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Do Not Depart

Encouragement and Tools to Abide in God's Word

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Only One Way?

September 20, 2010 by ScriptureDig 12 Comments

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From where I was standing in the packed crowd, I saw hands holding the spike over her feet just before a man did what I never believed people still do … he nailed that spike into the feet of a woman, crucifying her before the electric crowd. For seven years she repeated the ritual, attempting to pay for her own sins and those of her family; she pledged to continue her vow for seven more years in a determined plan to save herself and loved ones.


If she’s willing to do so much to save herself, shouldn’t it work?  Is there really only ONE WAY to bridge the gulf of our sin?  That seems kind of intolerant, doesn’t it?

It’s not easy for our world today to swallow the idea there’s only one way to knowing the true God. We live in a “post modern” world, which means “there is no such thing as absolute, objective, or universal truth,” according to John MacArthur in his book Why One Way. Instead of recognizing one reference point for truth and an Ultimate Authority, our world is more comfortable, even passionate, about the freedom to decide your own truth based on experience.

No wonder eyes roll when people hear Jesus’ claim in John 14:6, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” Instead, our world is intoxicated by the chance to have a god of their choosing.

It sounds so “B.C.” to talk about idols and offerings, but it’s really so “modern.” Around the world people still bow to golden images, offer hair as a sacrifice, give themselves in crucifixion, whip themselves publicly, and give gifts to silent objects made by men.  Sometimes old idols take new forms, as people try to find another way to know God, another way to fill their emptiness, and another way to pay for their sin. The confusing invitations to take easier, more visible routes/detours is nothing new … Paul encouraged his young mentee Timothy about expecting many lies to be told by teachers who would try to entice seeking souls to embrace myths instead of truth. But Jesus is the Truth.

Since God is holy, He has to have our sin problem dealt with to draw us near. And since He is merciful, He offered His Son as our atoning sacrifice. 1 John 2:1-3 declares that Jesus is THE atonement for our sin, for the whole world’s sin. He is the ONE WAY for the whole world, regardless of race or color or geography.

“If you confess with you mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be a saved” Rom. 10:9.

Narrow?  Yes.  Jesus even said in Matthew 7 that the way to God is a narrow way. We have to get down off of our crosses, turn away from our idols, and look to Him alone for rescue. 

After the woman was crucified in her hands and feet, the crowd shouted triumphantly. A team of men lowered the cross and released her, sending her away to have her wounds cared for. They prepared the cross for the next person … to try in vain to do what only Jesus can do through giving His sinless life in perfect love.


The Dig Team prays that those who read have chosen the narrow way that leads to abundant and eternal life in Jesus Christ alone. Do you know that Jesus is your One Way?


Brush with Death

September 17, 2010 by ScriptureDig 3 Comments

My life did not flash before my eyes. I was too concerned about how – or if – I was going to make it back to the beach. Our family trip that day was not supposed to end with me drowning in a riptide.

It was our first day on the beach with our rented boogie boards, and I was the first one in the water. Wanting to catch the waves where they were breaking, I headed away from the shore. By the time I realized they were breaking too far out, the water was over my head. On the board from the waist up, I started kicking to get back to the beach. After a couple of minutes I had not made any progress. In fact, I was farther away from the beach and farther down the shoreline. The board was strapped to my wrist so I let it trail behind me and began to swim. I swam until I was exhausted and swallowing water, but I was even farther from shore. No matter what I did or how hard I worked, I could not save myself.

Seeing I was in trouble, my husband grabbed another board, left the safety of the beach and came to my rescue. My three children watched from shore. I could hear the youngest crying for me. When Wayne reached me, he calmed me down and talked me through riding out the riptide so we could get back to the beach. Moments later I was reunited with my family.

The next day I learned that one or two tourists die each year in rip tides at that very beach. I thank God I was not a statistic.

Have you ever had a brush with death? If you’re a Christian you have. You’ve been pulled out of the rip-tide of eternal condemnation by a loving and merciful heavenly Father and plopped into the safety of the Kingdom of God.

