Never was there any character down here like that of the eternal Son of God as Man — a character that has a depth and height in it that could be found in none but in God Himself and could have been sketched only by the Holy Spirit. Satan would have done all in heaven and earth to have dimmed its perfection, but he could not touch that holy, undefiled One. It was God drawing near to man according to His own character; the whole thing from the manger to the cross was divine.
It is a very real thing to have to do with Christ. When you receive Christ, you meet all the moral glory of God in the face of that Christ — not merely His glory shining there, but all the tender affections of the Father’s heart of love displayed in Him who took our form and dwelt among us as man.
Why was He to leave heaven and come down here — the perfect, matchless, peerless God-man? What was this world to Him? Ah! God had all His plans centered in that One. From the foundation of the world it was ordained that He should take up the question of sin, and whatever the ruin and the misery brought in by it, Christ was perfectly equal to turning all the ruin to His own glory.
No one but the Son of God Himself could look up in God’s face and say, “I can settle the question of sin.” None save He could look down into the heart and mind of a sinner, whether Jew or Gentile, and say, “I know exactly what you are, and I can do a work of which God can say that He has found His rest, through which He is perfectly free to deal in grace with the most wretched sinner.”
There is no part of the life of the blessed Lord in which He stands forth so conspicuously as God as when on the cross, able to meet the whole volume of God’s wrath for sin, bearing in His own body sins heaped up without number, and by the sacrifice of Himself making clear God’s right to be just in justifying the sinner. The character of God as love was displayed too, in giving His Son to be the accepted sacrifice for sin. God has never before been revealed after this fashion.
G. V. Wigram