• Godly Living Posts / Quotes

    Do you know God has no condemnation towards you?

    If you didn’t know, now you know. Regardless of what you feel you have done, God is not a jobless Magistrate waiting for you to do a wrong thing for Him to declare condemnation as punishment. I used to think so until I decided to start reading the devotionals from Pastor Joseph Prince and I realized that, God loves me.

    Here’s a short devotional of what he wrote about this topic.

    “For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.”

    John 3:17

    The account of the woman caught in adultery demonstrates something very important. What enables someone to have the power to overcome sin?

    The threat of the law obviously didn’t stop the woman from committing adultery. But receiving Jesus’ acceptance—knowing that even though she deserved to be stoned to death, He did not condemn her—that gave her the power to “go and sin no more.”

    Notice that Jesus saved the woman righteously. He didn’t say, “Don’t stone her. Show mercy to her.” What He said was, “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.” And on their own accord, the Pharisees and religious mob all left.

    Notice also that Jesus did not ask the woman, “Why did you sin?” No, what He asked was, “Has no one condemned you?”

    It seems as if Jesus was more preoccupied with the condemnation of the sin than the sin itself. He made sure that she walked away not feeling the condemnation and shame.

    Why should you belief that God doesn’t have condemnation against you?

    Let’s not reverse God’s order. When God says something comes first, it must come first. God says “no condemnation” comes first, and then you can “go and sin no more.”

    Christian religion has it in reverse. We say, “Go and sin no more first, then we won’t condemn you.”

    What we need to understand is that when there is no condemnation, people are empowered to live victorious lives, lives that glorify Jesus. Grace produces an effortless empowerment through the revelation of no condemnation.

    It is unmerited and completely undeserved. But we can receive it—this gift of no condemnation—because Jesus paid for it at the cross.

    Truth be told, none of us could have cast the first stone. We have all sinned and fallen short. In Christ, we are all on equal ground.

    If a brother or sister gets tangled in sin, our place is not to judge them, but to restore them by pointing them to the forgiveness and gift of no condemnation that are found in Jesus.

    The only person who is without sin and who could have exercised judicial punishment on the woman was Jesus, and He did not. Jesus was in the flesh to represent what was in God’s heart. It wasn’t judgment. His heart is unveiled in His grace and His forgiveness.

    I like to say it this way when describing what happened as the Pharisees waited to stone the woman: The Pharisees would if they could, but they could not. Jesus could if He would, but He would not. That’s our Jesus!

    I have reposted several of similar devotionals on this blog.

  • Godly Living Posts / Quotes

    Do you feel condemnation?

    With the judgmental attitude of many people these days, it is challenging to not feel condemnation. However, hard life might be, be encouraged by this devotional from Pastor Joseph Prince. God has and will not send you away as long as you believe him, regardless of your past mistakes.

    And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made alive together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses, having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us, which was contrary to us. And He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross.

    Colossians 2:13–14

    In the account of the woman caught in adultery, the Bible is silent on what Jesus wrote on the ground with His finger. But I believe that when He stooped down, He was writing the Law of Moses.

    I have been to Jerusalem many times. During one of my visits many years ago to the temple precinct where Jesus would have met this woman, the Lord opened my eyes to see that the floor of the temple precinct was made of hard cobblestone.

    This means Jesus was not writing on soil. He was writing with His finger on stone.

    Then, in a flash, I saw that Jesus was writing the law on stone. He was effectively saying to the Pharisees, “You presume to teach Me about the Law of Moses? I am He who wrote the law.”

    Jesus wrote twice on the ground with His finger, thus completing the typology, as we know that God wrote the Ten Commandments with His finger twice.

    Jesus wrote to confirm we don’t have to feel any condemnation

    The first set of the Ten Commandments was destroyed by Moses when he saw the Israelites worshiping the golden calf at the foot of Mount Sinai. God then wrote another set on stones and gave it to Moses for it to be placed under the mercy seat in the ark of the covenant.

    I had never heard anyone preach this before—it was a fresh revelation straight from heaven. I love it when the Lord opens my eyes to see His grace!

    Do you know why it’s so exciting to know what Jesus wrote on the ground that day? It’s so significant because it shows us that the very author of God’s perfect law does not use the law to judge and condemn us today.

    And it’s not because God simply decided to be merciful on us. No! It’s because Jesus Himself fulfilled all the righteous requirements of the law on our behalf. He took upon Himself every curse and stroke of punishment for our sins on His own body at the cross.

    We are forgiven because He was judged. We are accepted because He was condemned! There is therefore no need to feel any condemnation. God loves you.

    Whatever your challenge today, your answer is found in receiving a fresh revelation. If you know how much you are forgiven in Christ, you will be at peace.

    To read more devotionals, go here.