Standing in Christ
Alone
By
J. Michael Feazell
"OK, I can see that
we're saved by grace and not by works, but I'm still not clear on a couple of
things. For example, some passages in the New Testament indicate that we won't
be saved unless we are doing good works. How do those passages fit with the
passages that tell us we are saved by grace and not by works?"
Good question.
The truth is, just as
these passages tell us, we cannot enter the kingdom of God unless we are
righteous, unless we are meeting the righteous demands of the law of God (that
is, the law of Christ, not the law of Moses). That is a fact, and there is no
way around it. Unless we are righteous, we are doomed.
The bad news is, the
righteous demands of the law, which are indeed righteous demands, leave us in
exactly that position: doomed. Why? Because we don't have what it takes to be
sinless. "There is no one who is righteous, not even one," Paul
reminds us (Romans 3:10).
But that is where the
gospel comes in. The gospel, which is, remember, good news, tells us that God
made Christ, who was sinless, to be sin for us, so that in him we might become
the righteousness of God (2 Corinthians 5:21). Like the man said, it is good
news.
That means we are saved
by, and only by, God's gracious acts of love on our behalf. In spite of our
rebellion, he loves us and wants us in his kingdom (John 6:40; 2 Peter 3:9). His
eternal banquet of joy and celebration is so important to him that he has
decided to have it overrun with guests even if the only guest-pool in the world
is made up of nothing but loser, ne'er-do-well, no-good-nicks.
God wants us at his
eternal dinner party, and he has made sure we can have, free of charge (because
we haven't got the price of a ticket), the soapy scrub-down, fragrant oils and
clean clothes not to stink it up. He has made sure, with no help from us,
because we bring nothing to the arrangement but our smelly, dirty selves.
So, when we read a passage
like Galatians 5:24, for example, we need to keep firmly in mind that this kind
of person is exactly who God has made us to be in Christ. We are not righteous
of ourselves; we are righteous only in Christ, and only by God's grace, and we
can know that only by faith.
We can believe it or not,
but that is what God says he has done. If we believe it, we will welcome the
scrub-down and the clean outfit.
If we don't believe it,
that is, if we don't accept God for who he is, the Father of Jesus Christ
through whom he has saved the world, then we will simply continue the futile
masquerade we call life and cut ourselves off from the joy of real life waiting
for us in God's banquet hall.
Standing in the light
In the kingdom of God,
righteous pretenders aren't welcome. Only sinners who know they are sinners, and
who trust God to forgive them and make them righteous in Christ, are allowed in.
Pretenders, who think they are in some way more deserving, or more acceptable,
or less dirty than the others, can't stay. They remain in their sins because
they won't give up their little righteousness charade and trust God fully to be
their righteousness.
Knowing what God has done
for us and in us, we are led to work on ourselves to overcome the sin that so
easily entangles us (Hebrews 12:1-3). But keep this in mind: we are accepted as
righteous by God only because of what Christ has already done for us, not by our
three-stooges-Keystone-cops-overcoming-performance, which is the best we can
ever muster.
The Holy Spirit in us
moves us to devotion, but the victory in which we participate is the victory of
Christ (Ephesians 2:4-7). We can enjoy the glorious fruit of his victory only by
trusting him, not by improving our behavior (Romans 3:27-28).
When we rest in Christ,
the peace of God removes our doubt, fear, anxiety and worry (Philippians 4:6-7).
We are secure in him, like a helpless baby comforted in his mother's arms.
When God sent his Son to
die for our sins and to be raised for our life, he made two things indelibly
clear: 1) He loves us immeasurably and unconditionally, to the point of taking
our burden as his own, even to the point of death, and 2) Our salvation was
entirely his work; there is nothing we can do to save ourselves.
Sin
What is it about sin that
makes it so bad? Sin amounts to an inseparable gulf between us and God. Imagine
what would happen to, say, a tomato plant if it suddenly declared independence
from soil, water and light. Without resting in the elements that produce its
life and growth, the wretched little plant is doomed.
It can never be what it
is, a tomato plant, without soil, water and light. It can never do what tomato
plants do—bear tomatoes—without soil, water and light. Yet our little rebel
tomato plant, if we can still call it a tomato plant, has decided it has a
better plan toward self-realization than the natural plan that makes tomato
plants be tomato plants.
Sin amounts to a state of
declared "independence" from God. It cuts us off from the very source
of our life and being. It is refusal to be who we really are, who we were
created to be, in a mad effort to be who we think we ought to be. Sin is more
than mere actions. It is the very condition of our lives. Individual sins are
merely the natural fruit of a corrupt heart.
On our own, because we are
sinners, we are like that tomato plant, trying to scratch out a life for
ourselves in a hostile world, ignorant of the fact that we are not even stuck in
the ground. Lying as we are in the dark on the concrete sidewalk, the best we
can hope for is to stay as green as we can for as long as we can and finally
wither up and die.
But the gospel tells us
that we are not on our own. God has come to our rescue and planted us in the
rich, moist soil in broad daylight. What can we do about it? The truth is, there
is nothing we can do about it. But we do have a choice about whether we will
believe it and enjoy it or deny it and shut off our roots and close our leaves
and go on pretending we are lying on our side in the dark on the sidewalk. Such
tragic pretense can end only in withered ruin.
