What was
nailed to the Cross-?
Lesson
31
When you were dead in
your sins and the uncircumcision of
your sinful nature, God made you
alive with Christ. He forgave us all
our sins, having canceled the written
code, with its regulations, that was
against us and that stood opposed to
us; he took it away, nailing it to
the cross. -
Colossians 2:13,14
Since His death and
resurrection, believers in Jesus have
discussed the question, What
was nailed to the cross? The
simplicity of the question belies the
enormity of this subject. This
question ultimately concerns each
follower of Jesus because the answer
reflects our understanding of
Gods actions and ultimately,
His will. Even though there is a
relatively simple answer to the
question, the process of getting to
the answer requires a working
knowledge of the Bible and a great
deal of commitment to the leading of
the Holy Spirit.
For years the
disciples of Jesus struggled with the
question of what was changed at the
cross. Their interest was not merely
academic for the answer can have
profound social and behavioral
consequences. (See Acts 15, Galatians
2 and 2 Corinthians 11.) Although
there are hints in the Old Testament
that help us understand what was
nailed to the cross, Jesus spoke
through the Apostle Paul (2
Corinthians 12) to make sure His
followers had information sufficient
to reach the right answer.
Social Ramifications
At times in
Earths history, following Jesus
has taken a lot of courage. For the
sake of illustration, the following
is a fictitious scenario that
generally conforms to the beliefs of
most Christians today. Even though
this scenario does not represent my
views, it has merit because it
demonstrates certain things that
could have happened if all of the
laws and statutes given in the Old
Testament were made void on the
Friday afternoon that Jesus died.
Such a dramatic change would have put
Jewish converts to Christianity in
such a difficult situation because
fourteen hundred years of culture and
religious practice would have
suddenly become worthless. A paradigm
shift of this magnitude would be
extremely hard, if not possible for
converts to accept. With these
thoughts in mind, consider the
following scenario: Benjamin was a
devout Jew from the tribe of Judah.
He was a curious middle-aged man
(like Nicodemus) who frequently
listened to Jesus. As time passed,
Benjamin became favorable to the idea
that Jesus could be the predicted
Messiah, but he was not sure.
Benjamin was an eyewitness to the
death and ascension of Jesus.
Benjamin saw the fiery manifestations
of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost!
Finally, after Benjamin witnessed the
stoning of Stephen, he decided that
Jesus had to be the promised Messiah.
He told his family and friends that
he was converting to Christianity on
the basis of what the prophets had
foretold, as well as the things that
he had seen with his own eyes.
Assuming that Benjamin immediately
began to interpret the will of God as
Christians do today, consider some of
the religious and social
ramifications that Benjamin faced.
As a born
again Christian, Benjamin was
suddenly free of the old covenant, so
Benjamin stopped taking animal
sacrifices to the temple. He stopped
supporting the priests and the temple
tithes and offerings. Benjamin
refused to have his newborn son
circumcised because his son could be
an heir of Abraham without
circumcision. Benjamin told his
relatives and friends that the office
of high priest in Jerusalem was
worthless because mans High
Priest had ascended to Heaven.
Benjamin told his family that pork
and shrimp, among other things, were
no longer unclean. Benjamin started
working on the seventh day Sabbath.
He began attending worship services
with Gentiles on Sunday. Benjamin
refused to observe the feast days or
attend Jewish assemblies. In short,
when Benjamin became a Christian, he
was set free of the culture and
religion he had known all his life
and most everyone knew him refused to
even speak to him. There is a feature
within all religions that says,
If you are not one of us, you
are against us. (Mark 9:40)
Given the polemical nature of
religion, is it little wonder that
Jewish relatives persecuted early
Christians. It is likely that
Benjamins business was either
boycotted or burned because he became
a traitor, a Gentile
lover. Eventually, there was no
safe place in Jerusalem for Benjamin.
He fled to Damascus because the
Pharisee, Saul, had heard of his
defection from Judaism.
How does a man endure
the hatred of everyone he has ever
known? How does a Jew suddenly lose
his denigrating bias toward Gentiles
and consider them to be equals in the
Lord? These matters are not
exaggerated. If anything, they are
understated. There is no greater
conflict that that of religious
differences. We live in an age when
it takes an average of 18 years to
put a man to death for first-degree
murder, but in Benjamins day, a
person could be stoned the same day
he spoke out against the high priest.
