Thursday, April 11, 2013

The Real Purpose of the Law

April 11, 2013

I’ve been in a very intense season of seeking the Lord about a major life decision.  Due to my very analytical nature, sometimes I tend to think myself into a corner, and being backed into a corner is never a pleasant place to be.  One can’t go backward.  One can’t go sideways.  And one feels like it’s impossible to go forward, because of all the “what ifs” just ahead.  So the only place I REALLY know to go in those times is up…straight into His embrace.  It’s in that place of seeking that leads to the security in His embrace.  It’s not that the seeking is the CAUSE of the security.  It’s the catalyst that makes me realize I CAN’T figure it out, and thus the need to just rest in Him and His perfection.

That’s the real purpose of the Law.  It points out what we can’t do.  This has become a touchy subject in recent years…the Law versus Grace thing.  It’s messy and it is hard to accept from within the confines of what man has said is necessary to become Holy and righteous.  But at its most basic level, it is so very simple.

God is brilliant.  He uses the simple things…the foolish things…to confound the wise.  His own Word says so, so before I get lambasted for saying the rest of what I am about to say, please remember.  The Lord Himself said in His Word that He uses foolish things to confound the wise.   

Let’s say that you have been instructed to build a house.  It needs to be sturdy, able to withstand gale force winds, secure from intruders, and of a design standard that would rival the most beautiful historic Southern mansion.  From the moment you receive this charge, you are excited.  Your mind is already reeling with the possibilities.  You can’t wait to get started.  And then you receive your supply list.  To accomplish this astonishing masterpiece, you have at your disposal ten items:  a sheet of plywood, two 2x4s, three nails, one shingle, a screwdriver and a paintbrush.  Oh, and one stick of Wrigley’s Juicy Fruit chewing gum.  Ridiculous, right?  But the ones commissioning you to do this task assure you that they are very serious.  So you set about trying to figure out how to do the best you can.  And the best you can do isn’t enough, not even to build a model.  It’s foolish and you are confounded.

That’s the purpose of the Law…to show us the ridiculosity of our own attempts at becoming holy and to point us to the One who was to change our condition.  He went easy on us.  He only gave us TEN commandments.  There are board games with more rules than that.  And yet, not a single person on earth has ever kept them all…

Except Jesus.   He was the ONLY one who was qualified to keep them all, and by doing so, set us all free from the futile nature of our own attempts to be holy.  Without a way to show humans their inability to obtain holiness and righteousness, they would have never known what the beauty of His grace looks like.  And even still today, people get it confused.

Please hear me.  I am not saying that it is a bad thing to love God above all, to avoid stealing, to avoid bearing false witness, and all the other ones.  Those are legitimately moral behaviors.  So people spend a lifetime trying not to fail, falling into condemnation when they do, and in worst case scenarios, they turn from the faith altogether due to their inability to measure up to what they think they have to be. 

The key is in the order, priority and motivation.  We do not sin less to become holy in Christ.  Instead, we become holy in Christ to sin less.  We cannot earn holiness.  We first become holy through the sacrifice of Christ.  God KNEW we couldn’t even play by ten rules in the game of life.  He knew it was foolish.  So He used it to confound the wise.  He showed even wise, moral, educated, and respected people that they don’t have a leg to stand on alone.  So He provided the Way. 

Jesus is Grace personified.  When we attempt to keep the Law, we still cannot attain salvation.  If we keep trying to be holy first by keeping the Law, we are subjecting ourselves again to the bondage of slavery.  We are trying to earn God’s love.  We are trying to obtain what we already have.  But when we acknowledge the futility of attaining salvation through works, we embrace Grace alone.  And as our nature changes, sinning less is a fruit of that.  Grace is not a license TO sin.  He is insurance AGAINST it.  Yes, just like with our vehicle insurance, we have the occasional fender bender.  We may even have a serious crash.  In life, as long as we live in bodies of flesh, we will still fail.  But Jesus paid in full for the restoration.  A responsible driver does not intentionally keep crashing his or her car to get insurance money.  The more he or she drives, the more experience is gained, hopefully leading to even more responsible driving with fewer and fewer accidents along the way.  But they have to be able to start driving first.  By the same token, a person who has a revelation of the Grace of Christ will not intentionally keep sinning.  Through intimacy with Christ and growing in maturity and love, fruit that comes from the relationship manifests.  One who is IN Christ and continues to walk in Him WILL be transformed.   You cannot have an indwelling of the Holy Spirit and not be changed.

I have come to believe that this is why, at least in part, that Jesus said we must become like children to enter the Kingdom.  Children have no qualms about asking for help, even for the messy stuff.  Sometimes they aren’t even able to realize the mess they’re in to ask the right question.  Who HASN’T seen a child with a sticky, snotty, runny nose before?  Yet an adult helps them get cleaned up.  But at some point, they do realize their need for help and ask the questions.  Will you help me blow my nose?  Will you tie my shoe?  Will you read me a story?  So to enter the Kingdom, we acknowledge that it is impossible to keep the full Law.  So we become like children and say, “Abba, I can’t do this.  I’ve made a big mess of things.  This is too hard for me.  Will you do it for me?”

And He did.  Praise to Jesus for the gift of Grace.  It is forever finished.

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