Dead in sin, alive in
Christ
To put it another way, if
any one of us is fog-brained enough to think we are actually acceptable and
righteous before God because of our devoted efforts to do what is right and
avoid what is evil, then what can anyone say? Imagine a spoiled can of Spam
shedding a layer of its reeking, bacteria-infested mass and then humbly telling
you that it would now, free of that layer of putrefaction, make an acceptable
lunch for you, and you have something of the idea.
In other words, no matter
how much you overcome, no matter how many sins you shed, no matter how many bad
habits you replace with good ones, no matter how much better you are today than
you used to be, it is still fourth down and one million yards to go.
That is why we need to get
our minds off ourselves and onto our Lord and Savior. We need to give up on
ourselves and put our trust in Christ. He fixes us from the inside out.
Quit looking at the
evidence you see in your life and start trusting him to be for you and do for
you what he says he will be for you and do for you. Quit worrying that he will
not be faithful on account of your being a sinner, and start trusting him to
forgive you and clean you up like he said he would.
You see, it works like
this: your unfaithfulness does not keep God from being faithful. He will be
faithful because that is the way he is—faithful. You can stick out your tongue
at him all day long, and he will still be faithful. You will have a sore tongue
and you will miss out on all the fun he wants you to have, but in spite of your
woodenheadedness he will still be faithful.
He will not stop loving
you and he will not stop knocking on your door, hoping you will let him come in
and have supper with you. He is, and always will be, faithful, even when you are
not.
We are free even to deny
him. We are free to give up on him. We are free not to believe him, even to hate
him. We have that choice, the choice to love our own self-defined pseudo-lives
and turn down his gift of real life. We don't have to enjoy his kingdom. He will
let us stew in the misery of sin and death if we want to.
Even so, he will always
remain faithful, never forcing himself on us but always desiring our love.
As Paul wrote: "The
saying is sure: If we have died with him, we will also live with him; if we
endure, we will also reign with him; if we deny him, he will also deny us; if we
are faithless, he remains faithful—for he cannot deny himself" (2 Tim.
2:11-13).
You can get yourself into
all the trouble you want, and God will still be faithful. He will hurt for you
and grieve for you, because he loves you, but he will not force you to trust
him.
He earnestly wants you to
trust him and receive the glorious benefits of his grace, mercy and love, but
the choice is yours.
You ask me if you can sin
and still be saved, and all I can say is that you are a sinner and God saves
sinners, so there can be no other answer but yes. You ask me if I am trying to
encourage you to sin, and I answer, no, I am not; I am encouraging you to trust
God to love you and forgive you and save you in spite of your sins, because that
is what he promises to do.
You ask me how a person
can have true faith in Christ and still keep sinning, and I answer, it would be
nice if we believers would quit sinning, but nobody, ever, in all history has
quit sinning this side of death. You try to think of some other way to ask it,
and I still can answer no other way and be faithful to the Word of God.
We are all sinners, and
God saves us anyway, because saving sinners is what he does. That is not an
invitation to sin; it is simply a fact. God remains faithful to us even when we
are unfaithful to him, and thank God it is so. If we put our trust in him and
admit we are sinners, he is faithful and just to forgive us.
Saved by grace
"But God will not
save us unless we change, will he?"
Change how much? Change a
little, change a medium amount, change a lot? Listen! God saves sinners. He
heals the sick, not the healthy (Mark 2:17).
"Mike, you know what
I mean. You have to change at least some, or he will not save you."
God does not save on the
basis of human changes. He saves on the basis of his own righteousness (Romans
3:21).
"Come on. You know
what I mean. If you believe, and Christ lives in you, then you have to put sin
out of your life or you won't be saved."
OK, how much sin do you
have to put out? All sin, most sin, some sin, a little sin? How much sin have
you put out? How much sin is still left?
"Look, I may not have
all the answers to your cute little fast and loose in-my-face questions, but I
know this much: God is not going to save us if we just keep on sinning and not
even caring about it."
Ah, now we're getting
somewhere. Who said anything about not even caring about it? That is precisely
what believers can't do. Not that there is a rule against it. There doesn't have
to be. When you love somebody, you care, that's just the way it is. The fact
that we are believers means we do care about it.
The very thing that
believers are trusting God to do is to forgive their sins and raise them from
the dead. People who sin without caring about it, you see, do not, by
definition, care about whether God forgives them for sinning. They might figure
that it's nice if he does, but it's all the same to them if he doesn't.
In other words, to them,
it doesn't matter what God thinks, one way or the other. They only care about
one thing: themselves, which is why they don't mind sinning in the first place.
Believers, on the other
hand, care about themselves too, of course, but they also care about something
else even more: God. They care that God says sin is wrong, they care that sin
destroys, and they don't want to be sinners, which is why they want to be
forgiven.
They trust God's Word
about everything, including sin, they care about the fact that God loves them
and has forgiven them, and they care about loving, thanking, praising and
serving their gracious God.