All of the issues presented in this
scenario are discussed in the New
Testament because becoming a
Christian during the first century
A.D. was not an easy decision,
especially if the individual was born
a Jew.
Not Representative
This scenario about
Benjamin does not represent how
Christians began to act the week
after Jesus rose from the dead. A
person cannot change his or her
religion or religious practices in a
week. On the other hand,
Benjamins scenario demonstrates
what many Christians think were
nailed to the cross. However,, the
New Testament reveals an interesting
fact. It took many years and many
intense discussions before the
disciples of Jesus figured out what
was nailed to the cross. Why did (and
why does) God permit so much
ambiguity on this question? First, if
Jesus had declared the facts from the
cross as He did from Mt.Sinai few, if
any, Jews would have been able to
accept the truth. Jesus often spoke
in parables so that the people would
consider and think about His words
rather than be offended by His words.
(Matthew 13:11-13) Second, the answer
to, What was nailed to the
cross requires more than a
theological answer. At Mt. Sinai,
Gods will was plainly stated.
(Deuteronomy 30:12-15) The history of
the Jews confirms that no man can
measure up to the will of God. A
close look at Jewish history from the
Bible reveals an interesting fact.
The Jews were in total rebellion to
the plainly stated will of
God or they made the
plainly stated will of
God a legalistic burden, which
no one man can fulfill. The failure
of the Jews explains why God has left
the answer of what was nailed to the
cross up to the individual. You can
answer the question in whatever way
you wish. Of course, your answer may
have nothing to do with the truth.
God knows that if you do not want to
know the truth, there is no point in
revealing the truth to you. However,
if the Holy Spirit is leading you,
and you are an honest seeker for
truth; if you are a born-again
follower of Jesus Christ, you have a
hunger and a thirst for the whole
truth. On this basis, according to
Gods grace, you are going to
discover the truth that God has
hidden and joyfully apply it in your
life. Jesus has promised this! Jesus
told His disciples, But when
he, the Spirit of Truth, comes, he
will guide you into all truth.
(Matthew 13:11) The knowledge
of the secrets of the kingdom has
been given to you but not to
them. (John 16:13)
The Womb of Judaism
Jesus was a Jew and so
were His disciples, so there is no
denying that Christianity began in
the womb of Judaism. Peer pressure
and social conformity have enormous
staying power over people. This is
why less than 5% of Earths
population converts from their
original religious system to another.
Therefore, a sudden revelation of all
that was nailed to the cross would
have been too much at any one time
for any Jew to thoughtfully consider.
Early Jewish converts to Christianity
struggled with the question of what
was nailed to the cross for years
because of social consequences were
enormous in the family and the
community. (Acts 15) Evan after
making the transition to
Christianity, converts could not make
a clean break from their past,
culture, traditions or beliefs.
Jewish converts carried a lot of
Jewish baggage with them into the
early Christian faith. Often, the
Apostle Paul modified his social
conduct to conform to each situation
in which he found himself. For
example, when he was in Corinth, he
lived like a Corinthian. He behaved
like a Jew when he was in Jerusalem.
(1 Corinthians 9:20-23) Because of
its Jewish origin it seemed that
Christianity might remain a sect
within Judaism, but God had other
plans. The Romans surrounded
Jerusalem and Titus destroyed it in
A.D.70. This event forced Christians
to scatter toward the four corners of
the Earth and pushed Christianity out
of the womb of Judaism.
The Empire Was
Prepared
Thirty-five years
before Jerusalem was destroyed, Jesus
chose a man whose heart was right and
his head was wrong, to become His
spokesperson to the Gentiles. After
Saul was converted on the road to
Damascus, he became an unstoppable
ambassador for Jesus. The Apostle
Paul prepared the Roman Empire for
the dispersion of Christians. Paul
traveled extensively throughout the
Roman Empire carrying the gospel of
Jesus Christ. Paul established many
early churches and on the basis of
several revelations from Jesus, Paul
laid a theological foundation that
explains how God viewed believers in
Christ as the heirs of Abraham. As
Gentile men and women joined the
Christian faith they naturally
brought Gentile baggage into the
Christian faith with them just as
their Jewish counterparts had done in
Jerusalem. (This baggage is often the
primary reason Pauls epistles.)
