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Sin (living apart from God) results in sinning (doing wrong things).

“My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me.” (John 10:27)

The mindset of sin, which is living a life separate from God, will naturally result in a life of sinning — doing the opposite of God’s will. Actions that we call sin are only the result of a sinful condition, the effect of not having a true relationship with Christ.

If we get this backwards, we’ll think that doing wrong things is what separates us from God. The opposite is true: living apart from God is what leads us to do bad things. Sin (singular) leads to sins (plural).

King Solomon began his reign with his heart trusting God, in a unified, trustful relationship, that in time faltered. “For it came to pass, when Solomon was old, that his wives turned away his heart after other gods; and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God, as was the heart of David, his father.” (1 Kings 11:4). Solomon’s sin began by replacing his relationship with Yahweh, by the outward worship of other gods, to satisfy the multicultural customs of his many foreign wives.

Did Eve fall because she ate the apple? No. She ate the apple after she fell — after tempted to distrust God — to rely instead on her secret perceptions of reality (preferring to know both good and evil), apart from spiritual unity and trusted guidance. Reaching for the fruit was only the result of a disconnect with her God. This resulted in spiritual death, disunity from God.

It took some time for Solomon to begin living apart from God in rampant sinning, whereas for Eve, this occurred with one flirtatious temptation. Minds unified with Christ’s mind is the conditional reality of a mature outward life, flowing from an inner spiritual life of unity.

Though we are seeking to know Christ, we may not yet know Him as intimately as we are privileged to know Him. Thus there may be times when we turn our eyes from Him. Dependent on ourselves without His Spirit leading, we will fail.

Here is a lesson: When a married man and woman separate, they no longer know each other straight from the heart, of the mind, intimately in conjoined reality. The New Testament uses the metaphor of marriage, to define our relationship with Christ as His bride.

If we continue to seek to know Him, to trust in our relationship with Him leading, our hearts and behaviour will be right as we grow into trusted union with Him. “And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent.” (John 17:3 ESV) We will know Christ increasingly, insofar as we follow His Spirit’s lead and trustingly obey.

If you are not doing anything wrong, does it mean that you are good?

If you are not doing anything wrong, it does not mean that you are good. Doing the right thing by not doing a bad thing is not necessarily being good.

I am not arguing that if you’re doing wrong, you’re doing right, or that it’s all right to do wrong. Many act right on the outside, yet live life terribly on the inside. You can only do right if you lovingly respond to Christ’s love for you – living right depends on expressing gratitude genuinely on the inside, expressed joyfully on the outside confirmed by the Holy Spirit’s witness.

Think of the Pharisees, looking the prudent part of the good guys’ club. Jesus spoke some firm words to the Pharisees in Matthew 23:27, 28: “Listen, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites? You are like painted tombs, which appear beautiful on the outside, yet are full of dead men’s bones. You think you’ve got it made by appearing righteous to men, but within you are lifeless – full of hypocrisy and corruption.”

Most agree that the goal for the Christian is to be good both on the inside and on the outside. If you’re not good on the inside, aren’t you better off at least being socially acceptable on the outside?

Jesus said that the religion of the Pharisee never measured up to truly loving God and our fellow man sufficient for eternal life. “Except your righteousness exceeds the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter the kingdom of heaven.” Matthew 5:20. If you think external goodness is recognisably real, it’s no good for the divine inspection.

We may presume to serve God while relying upon our efforts to obey His law, to form a right character, and secure salvation. However, cold and hardened hearts are not moved by any deep sense of the love of Christ. They seek only to perform the duties of the Christian life on the outside to get on the inside with God.

In Revelation 3 is a metaphoric message to the church for the time just before Jesus comes again. “I know your works. They’re lukewarm! – Not hot or cold – so I will vomit you out of my mouth!” (Verses 15, 16). External goodness is a bad tradeoff – a fake mask – it’s worse in God’s estimation than no goodness at all! He prefers cold hearts to show-and-tell righteousness, to a dog and pony Christianity – it’s as sickening as slaking an unrefrigerated Fresca after a day hiking in the sun.

External appearance alone is repulsive to God. Prodigals have a better chance of realising their need as sinners and repenting – are more easily reached with the mercy of the Gospel than the one who feels no need.

