Letter to my sister

Sunday, August 15th, 2010

Hey David. I always wanted to ask you this question but I didn't have the chance to. But anyways Jesus Christ forgives sinners right? Well then does He forgive someone that keeps doing the same thing over and over? I am sorry I didn't get to talk to you about this sooner, hope to get an answer back. <3 Jess

Dear Jess,

Thank you so much for asking me those questions. I will do my best to answer, but I know that my best cannot be quite good enough unless God helps me. I ask Him to help me explain this to you, and I ask Him to help you understand. James 1 says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given.” We know that God will give us wisdom when we need it.

Your question has a very simple answer: yes. Jesus forgives all our sin. But He doesn’t just forgive because He forgets that we sinned or pretends it isn’t a big deal. He forgives because He already paid for every one of our sins.

When Jesus died, He was paying for every time that you and I have ever lied or gotten angry or disobeyed. He suffered more than anyone else in history, because our sins were so, so bad.

Some people say that we are all really good, but that the little sins we do make us sinners. That isn’t true at all. We aren’t good. We are sinners, and we sin because of who we are.

Because we are so selfish and sinful, we deserve to have God throw us out. God does not need us. God cannot use sinful selfish people. Our selfishness makes us angry with God for no reason; we don’t want to do anything for God. God should really just get rid of us.

But the good news is wonderful! God is “rich” in mercy. Just like a rich person has enough money to do anything they want to do, God has enough mercy to do whatever He wants to do. And God is very, very rich in mercy.

We were so selfish and sinful that we could do nothing at all to impress God. We were like dead men. But God has enough love and mercy to do anything He wants to do. When we were weak and helpless, Jesus died for us. That is why God’s mercy is so perfect. Instead of forgetting about our sins, He took our sins away from us and put them on Jesus. Instead of the Father punishing us for our sins, He punished Jesus for them.

That takes a lot of mercy. But God’s mercy is even bigger than all of our sins. God does not want to save us from our sins and then let us continue being sinful. His mercy is big enough to come inside of us and change our hearts from the inside out. He kills our selfishness and sin and replaces it with a desire to love and please Him. This way, everyone sees how powerful and merciful He is, because He made terrible sinners into obedient children.

All of us used to follow the desires of our sinful nature. We were objects of wrath because of who we were. But because of His great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even though we were dead. God did this so that for all eternity He shows how rich His grace is, because we will all see His kindness to us in Christ Jesus. We are God’s projects, given life because of Jesus, so that we can do good works that will glorify God.”

Because God saved us from punishment and saved us from continuing in sin, we love Him! “We love Him because He first loved us.” Because of how much we love Him, we don’t want to do anything that makes Him unhappy. We know that every sin we commit was paid for by Jesus, but we don’t want to sin because it does not please God.

God has already shown how rich His mercy is! Now, it is our job to show the world how powerful His love is. We have to show the whole world that His love is powerful enough to save us from our selfishness. We want to do good works that glorify God!

But it is not easy. While we are still alive on this earth, the sin that is still part of our bodies will keep on making us sin. But now, we have a desire to love God even though our bodies are still wicked. The Bible and the Holy Spirit help us to love God even though our bodies only want to sin.

As long as we are alive in these bodies, we will keep doing things that displease God. But we will do them less and less, because we desire more and more to please God.

“Thank God, that even though you were once slaves of sin, you have been set free, and have become slaves to righteousness! For just as you used to desire impurity and lawlessness, making you sin more and more, now you desire righteousness, which glorifies God! Those shameful things only would have led to death before. But now you have been set free from sin. This righteousness leads to eternal life! For the result of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

I have been saved for a while now, but I still do things that don’t please God. But I hate it! Even though sin feels good to my body, I don’t want to hurt God’s heart! I don’t understand my own actions. Instead of always pleasing God, I do the things I know God hates! But it is not my heart that sins; it is just the sin that is still present inside me. I want to do everything that pleases God, but I’m just not strong enough.

We are pitiful! But God uses the Bible and the Holy Spirit to deliver us little by little from our sinning. And even though we will continue to sin here and there, His mercy is strong enough to save us every single time.

If we say that we are following Jesus but do not desire to please Him, we are lying. If we desire to please God because we see how much He loves us, then He has promised to forgive us and make us clean from sin. Every single time. God is rich in mercy.

I pray that God makes this easy for you to understand! I love you!

Your big brother David

Why Satan keeps screwing up

Friday, April 16th, 2010

The first sin that was ever committed, and every sin since, all sprang from pride.

“How you are fallen from heaven, O Day Star, son of Dawn! How you are cut down to the ground, you who laid the nations low! You said in your heart, ‘I will ascend to heaven; above the stars of God I will set my throne on high; I will sit on the mount of assembly in the far reaches of the north; I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High.’ But you are brought down to Sheol, to the far reaches of the pit.”

That is what “Lucifer”, the “Day Star”, said in his arrogance. It was said also of Nebuchadnezzar, for he was fueled by pride similar to Lucifer’s.

Satan’s fall was not merely about getting worship due to God. It was about status. “I will set my throne on high.” “I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High.” Satan’s pride deceived him into thinking that God was like him.

This is the lie that Satan has sold to hundreds of thousands of people through the ages. The Mormon heresy that Elohim was once a human who ascended to Godhood….Hinduism, which teaches that humans can achieve oneness with the Brahmin by repeated purification and reincarnation….Buddhism, which pretends that we can achieve divinity in meditation….all of these false religions preach that we can attain to Godhood.

