Is man in his human nature well, sick or dead? This would be an interesting question to ask someone at the office, your children at the dinner table or your neighbor standing with you in the yard. Granted it may be a little deeper question than your neighbor is expecting from you but it is a valid question that explores a persons worldview.
If man in his human condition is morally well then we can expect things to get better. He will make the right decisions for himself and others; he will carry out honorable and exemplary actions; he will maintain a gracious and giving attitude seeking righteousness, justice and love toward all mankind. In this view man may not be at this state of wellness but he is getting there and therefore what he affects in his wake will get better. Therefore there is nothing really wrong with the human race and his relationship to God is one of blessing for God to have such honorable and admirable creatures.
If man in his human condition is morally sick then he is not well and it is obvious by the problems we face in life, however there is hope. Things with man may be bad but not hopeless. There is still some hope and some good in this world. People are still in existence and doing some good things and the sick can be made better by God, themselves and others to do more good things.
If man in his human condition is morally dead in relationship to God then he can do no good thing as God establishes the standard for goodness. He is dead therefore he cannot move toward God in seeking him for his goodness. He is dead therefore he cannot respond to God unless there is someone or something to effect his condition of deadness with the adverse which is life.
A persons response to this question will inevitably lead to what that person then thinks about the gospel of Jesus Christ. The religions of the world and some masquerading as “Christianity” are for the well or the sick but the gospel of Jesus Christ realized at the cross is for the dead. It is said that there are only two kinds of people, “the quick and the dead”. But those who are quick to acknowledge that they are dead will find life outside themselves in the power of the gospel. No one can come to Jesus for salvation unless the Father draws him (Jn.6:44). And as Paul says to those who were dead in their trespasses and their sinful flesh, “God made (you) alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with it’s legal demands. This he set aside nailing it to the cross.” (Col.2:13-14).
The hope for the dead is for one to die in their place and to live in their place. Therefore the hope of the cross is the demonstration that Christ died for those dead in their sins becoming sin for them (2Cor.5:21). But the cross is empty because Christ not only died as a substitute for dead sinners (Rom.3:24-26) he rose from the dead to be their life (Rom.8:11), so that all who died with him are also raised with him to justification (Rom.4:25) and life in his righteous and holy life (Eph.4:24). The gospel of the cross is for the dead. The well may need an example to follow, and the sick may need some help, healing, love or encouragement, but the dead need a God who acts outside themselves to breath life into their deadness that all may be made new.
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