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Good FridayWesleyan~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

Love to the Uttermost: The Cross and the God Who Would Not Let Go

Isaiah 53:3-6John 19:28-30

The cross as the supreme expression of God's love for all humanity, the atonement as healing, and the universal invitation of grace

Arminian / Wesleyan

Grace, holiness, and personal transformation

Tradition vocabulary:universal atonementdouble cureprevenient gracehealingsanctificationCharles Wesleyinvitationall people

The Cross Is What Love Looks Like

Before the cross is a doctrine, it is a display. Before it is a mechanism of salvation, it is a revelation of character. The cross shows us what God is like — and what God is like is love. Not love in the abstract. Not love as a theological category. Love as a man hanging on wood, bleeding out for people who put Him there. "He was pierced for our transgressions." Not for the transgressions of the elect few. Not for the sins of the spiritually advanced. For OUR transgressions. All of ours. Every human being who has ever lived is included in Isaiah's "our." The Wesleyan tradition holds fast to this: the atonement is unlimited in its scope. Christ died for all. Not because all will accept it — but because all are invited. Charles Wesley captured it in a hymn that has shaped Wesleyan theology for three centuries: "And can it be that I should gain an interest in the Savior's blood? Died He for me, who caused His pain — for me, who Him to death pursued? Amazing love! How can it be that Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?" The wonder of the cross is not that God saved some. It is that God would save any. And the Wesleyan conviction is that He died for every single one — because His love is as wide as the human race and as deep as the grave He entered.
Isaiah 53:51 John 2:21 Timothy 2:5-6

By His Wounds We Are Healed

Isaiah's final statement in verse 5 is often overlooked: "By his wounds we are healed." The Wesleyan tradition takes this seriously — the atonement is not only forensic (a legal transaction) but therapeutic (a healing event). Sin is not just a crime to be pardoned. It is a disease to be cured. The cross does not merely clear your record before God — it begins the process of restoring you to the wholeness God intended. Forgiveness and healing. Pardon and transformation. The cross justifies you and the cross begins to sanctify you. Wesley called this "the double cure" — saved from wrath (justification) and saved from sin's power (sanctification). The hymn says it perfectly: "Be of sin the double cure; save from wrath and make me pure." Good Friday is not only about what Christ saves us from. It is about what Christ saves us for — a life of increasing holiness, a heart increasingly filled with love, a soul increasingly conformed to the image of Christ. So tonight, bring not only your guilt to the cross. Bring your brokenness. Bring the patterns you cannot break. Bring the wounds you cannot heal. "By his wounds" — not by your effort, not by your willpower, not by your resolution — "we are healed."
Isaiah 53:5Romans 5:8-101 Peter 2:24

The Cross Invites Everyone

"We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to our own way." All have sinned. Every single one. And the Lord has laid on Him the iniquity of us all. All have sinned — and all are invited to the foot of the cross. Wesley preached in coal mines and open fields because he believed the invitation of the cross was for everyone — not just the churchgoers, not just the respectable, not just the predestined. When Jesus said "It is finished," He did not add an asterisk. He did not finish the work for some and leave it incomplete for others. The price is paid. The door is open. The invitation is universal. Tonight, if you are far from God — the cross is for you. If you have been running for years — the cross is for you. If you do not feel worthy — the cross is especially for you, because the cross is precisely for the unworthy. "God demonstrates his own love for us in this: while we were still sinners, Christ died for us." Not while we were cleaned up. Not while we were trying harder. While we were still sinners. The prevenient grace of God has been drawing you — perhaps for years — to this moment. The cross stands before you tonight. And the Man on it is looking at you with the same eyes that looked at the thief on the cross next to Him and said: "Today you will be with me in paradise." It is finished. Will you receive it?
Isaiah 53:6Romans 5:8Luke 23:43

Applications

  • 1Let the cross be personal tonight. Christ did not die for "humanity in general." He died for you — specifically, intentionally, lovingly.
  • 2Bring your brokenness, not just your guilt. "By his wounds we are healed." The cross is not only about pardon — it is about transformation.
  • 3If you have been running from God, stop. The prevenient grace that has been drawing you led you here. The cross is for you.
  • 4Sing "And Can It Be" this week. Let Charles Wesley's words carry the theology of the cross into your heart.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord Jesus, the cross reveals what love looks like — and love looks like You, bleeding and broken and refusing to let go.
  • Be of sin the double cure: save us from wrath and make us pure. Let the cross not only pardon us but heal us.
  • For those here tonight who feel unworthy — remind them that the cross is precisely for the unworthy. While we were still sinners, You died for us.
  • It is finished. We receive it. We rest in it. We are healed by it. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Les Miserables (2012)

Jean Valjean steals silver from the bishop who sheltered him. When the police bring Valjean back, the bishop says: "I gave them to you. And you forgot the candlesticks." The bishop does not merely pardon the crime. He transforms the criminal. Valjean leaves that encounter a different man — forgiven and changed. That is the Wesleyan vision of the cross: not just pardon but transformation. Not just the removal of guilt but the healing of the heart. "Be of sin the double cure."

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

"By his wounds we are healed." The cross is not only forensic — a legal pardon. It is therapeutic — a healing event. Bring your brokenness, not just your guilt.

Pastoral

The prevenient grace of God has been drawing you to this moment — perhaps for years. The cross stands before you tonight. Will you receive it?

Edgy

Wesley preached in coal mines because the church wouldn't have him. The cross is for coal miners. It is for the unchurched. It is for the people the respectable church forgot.

More Titles

Love to the UttermostThe Double Cure: Pardon and TransformationBy His Wounds We Are HealedThe Universal Cross: Good Friday for AllAnd Can It Be: The Wonder of the Cross
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Frequently Asked Questions

How does Wesleyan theology view the scope of the atonement?

Wesleyan theology teaches that Christ died for all people — the atonement is universal in scope. While not all will accept the gift, the invitation extends to every person. This is grounded in texts like 1 John 2:2 ("He is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for the sins of the whole world").

What is "the double cure" in Wesleyan theology?

The "double cure" refers to the two effects of the cross: justification (pardon from the guilt of sin) and sanctification (healing from the power of sin). The cross does not merely clear your record — it begins the process of restoring you to wholeness. This comes from the hymn "Rock of Ages": "Be of sin the double cure; save from wrath and make me pure."