It’s preposterous, of course. But it’s the lie that people tell themselves. “I can be like God.” When people create an idol of God with their minds—a God who won’t judge them for their sins—they are pretending that they can be greater than God.

Anyone who is foolish enough to believe that he can become greater than God is foolish enough to believe that he can bring God down to his level. This was the fallacy that Satan fell prey to when he tried to tempt Jesus.

It wasn’t just about worship. He was trying to get God to sin. He wanted to prove to the universe that God was no better than the angels. He had believed that from the beginning, and in the incarnation of Christ he saw his chance to prove it.

Of course, this only factored into God’s divine plan. Jesus proved Himself completely unsusceptible to temptation. The devil’s mind was again proven false. And because of this, it can be said (as Paul said): “For we do not have a High Priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.”

Here’s a question. If Jesus wasn’t God, and all Satan needed to “win” was for Jesus to sin once, why didn’t Satan simply say, “let me worship you”? It’s a lot simpler to receive worship than it is to give worship. And if Jesus wasn’t God, then receiving worship would have been a sin.

We who know God laugh at how preposterous it would be to imagine Jesus worshipping the devil. But unless Jesus was God, then He would have been sinning if He had allowed the devil to worship Him.

David

Warring Against the Flesh

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Christians love to read clever anecdotes about how to overcome a particular besetting sin or thwart the schemes of the devil. Why wouldn’t we? This isn’t necessarily a method of doing that….but hopefully it will bring you a little comfort anyway.

The flesh — it’s a constant battle, isn’t it? We fool ourselves into thinking that our own strength will keep us righteous, but sin overtakes us nonetheless. We cry out with the Apostle Paul, “Oh, wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?”

Our answer should be the same as his.

“Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! ….there is therefore now 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.”

I was reading through part of Psalms when I recalled these words. King David wrote Psalm 18 as a celebration of God’s strength and the victory he’d been given over Saul and the rest of his enemies. Here’s an excerpt:

I love you, O LORD, my strength.
The LORD is my Rock and my Fortress and my Deliverer, my God, my Rock, in whom I take refuge, my Shield, and the horn of my salvation, my Stronghold.
I call upon the LORD, Who is worthy to be praised, and I am saved from my enemies.
The cords of death encompassed me; the torrents of destruction assailed me; the cords of Sheol entangled me; the snares of death confronted me.
In my distress I called upon the Lord; to my God I cried for help. From His temple He heard my voice, and my cry to Him reached His ears.
He rescued me from my strong enemy and from those who hated me, for they were too mighty for me.
They confronted me in the day of my calamity, but the Lord was my support.”

I don’t know about you. But I was never really able to identify very much with King David in passages like these. I’d never had to fight against people who wanted me dead. Usually, when I was in a bitter dispute with someone, I had been the one at fault. I didn’t ever have a time that I “pursued my enemies and overtook them, and did not turn back till they were consumed.”

But even so, the passage really resonated with me today. So I read it over again a few times. Re-reading scripture is a really good idea.

Then I saw the parallel.

“The cords of death encompassed me; the torrents of destruction assailed me; the cords of Sheol entangled me; the snares of death confronted me.”

“Oh, wretched man that I am? Who shall deliver me from this body of sin?”

The parallel continues.

“You have given me the shield of Your salvation, and Your right hand supported me, and Your gentleness made me great. You gave a wide place for my steps under me, and my feet did not slip.”

“There is therefore now 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.”

What peace and what blessing! “If God is for us, who can be against us?” The battle against the flesh isn’t a battle we must fight alone, or even a battle that we can fight alone; the battle is and always will be the Lord’s. And He is more than capable of defeating sin.

powerFor me, it’s just an awfully beautiful sight to imagine:

“The Lord also thundered in the heavens, and the Most High uttered His voice, hailstones and coals of fire. And He sent out His arrows and scattered them; He flashed forth lightnings and routed them. Then the channels of the sea were seen, and the foundations of the world were laid bare at Your rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of the breath of Your nostrils.”

Don’t you see? This is what God does to our flesh and our sin when we give Him the reins of our life! Is there any conceivable way that we’ll be defeated by our own selfish lusts when the Lord of the universe is fighting for us?

“For You equipped me with strength for the battle; You made those who rise against me sink under me. You made my enemies turn their backs to me, and those who hated me I destroyed.”

Dear Christian: trust in the Lord, and lean not on your own understanding. Seek Him first and He will bear you up.

David

“They who wait on the Lord….”

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

spring is coming
Right now all I can taste are bitter tears
And right now all I can see are clouds of sorrow
From the other side of all this pain
Is that You I hear
Laughing loud, and calling out to me

And saying, see-
It’s everything you said that it would be
And even better than you would believe
And I’m counting down the days
Until you’re here with me
And finally you’ll see

But right now all I can say is, Lord, how long
Before You come and take away this aching
This night of weeping seems to have no end
But when the morning light breaks through
We’ll open up our eyes and we will see

It’s everything He said that it would be
And even better than we would believe
And He’s counting down the days
Till He says, “Come with me”
And finally

He’ll wipe every tear from our eyes
And make everything new
Just like He promised
Wait and see…just wait and see….
Wait and see

And I’m counting down the days until I see
It’s everything He said that it would be
And even better than we would believe
And I’m counting down the days
Till He says, “Come with me”
And finally, we’ll see….


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