God has many titles,Yet there is
only one God who expresses Himself in three
persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God has
an unchanging character which includes the
qualities of holiness, mercy, justice, hating
sin, and loving people. He possesses all power
and knowledge - and it is He who created from
nothing the world and everything which exists.
Mankind is created by God
in His image; that is, we are spiritual beings
capable of making moral and rational choices. It
means that our lives have value and purpose. It
also means that we are capable of a relationship
with God that is real and meaningful.
However, sin entered
the world and mankind was corrupted. This
corruption has had an effect on us as persons,
hindering our relationships with others and with
God. We are still able to know right from wrong,
but not always. We have a conscience, but it
produces feelings of guilt. We are unable to
discipline ourselves to do many of the things we
know to be right. Our "want to" is broken - we
have trouble even wanting to be what we know we
ought to be. We are born into the world
estranged from God.
Still, God in His
love, has sought us out. He has revealed Himself
to us through creation and through the Bible. We
have his commandments to show us His perfect
righteous standard. In spite of all this, we
have continued to think, speak, and act in the
ways we wanted instead of in the ways God
wanted. Thus, the Bible exposes us as sinners.
God's holiness and our
sinfulness present a dilemma: God's perfect
standard requires that we make a 100 on God's
test; a 99 will not do. The perfection of God
requires perfection from us. James 2:10 tells
us, "For whoever keeps the whole law but fails
in one point has become guilty of all of it"
(Revised Standard Version). Some of us have done
worse than others, but "All have sinned and fall
short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:23).
Therefore, we cannot
know God or enter heaven through our own
goodness.
Not only is God holy,
He is also a God of justice. He can not simply
overlook our sins and pretend they didn't
happen. He must punish sin. Now, before
we say that a God of love wouldn't do that, we
have to consider things like unsolved murders.
What about these horrible crimes that were never
brought to justice on earth? Are we prepared to
accept injustice as a permanent state? Do we
really want God not to be a God of
justice? Regardless of our preferences, God is
absolutely just and will punish every sin. The
Lord "will not at all acquit the wicked" (Nahum
1:3).
What now? We are in a situation
from which we can not deliver ourselves.
How did God resolve this dilemma?
He Himself came to our rescue. God loves people
and desires for people to have a clear
relationship with Him. When their time on earth
is completed, He wants people to be with Him in
Heaven. Jesus Christ, God the Son, came to earth
personally and was born a real human being.
Jesus was tempted,
but did not sin. He taught us, though He did not
come primarily to teach. He healed, but He did
not come primarily to heal. These things served
to reveal His identity. Jesus came to die on the
cross as our substitute. God Himself paid the
penalty that we could not pay. Like a judge
finding his own daughter guilty and then paying
her traffic ticket himself, Jesus personally
accepted our punishment and "bore our sins in
His own body on the tree" (1st Peter 2:24).
This means
that a total and complete forgiveness is
available and that a relationship with God is
possible. It is available, but it is not
automatic.
The gap between God
and man has been bridged. What sin did to
separate, the cross worked to bring together.
The cross is like a bridge to God. However, this
bridge must still be crossed. One could stand on
one end of a long bridge and admire its
construction, yet, still not use it to walk to
the other side. So God yet has a work to do in
us. He has provided for our forgiveness and
offers it as a free gift. He has done a work
for us; He now works in us.
One way you may sense
this work is in what the Bible calls conviction
of sin. It is a good kind of guilt which makes
us face our sin and our need. It drives us to
God. It can be powerful and painful, but it
offers hope and not despair. Jesus said that the
Holy Spirit would "convict the world of sin and
of righteousness and of judgment" (John 16:8).
Another way God works
in us is to call us to Himself. "He called you
through our gospel, to the obtaining of the
glory of our Lord Jesus Christ" (2nd
Thessalonians 2:14). In this call we sense
ourselves being attracted to Him. We sense an
inward pull toward "Him who called you
out of darkness into his marvelous light" (1st
Peter 2:9).
This convicting and calling by
God awakens certain responses within us. These
responses are repentance and faith.
Repentance -
Repentance is an attitude adjustment which
changes the direction of our lives. It is
turning to God from self -- that
is, from our self-centeredness and sin. "Repent
therefore and be converted, that your sins may
be blotted out and that times of refreshing may
come from the presence of the Lord" (Acts 3:19).
Faith - Faith is
trusting Jesus Christ to do for you what you
cannot do for yourself. You cannot get your own
sins forgiven, you cannot get yourself to
heaven, you cannot make yourself right with God.
But because of the cross, Jesus can. Faith is
trusting Him to do it for us. "For by grace you
have been saved through faith, and that not of
yourselves; it is the gift of God" (Ephesians
2:8). Faith is more than just believing things
about God; it is trusting Christ. We must trust
Jesus apart from anything we ourselves might do.
We are talking about
more than a new lifestyle or signing on to a new
list of beliefs. It is not about
self-improvement (in fact, self is the problem).
It is about God giving new life to the
spiritually dead. Spiritual death means that we
are are disinterested in God (at least, the true
God) - that we are separated and alienated from
God, unable to respond. God's act of making us
alive to Him is called being born again (John
3:3) - and sometimes, "regeneration" (Titus
3:5). Just as being born the first time gives
physical life, so the new birth makes us alive
to God: "And you he made alive, when you were
dead through the trespasses and sins in which
you once walked..." (Ephesians 2:1, Revised
Standard Version).
This new birth has a
transforming effect within us. It changes our
hearts from apathy and hostility regarding God
toward one of desiring a close relationship with
Him. It begins the process of repairing our want
to. "So that if any one is in Christ, he is a
new creature: the old state of things has passed
away; a new state of things has come into
existence" (2nd Corinthians 5:17, Weymouth).
This new life is a
permanent condition. One may sometimes fall in
it or resist it or grieve God, but he may not
escape what he now is. Jesus said, "And I give
unto them eternal life; and they shall never
perish" (John 10:28).
The new life is a
free gift. The Bible refers to salvation as "the
free gift" (Romans 5:15), telling us that "The
gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our
Lord" (Romans 6:23). We do not deserve it. We
cannot achieve it. We can only receive it.
Suppose a person is
interested in receiving this free gift. Perhaps
you yourself sense God's calling in your heart.
How exactly should you respond?
First, you must face
up to the fact that you can't stand on your
record. Compared to God's perfect righteous
standard, your own righteousness amounts to a
zero. If we got what we deserved, we would all
go to hell. You must recognize that your sinful
condition is very serious.
Receiving this gift
also means that you need to own up to God to
what you have done, to admit that you are a
sinner. The Bible promises, "If we confess our
sins He is faithful and just to forgive us our
sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness"
(1st John 1:9).
To receive salvation
you must look up to Christ - and Christ alone -
to save you and make you what He wants you to
be. This means one's faith and repentance are
directed toward Jesus Christ. The Bible says
that, "As many as received Him, to them He gave
the right to become children of God..." (John
1:12).
Finally, receiving
the gift of eternal life means that you will
stand up and be identified with Christ. There
are no secret Christians. The Bible says that,
"If you confess with your lips that Jesus is
Lord and believe in your heart that God raised
him from the dead, you will be saved. For man
believes with his heart and so is justified, and
he confesses with his lips and so is
saved" (Romans
10:9-10).