| Born
Crucified
by
L. E. Maxwell
Reviewed By
Dean Taylor
At
a furious rate the Christian media today is churning out countless
books, CDs, T-shirts, and paraphernalia promoting more pleasure
and ease in the Christian life. Careless titles such as He’s
Gonna Toot and I’m Gonna Scoot plague the Christian marketplace.
To such slapdash attitudes, Maxwell’s book, Born Crucified,
makes an unapologetic rebuke.
Written in 1945, Maxwell’s diagnosis
of the church finds it fatally infected by the insidious disease
of self. Refreshingly, Maxwell prescribes the ageless cure for
this ever-enduring malady—the Cross! Written in a preaching
style full of great illustrations and anecdotes, Maxwell exposes
many common frustrations, weaknesses, and sins that continue
to vex the believer today.
In admonition to the fainting
saint who is striving in vain to have spiritual victory, Maxwell
incites that no real spiritual life and victory can be achieved
without first dying to self. He writes: “In the power of
Christ’s death I must refuse my old life. On the basis of Calvary
and of my oneness with Christ in His death, I must refuse to
let self lord it over me. I must choose whether I will be dominated
by that hideous monster self or by Christ. The life that ‘Christ
lives in me’ must have a happy ‘yet not I’ at its very heart.
How can I have the benefits of Christ’s death while I still
want my own way? Self must be dethroned.”
With words born out of personal
testimony, Maxwell makes a most penetrating exhortation to parents.
He states: “Many parents will suffer a painful inner crucifixion
through learning to discipline their children. Those who have
not disciplined themselves—how can they discipline their children?
Children are being denied proper and godly discipline today
because the parents have not yet learned to hate their ‘own
flesh.’ Not having laid the Cross on his own flesh, the parent
denies the Cross to his child. ‘He who spares his rod hates
his son’ (Prov. 13:24).”
Drawing from his own real-life
experiences of having seen his children face disease and discouragement
on the African mission field, he further warns parents: “Few
Christian parents are governed by these simple implications
of Calvary. We are thinking of good Christian homes. Parents
are often so wrapped up in their own children that they cannot
bear to see them take the way of the Cross. They shield them
from the path of suffering. Christian young people are often
eager to go to all lengths for God and follow Christ to the
ends of the earth, but the parents refuse to take the way of
the Cross, either for themselves or for their children.”
Writing to a predominately conservative
Christian audience, he cautions the church not to become too
sure or high-minded. He warns: “It is likely that many of my
readers are, as a whole, unworldly. But let me ask; are you
the victim of a single worldliness? To what thing are you passionately
attached? You may rightly condemn the teenager’s love of the
dance, the show, the theater. But are you under the spell of
politics, or art, or science, or money, or ambition, or social
popularity, or business power? The world is a different world
to a young person than it is to the middle-aged person. But
the narcotic is no less deadly.”
Digging deep into the heart he
challenges Christians to search those inner motives. He writes:
“When we thus begin to renounce self, we shall find that
this will generally be done through our submission to someone
in the family or business circle. Home missions are good; foreign
missions are better; but ‘submissions’ at home and abroad are
best of all.”
He
goes on to admonish that as we die to our self, the instrument
of execution must always be the Cross. However, with an insightful
admonishment to the way we use the common phrase “bearing my
cross” he shows that the Cross should never be looked upon with
disdain but only with joy. He writes, “Many times you have
cried, ‘Anything but that, Lord.’ You have feared it might come
upon you. And there it is, staring you in the face. To obey
God will now occasion new pain and shame and disgrace. But in
divine wisdom it will apply Calvary more deeply to self. Take
it up, therefore; stretch your hands out upon it, and there
make a fresh break with self…. We must not think of our cross
as something compulsory or unavoidable such as misfortune, infirmity,
or calamity. Our cross is the voluntary embracing of a path
which exposes self to fresh denial, and death, and which may
actually cost us our life. When we embrace the Cross, Golgotha
is our goal.”
Maxwell beautifully empowers his
strong teachings on holiness with the balm of hope from the
promises of Christ. He writes: “And the necessary shock
that has to come to the believer is that Christ’s standards
are completely beyond the reach of the flesh. Who naturally
loves his enemies, rejoices in persecution, hates himself, and
goes the second mile? Yet these things are native to the true
Christian life.” Quoting from F. J. Huegel he states: “We
have been proceeding upon a false basis. We have conceived of
the Christian life as an imitation of Christ. It is not an imitation
of Christ. It is a participation of Christ.”
Finally, he charges the Church
to get back into the battle. To a church steeped in softness
and ease he cries, “Oh, the pity of it, the shame, the awful
tragedy of it all! Emancipated, redeemed, and blood-bought,
but still in bondage to the world, to the flesh, and to the
devil. In retreat and defeat, flouted and routed! Soldiers of
Christ, halt! About-face! Claim your freedoms—crucified to the
world, crucified to the flesh, crucified just where the serpent
was crushed.”
This book is highly challenging
and encouraging. Oh, if we could individually and corporately
lay hold of and embrace the restorative execution of the cross—what
an abundant life we would have in Christ! For indeed it is true,
“He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth
his life for my sake shall find it” (Matt 10:39).
Originally
published under the title Born Crucified, this book can now
be purchased or ordered from your local bookstore under the
new title Embraced By The Cross by Moody Press.
Or write to:
Moody Press
c/o MLM
Chicago, IL 60610
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