We are saved by grace through faith and it is not of ourselves (Eph 2:8-9). Since it’s not of ourselves, it’s not of ourselves. That means your behaviour has nothing to do with it. Simple, right! But what happens when a believer does use grace as a licence to sin?
As sons we have a covenant with our Father that is not based on our performance. All our sins have been forgiven and He is not keeping count of what we are doing wrong. If you don’t believe me, try believing Him. Read Isa 43:25, Jer 31:34, Heb 8:12, Heb 10:16-17, 2 Cor 5:19, Rom 4:7-8 to name but a few. Since He keeps repeating Himself, I believe He is pretty serious about the things He has said. So serious that He would rather have His Name be put to shame than violate His Word. (Ps 138:2) We need to realise how serious our Father takes covenants. There is actually a great example of this found in the Bible. Samson, one of the many men appointed by God to bring deliverance to Israel also had a covenant that was not based on his performance or behaviour.
The stipulation of Samson’s covenant with our Father was regarding his hair. As long as Samson didn’t cut his hair, he would be supernaturally strengthened by the Spirit of God to bring deliverance to Israel. But when we actually take a step back and look at Samson’s life, we see him using this covenant to do whatever he felt like doing. Let me give you few examples:
- After gambling and losing a bet with a bunch of Philistines at his wedding (to a Philistine woman), Samson went and murdered 30 men, took their clothes and possessions and used that to repay his debt. (Jdg 14:12-13, Jdg 14:19)
- When Samson’s father-in-law refused to let him see his wife, Samson went and caught 300 foxes and burned down the Philistines’ fields. This in turned caused the Philistines to murder his wife and father-in-law. (Jdg 15:1-6)
- When Samson’s own people arrested him for making their oppression under the Philistines worse instead of better through his actions, he broke free of his bonds and killed 1000 Philistines. (Jdg 15:10-15)
- Samson went to Gaza and slept with a prostitute. The Gazites plotted to kill him over this so he ripped their city gates out of the ground and carried them to the top of a hill. (Jdg 16:1-3)
- Finally, he lied about the source of his power 3 times before giving it up. (Jdg 16:6-15)
So Samson was a gambling, thieving, murdering, aggressive & anger-driven liar who slept around with prostitutes. Very holy… The interesting thing about all these instances is that the Spirit never left Samson. Even though his behaviour was far from moral, upright or holy. He remained Israel’s judge, empowered by the Spirit. Why is that? Because he never shaved his head. The covenant was never broken therefore the promise defined by the covenant was always in force. The moment Delilah had his head shaved, the covenant was broken and the Spirit left Samson.
He had his eyes gouged out and was thrown into prison. The man who was appointed to deliver Israel’s from the Philistines ended up to be their prisoner and was further humiliated by having to entertain the Philistines at a royal party. (Jdg 16:23-25). Through his own carefree actions, Samson robbed himself of fulfilling his destiny as Israel’s deliverer. Yet the moment his hair grew back the stipulation of the covenant was again met and the Spirit returned to him. He then famously pushed the two pillars over and killed more Philistines in his death than in his life.
The tragedy of Samson’s life teaches us that even though our covenant is not kept in place by our actions, sin is still the seed of destruction in our lives. Samson’s hair grew back; his eyes and destiny, not so much. We too risk our lives, relationships, health, reputations and destinies by using grace as a licence to do whatever we want.
Gal 6:7-8 Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. 8 For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life. (NKJV)
Tts 2:11-13 For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men. 12 It teaches us to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, 13 while we wait for the blessed hope–the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ. (NIV)
Grace teaches you to say ‘No’ to ungodliness and worldly passions. It trains you to live self-controlled and upright. Not because that is what will uphold your covenant, but because God did not sacrifice His Son to save you from corruption only for you to stay in corruption. Saying ‘No’ to sin is exactly what grace empowers you to do. If you are using grace to say ‘Yes’ to sin, you are not being taught by the grace that brings salvation. There is no salvation in sin, there is only salvation from sin. You can be genuinely saved and call yourself free but fail to see that where you are in sin, you are still not free. Therefore freedom is not measured by not having any rules you can’t break, but in how little sin still has dominion over you.
Be Free!
