You’re Gonna Pay for It

In a time of bailouts, loan motivations, and foreclosures, the questions of who is liable when a debt is incurred if often a muddied one. For many, it may seem self-evident that the person who incurred the debt is also the person who should pay it, but we have seen many instances lately where this is no longer the case. Debt forgiveness, subsidy, and acts of Congress has modified that once clear-cut connection.

However, the poor economy is not the only culprit in this lopsided equation. Recently, I heard a message from Steve Lawson at the Resolved 2008 conference (for information on the 2009 conference, click here). In it, he articulated the biblical point that every sin demands a payment. The question is not whether or not sins will be paid for, the question is who will bare the cost.

It was a point that this Sunday School graduate had probably never considered to its fullest extent. It is easy to think of the fact that Christ has made my sin “white as snow” than to realize that the only way He was able to do this was to exchange my righteousness for His (for a great sermon on this topic, click here – March 1, 2008, Mike Fabarez). Because I accept Christ it doesn’t mean that my sin is no longer accounted for, it means that the penalty for it has been poured out on Christ. It’s just as if I accepted my own personal bailout for the debt I’ve incurred against God. When I accept Christ as my Savior, I in effect tell the Lord of this Universe that “I recognize the guilt of my sin and I’m accepting your payment for it.” To do so lightly or without a recognition of the costs to the King, is a perversion of the awe and magnitude of Christ’s grace.

However, this transaction also recognizes something else. When I say to Christ that I accept His payment for my sin, I also recognize that I am unable to make reconciliation on my own. To ever attempt to do so through the paltry offer of my good works, would be like offering monopoly money on the national debt. It’s not only inadequate, its not even the right type of currency.

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Cast Off


Sailing away often sounds appealing to me. In fact, in one of my all-time favorite books, A Severe Mercy, has an entire section recounting the adventures at see that the author and his young wife experienced. It sounded romantic, not just in that “boy meets girl and falls in love type of way”, but in the “life is an adventure and should be experienced and not just lived” type of way. The sea seemed like a world without care. Once that boat pushed off from the dock, all the troubles were cast away too.

The analogy seems apt because the Bible says that “perfect love casts off fear” (I John 1:18, NKJV). While this verse is oft-quoted, it is only recently that I have begun thinking about the action verb associated with it. In my minds eye, I think I considered the verse to be saying, “perfect love supplants fear” or “perfect love is greater than fear.” But neither of these are in fact what God’s Word contains. It says “perfect love casts off fear.” Just like the boat pulls up anchor, casts off, and sails into the open sea, perfect love does away with the weight of fear. It not merely overrules it, it repels it entirely.

This is a concept difficult to grasp because fear, anxiety and worry is so embedded into our day-to-day life. From worrying that we won’t arrive on time, to fearing that we won’t be able to pay our bills, we are consumed with that which we can’t control. Love, and the rest that comes from God’s perfect love, renders this fear ridiculous. Just as the anchor has no place on a boat that’s sailing on the open sea, fear has no place in a life redeemed by God’s love. For if God’s love has overarching prevalence in our life, then it is absurd to be afraid of all that’s less than it

Casting off for the blue skies and tranquil waters is promised as the pathway to peace. Real peace comes from casting off fear and trusting in Christ’s love.

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