In all cases and in each locale, the
end result was a hybrid religion-not
entirely Christian, Jewish, Grecian,
Egyptian or Roman. This religious
baggage explains why early
Christianity fractured on a many
theological issues. Jewish converts
were concerned with many of Jewish
issues that convert to Christianity
in Rome and Alexandria did not have.
History confirms that early
Christians did not have an absolute
answer to the question, What
was nailed to the cross?
Instead, their answers were the
result of processing selected
epistles of the apostles, Old
Testament study, and social
ramifications. Church history
demonstrates that specific answers
were constructed to suit the needs of
Christians in their respective parts
of the world. Remember, the New
Testament was not compiled until the
middle of the fourth century so early
Christians had to use the Old
Testament to verify Pauls
claims. (Acts 17:11) Strange as it
may sound, variances on the question
of what changed at the cross
ultimately caused Christians in one
region of the world to become
opposed, even hostile toward
believers on other parts of the
world. Church history confirms that
the Christian community has not been
in one accord since the Pentecost
that followed the ascension of
Christ. (Acts 1:14; 2:1)
A Need for Sameness
By the end of the
second century A.D., the Christian
Church was growing strong in the
North, South and East. The
northern version of Christianity was
centered in Alexandria, Egypt and the
eastern version was centered in the
churches of Asia Minor. Each
respective area had its on version
(or perversion, if you will of
Christianity. If we mix the
ancient modes of transportation, the
vast distances and the lack of
communication between Christians
along with the religious baggage
carried into regional churches, it is
easy to see why major theological;
differences developed within the
Christian movement. About A.D.
312, Constantine became the sole
emperor of Rome. The unity of
the empire was waning because ethnic
populations had changed the political
demographics of the world, but
Christianity seemed impervious to
ethnicity. Although independent
of each other, Christian groups were
gaining in presence and popularity
throughout the empire. Constantine
was a brilliant strategist and he saw
an opportunity to strengthen and
reunify the Roman Empire
through a political arrangement with
Christians, He saw that Christianity
needed a centralized authority or it
would fracture and suffer the
consequences of the empire. Therefore,
he converted to Christianity and
adopted religion as a formal vehicle
through which his empire could be
unified and his authority
consolidated. Of course,
Christians in Rome were very pleased
with Constantine s interest.
They had been persecuted and treated
badly for a long time. Now,
Christians began to enjoy the
sunshine of the emperors favor.
Well-educated and skillful Christian
leaders in Rome became intimate
advisors to Constantine and they
adjusted Christian
doctrine ad hoc basis to meet the
needs of the Romans and most of all,
the ambitious goals of Constantine.
Unequal in the Lord
About a hundred and
fifty years before Constantine became
emperor, Christians in the South and
East began to complain that the
bishop at Rome should stop trying to
impose his views on other Christians.
The bishop of Rome gained higher
authority than other bishops for
three reasons: First, the Church of
Rome developed into the largest
church system. Therefore, the bishop
directed the largest body of
Christians. Second, the city of Rome
was the worlds center for
advanced education at that time. Many
of the converts in Rome were well
educated and they had wealth and
influence. Third, as the office of
bishop rose to administrative
importance in Romes version of
Christianity, Christians in Rome
accepted the necessity of a hierarchy
that was similar to the hierarchy of
Roman government. These factors
helped propel the bishop of Rome into
the position of chief
spokesman for the Christians
before Constantine came to power.
Because the Romans did not bestow
power and authority on religious
leaders, the bishop at Rome could not
enforce his declarations nor control
the universal Christian church. But
the Romans did bestow divine power
and divine authority upon Caesar. The
Church of Rome obviously understood
the importance that Caesar could play
in their cause and they carefully
sought to win the favor of the
emperors through flattery. Their
motto was, Convert the king,
and the kingdom will follow.
When Constantine arrived on the scene
in A.D.312, the extensive presence of
Christianity throughout the empire
and its hierarchal structure were
political grapes, ripe for the
picking. The union between
Constantine and the church at Rome
looked like a marriage made in
Heaven. The church at Rome
needed his unimpeachable authority
and Constantine needed the unifying
force of religion. This marriage
produced one offspring, known as the
Holy Roman Empire.
