Categories
Luke Devotionals

No condemnation

Just thinking today on Jesus’ words to the criminal:

Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise. (Luke 23:43)

In short, Jesus was telling him, “No condemnation.”

“Yes, you’re on a cross and you will soon die. But know that when you stand before the Father’s judgment seat: no condemnation.”

Despite his pain, how much joy washed over that criminal in that moment? How much peace?

Like the criminal, you may still be suffering some of the consequences of your sin, even after you’ve repented. And you may be wondering if perhaps God is still punishing your for your sin.

If that’s you, remember the criminal and Jesus’ words to you: “Yes, you may facing pain because of your sin right now. But be at peace. In the Father’s eyes, there is now no condemnation for you.”

How joyful is the one
whose transgression is forgiven,
whose sin is covered!

How joyful is a person whom
the Lord does not charge with iniquity… (Psalm 32:1-2)

Categories
Numbers Devotionals

How God sees us

How can I curse someone God has not cursed?

How can I denounce someone the Lord has not denounced? (Numbers 23:8)

As I read those words, I thought about what Paul said to the Roman Christians.

Who can bring an accusation against God’s elect? God is the one who justifies.

Who is the one who condemns? Christ Jesus is the one who died, but even more, has been raised; he also is at the right hand of God and intercedes for us. (Romans 8:33-34)

Satan would denounce us before the Father for all our sins and failures.

Sometimes, we even denounce ourselves.

But how can we denounce someone our Father has not denounced?

Our Father justifies us by the blood Jesus shed for us on the cross. And Jesus himself stands by the Father’s side and defends us.

God foreknew us. He predestined us to be his children and to be like Jesus. He called us. He justified us. And he glorified us in his sight.

That’s how he sees us. He sees us as our loving Father.

And the good news is, he won’t change his mind. I love Numbers 23:19.

God is not a man, that he might lie, or a son of man, that he might change his mind.

Does he speak and not act, or promise and not fulfill?

God is determined to bless us and he will. (Numbers 23:20)

We may face his discipline at times for our sins, but he will never abandon us.

And because he never changes his mind, nothing can separate us from his love. (Romans 8:38-39)

God is with us. So let’s rejoice in our King. (Numbers 23:21)

And every day, let’s cry out, “What great things God has done for me!” (Numbers 23:23)

Categories
John John 8

You are not condemned…so go

This is probably my favorite story in the Bible.

Jesus is teaching in the temple courts early in the morning, and a huge crowd of people are surrounding him, listening to him teach.

But all of a sudden, there’s a commotion in the temple courts, and people are getting shoved out of the way as the Pharisees and teachers of the law push their way through to Jesus, with a woman in tow.

They thrust her in front of Jesus, and as he looks at her, he probably sees tears running down her face, and fear in her eyes.

One of the Pharisees then speaks out and says, “This woman was caught in the act of adultery. Now Moses in the law says that women like her should be stoned. What do you say?” (John 8:5)

Jesus looked at these men, and one thing was immediately clear from the glint of triumph that was probably in their eyes:

They were not bringing this woman to Jesus because they were horrified by her sin. They weren’t bringing this woman to Jesus because they were truly at a loss on what to do with this woman so caught in her sin.

They were bringing this woman to try to trap Jesus. What was the trap?

Well, if he said to stone her, they could probably accuse him before the Romans of breaking the law. According to Roman law, only the Romans were allowed to conduct capital punishment.

Not only that, all these people that had seen the love and compassion Jesus had for the worst of sinners, would probably walk away from him. He could no longer be called, “A friend of sinners.”

If on the other hand, he said “Let her go,” they could accuse him of going against the teachings of Moses whom all Israelites held in high regard as a prophet of God. He would therefore lose all credibility as a teacher.

So after a moment of looking at these men, Jesus stooped down to the ground and started writing in the dirt. Put another way: he ignored them.

This of course, infuriated these men, and so they started badgering him. “Hey! Don’t ignore us. Answer our question! What do we do with this woman!”

Finally, Jesus stood up, looked at them again, and said, “Fine. You want to stone this woman. Do it.”

But just as the smiles started to spread across these men’s faces, Jesus added, “The one person among you that’s never sinned, you get to throw the first stone.”

Then he started writing in the dirt again.

What did he write? I don’t know. But the word “write,” sometimes had the idea of “writing a record against someone.”

So it’s very possible he was writing each of their names, and specific sins they had committed.

What would you do if you saw your name being written and your deepest, darkest sins exposed for all to see? You’d probably do what they did. Get out of there.

And soon, only the woman was standing before Jesus. He said to her,

Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you? (John 8:10)

When the woman looked up, all the people that had been accusing her were gone. And she realized with wonder, “No one accuses me.”

I can imagine Jesus smiling at her as he said,

Then neither do I condemn you. Go now and leave your life of sin. (John 8:11)

A lot of times, we look at ourselves in the mirror, and we wonder, “How can God possibly love me? How can he accept me?”

Because we look at our sin and the mess we made of our lives. But Jesus tells us the same thing he told that woman.

“I don’t condemn you.”

More than that, he says, “Now go. Don’t linger in your regret. Don’t keep looking at your past. It’s forgiven. Leave the past behind. And leave behind the sin that made a mess of your life. Go. I’m making all things new. Live the new life I died to give you.”

Are you trapped by your regret? Are you lingering in doubt about whether God could love or accept you? Remember these words. “I don’t condemn you. Now go.”

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come! (2 Corinthians 5:17)