Must Christ fill the church with prestigious people who are classy enough to display required pretentious behaviour? Or politically or theologically correct sufficient to keep a church worker’s priestly pension safe. Pride is a barrier limiting any personal relationship with Jesus Christ. We can’t guarantee righteousness by checking off public achievements to gain God’s high five.

Let’s stop trying to do what is right, by setting time aside for devotion and contemplating Christ’s love-based Principles as we allow Him to out-express His life in us via the Holy Spirit.

Instead, we can swap out the fake; put in time and energy and effort toward seeking Him. He will then come and live His life in us. Only Christ’s right doing through you will make you good – and the bonus, you’ll be right with God.

The Law of God teaches us the need to appreciate the Love of God

“So the law is holy, and the commandment is holy and righteous and good.” (Rom 7:12)

There are three attributes of the moral law of God, taught by Paul. The law is holy, it is righteous, and it is good. Since God Himself can only designate these three attributes, the law is an expression of God’s character. It follows that to live a life led by the Holy Spirit; we live a life designed and motivated by the abiding love of Jesus Christ, which when so responding, our hearts sing within.

The law is the unchanging guideline of His holiness. Christ died so that “the just requirement of the law would be fully satisfied for us, who no longer follow our sinful nature but instead follow the Spirit” (Rom 8:4 NLT)

Disciples on the road to Emmaus listened to Christ use scripture to explain why He had to die, to fulfil the Word of God, to initiate the new covenant of grace. Later they admitted the experience as heart-warming. (Luke chapter 24)

Do the characteristics of God change? No, he remains holy, righteous and good just as a life of Godliness — of loving God and loving others reflects Christ, who fulfilled the letter of the law by dying for you and me.

Jesus made it clear that the law of God continues. (Matt. 5:17–19). To keep the law is evidence of being faithful to loving God and loving others.

Most Christians understand that the law can never save us. The law was never our way to salvation, though if revealed our need for Christ to save us from our own rule-based method of salvation, determined by works.

To live a Spirit-filled life means that we live following two primary laws of God, upon which predicates the law of God — both principles of love — for our Creator, and for the creation of man. (Matt 22:36-40)

Try viewing the law, as the pair of shoes in which you walk fulfilling loving God first, then loving your fellow sentient beings. Only in Christ’s love can we love — our love then walks and expresses itself in all areas of our life. In contradistinction, Jesus warned when “lawlessness will be increased, the love of many will grow cold” (Matt. 24:12 ESV).

Love perishes when the law of God depreciates as the standard of true love which reflects the character of Jesus Christ — who expressed the exact image of God as a man. Paul worked tirelessly with the churches teaching that our character is to be reformed — changed into the likeness of Christ: “My children, with whom I am again in labour until Christ is formed in you”. While Christ recreates our character in His image, will we not reflect God as loving, which will naturally be holy, righteous, and good, fulfilling the law?

Read Romans 13:10 and Matthew 22:37–40 to find out why love is the fulfilment of the law.

Morality can never make you righteous

Morality can never make you righteous, but righteousness will make you moral.

You cannot counterfeit morality for righteousness. Would a man give plastic roses to his wife for their anniversary as a sign of his love or real ones? Refined morality is as cold as ice.

Morality is the effect or righteousness, not the cause. It is fine adorning attribute; in fact, God demands excellent morals. Moral rectitude can keep you from indecent exposure in public, flirting with a married spouse, over-dubbing social dialogues, or from causing a rude embarrassment to your family. However, morality can never make you righteous. [1]

Without submitting by faith to Christ and without being led by his Spirit, we cannot achieve righteous standing before God. In Christ’s day, the Pharisees thought obedience to a self-regulated rule of moral law would offer sufficient righteousness before God: “For, being ignorant of the righteousness of God, and seeking to establish their own, they did not submit to God’s righteousness.” (Rom 10:3) The problem with this is that our self-prescribed righteousness is muddied with our agenda because we all have and all will sin against the glory of God, thus our need to rely on God to help us overcome daily. (Rom 3:23-27; Isa 64.4,6)

Righteousness is a gift we can only receive by faith in Christ. “For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God”(2 Cor 5:21) When we exercise faith in Christ, His righteousness becomes imputed to us, as Paul notes, “so by the one man’s obedience the many will be made righteous.” (Rom 5:18-19)

The only hope of being found right-doing with God is to “…be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own…but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith—that I may know him” (Phil 3:9-10)

The words are clear, righteousness is not the effect of moral behaviour, but rather it is dependent on faith, when we know Christ, enjoying a personal walk with Him. By abiding in Him, we can with sensitivity to the Holy Spirit’s guidance, discern and “…approve what is excellent, and so be pure and blameless for the day of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ, to the glory and praise of God.” (Phil 1:10-11 ESV) Right living reveals a moral life when you live by His principles of love.

