To Be Alone With You
Listened to a lecture today on forgiveness in relationship to the cross. Listened to a song today about the fullness of God's love on the cross. Maybe you've heard it, maybe not. It's by Sufjan Stevens:
I was completely blown away when Sufjan ended his peppy show back in September with this song as the only encore song. All the glam and glitterry costumes were gone and there stood simply an ordinary man and his guitar, singing about--of all things--the cross. What a powerful ending.
And when I was listening to this song on my MP3 player walking back from Clucker's this afternoon the powerfulness hit me again in light of the message I heard just minutes earlier in chapel. Christ died in our place. How beautiful is it that not only did he go up on the tree, but he also came in the form of a man to bear all of our shame on that tree? And not only did he do it so that he could be with us (although he is Emmanuel, God with us) but that we could be forgiven in that one act of love. Christ was not sent simply as a mediator to forgive us the debt we owe to God, but He came to represent both parties involved. He was in nature fully God (the one wronged) and fully human (fully identified with the transgressors, although innocent). His death was our death. His life is our life. How much fuller and richer the meaning of our forgiveness and our lives in Christ since this is true!
I'd swim across Lake Michigan
I'd sell my shoes
I'd give my body to be back again
In the rest of the room
To be alone with you
To be alone with you
To be alone with you
To be alone with you
You gave your body to the lonely
They took your clothes
You gave up a wife and a family
You gave your ghost
To be alone with me
To be alone with me
To be alone with me
You went up on a tree
To be alone with me you went up on that tree
I've never known a man who loved me
I was completely blown away when Sufjan ended his peppy show back in September with this song as the only encore song. All the glam and glitterry costumes were gone and there stood simply an ordinary man and his guitar, singing about--of all things--the cross. What a powerful ending.
And when I was listening to this song on my MP3 player walking back from Clucker's this afternoon the powerfulness hit me again in light of the message I heard just minutes earlier in chapel. Christ died in our place. How beautiful is it that not only did he go up on the tree, but he also came in the form of a man to bear all of our shame on that tree? And not only did he do it so that he could be with us (although he is Emmanuel, God with us) but that we could be forgiven in that one act of love. Christ was not sent simply as a mediator to forgive us the debt we owe to God, but He came to represent both parties involved. He was in nature fully God (the one wronged) and fully human (fully identified with the transgressors, although innocent). His death was our death. His life is our life. How much fuller and richer the meaning of our forgiveness and our lives in Christ since this is true!
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