Cornel
Ps. For more on this topic, see ‘Whose Grace Message Are You Listening To?‘
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This the follow-up part on my previous article about confessing sin and how that is NOT the way to overcome sin. This article was written by my friend Daniel Silva and will show you how to overcome sin as a believer. Enjoy! Oh, his website can found here: http://saintsnotsinners.org
These are things that I live by, that have completely changed my life and set me free. I went for 6 years, being trapped in sin and hating myself for it because I knew God wanted me to do good, but I couldn’t do it. That’s reminiscent of Romans 7, the chapter that most Christians will use to say, “See look, my constant struggle with sin is normal and Paul went through it too!”
But if you read the context of the chapter, Paul is talking to people under the law, not people under grace. The previous chapter in Romans 6, is where Paul was talking to people under grace about sin. If Paul was talking about his current situation in Romans 7, he completely contradicts himself in Romans 6.
Romans 6: “I’m free from sin! It doesn’t control me anymore. I’m no longer a slave to sin!”
Romans 7: “I know the good I want to do, but I cannot carry it out because sin lives in me.”
It’s a contradiction if Paul was talking about his current life, rather than his life under the law, in which many Christians are still living.
This post is kind of lengthy, but I hope it will set you free and move you into walking in constant victory, instead of constant defeat.
Romans 8:29 says that we are being CONFORMED to Christ’s likeness, not being TRANSFORMED into it, as many Christians think and call “sanctification”. We are already like Jesus is (1 Jn. 4:17), but we are learning how to walk it out. Getting rid of your sin is not what makes you holy, being holy is what makes you get rid of your sin; because holy people don’t sin, sinners sin.
If you think you’re a sinner, you will be stuck in your sin, because you believe it’s who you are and it’s your nature to sin. If you know you’re holy, you will be stuck in holiness because you will know that sinning is contrary to who you are. Does that mean you will lose your ability to sin? No. Adam sinned without a sin nature, so can we. But the more wrapped up we are in who we are, the less likely we are to do things that are contrary to our character. But that goes both ways:
The more wrapped up I am in how much of a sinner I think I am, the less likely I am to do things that are holy.
The more wrapped up I am in how holy I know I am, the less likely I am to do things that are sinful.
With a sin nature I have to try not to sin.
With a holy nature I have to try to sin, because sin now becomes a choice, as opposed to being prone to it.
The Bible says, ”BE holy because I am holy,” (1 Peter 1:14-16) It doesn’t say, “BECOME holy because I am holy.”
Do you see the difference? You are already holy (Hebrews 10:10), so being holy is the natural way for a Christian to live. As opposed to, “You’re a smelly sinner who needs to stop sinning so you can become holy.”
Here’s the rest of the verse:
“As obedient children, do not conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in ignorance. 15 But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; 16 for it is written: “Be holy, because I am holy.”
Some things I want to point out in this verse.
- Peter said, “do not conform to the evil desires…” One of the definitions for “conform” is “adapt”. So this can be said another way, “Do not adapt to the evil desires…” The implication is that they did not currently have those evil desires, therefore they would have to adapt them. And the rest of the verse proves it…
- One of the things I used to always miss while reading the Bible were the teeny words that gave meaning to the entire verse. Often times we are so determined to find something deep that we miss the treasure on the surface. Peter said, “Do not conform (adapt) to the evil desires you… had…when you… lived… in ignorance. He didn’t say that they currently had evil desires and they must pray and fast for God to make them holy. He said that when they used to live in ignorance of God, they… had… evil desires. He does not say it as if they still have them. I want to make that clear. When you were an old creation, you had evil desires… but you are a new creation in Christ. “Behold! All things have become new.” (2 Cor. 5:17)
Many Christians still think they have evil desires when they don’t. It doesn’t mean you can’t think bad things on your own or that every bad thought is a devil, you still have to manage your thoughts and take every thought captive. But your nature is to have a mind that is set on the things above, because you have the mind of Christ (1 Cor. 2:16), and Christ does not have, for example, a lustful mind. You have to learn to manage your own thoughts. But, bless God! You already have everything needed to do so (2 Peter 1:3).
