15 February 2021

The Unclaimed Blessing

Christians desire blessing from God like people go crazy over free stuff.  Drawings and giveaways keep our attention at the possibility of winning a valuable prize.  I wonder if believers can be like people who hang around an event for the chance of receiving something good from God when He has already blessed us with His presence, grace and love.  The reality is we are more blessed than we realise and comprehend.

What does God's "blessing" or "blessings" we ask for look like?  A lot of times our translation can be a bit selfish:  make life easy, remove difficulties, help me or give me what I want.  Last night I read about a blessing God has provided for us we do not always appreciate.  In sharing the Gospel with curious Jews who gathered in Jerusalem, Peter said in Acts 3:25-26:  "You are sons of the prophets, and of the covenant which God made with our fathers, saying to Abraham, 'And in your seed all the families of the earth shall be blessed.' 26 To you first, God, having raised up His Servant Jesus, sent Him to bless you, in turning away every one of you from your iniquities."  God coming to earth is a great blessing, and He was sent to bless people in turning everyone from their sins.

We love to have options and alternatives.  Mankind was under bondage to sin, death and fear, and Jesus came to turn us from sin.  He is infinitely more than a different option like a switch to another channel on television:  it is now like we can turn off the religious television programming altogether and have a personal relationship with God through faith.  Jesus came to save us from our sin, to turn us from wickedness and to Him.  The Law could only condemn sinners and Jesus bore the sins of the world on Calvary out of love for us in obedience to the Father.  Christians often rejoice to be free of the penalty of sin (which is death) and even the power of sin:  God has blessed us to turn us away from sin so we can look to Him in faith.  Sometimes our past iniquity and present temptation to sin has more of our attention than Christ who has turned us from it.

Though Jesus has blessed us by turning from sin, the reality is we can turn back to it.  Because sinful desire forms within us, it can seem no matter where we turn we cannot escape from the whispers to indulge in what allures our flesh.  We do well to remember this reason Jesus came to earth at all:  to turn us away from our iniquities, to deliver us from the power of the devil and sin.  The shame and guilt associated with sin has been washed away by the blood of Jesus, and this is a blessing we must receive by faith in Him.  To a believer sin God has turned us from ought to be seen as most sinful, not a "bad habit" or "moment of weakness" we can justify.  In all our temptation God makes with them the way of escape who is Christ, and He enables us to steadfastly endure and do righteously.

It would be a great shame to have your name chosen for a free new car or house and you were unable to claim for yourself because you decided to leave 5 minutes before the drawing took place out of boredom.  How many believers pray for blessing who do not realise the blessing Jesus has already provided by His coming to earth to turn away every one of us from our iniquities!  The chains that bound us to what brings a curse, sorrow and death have been broken by Jesus Christ who came to set captives free.  Will we as believers lay those shackles of sin upon our hands and feet, lamenting our hopeless state in unbelief, while the lock is shattered to bits?  Because Jesus has come, paid the price from our sin and is risen, let us in faith rise with Him who has blessed us.  If we will not receive the blessing of turning away from our iniquities, why should we beg for another?

When the purposes for Jesus Christ's coming to us are fulfilled, we are empowered to live fulfilling lives.

No comments:

Post a Comment

To uphold the integrity of this site, no comments with links for advertising will be posted. No ads here! :)