There are people who have committed sins that have caused them to think that somehow they’ve struck out, and God can never take their life and use it for His glory. They have believed the lie that you can commit sins so serious and so wrong that God will, as they say, set you aside and not ever be able to work through your life again. Nothing could be further from the truth.
The message of grace is that God can redeem you and take the circumstances of your life, no matter what you might have done, and he can redeem your choices and turn things around and use you for his glory.
I used to say, "You can’t unscramble eggs," but the truth is, we serve a God who can unscramble eggs. For that matter, He seems to like scrambled eggs if that means using lives that have come to brokenness and are now yielded completely to Him. There’s nothing you’ve ever done, or nothing you ever could do, that would keep God from pouring out His blessings on you and allowing His life to flow through you. The idea that you can commit sins that would disqualify you from being used by God is a lie that will keep you in bondage as long as you believe it.
Consider Hebrews 11, and examine the people that are mentioned there. God mentioned people like Noah. Noah was a man who had no sooner come off the ark until he got falling down drunk. Or look at Moses. Exodus 2 tells how he killed a man. Samson and David are on this list, even though they both committed adultery and their sin is remembered until this day. In Hebrews 11:31, the Bible mentions Rahab the harlot. By God's grace, she was used by the Lord to protect his people in Israel. The fact is that there’s no sin that you can commit that is so terrible that God cannot turn things around and work through you to influence others.
Look back over your past and think about the very worst thing you’ve ever done...
Now take that in your mind, carry it to the cross and lay it down at the foot of the cross, and then, visually -- in your own thinking, walk away and leave it there. The idea that you can commit sins that will disqualify you from seeing your Father work through your life is unnecessarily crippling because it just isn't true.
If I were to ask you who was the greatest Christian who ever lived, whose name comes to mind? I suspect many would say the Apostle Paul. The apostle Paul had been a murderer, and yet the Lord used him to write two-thirds of the New Testament.
You might think, “Well, my sins were committed after I became a Christian." Okay, then you're in good company. Remember Simon Peter? He denied Jesus at his crucifixion and ran out in shame and guilt. It seems reasonable to imagine that he probably wondered if the Lord would ever be able to work through his life again.
When Jesus was raised from the dead and he spoke to the ladies, He said “Go tell the disciples and Peter that I’m alive.” He specifically mentioned him by name. I think the reason he mentioned Peter by name is because he wanted to let him know, "you’ve not done something so terrible that I can’t use your life." It was in fact, Peter on the day of Pentecost, who preached that great Pentecostal message.
Hebrews 11 - read it. Look at those giants of faith mentioned there. Don’t just read their names in chapter 11, but go back and look in the Old Testament, and the history of those people and see some of the sins they committed. I think there’s a subliminal message in Hebrews chapter 11 that says to you and me, "No matter what you’ve done, no matter how low you’ve gone, no matter how far from God’s plan for your life you think you might have drifted, God has redeemed you, and He will take all the circumstances of your life, and He will use your life for his glory."
Whatever you might have done, God has forgiven you and your life can now glorify Him. It's called the gospel of grace for a reason. Put your past behind you, believe it, get up and live the Life He has given you.
Oh, thank you for this post! It was wonderful! In the very pit we've fallen into, we turn around and there He is loving and accepting us as if nothing happened. I guess to Him, nothing did, since He's forgiven and forgotten that sin already at the cross!
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of something I remember from one of your books - "when we sin it changes NOTHING in our relationship to God". That has helped me a lot!
I wish every Christian could read this! Thank you so much for your ministry..
It's not so much the things i've done that bother me or cause me to struggle with guilt...It's more the things I HAVEN'T DONE...... and these can be subtle things in the mind rather than the obvious commandments etc.... they can even be expectations one feels inside - eg - whether it's from helping a poor person in the city or going overseas as a missionary....I've never done anything like this and i've been a christian for 25 yrs. And how can one be free from guilt but also the pain of not seeing your father come to Christ - despite seeing him vulnerable in hospital - but unable to 'witness' to him because of feeling like his salvation was up to me to tell him.... an unbearable burden too much to bear....and it only becomes more painful when today i read at wayne jacobsen's blog about a 90 yr old man becoming a christian 1 hour before death.
ReplyDeleteOut of the Collective - if grace is intended for the weak, for those struggling with pain and even guilt, and it is intended in that way - then you are a perfect candidate to receive your Father's grace. Your Father isn't angry with you. He doesn't hold you responsible for what did or didn't happen with your Dad. And He isn't looking on you with contempt about the things you haven't done. Any of us can go down the same road you're on in your thinking. You haven't failed God, your Dad or anybody else. YOU ARE FORGIVEN AND YOU ARE NOW FREE. Believe that even if your emotions tell you otherwise. Don't focus on your perceived failures but instead focus on your Father's faithfulness. His love will bring you gradual healing as you do. Know that my prayers are with you today.
ReplyDeleteThank you Steve
ReplyDeletei just now saw this post. i really need this. i have both, what i have done is horrible, truly, criminal, insane, what i have not done, is even worse. paul can keep "chief of sinners" as his moniker, mine would be "the vilest offender". i really struggle with this issue, because i fail so frequently at everything, even the simplest things any normal nonbeliever has no trouble with...and thats the first voice i hear, the one telling me it's hopeless, if God intended to make anything good from my life He'd be doing it already. i have a real hard time telling truth from lies, i really do. i have a hard time telling evil from good and friend from foe. don't ever worship satan, this is what it will do to you. it makes you insane.
ReplyDeleteMoriah, keep your eyes on Jesus. You don't need to know good from evil, friend from foe, or anything else. HE KNOWS and He will guide your steps and keep you from falling into the lies that once held you bondage. You possess the mind of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:16)and HIS MIND inside you will cut through the clutter of superfluous thoughts that may rush through your mind at times and give clarity when it is needed. And when you don't have clarity, HIS FAITH will be the operative force within you causing you to move forward when your mind questions if your choices are the right ones. And when you feel alone and bewildered by what to do next, HIS PEACE will guard you and ensure that you make it through another day engulfed in grace. I know the next weeks and months look foggy to you right now and you can't see where you're headed, but the Light of the World will penetrate that haze and lead you safely onward. My prayers are with you, my friend. "IT IS FINISHED" and Satan has lost. You are not insane. You are a child of the Almighty God and you are learning to walk again and being required to trust when you can't understand. It may be a wobbly walk, but "he who has begun a good work in you will complete it."
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