Toward the beginning of our conversation, my brother, who was at that moment traveling just north of where United Airlines Flight 93 had crashed on that same day, seven years ago, told me of his location on the highway. We then began to reflect a little on how the 9/11 anniversary has a different feel as each year passes by.
And then my brother made an important point. He shared how Jesus' death on the cross 2,000 years ago is still a significant annual remembrance to this day, even in an increasingly secularized culture. His observation was an important one and leads to this thought: Of all the tragic events in ancient history, Jesus' death on the cross has its own unique and enduring quality to it.
The earliest New Testament books weren't written until approximately two decades after Jesus' death and resurrection, and yet even after some time had passed, the New Testament writers all highlight the cross in their understanding of who Jesus was and what Jesus was able to accomplish through his life, death, and resurrection. In other words, time did not erode the remembrance or the significance of the cross for those early Christians.
By dying on the cross and rising to new life on Easter, Jesus was able to take upon himself the sin, the brokenness, and the heartache of the world, and win the victory (nikos) over the enemies of sin and death. How appropriate that on the 7th anniversary of 9/11 we also remember the meaning of the cross and the hope and promise it gives us in the midst of our present day sufferings.
"But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory (nikos) through our Lord Jesus Christ." - I Corinthians 15:57
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