STEVE MORGAN
The message of the cross is not only about what Jesus endured, but about what His death means for every person who has sinned. This includes all of us. Through the Apostle Paulβs letter to the Colossians, we learn that the cross is the center of our salvation and the place where our relationship with God is restored.
Paul wrote that before knowing Christ, people are βdead in their trespasses.β This does not refer to physical death, but to a spiritual separation from God. When Adam and Eve disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden, they did not fall down dead, but their sin cut them off from fellowship with Him. From that moment, all humanity has shared in this broken condition. Sin severs our connection with the source of spiritual life. Without that connection, we are alive in body but dead in spirit.
Through Jesus, that separation is healed. When a person puts faith in Him, it is as if the broken cord between God and the human soul is reattached. Life flows again from God into the heart. This is what it means to be βmade alive with Christ.β Salvation is more than forgiveness; it is spiritual renewal. The one who was dead inside is now alive to God.
Paul continues by explaining that through the cross, Christ has forgiven all trespasses. This word all is crucial. No sin is too small or too great to remain outside His forgiveness. The blood of Jesus cleanses completely, not conditionally, but entirely. Every failure, every regret, and every wrong choice is covered by His sacrifice.
When God forgives, He also removes the lasting stain of sin. The inner guilt that clings to us is washed away. As the old hymn says, βSinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.β This forgiveness brings peace to the soul because it releases us from trying to fix the past or earn our way back to God.
The Bible describes three stages of salvation that all come through the cross. First is justification, when God declares a believer righteous, freeing them from the penalty of sin. Second is sanctification, the ongoing process by which the Holy Spirit frees us from the power of sin in daily life. Finally, there is glorification, when God will one day free His people from the presence of sin forever. Each stage rests on the power of what Jesus did at Calvary.
The cross also removes every obstacle that once stood between God and humanity. Paul describes it as the cancellation of a certificate of debt. In ancient times, debtors kept lists of what they owed, constant reminders of their obligation. Our sins make up a record of debt to God. It is a debt so large that no one could ever pay it. Yet when Christ died, He took that entire record and nailed it to the cross. Every charge that stood against us was erased.
This means that for those who belong to Christ, there will be no record of sin to face at judgment. Jesus bore that record Himself. The condemnation that was ours fell on Him instead. Because of that, believers stand free and forgiven before God.
Paul also writes that through the cross, Jesus disarmed principalities and powers. This speaks of His victory over Satan and all forces of evil. When Jesus died, it looked like defeat, but it was the moment of triumph. Satan lost his power to accuse or control those who trust in Christ. Though he still tempts and troubles, his authority is broken. His time is limited, and his final end is already determined.
Because Jesus has overcome, His followers also overcome. The book of Revelation says that believers conquer βby the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony.β The blood of Christ is the seal of our salvation, the protection against the enemy, and the assurance that we belong to God.
For those who have been saved, the suffering of this world is the worst they will ever experience. Heaven holds no pain, no sorrow, no death. It holds only the fullness of life in the presence of God. All of this is possible because of the cross.
The cross is not simply a symbol of suffering; it is the proof that God is for us. The blood of Jesus declares that every debt has been paid, every barrier removed, and every weapon of the enemy disarmed. Those who trust in Christ stand forgiven, restored, and secure forever.
For the word of the cross is foolishness to those who [a]are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.
1 Corinthians 1:18
