Grace and Wrath Podcast

Ep. 158: There is One Mediator
Jesus, the One Mediator: A Call to Behold and Believe *Based on 1 Timothy 2:5* Brothers and sisters, I am here today not to entertain, not to tickle your ears with soft words or clever stories, but to proclaim a truth that should shake the foundations of your soul and drive you to your knees before a holy God. The Scripture says in 1 Timothy 2:5, “For there is one God and one mediator between God and mankind, the man Christ Jesus.” One God. One mediator. One way. Do you hear that? There is no other door, no other bridge, no other hope for wretched sinners like you and me. Today, I plead with you to see Jesus—not as a mere figure of history, not as a moral teacher, but as the only One who stands between a righteous God and a rebellious humanity. Oh, let us tremble at this truth and run to Him! The Holiness of God and the Sinfulness of Man To understand why we need a mediator, we must first see the chasm that separates us from God. Scripture declares that God is holy—perfectly, infinitely, unapproachably holy. In Habakkuk 1:13, it says His eyes are too pure to look upon evil. He is a consuming fire, a God of justice who will not let sin go unpunished. And what are we? We are not merely flawed; we are corrupt to the core. Romans 3:23 tells us, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Every thought, every deed, every secret rebellion has made us enemies of this holy God. Do you grasp this? You cannot waltz into His presence with your good works or your church attendance. Your hands are stained, your heart is deceitful, and the wages of your sin is death—eternal separation from the God who made you—eternity in a lake of fire and torment. This is the tragedy of humanity: a perfect God, a sinful people, and a divide so vast that no man can cross it. You cannot climb to Him with your religion. You cannot bargain with Him through your sacrifices. The prophets of old tried to approach Him, and they fell on their faces in terror. Moses hid in the cleft of the rock because no man can see God and live. So how then? How can a sinner stand before a holy God and not be consumed? There must be a mediator—someone to bridge the unbridgeable, to reconcile the irreconcilable. And praise be to God, there is One! The Man Christ Jesus: Fully God, Fully Man Look at the text again: “the man Christ Jesus.” Oh, what a mystery, what a marvel! This is no ordinary man. This is the eternal Son of God who stepped into time, who took on flesh, who humbled Himself to bear our infirmities. Philippians 2 tells us He emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant, born in the likeness of men. He is fully God—Colossians 2:9 says, “In Him the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily”—and yet fully man, tempted in every way as we are, yet without sin. Why? Because a mediator must represent both parties. He must be God to satisfy God’s justice, and He must be man to stand in our place. No angel could do this. No priest could do this. No prophet could bear this weight. Only Jesus—the God-man—could span the gulf between heaven and earth. Do you see the beauty of this? He is not aloof, sitting in the heavens detached from your pain. He walked this broken world. He felt hunger, weariness, sorrow. He wept at Lazarus’ tomb. He sweat drops of blood in Gethsemane. And yet, He never wavered, never sinned, never turned from the Father’s will. He is the perfect man, the second Adam, undoing the ruin of the first. Where Adam failed, Jesus prevailed. Where we rebelled, He obeyed—even to the point of death. Oh, brothers and sisters, this is no small thing! This is the hope of the world! The Work of the Mediator: Atonement and Reconciliation What does a mediator do? He makes peace where there is enmity. He pays what is owed. And that’s exactly what Jesus did. On that cross, He didn’t just suffer physical agony—He bore the wrath of God. Isaiah 53:5 says, “He was pierced for our transgressions; He was crushed for our iniquities.