Whether you’ve heard it all your life or are hearing it for the first time, the gospel is a powerful message worthy of our careful attention and devotion. It is a message we can’t get enough of; one that reveals a little more salvation every time we open our hearts to consume God’s Word. Our minds are blown and our souls become freer. Humor me, and let’s marinade together in the greatness of salvation available to all!
Let’s begin with God. He is loving, He is compassionate, and He is kind. When Moses asked God to show him His glory, or His very nature and His heart, God proclaimed in Ex. 34:6, “The Lord! the Lord! a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abundant in loving-kindness and truth,”
Good news, right? Oh! what a wonderful God He is, worthy of our praise and worship!
Did you notice the comma? There is more that God proclaimed about himself! “Keeping mercy and loving-kindness for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but Who will by no means clear the guilty. . .” This is where the needle scratches the record and all men are silent. The law comes forth. The do’s and don’t’s, the rules and regulations, that thing we hate which makes us all cringe. The law which so strongly makes sins known and places blame, guilt, judgement and shame.
It’s funny how we are. We like to make life all about the law. We obsess about this set of rules, or moral code, and constantly measure ourselves and others. Some run in disgust, fed up with the guilt and blame they feel. They think that if they just reject or ignore it, the feelings will go away. Some embrace the law, and in their own effort “submit” and follow. Some are really good at being good, yet still live under the judgement of the law.
Actually, the law has little to do with the gospel. The law is just there to make us realize we all carry sin. The law points out our sins, something tangible we can see in reality. And that is why God set it up!! He wants us to see what He sees! We all do bad things because it is our nature. I write a lot about the flesh and this is what I’m talking about: everything in us that goes against the very nature of God. There is absolutely nothing we can do about that, it’s been here since Adam and it’s here to stay until the end.
But there’s good news.
When we walk in our natural way, cross-grained against the nature of God, there is friction which causes a separation between us and God. Think about when someone is offended. There is a withdrawal and separation between friends because the offense is hanging in the middle. Same thing with God. He is holy and just. We can’t go near him in our condition, in our old nature.
Ok, so here’s the good news. “For God so loved the world He gave His only son, that who so ever believes in Him shall have eternal life.” John 3:16.
God sent Jesus to die for us. Jesus takes the burden of our sins and crucifies it on the cross. What do I mean by burden? All that judgement, shame, guilt. . . yeah, that stuff that makes us so angry and offended by the law. It’s gone.
I like that, sounds like good news, right?
Truly we are forgiven, but we still have a problem. We still carry our old nature, or our flesh. We see it daily when we do things we believe to be wrong.
Here’s where the great exchange takes place. Not only did Jesus die on the cross and pay the price of our judgement, but God raised Him from the grave, giving us His life. Jesus takes the weight of our sins and hands us His nature in exchange.
I think this sounds like GREAT news!
We take on the the very nature of God when we believe Him for salvation. This is eternal life, or new life in Christ. We now have Jesus’s nature, and we can walk by God’s side. When God looks at us, He sees His Son. He’s looking at our new nature.
As plain and simple as it sounds, many of us haven’t even realized our new nature. We talk about living in Him, or walking by the Spirit, but haven’t seen or experienced what that looks like in the reality of our own lives. We need to learn to do life out of our renewed spirit, our new life, or in our new nature. Through learning to walk by the Spirit, we learn how to come into relationship with God and do life with Him.
“But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh.”
(Gal. 5:16)
While we can read all day about the differences of the old and new nature, the truth is everyone has to experience it for themselves.
Just like Moses, we can ask God to show us His glory. Once we get to know the very heart of God, everything opposed to it becomes clear. We begin to distinguish that which comes from our flesh. Paul writes in 1 Cor. 15:31, “I die daily.” What this means is that Paul identifies what is not from God in himself and practices turning from it daily. It means lying down our pride, our knowledge, our rights, and believing God.
I hope you join me in pursuing this great news in the reality of our own life!
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