One of the most important subdivisions of theology is Christology,
which is the study of the person and work of Christ. Within that field
of study, when we want to get at the aspect that is most crucial, the
aspect that we may call the “crux” of the matter of Jesus’ person and
work, we go immediately to the cross. The words crucial and crux both have their root in the Latin word for “cross,” crux,
and they have come into the English language with their current
meanings because the concept of the cross is at the very center and core
of biblical Christianity. In a very real sense, the cross crystallizes
the essence of the ministry of Jesus.
This was the view of the apostle Paul. In his first letter to the
church at Corinth, Paul made an astonishing statement about the
importance of the cross to the entirety of the Christian faith: “And I,
brethren, when I came to you, did not come with excellence of speech or
of wisdom declaring to you the testimony of God. For I determined not to
know anything among you except Jesus Christ and Him crucified” (1 Cor. 2:1-2).
Paul was a man who had the equivalent of two Ph.D.s in theology by the
time he was 21 years of age, a man who wrote with great insight on the
whole scope of theology. Nevertheless, he said that the focal point of
his teaching, preaching, and ministry among the Corinthians was simply
“Jesus Christ and Him crucified. Continue at R. C. Sproul
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