“In Him [the Lord Jesus] is no sin” (1 John 3:5). |
“Christ … who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth” (1 Peter 2:21-22). |
“For He hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin” (2 Corinthians 5:21). |
Here we have three verses, telling us that there was no sin in the Lord Jesus, that He did no sin, and that He knew no sin. Yet it also says that He was “made sin” for us. What does this mean? |
The Lord Jesus was absolutely sinless. Not only did He never commit sin, but He did not have a sinful nature. That is why John says, “In Him is no sin.” He could not sin, for He did not have the capacity to do so. A sinful thought never entered His heart. If this had not been true, He could not have been the One to bear our sins. |
However, when He was on the cross and bore the sins of those who would believe, He was “made sin,” as we read in 2 Corinthians 5:21. This means that God took our sins and laid them on the Lord Jesus, so that during those three hours of darkness on the cross, God treated Him as if He were the sinner. Those sins were on Him, and then He suffered the punishment from God for those sins. It was this prospect that made the Lord Jesus sweat “great drops of blood” in the Garden of Gethsemane, for as a sinless Man, He hated sin. Yet He was made sin for us, and God had to forsake Him because of this. |
Perhaps we can illustrate it this way. Suppose my son had a friend who had gotten his clothes filthy dirty, and we did not want him to come into our home like that. But suppose my son said, “Change clothes with me, and then you may go in wearing my clean clothes.” But then my son would have to wear his friend’s filthy clothes, and could not come into the house. That is what the Lord Jesus has done for us. But of course the Lord Jesus did not remain with sin on Him. He bore all the judgment, and then died. When He cried out, “It is finished,” those sins were all gone, never to be seen again. |