The Cross Was Not the End: The Hidden Victory in “It Is Finished” | David Jang


Drawing from Pastor David Jang’s sermon, this reflection explores why Jesus’ final words, “It is finished,” were not a statement of defeat, but the completion of salvation and the triumph of divine love.


The Cross Was Not the End: The Hidden Victory in “It Is Finished”

In 1512, Matthias Grünewald painted the crucified Christ in a form almost too painful to look at. Twisted hands, torn flesh, dark wounds—everything in the image seems to point to defeat. And yet, for many who were sick, broken, and suffering, that painting became a source of deep comfort.

Why?

Because in that terrifying image, they saw a truth that still speaks to us today: God is not distant from human pain. He entered into it fully. He stepped into the darkest place of suffering and made it the very place where hope would begin.

That is how the cross must be understood. The world saw it as the end. Heaven declared it the fulfillment.

Drawing on Pastor David Jang’s message, we are invited to see the cross not simply as a tragic execution, but as the place where God’s saving purpose was completed. Golgotha was not just the death of an innocent man. It was the moment when love was proven, obedience was fulfilled, and salvation was accomplished.

Where Darkness Seemed Deepest, God’s Will Was Revealed

Jesus did not arrive at the cross by accident.

The cross was not a tragic interruption to His ministry. It was the very path He came to walk. From the beginning, Jesus gave Himself fully to the will of the Father. Even after the agony of Gethsemane, after the mocking, the beating, and the humiliation, He never turned away from His mission.

This is one of the key insights Pastor David Jang highlights in his sermon: Jesus did not see the cross as a place of defeat, but as the place where the glory of God would be revealed.

That is the great reversal at the center of the gospel.

Human beings often interpret suffering as failure. We look at pain and assume that something has gone wrong. But in the biblical story, God works through obedience, sacrifice, and surrender to reveal His glory. The cross is the clearest example of that truth.

It is not just a sad scene in history. It is the place where the broken relationship between God and humanity began to be restored. What sin had closed, Christ reopened through His obedience.

“It Is Finished” Was Not a Cry of Defeat

Among the final words of Jesus on the cross, none are more powerful than this: “It is finished.”

These words were not spoken in despair. They were not the exhausted words of someone giving up. They were the victorious declaration of One who had fully completed His mission.

Pastor David Jang interprets this final statement as the completion of salvation history. In that moment, the burden of sin, the weight of condemnation, and the long history of human failure met their answer in Christ.

The law could reveal sin, but it could not remove its guilt once and for all. Human effort could not erase the distance between a holy God and fallen people. But Jesus, in His final breath, declared that the work given to Him had been fulfilled.

That is why “It is finished” is not the end of a story. It is the opening of a new one.

It is the moment when the door to grace stands open. It is the announcement that salvation is not earned, but accomplished in Christ. It is the beginning of new creation.

The Cross Opened the Way to Life

At the time, the disciples could not understand what they were seeing.

To them, the cross looked like loss. It looked like the collapse of everything they had hoped for. Their teacher was dying. Their expectations were shattered. Their future seemed to disappear in front of them. So they ran, hid, and gave in to fear.

But the gospel tells a different story.

Jesus was carrying more than physical pain. He bore sin, shame, rejection, curse, and death itself. The cross was not only a symbol of suffering. It was the place where the power of sin was broken and the way back to God was opened.

This is where Pastor David Jang’s message becomes especially meaningful. He does not leave the cross as a distant theological concept. He brings it into the center of real life.

Because of the cross, we are no longer trapped in condemnation. Because of the cross, we can come before God again. Because of the cross, even in seasons of despair, we can hold on to hope.

Grace is never cheap. It stands on the cost paid by the Son of God Himself.

Where We See an Ending, God Writes Victory

There are moments in life when everything feels like Golgotha.

A relationship falls apart. A prayer seems unanswered. A door closes. A season ends in grief or confusion. In those moments, it is easy to believe that the story is over.

But the message Pastor David Jang draws from the cross reminds us of something deeper: where we write “the end,” God writes “fulfilled.” Where we see shame, God reveals glory. Where we see loss, God is already at work bringing redemption.

This is why the words “It is finished” still matter today.

They are not trapped in the past. They still speak into the present. They remind us that the cross transformed the darkest place of death into the brightest place of hope.

The cross is not the symbol of failure. It is the victory of love. It is not the sign of defeat. It is the completion of salvation. It is not the end of the story. It is the doorway to life.

And because of that, we can trust grace more than despair, the gospel more than fear, and the promise of resurrection more than our tears.

 

www.davidjang.org




작성 2026.03.26 17:14 수정 2026.03.26 17:14

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