In the parable of the wedding garment, we find a man of moral confidence, who wears his best citizen’s suit to the king’s wedding feast, instead of the wedding garment provided by the king, metaphoric of Christ’s offered righteousness. The man was condemned for his self-sufficient righteousness. (Matt 22:1-4)

The parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector is another example of the emptiness of refined moral behaviour. The Pharisee lived by a prescribed checklist of rules and adjudged himself as righteous. Self-righteousness is no substitute for Christ’s righteousness when imputed to a man’s record. The tax collector was a sinner yet he obtained acquittal of all his sins. His faith, evidenced by his humble confession, before God, brought the verdict — justified, a theological term meaning forgiven. The man stood clothed in the glory of Christ’s righteousness. (see Luke 18:9-14)

Morality alone without Christ will not make you righteous. It is a dangerous delusion that bars you from true spirituality. (See Gal 2:21) Thomas Mertin noted in the New Seeds of Contemplation:

“it is more than just a moral union or an agreement of hearts. The union of the Christian and Christ is not just a similarity of inclination and feeling, a mutual consent of minds and wills…it is a mystical union in which Christ himself becomes the source and principle of divine life in me.”

Our righteousness is a gift through our faith in Jesus Christ. Christ is our righteousness, as He displays His glory in a Spirit-led life. “This righteousness is given through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe”. (Rom 3:22)

[1] Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics have helped many form a life of good conduct, of renowned civic character. Thomas Aquinas and many church fathers have been influenced and perhaps some misled by an over-appreciation of Aristotle.

Good works do not result in salvation

Our good works do not result in salvation, nor do bad works result in being lost.

If good works do not result in our salvation, are they important? Moreover, if our bad actions do not cause us to be lost, then are evil deeds a non-issue? The key phrase “result in” means that the outcome of our works, do not determine our status with the Lord. However, behaviour, good or bad, can indicate our sincerity or a distancing in our relationship with Him.

It is not about the importance of or the purpose of our good deeds. It is about the method of salvation of which our good deeds are not the cause. They are the result.

What causes us to experience the joy of salvation if not our good deeds? Romans 3:20 states: “By the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight.” Jesus alone saves us, and we are kept and accounted righteous by the faith expressed in our accepting Him and further abiding in a relationship with Him via the Holy Spirit. “There is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12). Our focal attention must not be on our goodness or our misdeeds.To seek for or experience salvation, we are to focus on Jesus. By beholding Him, we will become changed into His image and our joy shall be suffonsified.

Every time we look at ourselves or our agenda alone, we will be unsuccessful. It is easy to be discouraged when we see our sinfulness and give up, or be proud of our excellent works and become proud. It is a dead-end street, either way, these delusions work to our misery. Only look to Jesus and know that you are secure. The bad thief on the cross looked to Jesus and said “Lord remember me in your coming kingdom” recognising Jesus as the Messiah. How did Jesus reply? “Today I tell you—you will be with me in paradise!”

Paul was radical about the subject of salvation by faith in Christ alone. He was not against good works – after all, he was one of the best-behaved persons in town. Writing Philippians 3, he disabuses his readers with some balancing humour: “If anybody has reason to boast of good works, I have matched or exceeded his record!” Summing it up, he counted his past life as loss – in fact, he viewed his behavioural perfectionism as crap — when compared to the glorious, merciful, faultless righteousness of Christ. Judged by the letter of the law as a good man, with an exemplary moral outward life, he had abstained from recognisable sin. Paul, reviewing his life, now honest, saw himself as God saw him — a man trying hard to be justified by works. He came to his senses and confessed that his need alone was Christ.

Our salvation finds union and security in our acceptance of Jesus — of His sacrifice for us – and our ongoing relationship with Him. It is not dependent on behaviour — salvation is much more than behaviour. Good works are not bargaining chips for eternal life. Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life”. Actions alone do not determine one’s eternal destiny — whereas our open-hearted, unashamed and honest relationship with Jesus as your Saviour does.

