.
——————
[1] Jonathan Edwards, The Works of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 10, Sermons and Discourses 1720-1723 (Yale, 1992) p. 616.
[2] Jonathan Edwards, The Works of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 10, Sermons and Discourses 1720-1723 (Yale, 1992) p. 399.
Tony Reinke
Welcome to Miscellanies [formerly The Shepherd's Scrapbook] a blog serving sinners who seek their daily food in the Cross of Christ. Our goal is provide thoughts on Cross-centered living, theology, preaching and pastoral ministry. We review books considered excellent, announce new books that look interesting, and encourage biblical discernment with both. All of this should fuel our pursuit of the Cross. [Meet the winners of our book of the year awards: 2006 winner and the 2007 winners.]
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Email: crede.ut.intelligas AT mac.com
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“If you find me short in things, impute that to my love of brevity. If you find me besides the truth in anything, impute that to my infirmity. But if you find anything here that serves to your furtherance and joy of the faith, impute that to the mercy of God bestowed on you and me. Yours to serve you with what little I have.” John Bunyan (Works, 1:336).
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Stay on top of the latest posts by subscribing to the RSS feed.
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Current reading …
- Robert Louis Wilken, The Spirit of Early Christian Thought
- Michael Holmes, The Apostolic Fathers: Greek Texts and English Translations (3rd ed.)
- F.F. Bruce, The Spreading Flame: The Rise and Progress of Christianity from its First Beginnings to the Conversion of the English
- Augustine, Expositions of the Psalms: 73-90, Boulding trans. (vol. III/18 )
- Colin Duriez, Francis Schaeffer: An Authentic Life
- Roy Peter Clark, Writing Tools
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On my iPod …
Were You There?
music > off shai linne’s excellent rap album
Podcast #1: 07/07/07
podcast > interview with artist Tom Fluharty
Podcast #2: 04/09/08
podcast > interview with Dr J. Ligon Duncan [more]
Let Your Kingdom Come
music > from the excellent Valley of Vision CD
How Great Your Name
music > by Will Pavone
What a Savior!
music > live recording from NA’07
Rick Gamache
sermon jam >
sermon > A Functional Doctrine of Sin
sermon > The Glory of the Cross [great sermon!]
C.H. Spurgeon
sermon > Without Money and Without Price [a favorite sermon!]
John Piper
biography > on Jonathan Edwards [required!]
sermon > Boasting only in the Cross [classic!]
C.J. Mahaney
sermon > Cross-Centered Parenting [excellent!]
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2007 conferences. Last year we blogged the Sovereign Grace Ministries Leadership Conference (Gaithersburg, MD; April 11-13) and the Banner of Truth Minister’s Conference (Grantham, PA; May 29-31). Click on the hyperlinks for our posts.
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Do-it-yourself Blank Bible. Of all the books we promote, none compare with God’s Word. We pursue the Cross as God opens His Word to us. In this anticipation, we encourage you to make your own blank bible like Jonathan Edwards.’ Building a blank bible shows both a commitment to serious, life-long reflection and the anticipation of God’s illuminating Spirit. To date, over 15,000 readers have accessed the Blank Bible Index.
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FREE book! What is God saying to us? How can we know Him? I wrote a little book — Come Unto Me: God’s Invitation to the World — to answer these questions. You can download the book as a PDF and you can read more about the background of the project here.
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Humble Calvinism. Early this year we started a series on Humble Calvinism, a study through John Calvin’s Institutes. Especially noteworthy is Calvin’s experiential sensitivity to the contours of godliness. Join us as we continue learning humble and holistic Calvinism as Calvin intended. See the Humble Calvinism series index here.
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The Puritan Study. The Puritans were Cross-boasters. So how do we use the wealth of Puritan literature in our personal devotions and expositional studies? Our series on building and using a Puritan Study answered this important question. For more see the full Puritan Study series index.
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Who am I? My name is Tony Reinke but call me “chief of sinners.” For 22-years I hid from God in self-righteous religious ‘faithfulness’ until my stubborn heart was subdued by God’s sovereign grace (Eph. 2). In one moment, after a sermon by Paige Patterson in Lincoln, NE on Luke 18:9-14, I perceived the Gospel as the great exchange, and by God’s grace I released my self-righteousness to cling to the saving righteousness of Jesus Christ. That day I recognized I was a sinner playing the part of the Pharisee. It was the day I was reborn. Now nothing is more precious than knowing Christ — the God-man who died for me and gave me His righteousness in place of my sinfulness (Phil. 3:7-9). Pursuing further up and further into the Cross has become the center of my life and this blog is intended as a place to share this pursuit.
Educationally, I graduated from Bellevue University in Omaha, NE with a degree in Liberal Arts. Theologically, I’m an autodidact under the wise direction of a local church. I’ve been married for 10 years to my best friend, Karalee (a more gifted writer and blogger than myself) and we have three precious kids, a majority of whom are named after dead preachers. Last year I was interviewed by Joshua Sowin about life, books and reading (if you want more info)
God has given me the rare privilege and joy of serving as personal assistant to C.J. Mahaney (if you really want to learn from blogs, navigate away from this sorry one and check out what C.J. is saying on his.)
Misc stuff you don’t need to know but will read because you’re bored and surfing the Internet to kill time anyway: My nicknames include any variation of The Scribe, T-Scribble, Scribs, Big Blog Daddy, Big Honkin Blogdaddy, Big Blog Papi, T-Rex, Blogzilla, and Scribola (take your pick). Curtis Allen calls me by the name Tone Capone. Do I look like an Italian mobster? Here’s my mug.
Email/comments. I’m grateful for your readership and would love to hear from you. You can leave a comment on any post to get in touch. Depending upon time restraints I usually respond to email. You can email me at: crede.ut.intelligas AT mac.com .
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My book wishlist. Hopefully one day these valuable books will be added to my library. All from the The Works of Jonathan Edwards (Yale editions) …
- Vol. 1: Freedom of the Will
- Vol. 2: Religious Affections
- Vol. 8: Ethical Writings
- Vol. 3: Original Sin
- Vol. 21: Trinity, Grace, and Faith
- Vol. 10: Sermons and Discourses ( 1720-1723 )
- Vol. 14: Sermons and Discourses ( 1723-1729 )
- Vol. 19: Sermons and Discourses ( 1734-1738 )
- Vol. 25: Sermons and Discourses ( 1743-1758 )
- Vol. 17: Sermons and Discourses ( 1730-1733 )
- Vol. 22: Sermons and Discourses ( 1739-1742 )
- Vol. 13: The ‘Miscellanies’ ( No. 1-500 )
- Vol. 18: The ‘Miscellanies’ ( No. 501-832 )
- Vol. 20: The ‘Miscellanies’ ( No. 833-1152 )
- Vol. 23: The ‘Miscellanies’ ( No. 1153–1360 )
- Vol. 15: Notes on Scripture
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Princeton Cemetery. I don’t know how I did it, but in the Spring of 2006 I convinced my wife and kids it would be fun to spend the day at Princeton cemetery. Princeton is famous for its school and less famous for its rich evangelical history. I took several photographs at Princeton Cemetery (where Edwards, Hodge, Warfield and the Alexanders are buried). These photos always remind me to be Cross-centered.
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All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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