The Death of Guilt at the Cross

Everyone, at some point in their lives, has felt guilty. Everyone has skeletons they’d like to keep buried in their closet. Every single one of us has done things we aren’t proud of. The feeling of guilt can paralyze us and make us live in shame and doubt for the rest of our lives, if we don’t deal with it correctly.

So how do we deal with it? How do we react when we feel guilty?

First, we have to remember that we feel guilty because we are guilty. Those feelings of shame and guilt we feel at our actions come because we are legitimately guilty, not just before man, but before God.

Romans 3:23 says, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” All. Not 95%, not 99%…100%. All fall short of God’s glory, and incur, not just feelings of guilt, but actual, real guilt before a holy God.

If you’re looking for a god who will tell you that it’s all okay, and that your sin is “no big deal,” and you simply need to “overcome negative feelings and emotions,” and “believe in yourself,” you need to throw away your Bible, because you won’t find a “god” like that in it. The God of the Bible, far from telling us our sin is okay, demands blood. He is a holy and jealous God, refusing to bend even slightly from His holiness. To do so would be to betray His own character and reject His own rule and reign over us.

Think about a parent who just lets their kid get away with whatever they want. Do we consider them to be good parents? Of course not! I worked in retail for two years, and I can tell you I really appreciate parents who discipline their children, instead of the parents who let their kids destroy my department and make my job 50 times harder than it has to be. Good parents discipline their children. And a good God punishes sin, because sin is offensive to Him and ruins the world and the people He created.

Thankfully, the story doesn’t end here. We don’t have to suffer the wrath of God as a result of our guilt, because our God is a gracious God, who sent someone to suffer in our place.

Here’s how God deals with our guilt:

“For Christ has entered, not into holy places made with hands, which are copies of the true things, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God, on our behalf. Nor was it to offer himself repeatedly, as the high priest enters the holy places every year with blood not his own, for then he would have had to suffer repeatedly since the foundation of the world. But as it is, he has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself.”–Heb. 9:24-26

God deals with our guilt by punishing His own Son. God throws every ounce of our real guilt, our real sin, our lust, our laziness, our murder, our anger, our idolatry, on His Son. The Son of God became our sin, became cursed, so that those who were not children of God could become children of God.

In light of His great sacrifice, here’s how the Bible tells us to deal with our guilt:

“If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us of our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”–1 John 1:9

How simple is this? Not easy…dealing with our sin is never easy…but it is simple! We confess our sins, with faith and repentance toward Christ, and He forgives us and changes us!

God never expects us or asks us to “make up for our sin.” He never commands us to try and add to what Christ has done for us…and yet, how often do we try to do so?

I watched The Da Vinci Code a few nights ago. Don’t worry, I’m well aware that the movie’s view that Jesus had a wife and kids is total garbage….but I’m also well aware that Tom Hanks is a great actor. Anyway, one of the main antagonists in that movie spends time in self-flagellation, that is, brutally beating himself in order to “please God” and earn forgiveness of sins. It’s quite the gruesome scene. It’s also quite the ungodly scene.

Beating ourselves up and atoning for our own sins sounds nice if we don’t dig too deeply. We’d probably respect someone who is so convicted that he or she decides to “make up for it.” We love those stories…the convict who spends time mentoring others so they don’t wind up in prison, the recovering alcoholic who spends time warning people of the dangers of alcohol abuse, etc. And while there’s nothing wrong with that (if it’s done for the right reason), all of that can be a cover-up for legalism.

If we try to show God how sorry we are by beating ourselves up, or by shedding thousands of tears, thinking that those actions will merit His love, we spurn the love He showed at the cross. If we try to show God how much better we can do by self-effort, we miss the message of the cross. The cross says that our sin is so wicked that we cannot save ourselves–there must be a death that occurs. The cross also says we are so loved that God Himself paid that price for us.

If Jesus has fully paid for our sins, why do we act like there’s something else we have to do to “earn” forgiveness? The good news is that we don’t “earn” forgiveness…we receive forgiveness, freely, through the blood of Christ, through faith and repentance in Him.

If you have trusted Christ for forgiveness, and you are submitting to Him as Lord, looking to Him to lead you in new life, you are completely, 100% forgiven. There is nothing you can do, no sin you can commit, that will make God love you any less. There is nothing you can do, no good work you can commit, that will make God love you any more. While we can please and displease God with our actions, we can never lose His love, if our faith is in Christ.

So what do we do with our guilt? We take it to the one who died for us. We lay it down at the cross. We rest in His forgiveness, and trust Him to help us follow Him.

And then we get up. We walk forward, day by day, by the grace of God. And we keep living.

Don’t be paralyzed by guilt. Take it to Christ, and be rid of it.

Lord, may we never forget the cross. May we not beat ourselves up, or try to add to your work with our effort. May we rest in your grace. May we move forward in holiness by your grace. May we lay our guilt down at the cross, and worship you.

God bless,

Neal E.

Orlando

How do we react when 49 people are brutally murdered? How do we react when yet another terrorist commits a heinous act in our backyard? What do we do? What do we say?

Our God is a God familiar with suffering. He suffered when His creation rebelled against Him. He suffered as Israel followed after false gods, and He suffered most of all in our place at Calvary. And by His grace, He’s given us His Word on how we can deal with suffering and evil and pain as a Christian. I want us to see just a few verses that encourage us and instruct us in these times.

“Weep with those who weep.”–Romans 12:15

We are to weep. Jesus wept. He wept over death, over sin, and over the fallen state of His world. We, likewise, before we post on Facebook about how bad Muslim terrorists are, or how we need (or don’t need) more gun control, etc., ought to weep for the loss of life in Orlando. We ought to weep that evil exists, that death is a reality, and that there are mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters that have lost a family member. There are friends and loved ones who won’t see someone again, at least not here. And this is a tragedy. We do not need to rush into encouragement…we need time to grieve, and we need to allow others to grieve.

But, grief does not have the final word. Suffering does not have the final word. Death does not have the final word. Hope does. We weep in hope that the true King is returning to make all things right again. We weep in the hope of the gospel that those who place their faith in Him will be with God forever, and we will live in a kingdom, as Dr. Russell Moore said this week, where “bullets do not fly.”

So weep with the hurting. Let them grieve. And point them to Jesus.

“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.”–2 Corinthians 1:3-4

Comfort those who are hurting. As we weep with them, we take care of practical needs. To believers in Orlando: Don’t miss this opportunity. In the wake of tragedy, God has given you a great opportunity to comfort the hurting and afflicted. This is bigger than anything going on in your life right now…God has turned evil into an opportunity for good. Take that opportunity.

To believers elsewhere: May we use this opportunity to speak about the love of Christ, that comforts all who run to Him. We comfort others “with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.” That is, we comfort with the gospel, with the good news that Christ comes to be with and save sinners.

“And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”–Revelation 21:3-4

The world will not stay this way. Evil will not reign forever, Jesus will. Death will not reign forever, Jesus will. Sin and suffering will not reign forever, Jesus will.

So as we weep, as we mourn, as we seek to minister to the hurting, let’s remember and hope in the kingdom that is to come, even as we seek to change the world right now. Let’s pray for the return of Christ, and seek to share the gospel with everyone until He comes to make all things new.

Lord, may you comfort those who are hurting. May you surround them with your love and your grace and your presence. May we as your people be faithful to show love and share the gospel. May we show compassion to those who desperately need it. May you come back soon to make all things new.

God bless,

Neal E.