The mission of JesusChrist's death on the cross may have been the climax of his earthly ministry, but it is the beginning of God's ministry to us today. Maybe better said is that it's the beginning of our awareness of God's ministry to us today.
The mission of Jesus was a mission of compassion. The words *mission* and *compassion* should always be bracketed; indeed almost hyphenated, so closely do they belong to one another.
Again and again we read in the gospels that Jesus 'was moved with compassion' -- now by the leaderless or hungry crowds, now by the sick, now by a single leprosy sufferer, now by a widow who had lost her only child.
What aroused his compassion was always human need, in whatever form he encountered it. And out of compassion for people in need he acted. He preached the gospel, he taught the people, he fed the hungry, he cleansed the leper, he healed the sick, he raised the dead.
All this was part of his mission. He had not come to be served, he said, but to serve (Mk. 10:45). Of course the climax of his self-giving service was his atoning death, by which he secured our salvation. Nevertheless, his mission of compassion was not limited to this, because human need is not limited to this.
He was sent to serve, and his service was adapted with compassionate sensitivity to human need.
--From 'The Biblical Basis for Declaring God's Glory', in "Declare His Glory Among the Nations", ed. D. M. Howard (Downers Grove: IVP, 1977), p. 54.
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--Excerpted from "Authentic Christianity", p. 320, by permission of InterVarsity Press.
Since "every good and perfect gift is from above..." (James 1:17) and God "knit me together in my mother's womb" (Psalm 139:13) surely we owe thanks to Him alone for all compassions we have ever received, even before we knew they came from Him.
That God lovingly bestows "other" compassions is CRITICAL to our very lives. We need EVERYTHING from God, not just the cross; Christ's sacrifice is the conduit through which we are able to receive it...and does not lessen our need for other expressions of God's compassion toward us.
I submit that a generous portion of Christians wouldn't say that we don't believe "other" compassions are critical, but we often demonstrate it by how we go about our daily lives, saying "thanks for my salvation...I'll be on my way to work out the rest of my life now" with every step.
I am chief among the guilty.