If you’ve never given your life to Christ – if you’ve never entered into a saving relationship with Jesus – then you still face an eternity separated from God. Don’t wait another day. Accept the rescue He offers. Don’t be an eternal statistic. (How to know Jesus)

If you’ve experienced God’s eternal rescue, share a bit of your story with us today. How did God save you? What did He save you from?

*This story is excerpted from “God’s Truth Revealed” by Kathy Howard, published by New Hope Publishers, 2010.


Salvation & Sanctification

September 16, 2010 by ScriptureDig 7 Comments

I grew up in the church where my mother grew-up, my grandfather grew-up, and my great-grandfather helped start. Members of my family had held every position in that church from organist to usher to Bible study teacher. Church felt like home. I wanted to be there more than I wanted to be anywhere else. Pastors, Sunday School teachers, camp counselors, and VBS volunteers all encouraged my growing faith, up to the night I prayed and asked God to “make His home in my heart” when I was six years old. Even then I knew I was a sinner and I knew I needed forgiveness.

If you were to observe my life from that moment to this, you might think I had it pretty easy. I appeared to follow the straight and narrow path, as the saying goes. I was at church every time the doors were open. I was active in my youth group. I went to a Baptist college, where I found another great church home and was active there. After graduating from college, I went to seminary and taught at a Christian school. There I met my now husband, who is a pastor.

But I certainly wasn’t perfect. I’m still not perfect. The truth is, I need the cross today as much as I needed it the first time I confessed my sin, was forgiven, and adopted into the family of God. I can easily slip into a Pharisee-like faith, where I get out my check-list and convince myself I’m a good Christian (or at least a good enough Christian when I compare myself to others).

Jerry Bridges writes about me “Christian Pharisees” in his book, The Disciplines of Grace. He warns against an attitude of, “varying degrees of self-satisfaction with one’s Christian life. We can drift into this attitude because we are convinced we believe the right doctrines, we read the right Christian books, we practice the right disciplines of a committed Christian life, or we are actively involved in some aspect of Christin ministry and are not just ‘pew sitters’ in the church.”

The cure is the cross. I must preach the gospel to myself every day. I am a sinner. I need God’s grace. I am a sinner. I need God’s grace.

Am I saved? Yes. But I’m not perfect. I’m in the life-long process of sanctification. 2 Thessalonians 1:13 says, “To this end we always pray for you, that our God may make you worthy of his calling and may fulfill every resolve for good and every work of faith by his power.” I am so thankful God continues to give me abundant, amazing grace so that I can fulfill His call for me by His power. I cling to the cross–first for my salvation, and every day since then for my sanctification.

If you can’t recall a time in your life when you asked God to forgive your sin and Christ became your Savior and Lord, please contact us so we can encourage you to take steps of faith toward God- ScriptureDig {at} comcast {dot} net

Like trying to cure cancer with a lightbulb…

September 15, 2010 by ScriptureDig 7 Comments

LONDON - NOVEMBER 16:  In this photo illustrat...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

An interesting little device was discovered in the attic of my grandparent’s home a few years ago. This strange contraption that appeared to date from the first half of the 20th century was equipped with lightbulbs and gages… and boldly inscribed upon it was the claim that it was the cure for cancer.

This gadget has spawned more than one discussion of whether or not it should be taken to the Antiques Roadshow to try to figure out what in the world it is! We don’t know if it was intended to be a hoax, a fraud, or if someone mistakenly thought that they really had the cure for diseases that plague us still today.

Old medical treatments often intrigue me. We shake our heads at the thought of bleeding sick people with leeches or curing cancer with a lightbulb. Because doctors did not understand the cause of the symptoms they were seeing, their “cures” sound outlandish and childlike to us. They didn’t understand what the problem really was, so they couldn’t even begin to understand how to solve it.

Each one of us has a serious disease that is eating us alive. It is a sickness that is often misdiagnosed, and the cures that we frequently self-prescribe are far from effective because they fail to treat the real problem.

The sickness we suffer from is sin – we are completely and totally depraved. It is true that we are not all as bad as we could be; not many of us have committed adultery, murdered another person, or otherwise become felons. But sin is invasive in our lives. It pervades every ounce of our being.

