September has always been a time of reflection for me. I look at September and reassess my year, what have I accomplished, what do I hope to accomplish in the coming year. I don’t exactly know why. I guess it was when school started and all the school supplies were out, it had the feeling of a new beginning. I don’t always accomplish my goals for the upcoming year, but I think it is good to evaluate and examine and think forward. I do the same thing in January, the actual start of the year. Yet my big review is September.
What does this have to do with anything you ask? Well, when I wrote the post on sin. It was a getting back to basics. Understanding sin is foundational to our lives. We need to know we have all sinned and we are all sinners. Now see this causes a problem, because once we realize the fact we must do something with it. People have tried many things throughout history to do something with their sin. Many tried by themselves through good deeds thinking that good deeds will outweigh the stain of sin. Others tried penance. The act of confessing to a priest, self-punishment, prayer, fasting, or other means. While these may have merit on their own, though I can’t see much value in self-punishment, they are not enough to cleanse from sin. Even the Jews had to have a day of atonement each year to remove their sin.
So, what is to be done with this debt of sin? We cannot get rid of it on our own. The blood of animals cannot cover it. Our own efforts are not enough to wash it away. Well, it happens that God had a plan to wash away our sin from the start. God being righteous and holy cannot look on sin and do nothing. There must be a judgement. There must be a price paid. Paul wrote in Romans that the price for our sin is death (Rom 6:23). Death not just physically, but eternally. It is a price we cannot pay. We cannot wipe away our debt with a confession to a priest. We cannot wipe it away with a few good deeds. God must judge sin, but there is hope.
He has not dealt with us according to our sins, Nor rewarded us according to our guilty deeds.
God in his grace and mercy provided salvation for our debt. Paul finishes his statement in Romans 6:23 with, “but the gracious gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Were it not for God’s grace none of us could be forgiven. It is only by his grace and mercy we can be set free in Jesus Christ. God did not just create us and leave us to our own devices to figure things out. No, he loves us and wants to be involved in our lives. In other words, he wants a relationship with us. Our sin gets in the way of that relationship. Jesus stepped in as our sacrifice and carried our punishment so that the relationship between God and man could be restored.
He made Him who knew no sin to be sin in our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.
The writer of Hebrews also attests that,
“without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness.” (Hebrews 9:22)
When Jesus died on the cross, he satisfied the debt of our sin. The judgment and wrath that was due was paid in full by the shedding of his blood. 1 John says it like this:
and He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world.
In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.
There’s a word in there we don’t use often. The word propitiation. It refers to satisfaction or appeasement. In other words, Jesus is the satisfaction for our sins. He alone is the appeasement for our judgment. He alone can turn away God’s wrath for our debt of sin which deserves death. Because Jesus took our place we can be restored to a right relationship with God. The relationship He had always intended. The choice is now ours.
Think and ponder on the things on which we have looked. Have you tried on your own to make things right with God? Do you plow through good deeds but still carry guilt? Are you in church every Sunday but Monday through Saturday there is no difference? Think on these things and ask yourself if you need a Savior. What choice are you willing to make? We will talk about it next time.
Angela