Believers fight their
sinful nature, desiring to live in harmony with their calling in Christ. But
when they sin, as they all do, they trust God to forgive them for the sake of
their Advocate, who is their Savior. That is, they ought to trust him to forgive
them. But with all the legalistic you'd-better-measure-up-or-go-to-hellfire
preaching and teaching loose on the planet, tragically, many Christians live in
dread that God will in the final analysis reject them because of their sins, not
save them.
Ask the average
churchgoer, "How do you avoid hellfire?" He will say something like
this: "By living a good life."
That is not the gospel,
but it is the common perception not only of John Q. Public, but also of John Q.
Churchperson. Why is it the common perception? Because that is what has passed
for preaching in untold numbers of Christian pulpits for centuries. Believers
are lured in with promises of grace, then held hostage by a long and slippery
list of required moral demands necessary in order to stay on God's good side. It
is called religion.
The gospel, however, is
not religion. The gospel is a loving God's good news to humans: "I love you
so much that I sent my Son, so that by putting your trust in him you will not
perish but live in joy and peace with me forever."
Let him who thinks he
stands ...
When we love God, we obey
him. Right? Well, maybe that works for you—maybe the fact that you love God
moves you into a life of faithful obedience and steady purity. It doesn't do
that to me. I love God with all my heart, and in many ways I do better than I
used to when it comes to sin, but I still grieve the Holy Spirit a whole lot
more than I want to.
God's children want to
obey him. The Spirit of God in us leads us to obey him. Our consciences,
appropriately, plague us when we know we are disobeying him. Still, two things
to remember: 1) We have been forgiven already, and 2) We keep sinning no matter
how much we overcome.
The person who thinks he
stands is the very one who needs to take heed (1 Corinthians 10:12). Why?
Because nobody stands except in Christ. Even with all the apostolic urging to do
what is right, not one of us actually walks a pure and holy life—except as we
are held in Jesus, and that life is invisible to us (Colossians 3:3).
Unless our righteousness
exceeds that of the Pharisees, Jesus said, we have no part in the kingdom
(Matthew 5:20). What? The Pharisees were the most careful and devoted law
abiders around! They took the word of God seriously, and they devoted themselves
scrupulously to observing it. But Jesus said that anyone who will be in his
kingdom must have even greater righteousness.
Do you have such a level
of righteousness? I sure don't.
And that is just the
point. Salvation does not come by what we do, no matter how good we are—or
think we are. Our righteousness is the righteousness of Jesus (1 Corinthians
1:30), and our faith is in his promise of deliverance, not in what we can do
(Ephesians 2:8-9).
So how do we stand? By
admitting that we are stone dead, flat on the ground, unable to lift a finger,
and by trusting Christ who raises the dead (John 11:25).
How do we stand? By faith
in the God who justifies the ungodly (Romans 4:5). How do we know we can trust
him? Because he has proved how much he loves us by sending his Son (Romans 5:8).
How much proof do we need to be able to put our trust in him? What does he have
to do? Die for us? He did just that. More than that, he was raised for us too.
And it is in him that our true life is hidden with God until it is revealed with
him when he comes (Colossians 3:3-4).
Then we shall see
ourselves for what we really are, for what he has made us, and we can accept our
resurrected life, which includes and springs from our death, or we can reject it
in favor of what we have always had, this pitiful excuse for life we see all too
clearly right now.
We can keep the crisp five
bucks Monty Hall gave us for the two used Kleenexes in our back pocket and think
we have really got a handle on life, or we can trade it all in for what's behind
the curtain—trusting God's gracious promise that even though we can't see it
yet, it is the mother of all jackpots.
In other words, we can die
to all the things we thought were worth fighting, clawing and bleeding for in
this world, and trust God to give us the real life we don't yet see, the one
that is hidden in Christ with God.
The two cannot exist
together. We must give up the fake life we hold so tightly with both hands in
order to grasp the real life God continually holds out to us (Matthew 6:24).
Serious about sin
Yes, we do need to
"get serious" about overcoming sin. But we need to do so in the
context of complete assurance that we are God's forgiven and beloved children
for Christ's sake.
We need to get serious
about overcoming sin knowing full well that God has not and will not reject us
because of our sins, and that he will always stand with us in our struggle
against sinning. The only thing that can cause us to "lose" our
salvation is for us to stop caring about it altogether and stop trusting God
(Hebrews 2:3). Even then, God will continue to knock on our door, earnestly
desiring that we answer it and let him in (Revelation 3:20).
The bottom line is, fight
sin tooth and nail but quit worrying that your failures, setbacks and dry
periods cut you off from God. They don't. God is not arbitrary in his love for
you, nor does he keep score (1 Corinthians 13:7).
He is absolutely true to
his covenant promise; he will never leave you nor forsake you, and you can count
on that no matter how deep in the miry pit of sin you have wallowed.
In his eyes, even while
you still wage war with your sins, you are already new and righteous with him in
Christ (Colossians 3:3). He sees you for what he has made you in Christ, not for
what you have made yourself by a lifetime of wrong turns, bad decisions, weak
moments, failures and sins.
Again, that is why this
gospel is good news!
Copyright ©
Worldwide Church of God, 2000
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