My thinking is distorted by sin and I cannot perceive things correctly on my own. My emotions are distorted by sin and my feelings lie to me. My will is distorted by sin and I do not want to do what I should do. Even when I attempt to do what is right and good, my perception of what is good is often skewed, my emotions steer me away from truth, and frankly I often just don’t want to do it.

I am a sinner.

There are common “cures” that are often prescribed for this debilitating sickness – but none of them will cure the problem any more than a lightbulb will cure cancer.

Denying it.

Some people attempt to solve their sin-sickness simply by denying it. “How dare you say that I am a sinner! I am not a bad person – I’ve never murdered anyone!” This approach is common… and tragic. For no matter how much we try to deny it, no one is good but God alone. We are sinners, whether we recognize it or not.

Rationalizing it.

Similar to denying it, this approach relies on comparison and denial. “I’m not as bad as that person over there…” We try to rationalize away our sin by thinking that being a “sinner” means that a person is the worst of the worst in society – an obvious blight on the human race. But, like a cancer patient claiming that she doesn’t have cancer because her tumor isn’t as large as the one in the patient next to her, this fails to address the real and deadly problem.

Baptizing it in religion.

This approach is common… and deceiving. Many people believe that the cure for their sin-sickness is to be more religious. To go to church frequently, to sing in the choir, to hang crosses on chains around their neck, pray prayers before bedtime, or perhaps investigate the approaches other religions have taken to deal with their disease of sin. This false “cure” is like a person who believes that their cancer will go away if they just act like a healthy person… you might be acting the part on the outside, but the cancer is still eating you alive from within.

Overshadowing it with good works.

Some people are very aware of their sinfulness and therefore try to “do more good than bad.” They give to charity, volunteer for worthy causes, and tire themselves out with an agenda packed with admirable deeds. This is the spiritual equivalent of hospice – it takes away the sting of pain from knowing the guilt in your own heart… but the cancer has not been cured.

There are many so-called “cures” for this sin-sickness… but there is really is only one solution. It is available to you free of charge – but that doesn’t mean it came without cost. The price was incalculably high, but it has already been paid.

To be continued tomorrow…

Our Rescue

September 14, 2010 by ScriptureDig 11 Comments

For He rescued us from the domain of darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. Colossians 1:13-14, NASB

I spend one morning a week volunteering at our local crisis pregnancy center.  Over the past seven years, I have had the honor of spending time with hundreds of women and sharing with them the hope we have in Jesus.  One of my favorite parts of what I do is the privilege of sharing the gospel message with people who are hurting, hopeless, and desperate.  The beautiful truth of our rescue from the “domain of darkness” is one I never tire of repeating.

Yesterday, Julie reminded us of the sweet truth of our Rescuer’s love for us.  Today, my heart is to share with you what our rescue involves … what salvation gives us.

In John 3, Jesus explains to Nicodemus that we must be born again.  Not literally, of course, though Nicodemus did require some further explanation.   It’s our spirit that must be reborn … that part of us that was created for fellowship with God, in His image.  Our spirit that rejected God and chose self in the Garden … and every day since.  Our spirit is reconciled to Him through salvation.  And through that rescue, through salvation, we are changed.

Salvation gives us new life.

“What this means is that those who become Christians become new persons.  They are not the same anymore, for the old life is gone.  A new life has begun!”  ~ 2 corinthians 5:17 NLT

Salvation gives us new certainty.

“And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate from his love.  Death can’t and life can’t.  The angels can’t and the demons can’t.  Our fears for today, our worries about tomorrow, and even the powers of hell can’t keep God’s love away.  Whether we are high above the sky or in the deepest ocean, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord.”  ~ Romans 8:38-39 NLT

Salvation gives us new direction.

“But you are not like that, for you are a chosen people.  You are a kingdom of priests, God’s holy nation, his very own possession.  This is so you can show others the goodness of God, for he called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light.”  ~ 1 Peter 2:9 NLT

Have you experienced that rescue? Paul explains in Romans quite simply what this salvation requires:  “That if you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (10:9).  Confession is that awareness of your need for rescue, for a Savior, for Jesus.  Belief is the understanding that He is the only way, nothing you could ever do would be enough.    And so salvation results from this: Confession of your need and belief that He is the only Need-Meeter.

