Shane & Shane

Crown Him With Many Crowns

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Crown Him With Many Crowns Devotional
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Crown Him With Many Crowns

Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation. (Revelation 5:9)

 

Jesus Christ is a king unlike any other king. Merely human monarchs have their strengths and weaknesses, their fortes and flaws, the particular glories for which they are remembered and the inevitable inadequacies they wish to be forgotten.

 

Yet the man Christ Jesus — not only truly human but also truly God — eclipses and far surpasses every other human ruler. He is worthy of more than a singular crown. As King of kings, and Lord of lords, and Glory of glories, he is worthy of many crowns.

 

Lord of Love

 

When Christ’s subjects consider his love, we are not left to speculate about the subjective. Rather, we look to the objective revelation of his love for us, and his Father’s love for us through him, at the cross: “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Behold his hands and side!

 

No act of love is greater than the Son of God himself not only becoming man but a servant, and humbling himself all the way to death, even death on a cross, to reconcile to himself not the good and righteous but us sinners. The depths of our need, and the length to which he went to rescue us, show us the heights of his love.

 

Lord of Life

 

But demonstrating his love, by giving himself to death for sinners, would have been tragic were he not Lord of life who has triumphed over the grave. We would have no eternal life were he not alive for us to be joined to him. But he is not dead; he is alive.

 

As creator, “In him was life” (John 1:4:), and now as the resurrected one who has conquered death, we have new life in him, the very life of resurrection that will not die. Earthly rulers will come and go; they have life for a while, as long as King Jesus sees fits to grant it, but they are not its lord. But Jesus is the Lord of all life, from the beginning to the end, from before the foundation of the world to eternity future, from the new birth until the new heavens and new earth.

 

Lord of Heaven

 

In his resurrection life, Jesus is not only Lord over all earthly lords. He now reigns as Lord of heaven. Not only has he, as human, been admitted to heaven following his ascension, but he has come forth to the very center to sit with his Father on the throne of the universe.

 

And as Lord of heaven, he does not stand but sits. It is a mark of his glory that he now sits. He is seated on heaven’s throne. In the old-covenant arrangement, “every priest stands daily at his service, offering repeatedly the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But when Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God, waiting from that time until his enemies should be made a footstool for his feet” (Hebrews 10:11–13). He sits in glory as Lord of heaven, with his Father on “the throne of God and of the Lamb” (Revelations 22:1, 3).

 

Lord of Years

 

Finally, among endless other glories, Jesus is Lord of time. “He was in the beginning with God” (John 1:2), and “he is before all things” (Colossians 1:17). And with his coming to earth, he split history in half. Without him, there would have been no time and history.

 

The apostle Peter tells us of King Jesus’s sovereign reign over time: “Do not overlook this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day” (2 Peter 3:8). He is not slow, as we’re prone to reckon slowness and grow impatient, but he is patient, not eager for any to perish but to come to repentance (2 Peter 3:9). But soon enough he will come again, and all in a moment, like a thief (2 Peter 3:10). Time is his. The years are his. He is attentive to every year and hour, every month and minute, and in his perfect timing, he will destroy the ungodly (2 Peter 3:7) and bring this fallen age to an end, and usher his people into the new heavens and new earth in which righteousness dwells (2 Peter 3:13).

 

Thy Matchless King

 

Jesus is indeed a matchless king, and by faith and the power of his Spirit, he is our king. We not only look on his glories from a distance but we admire him as a brother, as a friend, as those who are known by him, and know ourselves loved by him. There is no king like Jesus. He is worthy of many crowns.

David Mathis

@davidcmathis
David Mathis is executive editor for desiringGod.org and pastor at Cities Church in Minneapolis.  He is a husband, father of four, and author of Habits of Grace: Enjoying Jesus through the Spiritual Disciplines.

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