Good deeds will show up in your life, but they will never cause your salvation. God does not judge by the outward actions, but by the heart from which flow all the issues of life (see 1 Samuel 16:7; Proverbs 4:23).

Learning from the faith of children

“And they were bringing even their babies to Him so that He would touch them, but when the disciples saw it, they began rebuking them. But Jesus called for them, saying, ‘Permit the children to come to Me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.Truly I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it at all.’” (Lk 18.15-17)1

The acceptance Jesus offers to children promotes their simple potential faith in Him. Recall a child hanging on its mother’s hand. Ask, “Do I turn to Jesus Christ and our heavenly Father like that?”

A child trusts its parents, knowing a calm nearness and unity of engagement. Unlike most adults, a child’s mind is fully at peace in the moment when a loving mother or father engages with their child.

There are no stresses and fears entering the mind of a child because most young children are not worrying about their future. Nor are their memories of past regrets or harboured bitterness in the mind of a child, as most are not culpable of racking up traumatic memories of harm to or by others. Children are not generally focusing on the past, again free to experience the moment of parental unity.

I am hoping to be more like a child when I come into the moment with our Lord, to experience His presence with His Father, both who desire to dwell with us ongoingly. I know that only when my mind is practising the presence of God can His Spirit’s love, compassion, and kindness flow through me to those I connect with.

They will see Christ in us, and together with Him, we will make a difference in the lives of others that can impact their lives for eternity.

All stresses and fears enter our mind when we are thinking about the future. All regrets and bitterness come into our mind when you are focusing on the past.2 Mindfulness is lost and our faith life while living in Christ in the moment is distracted and lost in time. (see Mat 6:34)

Take a moment and think about how beautiful it is to see a child walking by the side of a parent with a small hand stretched up as high as it can go so his or her fragile fingers can lock onto the hand of Mom or Dad. The child’s feet scurry to keep up with the parent’s gait. In that scene is a picture of you, a child of God.

We are to metaphorically place our hands in his and walk with him at our side, letting him direct our steps. The humility, trust, and dependence of a child teach us to seek the face of our heavenly Father and stay close to him as we walk with him.3

1 New American Standard Bible: 1995 update. (1995). LaHabra, CA: The Lockman Foundation.
2 Scott, Steven K. (2015-12-15). Jesus Speaks: 365 Days of Guidance and Encouragement, Straight from the Words of Christ (p. 1). The Crown Publishing Group.
3 Life Application New Testament Commentary, Luke, Darrel L. Bock

Lord, I will teach by using your Word alone

“Make them holy by your truth; teach them your Word, which is truth” (John 17:17 NLT)

Jesus is referred to as the express character of God, revealing His father’s love and His maxims expressed in His Word to mankind. He said: “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6 NIV) He came to reveal a new way of thinking about love, about grace, mercy, and forgiveness – a way of freedom from guilt and the eternal consequences of sin. Apostle John says that the Word of God is truth and is a standard to rely on. Jesus expressly prayed asking His Father to teach His apostles from the Scriptures alone: “…teach them your Word, which is truth” (John 17:17 NLT)

Poppa, God is Spirit, He wants to give us more Life

“His Spirit joins with our spirit to affirm that we are God’s children.” (Romans 8:15b-16

I was to meet my daughter for the Kitchener, Christmas parade. The parade began, and she had not arrived with the children (held up at the doctor’s office). I got a call “I’m here, in the parking garage”! As I helped the grandkids out of the van, I was informed: “Santa Clause just passed by.”

Instead of the parade, I enjoyed a visit with my grandchildren for about an hour plus, alone. She conversed freely with me. Flipping through a little Bible, she noted the word love in 1 Corinthians 13. “I know this word, love”. She began to tell me about the Spirit of God, His love and His desire that we have more Life.

Next, she headed for my Bible with many inquiries. Flipping it open she said, “did you do this?” as she perused my underlining in the Word. “Why?” was the next question. I pondered, wow, Jesus must be akin to the Grandfather with His own grandchildren. I praised Him over my grandgirl silently, considering what Jesus said, “Except my Father invites, no one can come unto me” (John 6:65 my version) And we talked, further.