First Sunday after the
First Full Moon after the Spring
Equinox
The observance of
Easter is first noted in church
history about the middle of the
second century A.D. Prior to this
time, it is probable that Jewish
converts observed the anniversary of
Christs death and resurrection
at the time of the Passover (Nissan
14/15). As Christianity diversified
and more religious baggage was
introduced into Christianity, the
observance of Christs death and
resurrection became associated with
pagan fertility rites (Easter eggs
and bunny rabbits). Because Jewish
converts insisted on observing the
death and resurrection of Jesus at
the time of the Passover, a serious
dispute arose. Christians,
principally those in Rome (Pope Pius
I, A.D. 142-154), insisted on a
perpetual Sunday observance for
Easter, the day that Jesus rose from
the tomb. The pope insisted that it
was more appropriate to celebrate the
day of Christs resurrection
instead of the day of His death. But,
a Sunday celebration did not solve
the whole problem. Which Sunday
should be celebrated for Easter?
Depending upon the phases of the
moon, Passover can vary about 29
days. Should Christians observe the
Sunday following the Jewish Passover
each year in order to stay close to
the date of Christs
resurrection or should they fix an
absolute date for Easter?
The bishop at Rome
decided that Easter would be
celebrated on the first Sunday that
followed the first full moon
following the Spring Equinox. His
declaration caused a significant
schism in the church because Jewish
converts in the East and South wanted
to keep the day of the resurrection
tied to the date of the Passover.
Because the day of Passover wanders
through the weekly cycle,
Christs resurrection could be
celebrated on a Tuesday or Friday.
The popes method of determining
Easter would eliminate any dependency
upon the Jewish calendar. At church
counsels, Pope Pius I threatened
those churches who stood in
opposition with excommunication id
they failed to accept his decision.
This show of force splintered the
early Christian community for many
years. When Constantine became
emperor, the controversy over the
time for Easter was still ongoing
because no one had enough authority
over all of the Christian churches to
silence opposition. Given this
background information, consider the
provocative words of Constantine in
June, A.D. 325 when he defended and
defined Christian doctrine.
Especially notice his reasoning:
When the question
relative to the {timing of the}
sacred festival of Easter arose, it
was universally thought that it would
be convenient that all should keep
the feast on one day; for what could
be more beautiful and more desirable,
than to see this festival, through
which we receive the hope of
immortality, celebrated by all with
one accord, and in the same manner?
It was declared to be particularly
unworthy for this, the holiest of all
festivals, to follow the {dating}
custom of the Jews, who had soiled
their hands with the most fearful of
crimes, and whose minds were blinded.
In rejecting their custom {of
determining the date for Passover},
we may transmit to our descendants
the legitimate mode of celebrating
Easter, which we have observed from
the time of the Saviors Passion
to the present day. We ought not,
therefore, to have anything in common
with the Jews, for the Savior has
shown us another way; our worship
follows a more legitimate and more
convenient course; and consequently,
in unanimously adopting this mode, we
desire, dearest brethren, to separate
ourselves from the detestable company
of the Jews, for it is truly shameful
for us to hear them boast that
without their direction we could not
keep this feast {at the proper time}.
How can they be right, they who,
after the death of the Savior, have
no longer been led by reason but by
wild violence, as their delusions may
urge them? They do not possess the
truth in this Easter question; for in
their blindness and repugnance to all
improvement, they frequently
celebrate two Passovers in the same
year.
We could not imitate
those who are openly in error. How,
then, could we follow these Jews, who
are most certainly blinded by error?
For to celebrate the Passover twice
in one year is totally inadmissible.
But even if this were not so, it
would still be the duty not to
tarnish your soul by communications
with such wicked people. Besides,
consider well, that in such an
important matter, and on a subject of
such great solemnity, there ought not
to be any division. Our savior has
left us only one festal day of our
redemption, that is to say, of his
holy passion, and he desired {to
establish} only one Catholic
{universal} Church. Think, then how
unseemly it is, that on the same day
some should be fasting whilst others
are seated at a banquet; and that
after Easter, some should be
rejoicing at feasts, whilst others
are still observing a strict fast.
