Thursday, September 15, 2011

Does God Really See All My Sin?


Then the Lord God called to the man [Adam], and said to him, ‘Where are you?’ Genesis 3:9
Adam was a man who was familiar with the presence of God.  Yet, when he sinned against God, he hid in fear… in fear of this holy God who was now his judge.  In his shame, Adam did not want God to see his sin.  But the problem with Adam’s attempt in the garden was that he was completely unable to hide from the God who knows all.
There have been times in my life when I, like Adam, have tried to hide my sin from God.  A while back I was reading through Hebrews and came across the following passage:
And no creature is hidden from His sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.  Hebrews 4:13
Naked and exposed?  I don’t like the sound of that.  In fact, it sounds like what I’m sure Adam felt in the garden.  For the first time in his life, he was aware of his nakedness.  Despite his attempts to hide, he was exposed.  It is quite an understatement to say this was an uncomfortable position for Adam… to be naked before a holy God.
Yet, though Adam’s sin separated him from God, God was still drawing near to be with him. God offered the promise that a Redeemer would come, a sacrifice would be made for sins so that Adam and all those who believe can be reconciled with God.
When I look around and see sin in my life, it is comforting to read on in Hebrews.  Through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, I am no longer naked and exposed before the judge in guilt and shame…  I can come boldly before His throne with confidence, holding fast to the hope found in my Savior.
And no creature is hidden from His sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.  Since then we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession.  For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.  Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.  Hebrews 4:13 – 16
Through the cross of Jesus Christ, God the Judge does not excuse our sin; He offers forgiveness for it.  He allows us to come and stand before Him with confidence, no longer in nakedness and shame but clothed in the righteousness of Christ.
Let us thank Him today for His sacrifice and the forgiveness He offers us!
[copyrighted, 2009, Emily Schankweiler]

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Don't Dwell on Your Past

 One of the biggest challenges I have faced in my walk is the challenge of leaving my past behind. For a lot of us, our pasts are full of stuff that we feel ashamed of. I will be the first to admit that letting that shame go is hard. I personally felt unworthy and unwanted when I thought of my past and the mistakes I made. There are few people that actually know the story of my past, and even fewer still that have heard the worst of it. Those that have heard displayed nothing but good will toward me; never once did any of them turn around and tell others, none of them threw it back in my face, and all of them said that they had been in a similar boat at one time. Yet I still to this day feel shame when I think about telling people my full story, and I was still full of the feelings of being unwanted and unworthiness constantly picking at me. However, the bible tells us, through a culmination of verses, that God forgives and forgets our sin. If you confess your sins to God, then the shame of those sins is wiped away, and you are made anew in Him. While at the Motion Conference in Alabama at the end of this summer, the big thing that God was laying on my heart was that our pasts should not dictate our futures. The events of the past cannot be changed, and they have been forgiven and forgotten. But at the same time we should not totally abandon our pasts. You must keep your guard up, or those mistakes of the past may come back to attempt to trap you again, and you need to be prepared with God to defend against them. And I know a key thing for this type of devotion is for the writer to practice what is preached, so I will let the shame go and let you all in on my past. I was an addict. Not of tobacco, or drugs, or self-image. I was addicted to pornography. It’s a serious addiction that comes back to nip at my heels constantly. And I am very ashamed of the choices I made that led to that addiction. But I am letting that shame go. This is my freedom day. The day that I let the world in on my secret. And I have to be totally honest with you all; I still have to fight this addiction. It’s not easy, and the shame will probably continue to creep in on me whenever it gets the chance, but now I have nothing to hide. And that shame will fade. As Isaiah 61:7 says, “Instead of shame you shall have double honour.” Now it’s your turn. Find a buddy, and just pour out your shame. Let go of the secrets in your past that bite at you. Turn from your shame and when it tries to come back into your life, push it away. Pray for God to help you fight the shame, the addictions, the secrets that haunt your thoughts.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

A Word From WCACYouthGroup


Jesus Takes Our Shame


“Living Out the Lyrics: What Does That Even Look Like?”


During youth group and on Sunday mornings we sometimes sing Judson W. Van Deventer’s, “I Surrender All.” The refrain is repeated throughout the song and goes…


“I surrender all, I surrender all; All to Thee, my blessed Savior, I surrender all.” 


Whenever I sing this song I get a little scared inside. I’m hesitant to commit to my words. Surrendering ALL is an extreme statement. When we sing praise to and worship God we want to mean the words we say and offer them up from the bottom of our hearts, but how can we make such a big commitment without knowing what it means or looks like?


Slowly Read Colossians 2:6-15 
“And having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross.”


When you think about Christ’s physical suffering and death on the cross, do you see a triumph? Honestly, it’s easy for me to see the shame, the pain and suffering, and the degradation. Yet here the Bible tells us that the powers and authorities of this world were paraded around in humiliation by the cross. I think deep down it’s easy for most of us to look away from the sight of Christ on the cross; a suffering and bleeding savior makes us uncomfortable, so we only think of it when we have to. What should really make us uncomfortable is that Christ’s body reflects our sin and brokenness. Take a good look inside and you don’t have to go very far before you see your own humiliation and degenerateness apart from Christ. However, Christ’s sacrifice on our behalf turned the world upside down. Those of us in Christ understand the triumph that Christ has over sin, over the powers that bound us. We can look at the cross and see that Jesus in being humbled to death absorbed our humiliation and brokenness. Is there any brokenness that you still need to surrender?


In versus 6-10, Paul starts off by reminding us that accepting Christ is no one time spoken proclamation, but a process to be lived out. We forget so often that we are living to glorify God, and in the large scheme of things, nothing else matters. The world might be saying otherwise, but we need to kill the selfish mindset and pointless stress, look heaven-wards, and become alive in Christ. We know that HE is the ruler of everything, and already has great plans for us. HE is the one who loves us and died for us. Take Christ off the back burner, and give everything else to Him, the one who controls everything. What is holding you back?


In versus 11-12, Paul again reminds us of the past when we accepted Christ into our hearts. He gets metaphor heavy and throws two big ones at us; “circumcised” and “buried with Christ.” In the NLT, it does a great job of telling you straight up what he’s talking about, “When you came to Christ, you were ‘circumcised,’ but not by a physical procedure. Christ performed a spiritual circumcision—the cutting away of your sinful nature.” Also, not all of us have been literally been baptized, but when we accepted Jesus into our hearts, we surrendered our sinful nature and were raised to new life. In 12-15, he stresses the importance of the cutting away, and in verse 14, he explains why we can be alive in Christ. “He canceled the record of the charges against us and took it away by nailing it to the cross.” We’ve all sinned plenty in our lives but we don’t need to be fixated on it because Jesus took it to the cross and wiped us clean. He loves us and wants to be with us; we shouldn’t be ashamed to go to him. Surrendering shouldn’t be a mundane task we’re hesitant to perform but a joyous one that we are more than willing to do in order to have a closer relationship with Christ.