Maybe you know Him, you belong to Him … Today, won’t you praise Him for rescuing you?

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

But maybe you don’t … Maybe you are unsure what all this means or uncertain of His love for you.  Perhaps you want to know more.   We’d love to share with you about this great Rescue that we have experienced. Email us … ScriptureDig {at} comcast {dot} net.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Recommended Listening:

Jesus, Messiah {At this point in my life, in the midst of chaos and change, I find myself clinging to the beautiful truth that HE IS “Jesus Messiah, the Name above all names, Blessed Redeemer, Emmanuel.  The RESCUE for sinners, the Ransom from Heaven, Jesus Messiah, Lord of All.”}

Rescue {Another sweet song of promise … “I need You, Jesus, to come to my RESCUE! Where else can I go?  There’s NO OTHER NAME by which I am SAVED, capture me with GRACE!”}

Image via flickr

The Rescuer’s Love

September 13, 2010 by ScriptureDig 10 Comments

Last week in Guatemala lives were lost in mudslides and flooding. Rescuers risked their lives to search unstable land and debris for those they knew were alive, but in need of saving. Some rescuers met their own deaths in attempts to reach the lost. When the saviors arrived, they were not to be stopped in attempting to reach the dying, but they could not defeat death.


Jesus came to earth in response to the need to rescue those facing certain death. “The Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost” (Luke 19:10). He was reaching out to those in dire straits, doomed to the end sin brings (Matt. 9:13) as Teri Lynne shared last week.  His love is for those who are without hope, totally helpless, staring death in the face if a Rescuer doesn’t reach them.  We know the compassions of our Lord do not fail (Lamentations 3:22) and He exercised the greatest love when He gave His life for us (John 15:13).   While He is a holy God, everything about Who He is communicates His loving nature, so He acts in His compassionate desire to “tread our sins underfoot and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea” (Micah 7:19).   As we look at salvation this month, God’s whole plan to spare us from our deserved end is proof of His love for us. He offers us, the dying, trapped in the suffocating mud of our sin, the chance to have our sins blotted out and remembered no more (Isaiah 43:25).

What could possibly be so enticing in the midst of the mud to make us want to stay longer, maybe until the risky “final hour,” before we reach out and take the Rescuer’s hand?

God demonstrated His heart for the dying by giving His own Son’s life as an expression of His great love for us. I can’t fathom sending my beloved child into a horrible death so they could send others out to safety at the price of their own life. I’m sure I would hold back my precious child, beg them not to go into the blackness, and call their name to return to me. But God sent Jesus in for us. It’s a love that doesn’t begin to describe human rescuers; only the Divine can love like this:  “I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with loving-kindness” (Jeremiah 31:3).  Kristi shared last week how only God is good. To be reached and rescued by such a great love, it seems only two responses are appropriate:  gratitude to the Savior and help to the others still trapped in the mud.


Is God’s love this great for every man? I know it is.  Luke 15 tells the story of a shepherd, a shepherd who left 99 sheep to go search for one lost sheep.  When he found it, he put it on his shoulders in protection, claimed it as his own, and carried it to safety.

From one sheep who was dying to another, it’s a great view from the shoulders of the Shepherd, and my heart is grateful He came for me.

How has God shown you His ongoing love in your life?

(photo Assoc. Press)

Steph’s Story

September 9, 2010 by ScriptureDig 35 Comments

My backstory isn’t a pretty one. In fact, I didn’t even begin life as an sweet little planned bundle of joy. My mom was raped and I was the result.

I was adopted by two wonderful parents who loved me and raised me as their own. But from the age of 3 until about the age of 12 my concept of love became skewed and shattered as I was repeatedly molested and raped by two different people in my family.

