The Great Exchange
By John Piper
For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed. (Romans 1:16–17)
We need righteousness to be acceptable to God. But we don’t have it. What we have is sin.
So,
God has what we need and don’t deserve — righteousness; and we have
what God hates and rejects — sin. What is God’s answer to this
situation?
His answer is Jesus Christ,
the Son of God who died in our place and bore our condemnation. “By
sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he
[God] condemned sin in the flesh” (Romans 8:3). Whose flesh bore the
condemnation? His. Whose sins were being condemned? Ours. This is the
great exchange. Here it is again in 2 Corinthians 5:21: “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.”
God
lays our sins on Christ and punishes them in him. And in Christ’s
obedient death, God fulfills and vindicates his righteousness and
imputes (credits) it to us. Our sin on Christ; his righteousness on us.
We can hardly stress too much that Christ is God’s answer to our greatest problem. It is all owing to Christ.
You
can’t love Christ too much. You can’t think about him too much, or
thank him too much, or depend upon him too much. All our forgiveness,
all our justification, all our righteousness is in Christ.
This
is the gospel — the good news that our sins are laid on Christ and his
righteousness is laid on us, and that this great exchange becomes ours
not by works but by faith alone. “By grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast” (Ephesians 2:8–9).
Here is the good news that lifts burdens and gives joy and makes strong.
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