| BOB SLOSSERIt Says We Are Healed, So 
  Whats Wrong?By Bob SlosserCBN.com Columnist
 
CBN.com 
  - One of the most-debated passages of Christian Scripture in Christendom 
  is surrounded by beautiful, yet difficult and complicating words of promise. 
  These words were used by Peter the Apostle in his first letter to struggling 
  Christians midway in the first century. A truncated version of the passage, 
  widely remembered in the charismatic renewal of the sixties and seventies, says 
  simply: ". . . by His wounds [stripes] you have been healed."
 And here I am  stumbling around like a man looking for his deathbed. Que 
    pasa, one might say if he could punctuate it on his computer. I must be doing 
    something wrong.  This troublesome passage of that transformed man, who served the Lord mightily 
    until his death in the late sixties of the first century, comes in a passage 
    that started out about slaves and how they should act toward their masters. 
    He was not endorsing slavery, but was using Christs example in suffering. 
    He says flatly that we should follow in His steps: "He [Jesus] committed 
    no sin, and no deceit was found in His mouth" (1 Peter 2:22, Isaiah 53:9, 
    NIV). Sinlessness. Truthfulness. Weve heard all this  I know  but please, lets 
    hear it deeply: "He Himself bore our sins in His body on the tree." 
    The Cross. He bore all sin, ALL SIN, in those awful hours. He alone. Once. 
    It was done . Why? "That we might die to sins." To be positionally dead  reckoned 
    dead, seen as dead  to sins. Note the tense of the translation  "that 
    we might . . ." It opened the way. It was an accomplished fact, but we 
    could ignore it or reject it. All sins were forgiven, but not all people were 
    saved. But it didnt stop with forgiveness. It added the possibilities for righteousness, 
    for sanctification, as we say, for holiness  "so that we might live 
    for righteousness." Again, note the tense  "that we might . . ." 
    We could ignore it. Peter is stressing the importance of the cross on sanctification. We can 
    put on the new man, live new lives, and present ourselves to God as instruments 
    of righteousness," not as instruments of sin. The cross, you see, makes 
    it possible for us to be experientially what we are positionally. Then Peter concludes or sums up: "By His wounds you have been healed." So that leaves us with this  the "us" being Christians, the church. 
    Commentators, even conservative ones, most of whom are evangelicals (at best) 
    often have some difficulty acknowledging that "healing" in this 
    case is broader than spiritual healing. I, dear friends, believe were dealing 
    with all healing  spiritual, physical, mental, social. They are all possible 
    because of the cross. Peter certainly seemed to be harking back to Isaiah 53. Look at verses 4-6: 
    "Surely He took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered 
    Him stricken by God, smitten by Him, and afflicted. But He was pierced for 
    our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that 
    brought us peace was upon Him, and by His wounds we are healed." It seems 
    clear to me that that points "wholeness" and restoration. Furthermore, Matthew 8:16-17 says the healing done by Jesus was in fulfillment 
    of Isaiah 53:4: "He took up our infirmities and carried our diseases." And Peter extends that to the ongoing work of the Cross through the church. 
    It is unquestionable that Christ himself bore our sins on the tree, so that 
    we might die to sins and live for righteousness. Here is my remaining question: 
    How sure are we that have died to sins and are living for righteousness? Jesus 
    has done His part, but . . . Yes, healing is in the world, beloved, wholeness is in the world. This is 
                the time of the Lords favor. But, it seems, we need the church 
                to help us get to where we should be. 
 
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