I was pregnant at 17. Then married. Divorced and a single mom at 19. I spent the next five years looking for love in all the wrong places – which is exactly where I met my husband – in a bar. He was the drummer in the band and our lifestyle was a reflection of the whole rock and roll band scene. Not a pretty picture. But then again, no picture is pretty without God in the middle of it.

Sitting in my apartment one afternoon, I watched a tele -evangelist share a message I had never really heard before. Or maybe I had, but this time it began to make sense. I wanted what he talked about. Salvation. Eternal life. A real relationship with Jesus. But I also wanted my life to remain mine. And so it did. Even though I cried, prayed and thought I was saved, my life remained my own and I remained unchanged.

But about two years later, at the age of 24 I was ready. Ready to surrender all I was for all Jesus is. I knew He was the only one who could save my wretched self, and this time, I was not only ready – but I was willing.

It was a sweet October day in 1987 when Jesus reached down, captured my heart and life and radically changed this broken girl with a bad past and a bleak future. Jesus loved me just as I was. With all my failures. With all my sins – He still loved me so much that He died for me. I didn’t have to ‘prove’ my love for Him, I just had to accept His love for me.

For the first time in my life, I understood what the term, “born again” meant. That’s exactly what I was…brand new…born again by the Great I Am. Sin became something I not only noticed in my life, but for the first time it grieved my heart to grieve His. God’s Word nourished me more than food. It consumed me and I found that it was unlike any other book on planet earth. It changed me. I became incessantly passionate about living for the Living God.

Twenty three years later, I still am.

Through the years, He has continually called me to serve His daughters – passionately teaching His Word, speaking His truth and His principles into lives of women who are hurting and in need of hope, redemption, restoration and forgiveness. I love when God’s girls fulfill their God-given destinies and become who they were created to be.

Today, I shared parts of my painful past that I normally like to keep neatly wrapped in the Christian package stamped “Clean” and hidden from view. Although the Lord has allowed me the privilege of using my past to speak redemption and hope into other women’s futures, it’s not something I freely share.

But I had to. Someone reading this post today needs to know that your value is not based on what you have to offer someone. It doesn’t lie in the web of lies someone has told you. You are loved because you are His creation. Because He chose to place you on planet earth for such a time as this and He longs for you to run to Him – to accept His love for you. It doesn’t matter what your past has whispered to your heart; God delights in using broken vessels. I know because I am one.

Sweet friend, you are never too battered, too broken, too dirty, too unlovable, too unworthy or too unforgivable. He is a Loving God who can make beauty out of ashes. So, for whoever it is that I’m writing this to today, I’m asking you to give Jesus the ashes of your life and let Him make it something beautiful. That’s exactly what He did for me and I know He’ll do the same for you.

So that’s my story, ladies…and I’m stickin’ to it. What about you? Do you have a testimony you can share about when Christ saved you? Do you struggle with accepting God’s love for you because someone else has skewed your view of what real love is?


The Reality of Hell

September 8, 2010 by ScriptureDig 11 Comments

One of the women came into my Sunday School class this week after the first service and said her six year old asked her what hell was, since my husband mentioned it in his sermon. She had a nervous laugh when she said she would have to tackle that topic on the way home with her son. The doctrine of hell is tough whether you’re six, thirty-six, or sixty-three! But hell is real, and the reality of it should make a real difference in our lives.

The Reality of Hell for the Lost:

We know of the reality of hell from Scripture. 2 Thessalonians describes hell as a place for those who do not know God or obey the gospel. It mentions flaming fire, affliction, vengeance, punishment, and destruction–away from the presence of God. (We know God is omnipresent. Therefore, hell is away from the mercy and grace of God, not actually away from God Himself.) Revelation 20:10 says it goes on “day and night forever and ever.” The reality of hell is not a party with friends and a lot of beer (contrary to the recent movie title, “I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell”). The reality is enough to literally put the fear of God in people. Like the jailer in Acts 16, who rushed to Paul and Silas, trembling with fear we want to ask, “What must I do to be saved?”

“… but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Since therefore, we have now been justified by his blood, much more shall we be saved by him from the wrath of God.” Romans 5:8-9

We are saved from hell and the wrath of God through the redemption of Christ’s blood!

