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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Dirty Diapers And Divine Acceptance

When my grandson, Jonathan, was a baby, I was holding him on my lap one day. I was laughing at him to see if I could get him to laugh. It worked. Every time I would laugh, Jonathan saw my delight in him and he laughed too. As we sat on the couch laughing together, I was filled with emotion and thought to myself, “It’s amazing how much love I feel for him.”

At that moment a thought came into my mind that I knew was the voice of God. “That’s nothing compared to the love that I have for you.” I was overwhelmed by the realization that my heavenly Father loves me infinitely greater than I could ever love my grandchildren or children.

As we continued to play together on the couch, I became increasingly aware that Jonathan had “sinned against me.” It was a diaper problem, a serious one. Here I was holding him on my lap, showering him with attention and affection and he goes and does something like that! What do you suppose I did? I didn’t throw him from my lap in anger, screaming, “Depart from me, you worker of iniquity!” Not at all. You see, I understand something about babies – they do that kind of thing. I wasn’t pleased with his behavior, but what he did changed absolutely nothing between the two of us.

Jonathan eventually outgrew that habit and began to act responsibly in that area of life. As I thought about the incident shortly after it happened, I was reminded of our Father’s patience and loving kindness toward us. He is always interacting in our lives with a divine determination to cause us to find pleasure in Him. Yet at the very same time, we sometimes sin against Him. We make a mess of things, despite His continuous commitment to cause all things to work together for our good.

When we sin against Him, does He cast us off? Absolutely not! “For He Himself knows our frame; He is mindful that we are but dust” (Psalm 103:14).

When Jonathan experienced his baby problem, his mood soon changed from happy to sad. He began to cry, instinctively knowing that he needed some sort of help from somebody bigger than himself. That is what happens in the lives of believers when we sin. We know that Somebody bigger who loves us will take care of our problem and deliver us from what we’ve gotten ourselves into at the moment. We just cry out to Him in dependence and anticipation and He does the rest.

Your Father knows you better than you know yourself. The things that have caused you to feel guilty have already been dealt with by His finished work on the cross. Remind yourself all through the day today that your sins have been forgiven and you have already been glorified with Christ in the eternal realm! Reach up to Abba. He'll clean up your mess.

4 comments:

  1. I recall how a member of my church's worship team sinned sexually, and he was unnecessarily called out and humiliated in front of the church. No one ever saw him again after that. Quite different from the compassion that Jesus showed to the adulterous woman.
    I'm grateful that our Heavenly Father will still love us, and keep us "on his lap" so to speak, even when we make a mess . . .

    Mark

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  2. Hi Mark:
    The Pharisees had the scriptures to stone her but they could not hear the Word of God in front of them nor discern the difference. Unfortunately religion has the order switched around sin no more then I will not condemn you. He that believes on the one that justifies “the ungodly” this is the only kind of faith that counts for righteousness.

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  3. To Mark and John :

    It should be noted that Jesus' last remark to the woman he rescued from stoning was "Go and sin no more." The ongoing attitude of the rescued sinner needs to be gratitude and a resolve to do better. Divine acceptance is a bogus replacement for divine redemption.
    Dave- an embattled Lutheran

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  4. When I became a man I put away childish things.

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