Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Do you have to confess your sins IN ORDER to be forgiven?

Do you believe this?

Confess each sin in order to be forgiven. Confess each sin in order to be forgiven. Notice the words in order to be.

If you truly believe this, then what you are saying is your forgiveness of sins is based on your confession of sins.

But what does the Bible say forgiveness of sins is based on?

Ephesians 1:7: "In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace"

So not according to the confession of our sins, but according to the riches of His grace. The day you can measure the riches of His grace is the day you'll realize how much you've been forgiven.

Also notice how forgiveness of sins is something we already have, not something we are trying to get.

What is the fruit of knowing you are forgiven much? Jesus says in Luke 7 that the woman who poured oil on his feet knows she was forgiven much, so she will love much. The reason why we love little is because we think we are only forgiven little, only up until the very next sin we commit (like the Pharisee in the above story).

It is no longer like the Old Covenant, where we went from clean (righteous), dirty (unrighteous), clean, dirty, clean, dirty. No, today in the New Covenant we are always clean. The blood of Jesus keeps on cleansing you from any and every sin 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It's nearly-too-good-to-be-true!

If you want to confess your sins to God, you are free to. I just want to ask if there is a better way of relating to God, or is that way an Old Covenant approach to God and is the New Covenant a lot better than that? If it makes you feel better to confess your sins to God, if it reminds you that you're forgiven and how good He is, then you're free to do it. But don't do it out of a begging, pleading mode for Him to forgive you and make you clean again. I believe that is an insult to Jesus' sacrifice, because it's saying that the shedding of His blood alone was not enough for the forgiveness of sins.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Does sin break fellowship with God?

When Jesus died on the cross, did he pay for the consequences of sin?

Was it paid in full? Did He pay it all?

If he did, does all include broken fellowship with the Father?

Yes, of course it does. Jesus paid for broken fellowship.

If you still think it does, ask yourself:

What is it that breaks your fellowship with God? Is it sin?

If your sins caused you to be out of fellowship with God, what then keeps you in fellowship with God?

Not sinning?

How much of your life can you live not sinning?

Two hours?

So, how much of your life would you be in fellowship with God?

Not very long, huh? This is not good news. Sin does not break fellowship with God. Because the wages of sin is not broken fellowship. The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). So if God were to deal with you according to your sin, what would He have to do to when you sinned?

"Aaaah that's even worst news!"

But here's the good news. At the cross, Christ paid for our sins "once for all." (1 Peter 3:18). The Law demanded sin to be punished by death. So Christ came and being our representative - paid the penalty of sin, which is death; so that we could have His life in us.

For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ. You have that life in you right now. Eat on that truth and enjoy the fruit it bears in your life.