The Reality of Hell for the Redeemed:

Why does the doctrine of hell matter for those of us who are saved?

  • It shows us the seriousness of our sin. When I was six and lied to my parents, I was guilty of sin and therefore deserved the punishment of hell. As Teri Lynne wrote yesterday, sin is serious and has serious consequences.
  • It helps us understand the holiness of God. God is so holy, He must separate Himself from sin, and therefore must separate Himself from sinners who never accept the gift of salvation. (For more on God’s holiness, see Kristi’s post from Monday.)
  • It motivates us to proclaim the gospel. The rich man in Luke 16 was sent to hell after his death. He begged Abraham to go tell his brothers about the place of torment (v. 27). As Christians, we know there is a place of eternal torment and we must share this truth. As John Piper said, “It’s very hard to give up on the gospel if you believe there is hell, that after this life, there is an endless suffering for those who did not believe in the gospel.”

Hell is real. And although it isn’t an easy topic to tackle, it’s worth “digging in” and knowing the truth. How does thinking about this reality affect you today?

Oh the Consequences!

September 7, 2010 by ScriptureDig 27 Comments

Consequence:  the effect, result, or outcome of something occurring earlier.

Looking back over my life I realize that seldom have I understood the full consequences of seemingly meaningless choices.  I could never have known how the poorly-considered decision to disregard truth about purity would lead to the most devastating event of my life just five years later.  But neither could I have begun to predict that the casual choice to attend a concert on June 12, 1995 would lead to a marriage that has now celebrated more than 14 years together.

“She took of its fruit and ate, and also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ate.” ~ Genesis 3:11 ESV

Such a tiny, little thing.  Something we do every day without a second thought … she ate and then she shared with the one beside her.  And yet that tiny, little thing had such consequences.  Not just in her life but in all our lives.   It wasn’t the bite … it wasn’t the sharing.  Those were outward.  The issue was the heart.  Both Eve’s and Adam’s.   The issue wasn’t about following the rules ~”Don’t eat from that tree.”  The issue was far deeper ~ They didn’t trust the nature of God and so they acted in opposition to it. {Read Kristi’s post yesterday for more on this idea of the deeper issue of sin.}


And because they … and we, every day since … chose opposition to God’s nature, sin, we live in the results, the consequences of that very choice. We have traded God’s nature for our own and in doing so have also made the following trades.

Trading Confidence for Shame

In the garden they walked with God, sharing an intimate, face-to-face relationship with Him.  They lived in the truth of being created in His image, unbroken fellowship with Him.   But after their choice, they hid from the God who called to them (Genesis 3:8-9).  Why?  Because they had given up the confidence they had in their relationship with God for shame.  Verse 7:  “Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked.  And they sewed fig leaves together and make themselves loincloths.”

“They knew that they were naked.”   This sentence speaks so clearly of the assurance Adam and Eve had in their relationship with God and with each other.   They had been unaware of and unashamed by their nakedness … What a vivid picture of trust.  We trade our confidence in God for shame before Him as a result of our sin.

Trading Love for Blame

Created specifically for each other, Adam and Eve enjoyed a communion with each other unlike any human relationship since.  A perfect love, fulfilling every description uttered in all of Scripture.  Likewise, they lived in the fullness of God’s love for them.

Until … “The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate” (v. 12)  and “The serpent deceived me, and I ate” (v. 13).

Blame.  Oh that sad result of sin!  His fault, her fault.  Someone else’s fault.  In our culture refusing personal responsibility has become an art form.  “The victim mentality” has taken firm grasp on the hearts and minds of people – believers and unbelievers alike.  And we have even blamed God … “If God was really loving, He wouldn’t have …”

In our quickness to assign blame, we have lost the beauty of love. This kind of love:

Love never gives up.  Love cares more for others than for self.  Love doesn’t want what it doesn’t have.  Love doesn’t strut, Doesn’t have a swelled head, Doesn’t force itself on others, Isn’t always “me first,” Doesn’t fly off the handle, Doesn’t keep score of the sins of others, Doesn’t revel when others grovel, Takes pleasure in the flowering of truth, Puts up with anything, Trusts God always, Always looks for the best, Never looks back, But keeps going to the end.  ~ 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 MSG

