I find in my sinful nature I am always seeking to
justify my sinful actions. It is a testimony to the fact that I agree that sin
is a problem that needs to be dealt with one way or another.
Pretending that sin does not
exist will never work, though it may make our consciences feel good for a
while. If we spend time in the Bible we are confronted and rebuked by the truth
of Gods Word, Christian or not.
But for the believer, and the
believing chaplain, indeed for anyone serving the Lord with the gifts He has
given them, if we pretend that our sin is not real, or if we are unaware of it,
we will grieve the Spirit, or worse, as the writer to the Hebrews calls it,
"trample the Son of God under our very feet." (10:29) Effectively, we
will be trying to live our lives in a way that inherently denies that Jesus
died the second death in our place when he died for us on the cross.
Grace is in effect the unmerited
favour of God. Cheap grace is the idea that we do not need to respond to the
demands of grace (is grace entirely undemanding?) or the favour that God has
bestowed on us in Christ. That is, we can keep on sinning as though there is no
need to repent.
The phrase that Paul uses
"God cannot be mocked" (Gal 6:7) basically means that we can't pull
the wool over God's eyes. He knows our hearts, he knows our conscience and if
we intend to continue in our sin, there is no forgiveness. (Hebrews 10:26)
A right response to God's grace
to us in Christ is sorrow for sin, for the recognition that the offence is not
just against another human made in the image of God, but also against God
himself. But further, a right understanding of grace leads to a desire to
change, to turn away from sin.
When Peter, seeking to justify
himself, asks Jesus how many times should he forgive the brother who sins
against him, he thinks he is being very big hearted when he says
"seven". Imagine his surprise and disbelief when Jesus responds with "seventy
times seven." (Matt 18:22).
In underscoring the boundless
nature of God's forgiveness toward repentant sinners, and that we should have
the same attitude towards those who wrong us, Jesus is challenging Peter's
sinful desire, even in the midst of his right service and seeming right
thinking, to seek his own justification.
I have a lot of sympathy with
Peter. Isn't Jesus setting the bar impossibly high? This is the chief apostle
who was with Jesus from the beginning, who preached the first gospel sermon in
Acts 2.
If he hasn't got it
together, what chance do we have?
But that is the wrong question
though isn't it? Jesus deals graciously with Peter's sinful desire that says,
look at me, aren't I great for doing the right thing? So should we when we see
it in others, or in ourselves. He calls out the error and calls for repentance.
Because grace expects a right and Godly response from sinners who know that
while it is undeserved favour, it was not cheap, it does not invite further
indulgence of the sinful nature.
Paul dealt with cheap grace very
deftly and devastatingly in his letter to the church in Rome. He has been
emphasising Jesus' very point to Peter in Matthew's gospel referred to above.
He had been saying, where sin abounds, grace trumps it. In other words, grace
beats sin every time. And what's more, true grace does not lead to license,
that is, permission to keep on living a life of sinfulness.
True grace leads to a desire to
turn away from sin and to serve the Lord with thankfulness and real devotion,
more and more.
Listen to this from Paul in
Romans 6:1-3. "What shall we say then? Shall we go on sinning so that
grace might increase? May it never be! We died to sin, how can we live in it
any longer? Or don't you know that all of us who were baptised into Christ
Jesus were baptised into his death? We were therefore buried with him through
baptism into death in order that just as Christ was raised to new life through
the glory of the father, we too may live a new life. "
We have been spiritually raised
with Christ to live a new life with him right now. To sow for the Spirit in the
power of his grace.
Further, Paul says in 1
Cor 15:10 "But by the grace of God I am what I am and his grace
to me was not without effect. No I worked harder than all of them. Yet not I
but the grace of God that was within me."
Grace issues forth in hard work.
If I am trying to justify myself
in my work, I am not working hard because I have been set free to serve, I am
working hard out of a sinful refusal to accept Jesus as my Lord, even in my day
to day service of Him!
But Paul goes even further to
help us have a right perspective. He says the hard work that God has for us to
do is a gift of his grace.
Ephesians 2:10
" For we are God's workmanship,
created in Christ Jesus to do good works which God prepared in advance for us
to do. "
There is great freedom if we serve in response to and because of His grace. We serve in love, in the power of the Spirit and to the glory of God in Christ, because we have no obligation to the sinful nature.