For Our Sake…That We Might Become
2 Corinthians 5:21
"For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God."
If someone were to ask me to sum up the gospel, I'd begin with this verse. This verse stands alone as the most profound summary of the gospel in all of Scripture. It declares in one sentence the great spiritual exchange at the heart of our salvation.
For this cause Jesus died, so that we might live for Him. God the Father "made him [Jesus] to be sin who knew no sin."Jesus, the eternal Son of God, lived a perfectly sinless human life. He "knew no sin", not in thought, word, or deed. He was holy, blameless, the spotless Lamb. Yet, in an act of divine justice and love, the Father treated Him as if He embodied all the sins of His people.
Jesus received the punishment we deserve. Imagine the implications, Jesus drank the cup of our judgment so we would never have to. This was no mere example or attempt at morally influencing us; it was a penal substitutionary act.
Here is the glorious flip side of the exchange. So many in church, are sitting there thinking that their attendance is going to buy them a place in heaven. Thinking that their giving will purchase them a heavenly home. Their faithfulness will guarantee them a better chance at survival into eternal life. Their many prayers will be answered because they have kept the faith in their rituals and sacrifices.
The prophet Isaiah says that if you regard inequity in your heart, God doesn't even hear you.
Isaiah 59:1-2�"Behold, the Lord’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save, or his ear dull, that it cannot hear; but your iniquities have made a separation between you and your God, and your sins have hidden his face from you so that he will not hear."
Isaiah 1:15
"When you spread out your hands, I will hide my eyes from you; even though you make many prayers, I will not listen; your hands are full of blood."
He [God] doesn’t ignore sin just because He made Jesus to be sin.
It's as if you signed up for the calling plan, bought the cell phone, and began texting your sweetheart about how much you love her/him, but you didn't turn it on, or you've got no signal. The WiFi isn't working, you haven't got the password. You've got a broken connection.
It's a deceptive place to be. You think you're in Him and all the while the phone message didn't send. Lies, fornications, adultery, greed, deceit, ignorance, corruption, contempt, conspiracy, murders; all these things are breaking that connection. Meanwhile you're relying on attendance, giving, rituals, and prayers to buy you a ticket to heaven or at least improve your odds.
But God does not grade on a curve.
He does not overlook sin just because we’re "trying hard" or because we’ve logged in years of religious service.
Sin separates.
Always.
It’s like buying the latest smartphone, signing up for the unlimited plan, and then frantically texting your beloved…but the phone is still in airplane mode. No signal. No connection. The line is dead; not because the plan isn’t paid for, but because you haven’t actually turned it on.
Meanwhile, Jesus paid the full price. The "plan" of salvation is completely purchased; our sin debt is canceled, His righteousness is provided. But it only becomes ours when we, by faith, receive it. When we stop trusting in our own works and rest entirely in Christ’s finished work. Until then, all our religious efforts are like prayers sent over a dead connection.
God’s ear is not deaf, but sin blocks the signal. Only when we come empty-handed, confessing our sin and clinging to Christ alone, does the connection go live.
That We Might Become the Righteousness of God
Here is the staggering flip side:
Because Jesus was treated as sin, we who believe are now treated as righteous, the righteousness of God Himself.
This is how God loved us:
John 3:16-18
"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God."
Not merely forgiven (wonderful as that is), but declared perfectly righteous, as if we had lived Jesus’ flawless life.
Hear that again all you fundamentalist self-righteous works based people; not merely forgiven, but declared perfectly righteous, as if we had lived Jesus’ flawless life.
Not earned by rituals. It is received by faith. The moment we trust Christ, the great exchange is applied to us personally. The barrier is removed. The phone powers up, signal goes through. God hears. And He delights to hear.
No more striving to earn what’s already been given.
No more fear that our performance disqualifies us.
No more pretending our good works make us acceptable.
Just our humble gratitude, joyful obedience, and bold prayers; settled once and for all in the assurance of our knowing we can approach God clothed in Christ Jesus' righteousness.
He became what we were, so that we might become His righteousness in faith.
Extra credit food for thought:
The religious leaders of Jesus’ day were scandalized; not primarily by His miracles or claims to deity (though those bothered them), but by the company He kept. What offended them most was that Jesus welcomed the very people who knew they could not earn righteousness by rituals. The prostitutes, tax collectors, and outcasts didn’t even try to pretend they were acceptable by performance. They came empty, desperate, and deeply aware of their sin. And Jesus received them with open arms, offering forgiveness and a seat at His table.
Meanwhile, the Pharisees and scribes, confident in their law-keeping, tithing, fasting, and temple attendance, were furious.
Why?
Because Jesus’ grace exposed the bankruptcy of their system. His life was like a Holy mirror. If sinners could be justified by faith alone, apart from works, then all their striving was in vain.
And this is the stumbling block even today. The scandal of the gospel.
The cross doesn’t say, "Clean yourself up, then come."
It says, "Come as you are, broken, guilty, empty; and I will clean you. I will clothe you. I will make the exchange for you."
You don't need to invent traditions that are merely attempts at reinstating what the Pharisees and others had. Jesus paid the price, the merit based systems have collapsed at his cross. The stumbling block is now Jesus Christ himself, and specifically, the message of the cross; free grace to the undeserving.
This remains the great offense of the gospel in our time. Many people, yes, even in churches, are busy reinventing Pharisaism with new traditions, new metrics, and new ladders to climb.
"I’ve been baptized, confirmed, catechized...surely I’m in."
Modern equivalents of tithing mint and cumin.
"I read my Bible every day, so God must be pleased with me."
Spiritual disciplines, experiences, political alignments, moral causes; anything to create the feeling that we've contributed to the redemption.
But the cross still thunders the same message it did 2,000 years ago; come as you are, nothing in your hand, simply cling to the cross. No mixture of works and grace. No partial credit for your best effort. No "Jesus plus…"
Just Jesus. His sin-bearing death. His perfect righteousness. Received by faith alone. Christ has done it all. The exchange is complete.
So today, as we begin the new year, drop the spiritual resume. Begin this year not with anxious striving, but with wide-eyed wonder. Not saying, "Look what I’ve done for You," but "Look what You’ve done for me."
Closing Prayer
Father, forgive us for the thousand ways we still play the Pharisee; trusting in our efforts, comparing ourselves to others, inventing rules to make us feel acceptable. Thank You that Jesus welcomed sinners then and welcomes us now, not after we clean up, but in the middle of our mess.
Father, free us from every false ladder. Let us live as those who are already, eternally, irrevocably accepted in the Beloved. May our lives overflow with gratitude, not groveling. Joy, not fear. Bold love, not proud judgment. In the Holy name of Jesus, the Friend of sinners, Amen.