Trading Wholeness for Pain

Unbroken communion with God, each other and all of creation.  That’s what they had. The only two humans to ever have experienced on earth what will be again in the new Jerusalem:

“Behold the dwelling place of God is with man.  He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be their with them as their God.  He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” ~ Revelation 21:3b – 4 ESV

This description of what will be in Heaven is also a description of what was in the Garden.  God dwelling with them, walking with them.  And yet, the choice to reject His nature led to this one devastating result –  life with pain. The spiritual pain of separation from God, the emotional and social pain of difficulty in human relationships, and the physical pain of hardships in all of life … The results of trading wholeness for pain.

It’s so easy to focus on the behaviors and outward consequences of sinful choices … But it is always those deep truths of the heart that bear the deepest wounds of sin’s results.   How I pray that I’ll be always mindful of the sorrow-filled results of trading an obedient, G0d-seeking heart for a sinful, God-rejecting one.

No one is good but God alone

September 6, 2010 by ScriptureDig 18 Comments

Jesus is considered by scholars such as Weber ...
Image via Wikipedia

People don’t really like to talk about “sin.” It’s an uncomfortable word… no one revels in being called a “sinner.” It is becoming increasingly politically incorrect to say that there is such a thing as right and wrong. Lifestyles are not unbiblical or sinful, they are “alternative.” God’s love and mercy are applauded, while the thought of a holy God righteously judging sin is avoided.

So, what is sin? Do we even know?

People often think of sin as violating God’s laws. This is absolutely true. Stealing, murdering, committing adultery are all sin- they are all examples of breaking God’s law.

But it goes deeper than that.

In Jesus’ “Sermon on the Mount,” found in Matthew 5-7, He points to specific laws in the Old Testament and elaborates on them. The people had “heard it said” that they should not murder or commit adultery, but then He broadened the statement. Murdering is wrong, yes, but it begins in a heart full of hate – hating your brother is the root sin. Committing the physical act of adultery is wrong, but it begins in a lustful look – lust is the root sin. Even if these things are never acted out on, even if no laws were technically violated… they are sin.

Why?

Sin is anything contrary to the nature of our holy God. Our completely righteous, completely loving, completely just God. The core of His nature is holiness – He always acts completely righteously because that is who He is. He loves completely because that is who He is. The laws He has given us in His Word flow out of His nature – to do what is right is to act in a way consistent with His character, to sin is to do (or be!) anything that contradicts anything in His nature. God created mankind in His image, and people are valuable to Him – so they were to value human life, also. Because He is love, we are to love. Because He is a God who makes and keeps covenants, the marriage covenant is to be guarded and treated as holy.

Even if we somehow manage to outwardly follow all the “rules” (and wow – I know that I have not managed to do so!) we are still sinners at heart. No matter how hard we try, all the “good” things we try to do, the “good” people we try to be will fall woefully short of God’s standard.

In Mark 10:17-22, we find a fascinating interaction between Jesus and a faithful rule-follower:

As Jesus started on his way, a man ran up to him and fell on his knees before him. “Good teacher,” he asked, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?”  “Why do you call me good?” Jesus answered. “No one is good—except God alone. You know the commandments: ‘Do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not steal, do not give false testimony, do not defraud, honor your father and mother.'”

“Teacher,” he declared, “all these I have kept since I was a boy.”

Jesus looked at him and loved him. “One thing you lack,” he said. “Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me.” At this the man’s face fell. He went away sad, because he had great wealth.

Jesus is trying to help this man see his own failure to live up to God’s standards. No one is good but God alone! Keeping all of the commandments did not make him good. In his heart, this man loved his wealth more than he loved God or the people He made – and henceforth, his heart was full of sin. He had fallen short of God’s nature.

That really is the essence of sin – falling short. We have all fallen short of God’s standard. Perhaps compared to one another some of us might look “good,” but in comparison with the Holy One, no one is good but God alone.

“for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God…”

Romans 3:23

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