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Christ Died for the Sins of Christians Too

The title for this post actually came from a guest post on Tullian Tchividjian’s blog. It was written by Dr. Rod Rosenbladt, a professor of theology and apologetics at Concordia University in Irvine, California.

I would encourage you to read Dr. Rosenbladt’s post in conjunction with the following:

The more difficult thing with which Christians must come to grips is, “What does the gospel matter to my Christian life?” Or, in other words, “What do I do now? Do I still believe the gospel, or is the rest left up to me?”

One of my favorite stories that illustrates this particular matter deals with a time when the German reformer Martin Luther was translating the Bible into German at the Wartburg castle and could only have contact with his colleague Phillip Melanchthon by courier. Melanchthon had a different sort of temperament than Luther. Some would call him timid; others of a less generous bent might call him spineless.

At one time, while Luther was off in the Wartburg castle translating, Melanchthon had another one of his attacks of timidity. He wrote to Luther, “I woke this morning wondering if I trust Christ enough.” Luther received such letters from Melanchthon regularly. He had a tendency, a propensity, to navel-gaze and to wonder about the state of his inner faith, and whether it was enough to save. Finally, in an effort to pull out all the stops and pull Melanchthon out of himself, Luther wrote back and said, “Melanchthon! Go sin bravely! Then go to the cross and bravely confess it! The whole gospel is outside of us.”

Our desire here at the Summit is to live and breathe the Gospel. It’s so important that I wrote a book on it! Check out GOSPEL: Recovering the Power that Made Christianity Revolutionary