Good
Morning All,
2
Corinthians 5:19, “that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself,
not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of
reconciliation. “
A lot has been made these last few days
about the no call made by the referees in the NFC championship game. Some are wondering how they missed it while
others say, “it is part of the game.” We spend a lot of time talking about
calls that referees or umpires make which we see as just plain wrong. Most sports fans can look back and list some
of their all-time worst rulings by an official.
We even see it go farther than sports as we look at rulings by our court
system and just scratch our head in wonder.
Most people who watched the OJ Simpson
trial still cannot figure out how he was found not guilty. The same can be said of Casey Anthony or the
police in the Rodney King case. We all
looked at these trials; we saw overwhelming proof of guilt. We were convinced that there was no way that
these people would get off. They were
guilty and the whole world knew it and yet they were found not guilty. They were declared innocent despite all the
evidence to the contrary.
We may not like this in our sports or
judicial system but we experience this type of judgment every day. Everyday God looks at us and declares us “not
guilty.” The devil and the whole world
will look at our sins and scream “how can you make that call?” “He is as guilty
as they come.” But just like our
examples, when the ruling is made; that is the way it is. If the referee says he caught it; well then
he caught it. If the judge says he is
not guilty; he is not guilty. That is
the way it is.
Fortunately, that is the way it is in our
faith life as well. Because of the work
which Christ did on Calvary for us, God looks at us and declares us innocent of
all charges. You and I stand before God
as saints because the merit of Jesus makes it happen. We stand righteous before God because we are
cloaked in the righteousness of Christ.
This is sometimes called “the great exchange.” We exchange our sins for Christ’s
righteousness. God looks at us and sees
the righteousness of Jesus and not our sins.
He then rules that we are “not guilty” and when the judge (God) says “not
guilty” we are not guilty.
This should be a source of great joy for
us. Imagine your mortgage or your credit
card or student loans or your farm bank notes suddenly being declared
“forgiven, they don’t owe anything”; how would we respond then? Our joy should be even greater than that and
the whole world should see it. We have
joy because our sins are forgiven; we are “not guilty” declared holy by God.
Gracious Lord, we given you thanks for our redemption by your
blood. We ask that you lead us to live a
life of joy and thanksgiving for this promised mercy. Move us by your Spirit to tell others of this
great gift and lead them to your saving grace.
In your precious name we pray, amen.
God’s
Peace,
Pastor
Bret
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.