To sacrifice the valuable, Jesus would have had to give up his eternal life in heaven.
God said to the Israelites: “What do I care about incense from Sheba
or sweet calamus from a distant land? Your burnt offerings are not
acceptable; your sacrifices do not please me.” (Jeremiah 6:20). It is
not surprising therefore that Solomon also says: “Guard your steps when
you go to the house of God. Go near to listen rather than to offer the
sacrifice of fools, who do not know that they do wrong.” (Ecclesiastes
5:1). Christians would do well to heed these counsels.
Ungodly sacrifices
Why are sacrifices so objectionable to God? Jesus teaches that if
something is of men, it cannot be of God. He says to Peter: “Get behind
me, Satan! You are an offense to me, for you are not mindful of the
things of God, but the things of men.” (Matthew 16:23). Jesus also says
if something is from men, it cannot be from heaven and vice-versa.
Accordingly, he asked the Pharisees: “The baptism of John- was it from
heaven or from men?” (Mark 11:30). Sacrifice is of men; therefore it
cannot be of God.
Men have always seen sacrifice as the way to worship deities.
Primordial man sacrificed. Idol-worshippers sacrifice.
Devil-worshippers sacrifice. In the bible, men sacrificed even before
the Law of Moses. But God has no need for sacrifices. Hear him: “I
have no need of a bull from your stall or of goats from your pens.”
(Psalm 50:9). “Do I eat the flesh of bulls or drink the blood of
goats?” (Psalm 50:13). Thanks to Jesus, we now know that: “God is
spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth.” (John
4:24).
Jesus says: “Go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy and not
sacrifice.’” (Matthew 9:13). When we follow this injunction, we
discover that sacrifice is incompatible with the abundant mercy of God.
God does not withhold forgiveness to the penitent, pending the offering
of a sacrifice. If he does, the Father of the prodigal son in Jesus’
parable would not have rushed out to embrace his returning errant son.
He would have asked him first and foremost: “Where is your sacrifice?”
However, instead of requiring the blood of bulls and the fat of rams, it
was the Father who killed the fattened calf in celebration of his son’s
return.
Inadequate sacrifices
God desires love without sacrifice. By its very nature, a sacrifice
is hardly ever given whole-heartedly because we are required to
sacrifice what we love. However, the love God requires comes “with all
our heart and with all our soul and with all our mind.” (Matthew 22:37).
That means it cannot be sacrificial. A sacrifice involves loss. The
man who gives sacrificially loses the valuable thing he gives.
Therefore, there is often discontentment in sacrifices.
But with love, there is no loss: there is only gain. When we truly
love, we don’t give sacrificially; we give wholeheartedly. The man who
gives out of love loses nothing. There are no grounds for
disgruntlement because he delights to do the will of God. Accordingly,
David acknowledges to God: “Sacrifice and offering you did not desire;
my ears you have opened. Burnt offering and sin offering you did not
require. Then I said, ‘Behold, I come; in the scroll of the book it is
written of me. I delight to do your will, O my God, and your law is
within my heart.” (Psalm 40:6-8).
When Jesus told the chief young ruler to go and sell all he has and
give the proceeds to the poor as precondition for inheriting the kingdom
of God, the man saw the requirement as a sacrifice and refused to
fulfil it. But the love God desires is not sacrificial. It is one
where we give God everything without batting an eyelid because we are
completely overwhelmed by his love. This is why Jesus says: “Any of you
who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple.” (Luke
14:33).
Jesus insists on love and not sacrifice. God never takes anything
valuable from us. He only insists that we give up rubbish in order to
receive the Excellency of all things, which is God himself. Just listen
to Jesus: “The kingdom of heaven is like a merchant seeking beautiful
pearls, who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold
all that he had and bought it.” (Matthew 13:45-46). Buying this
precious pearl does not involve any sacrifice.
Bloody sacrifices
Sacrifices are evil and unjust. Jesus says: “If you had known what
these words mean, ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice,’ you would not have
condemned the innocent.” (Matthew 12:7). With every blood-sacrifice,
the innocent is killed. Such injustice contravenes the mercy of God.
Therefore God says: “Whoever sacrifices a bull is like one who kills a
man, and whoever offers a lamb, like one who breaks a dog’s neck;
whoever makes a grain offering is like one who presents pig’s blood.”
(Isaiah 66:3).
The kingdoms of men are built on the injustice of sacrifices. We
build kingdoms on the blood of others. We sacrifice slaves; we
sacrifice blacks; we sacrifice minorities; we sacrifice the poor; we
sacrifice women; we sacrifice the under-privileged. Therefore, God who
is love cannot be part of any sacrificial system, including the one
allegedly ascribed to Jesus. But God is at the centre of every truly
loving system.
False religion justifies violence as sacrifice. But true religion
exposes this as deception. Sacrificial systems are founded on violence
and killings. Once sacrifice is falsely construed as a basic
requirement of faith, cruelty is the answer. Sacrifice often entails
the shedding of blood. In the bible, the children of Israel sacrificed
their neighbours, sacrificed their prophets, sacrificed their children
and they sacrificed Jesus, their Saviour. Leviticus depicts a bizarre
society that regarded the spilling of blood as a means of maintaining an
ungodly religious civilisation.
Hatred of life
Jesus sacrificed nothing by allowing himself to be killed. On the
contrary, he traded the futility of this world for the glory of the
Father. That is the antithesis of a sacrifice. Jesus said to his
disciples on his departure: “If you loved me, you would rejoice because I
said, ‘I am going to the Father.’” (John 14:28). Where then is the
sacrifice?
Jesus teaches that: “The man who loves his life will lose it.” (John
12:25). Accordingly, Jesus himself hated his life on earth. If he had
lived to a ripe old age, that would have been a sacrifice for him. But
he died young; ensuring that he went back quickly to the Father he
loves. That is not a sacrifice. A man who gives up what he hates does
not make a sacrifice. A man who hates his life cannot sacrifice his
life.
Jesus says: “Love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has
no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends.” (John
15:12-13). Jesus is not asking us to sacrifice here: he is asking us to
love. A sacrifice implies the loss of something valuable; but life in
this world is disposable. To sacrifice the valuable, Jesus would have
had to give up his eternal life in heaven.
By Femi Aribisala.
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