I’ll make myself vulnerable. Sometimes I get lustful thoughts *gasp*. Sometimes the “pull,” or whatever you want to call it, gets incredibly strong to where it goes from a passing thought, into a full on battle. I used to think that that was my sinful, evil nature, trying to lead me into sin and destruction, so I would begin to beg God for forgiveness, and tear myself to bits with my words. But in reality, it’s a demonic attack, and that’s when you start exercising your authority (Luke 10:19) and commanding the devil to leave and take that stupid stuff with him. The trick of the devil is just that, when you think it’s you, you won’t exercise your authority over him, the real culprit. It’s like if a guy broke into your house and stole all of your furniture, and then convinced you that it was you who did it. You’re not going to get angry and go after him if you think you’re the one to blame. Make sense?
Other times it’s not a devil, but my mind begins to wonder, and I have to start taking thoughts captive and say, “Nope. I’m not even going to go there.”
Just to be clear, while I’m on the subject of lust. Having a desire to have sex is not evil; God gave us a sex drive. But in that, we also have to learn how to be in control of it. Back before I knew any better, I’d get frustrated and upset when I started thinking about that stuff, and go, “No! That’s evil and gross! I’m so dumb! Forgive me for having a lustful heart, Jesus!”
Having a sex drive does not make you evil, but it does need to be managed, and as Paul put it, we have to make our bodies our slave instead of becoming a slave to our bodies.
But one thing that has helped me tremendously in managing my thoughts, is learning that I’m already holy. Now I know that it is not my nature to lust after girls, because that nature and those desires are dead (Galatians 5:24), so I can easily overcome those moments where I start to.
Though not every battle is easy, every battle is winnable (2 Cor. 2:14), because you have allpower and authority, the devil has none. The devil only has authority when you give it to him; you give him permission to harm you when you come into agreement with the lies he tells you. You being a sinner is one of those lies.
This knowledge of identity makes sin so much easier to battle because it’s not a struggle of, “I want to do good, but I know I’m going to lose this battle because I’m evil!” It’s a victory because you begin to live out of Christ’s victory and say, “I’m a saint, and saints don’t do that.”
This is usually the part where people say, “But do you still sin?” Yes. “So, doesn’t that make you a sinner?” Nope, my identity is in Him. Who I am is based on His works, not my own. Why? So no one can boast (Ephesians 2:8-10). If who I am were based on what I do, I can legally rub it in your face if I obey more rules than you do. But since my actions do not give me my identity, His do, I cannot brag about anything but what He has done because the same thing that is available to me is available to every single human being on this planet, whenever they choose to have faith in His work.
That’s how Paul could say, “If anyone boasts, let them boast in the Lord,”(1 Corinthians 1:30-31) because Jesus is the one who did it all for us, not us. We can only boast in His work because our work and performance cannot add to or take away from what He has already done. So now we have two choices: refuse His work and continue in our own (also known as the law of sin and death, or self-righteousness), or rest in His work and accept that we are already sanctified and holy, and are already His righteousness (Hebrews 4:10-11, Hebrews 10:10, 2 Corinthians 5:21).
You are not a sinner who is prone to sin, you are a saint who is prone to righteousness, because righteousness is who you are, and the you that was prone to sin is dead (Romans 6:2,Romans 6:7, Romans 6:10-11, Galatians 5:24, Colossians 2:11). The reason you cannot be a sinner, even if you sin, is because who you are is no longer based on what you do, who you are is based on what He’s done. Remember: You are dead! It’s no longer you who live, but Christ who lives in you. If you believe that, but also believe you are a sinner, you believe Christ is a sinner because He is the one living in you and through you. We are not God’s righteousness because we did something for it, we are God’s righteousness because He did something for it and we chose to receive.
It’s not just by grace you have been saved, it’s by grace through faith (Ephesians 2:8-10). That simply means that you have to put your faith in what grace has already made available. Grace is what made this stuff available, but faith is what makes this stuff a reality that you will walk out. Just like grace made salvation available, but faith is what makes it a reality in someone’s life.
It is simply repenting (changing how you think) and putting all of your faith in His work, and none of your faith in your own works, whether good or bad. His finished work outranks your good work, His finished work outranks your bad work. You can never sin enough to be a sinner because you can never taint the righteousness of God, which is who you are (2 Corinthians 5:21). He has forever perfected those who are being sanctified (Hebrews 10:14), and yet, you have already been sanctified through the offering of the body of Christ (Hebrews 10:10).
“Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Romans 12:2)
Not by the effort of your prayers.