For this reason, Divine Providence
wills that this custom should be
rectified and regulated in a uniform
way; and everyone, I hope, will agree
upon this point. As, on the other
hand, it is our duty not to have any
thing in common with the murderers of
our Lord; and as, on the other, the
custom now followed by the Churches
of the West, of the South, and of the
North, and some of the East, it is
most acceptable, it has appeared good
to all; and I have been guaranteed
for your consent, that you would
accept it with joy, as it is followed
by Rome
Make known to your
brethren what has been decreed, keep
this most holy Easter day at the same
time, if it is granted me, as I
desire, to unify myself with you; we
can rejoice together; seeing that the
divine power has made use of our
instrumentality for destroying the
evil designs of the devil. (Eusebius,
Vita Const., Lib iii., 18-20,
insertions in brackets are mine.)
The quotation confirms
three things. First, the importance
of Easter observance and the dating
of Easter are contrived issues. The
Bible does not mandate an Easter
observance and Constantine does not
appeal to Scripture for authority.
Second, any association with the
repugnant Jews for dating
Easter was unconscionable to
Constantine. He plainly says so. Last
Constantine decreed that Easter be
celebrated on the same Sunday for all
Christians and he claims this is the
will ofDivine Providence.
This last comment, no doubt, was
designed to silence the argument. The
formula for dating Easter advanced by
Pope Pius I proved to be successful
for four reasons. First, it
eliminated any dependency on
those repugnant Jews for
the timing of Easter. Second, it kept
Easter Sunday as close as possible to
the season when Jesus died and rose
from the tomb (near the time of a
full moon.) Third, the celebration of
Easter on Sunday supported the
growing importance of Sunday
sacredness among Roman Christians and
last, Constantine liked the idea and
simply resolved a theological problem
by edict. In doing so, he affirmed
the desires of the bishop of Rome.
The bishop was happy and Constantine
was happy. Problem solved.
Hopefully, after
reading the past few pages, you can
understand how some Christian
doctrines and practice came to be.
This background has been presented to
demonstrate three things. First,
anti-Semitism was a powerful
influence in matters of theology and
practice in early church history. A
significant number of Christian
traditions (like the oberservance of
Easter) are responses born out of
anti-Semitism instead of Scripture.
Second, the answer to What was
nailed to the Cross? is not as
plainly stated in the Bible as the
Ten Commandments, but every seeker
for truth has enough information in
the Bible to correctly answer the
question. Last, the bishop of Rome
came to a place where he presumed to
have the authority to dictate the
will of God for all other Christians.
In essence, the church at Rome
answered the question by concluding
that everything Jewish was nailed to
the cross.
There is a twist of
irony in this story. The position of
the Catholic Church on the question
of what was nailed to the cross
directly affects most Protestants.
Whereas Catholics claim that the pope
and church leaders have the authority
to determine all matters regarding
religious practice, Protestants claim
the Bible is their only authority in
matters of religious practice.
Because Protestantism has a lot of
Catholic baggage mixed into its
theology. Ironically, those
Protestants who defend the decisions
of the church at Rome are left
holding the bag. A Bible student
cannot use Bible texts to justify a
number of decisions that originated
on the basis of anti-Semitism. We
have seen in this chapter that the
church at Rome dissociated Easter
from the Passover of the Jews because
the Romans had nothing but contempt
for the Jews. Later in this study, it
will be shown the same is also true
for the Tem Commandments. The Church
at Rome declared the seventh day
Sabbath to be null and void because
it was the Sabbath of the Jews and in
its place Sunday was substituted.
Memory Verse: But
when he, the Spirit of truth comes,
he will guide you into all truth
(Matthew 13:11)
Quiz:
- From this
lesson, what has been nailed
to the cross?
- Has this
lesson left you thinking
about a paradigm shift about
the Roman Catholic Church?
- Has peer
pressure and social
conformity caused you to
re-think about religious
values in your own life?
- Is the
observance of Easter
important to your soul
salvation?
- Are the
Ten Commandments
as important today as they
were several thousand years
ago?
- Is Sunday the
true day of worship or has
man manipulated Gods
laws of the true Sabbath Day?
- Has this
lesson opened your mind to
deeper thoughts about all
religions?
Notes: