The Old Cross and the New Cross
The old cross slew men; the new cross entertains them. The old cross condemned; the new cross amuses. The old cross destroyed confidence in the flesh; the new cross encourages it. The old cross brought tears and blood; the new cross brings laughter. The flesh, smiling and confident, preaches and sings about the cross; before that cross it bows and toward that cross it points with carefully staged histrionics–but upon that cross it will not die, and the reproach of that cross it stubbornly refuses to bear.
I well know how many smooth arguments can be marshalled in support of the new cross. Does not the new cross win converts and make many followers and so carry the advantage of numerical success? Should we not adjust ourselves to the changing times? Have we not heard the slogan, “New days, new ways”? And who but someone very old and very conservative would insist upon death as the appointed way to life? And who today is interested in a gloomy mysticism that would sentence its flesh to a cross and recommend self-effacing humility as a virtue actually to be practiced by modern Christians? These are the arguments, along with many more flippant still, which are brought forward to give an appearance of wisdom to the hollow and meaningless cross of popular Christianity.
(A.W. Tozer, The Pursuit of Man, 53,54.
Join our Facebook Group
Subscribe to Vision News, World Evangelism blog, and World Evangelism News and Helps to receive new posts by Email!
July 22 2008 10:47 am | General

Scott Newton on 23 Jul 2008 at 2:22 pm #
Wow. That is pretty amazing. I think that sometimes our wrong perception is not on purpose but we just lose the sense of the real meaning and cost of the cross out of just being careless. We stop meditating on the cross because it becomes an old hat. That is very convicting, thanks for that!