Not by the length of your fasting.
Not by the volume of your crying.
Not by how genuinely you sing in church.
Not by how well you can avoid sin.
Not by how often you read the Bible.
Not by how well you quote the bible.
Not by how well you preach the bible.
Not by how well you learn the bible.
But only by renewing your mind and changing the way you think. If you are struggling with sin, change the way you think. Renew your mind. That simply means to bring your mind into a newcovenant way of thinking about things. That you are not the victim of sin, but the overcomer of it through Jesus’ finished work. That is how you will be transformed and begin living it out.
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I know there are many verses that specifically say our sins have been forgiven. Please note that I am not trying to disprove scripture. I just want to let you see forgiveness from a different perspective in order to see the extent of God’s grace that is lavished on us. The way I personally understand what happened at the cross, has made me come to believe that our sins weren’t forgiven. Let me go through my deductions with you:
Rom 6:23 For the wages of sin is death (NKJV)
The wages of sin is death. We all know this well. Now read this verse together with the following one:
Rom 5:8 But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. (NKJV)
One of the root meanings of the word forgive in the original Greek means to disregards. So if God were to forgive our sins, it would mean He had to disregard them. If it were true that He could just disregard or forgive them, then why did Jesus have to die? If the penalty for sin is death and Jesus died to pay that penalty, it tells me that God didn’t disregard or forgive our sins. But why do all those verses say our sins were forgiven? The answer lies in the word sin. The confusion lies in the English language. Whenever we hear the word “sin”, we immediately think about some action or deed that transgresses the laws of God. Our minds are somehow trained to think of sin as a verb. In English, we only have on word for both sin, the noun, and sin, the verb. The verb refers to the action of committing a sin and the noun refers to a person’s state of guilt because of the trespass, their collective sinfulness, or their universal inability to “hit the mark”. In light of this common confusion, let’s look a little closer at a few of those well known verses:
Acts 5:31 Him God has exalted to His right hand to be Prince and Savior, to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins [noun]. (NKJV)
Acts 13:38 Therefore let it be known to you, brethren, that through this Man is preached to you the forgiveness of sins [noun]. (NKJV)
Acts 26:18 to open their eyes, in order to turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins [noun] and an inheritance among those who are sanctified by faith in Me. (NKJV)
Rom 4:7-8 “Blessed are those whose lawless deeds [noun] are forgiven, And whose sins [noun] are covered; 8 Blessed is the man to whom the Lord shall not impute sin [noun].” (NKJV)
Col 1:14 in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins [noun]. (NKJV)
Eph 1:7 In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins [noun], according to the riches of His grace (NKJV)
All the words ‘sin, sins and lawless deeds’ in these verses are not all the same Greek word, but they are all nouns. Not one of them refers to the action of committing a sin technically. Now I know some of you will say that is merely semantics, what am I really on about? This is what I mean: Your sins were NOT forgiven, YOU WERE! You received forgiveness, not your sins. People are forgiven, people are set free, and people are redeemed. Their every sin gets punished unto death in Christ Jesus. The wages of sin is death and Jesus died to pay them. His death secured forgiveness for you. When you believe, you become forgiven. That means God will ‘disregard’ you when He has to enforce final judgment on His great day. When you stand before Him, He can disregard you because the wages for your sins have already been paid, you don’t owe anything for them.
So instead of thinking that every act of committing a sin needs to be forgiven, rather realize that all sins have to be punished unto death. If your sins are punished in Christ, you are forgiven, regardless of the action and also regardless of when the act is, was or will be committed. The noun-sin, the sinfulness that resulted because of the actions, the guilt and the inability to hit the mark are disregarded in Christ. You might need to say this to yourself a few times to let it sink in. Say it out loud too: “I am forgiven.” Why do you need to realize this? Because as long as you think actions are forgiven, actions won’t bother you. As long as you think sin gets forgiven, sinning won’t bother you. You will just commit them over and over because they can just be forgiven, right? Once you realize people get forgiven, but that somebody had to die in order for you to be forgiven, you might want to honour the person who died for you by thinking twice about what you are about to do. If it wasn’t for Jesus, you would have had to go through what He went through. You’re only free if you choose to live free. Grace gives you the choice, now make it.
Glory, Honour and Praise to Jesus!
Cornel
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