Jesus: The Center of Creation and Our Satisfaction

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A lion is admirable for its ferocious strength and imperial appearance. A lamb is admirable for its meekness and servant-like provision of wool for our clothing. But even more admirable is a lion-like lamb and a lamb-like lion. What makes Christ glorious, as Jonathan Edwards observed over 250 years ago, is "an admirable conjunction of diverse excellencies." [00:03:08]

Jesus is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For in him all things were created in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, either thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities. All things were created through him and for him. And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together. [00:08:20]

Jesus is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be preeminent. For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross. [00:08:47]

Jesus is the Lord of all creation. He's the Lord of all creation. We said that all is the thread that ties these verses together. So note just the first five alls here in the first three verses: Jesus is firstborn of all creation; in him all things were created; all things were created through him and for him. [00:09:17]

Jesus is truly Lord of all, even Lord over Satan and the demonic powers. If someone were to object to this exhaustive vision of the supremacy of Christ, one of the first things they might say is, "What about the angels? What about the spirit world?" Even better, "What about Satan and the demonic powers?" [00:17:00]

Not only was Jesus in view in the agent and the goal of all creation, but he also holds all things together. Not only is his involvement in creation exhaustive, but in every moment of every day, he doesn't make the watch and back away. He holds the world, all history, and our lives in his hands. [00:18:17]

Jesus is the agent of all salvation. This is verses 18 and 20. He's savior, he's means, the agent of all salvation. As impressive as it may be that Christ is Lord over all that exist in such utterly exhaustive and unrestricted terms, it is even more impressive that he is Lord over all the world to come. [00:19:54]

As great a glory as it is for Christ to be the very image of God, in whom and through him and for whom all things exist, his role in relation to the church is even more significant. As Paul says in the companion letter to Colossians, Ephesians, we might call it, it is through the church that the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known. [00:21:14]

The horror of human history is that the creature made in God's own image rebelled against him. We made war on the very one we were supposed to live to display. We did the most irrational, pathetic evil we could when we distrusted the one who is infinitely worthy and we chose to go our own way toward destruction. [00:22:37]

When Jesus makes peace by the sacrifice of himself, he doesn't restore us to the creation as our final satisfaction. He reconciles us to himself. Paul says yes to each other, that's part, that happens in the process. Yes to the creation, that will happen, but ultimately to him. He's the focus, he's the source. [00:25:04]

All the fullness of God is in Jesus, not just for the sake of an effective redemption, but also for our eternal satisfaction in him. There is no delight, no goodness, no mercy in God that we must bypass Christ to get to. All the fullness, all the joy, all of God is there in him. [00:25:38]

The glory of Christ shines all the brighter because the conjunction of his diverse excellencies corresponds perfectly to our complexity. End of quote so brothers and sisters, Jesus holds it all together. He is Lord of heaven and earth, of the first creation and the coming new creation, of the present and of the future. [00:29:25]

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