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The cross’ power to sanctify

The thought came to me today that perhaps the primary way that Jesus’ cross saves us from the power of indwelling sin is that the cross releases from our fruitless attempts to establish our own righteousness.

When we have sinned, our natural, sinful, tendency is to seek to “do better next time.”  We want to put our failure behind us and show that we can do better.  And we may actually do better to some degree, but we are still bound by sin because it is impossible for us to do better to the infinite degree that is required by God’s absolute holiness.  Only when we come to the cross of Jesus for forgiveness of our sin and receive the free gift of his righteousness can we receive the absolute and infinte righteousness that God requires of us.  

I Corinthians 15:56 says that “the power of sin is the law.”  When we are set free from the attempt to justify ourselves by keeping the law, we are set free from the power of sin.

Romans 8:1-4 says the same thing:

There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, for the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death.  For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do.  By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh, in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.

By the cross of Jesus we are set free in a way that the law could not set us free.  The righteous requirement of the law is fulfilled in us through our union with Christ in his death and resurrection by the Holy Spirit.  When we seek to establish our own righteousness, we are only confirming ourselves in our sin, but when we turn from our own self-righteousness to Jesus and his righteousness, we are set free from the vicious, fruitless cycle of trying to “do better next time”.  

Interestingly, just after having this thought in my devotional time, I read the following quote from www.firstimportance.org:  

“The only people who get better are people who know that, if they never get better, God will love them anyway.”

—Steve Brown, A Scandalous Freedom (West Monroe, LA: Howard Books, 2004), 68-69

The quote doesn’t state the basis of the assertion, but the basis is the cross of Jesus.  God loves us because of the cross of Jesus and his imputed righteousness.  

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a chat with my brother

The following is a chat I had some time ago with my brother about the sinfulness of mankind.  The thoughts are… well… a little disorganized, but I thought some people might enjoy the informality of the discussion we had.

chat-1chat-2chat-3

chat-4chat-5

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Whose church is it anyway?

As someone who has served as a pastor, I admit that sometimes when I read the first several chapters of Acts, I am tempted to either envy or despair.  The description of the early church is so glowing that it is easy to think, “Why isn’t my church like that?  What am I doing wrong?  Why isn’t God blessing us like that?”  

Acts describes a church freshly filled with the Holy Spirit, a church that is growing in number daily, a church willing to sacrifice so that its members needs are met, a church so spiritually vital that its members are willing to lay down their lives for Jesus.

As I read this description recently this thought struck me:  “This church is my church?”  Actually, it is Jesus’ church, and the churches that I have pastored are also his.  Really, Jesus only has one church, and the blessings that he pours out on his people in certain times and places are blessings that belong to all of us his people in all times and in all places.  

Rather than read these glowing descriptions with envy or despair, I should read them and thank God for what he has given me.  I should thank him for allowing me to experience such tremendous blessing as I read about his mighty works in Scripture.

When Jesus died and rose again, he purchased for himself one people, HIS people.  When we consider that any blessing he gives to his people in any specific time or place is really OUR blessing, we will soon begin to see just how much he has blessed us down through the years.

Not only that, it is pleasing to the Lord when we come to him and say, “Lord Jesus, please bless us again.  You blessed us in Acts and we need that blessing again.  We wait upon you for a fresh outpouring of your Spirit and your power upon us.”  Isn’t that what the church in Acts did?  In chapter 4, Peter and John were brought before the Jewish rulers and threatened, and yet when they returned to the church and began to pray, God re-filled them with His Spirit and they “continued to speak the word of God with boldness.” (Acts 4:31)

We need to see the difficult times in our lives and ministries as nothing more than God’s pauses between his blessings.