• you are more sinful than you ever dared believe, yet
• you can be more accepted and loved than you ever dared hope at the
same time, because Jesus Christ lived and died in your place.
Salvation is of the Lord (Jonah 2:9)
The irreligious don't repent at all. The religious only repent of sins.
But Christians also repent of their righteousness. Moral and religious
people are sorry for their sins, but they see sin as simply the failure
to live up to standards by which they are saving themselves. They may
go to Jesus for forgiveness-but only as a way to "cover over the gaps"
in their project of self-salvation. But a Christian is someone who has
adopted a whole new system of approach to God. They realize their
entire reason for either irreligion or religion has been essentially
the same and essentially wrong! Christians realize that both their sins
and their best deeds have all really been ways of avoiding Jesus as
savior.
... the way to avoid Jesus was to avoid sin... -Flannery O'Connor
A Christian says: "though I have often failed to obey the law, the
deeper problem is why I was ever trying to obey it! Even my effort to
obey it is just a way of seeking to be my own savior. In that mindset,
even if I obey or ask for forgiveness, I am really resisting the gospel
and setting myself up as Savior." To "get the gospel" is turn from
self-justification and rely on Jesus' record for a relationship with
God. "Lay your deadly doing down, down at Jesus' feet. Stand in Him, in
Him alone-gloriously complete."
The Two "Thieves" of the Gospel - Legalism and Liberalism
Tertullian said, "Just as Christ was crucified between two thieves, so
this doctrine of justification is ever crucified between two opposite
errors." These errors continue to "steal" the gospel from us. They are
"legalism" and "liberalism". On the one hand, "legalists" have a truth
without grace, for they say or imply that we must obey the truth in
order to be saved. On the other hand, "liberals" have a grace without
truth, for they say or imply that we are all accepted by God regardless
of what we decide is true for us. But those with truth without grace,
do not really have the truth, and those with grace without truth, do
not really have grace. In Jesus we behold the glory of the one "full of
grace and truth". De-emphasize or lose one or the other of these
truths, you fall somewhat into legalism or somewhat into license and
you eliminate the joy and the "release" of the gospel. Without
knowledge of our extreme sin, the payment of the gospel seems trivial
and does not electrify or transform. But without knowledge of Christ's
completely satisfying life and death, the knowledge of sin would crush
us or move us to deny and repress it. Take away either the knowledge of
sin or the knowledge of grace and people’s lives will not be changed.
They will be crushed by the moral law or run from it screaming and
angry.
As
Luther put it, the Christian is simul justus et peccator
(simultaneously accepted, yet a sinner). We are more sinful than we
ever dared believe, but through Christ we are more accepted than we
ever dared hope. When the gospel dawns on the soul, it becomes a
transforming power (Romans 1:17). Instead of seeing the law of God as
an abstract moral code, Christians see it as a way to know, serve, and
resemble their Master. Instead of obeying to make God indebted to them,
they obey because they are indebted to him. Instead of being driven by
an anxious sense of being unacceptable, they are empowered by grateful
joy. The difference between these two ways of morality could not be
greater. Their spirits, goals, motivations, and results are entirely
different.