Sunday, June 10, 2018

Justification: Faith and Work: Finding Purpose and Passion in Everyday Work, Day 5

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Justification, Day 5

Today's reading is drawn from Romans 3:23-24 and Acts 13:39.

We live in a culture that thinks hard work gets us what we want or what we think we deserve. This is especially true in the workplace. If we work hard enough, we get a raise, bonus, or promotion. And if something goes wrong, we can usually work hard enough to make amends. We live in a meritocratic culture.

But God's kingdom functions differently. He has given us something we don't deserve: right status before him.

The doctrine of justification tells us that we are considered righteous before God, not by our obedience to the law—for no one can fulfill the law's requirements—but because of the perfect work of Christ. He alone lived perfectly according to the law and fulfilled it. Because of Christ's work, God no longer sees us as sinful or guilty. He sees us as righteous and holy. Therefore, we do not have to fear God's wrath, because our sins are forgiven and the weight of our guilt has been removed.

In his famous Institutes of the Christian Religion, reformer John Calvin says that no sinner could ever justify himself. Not only that, but wherever there is sin, there also "the wrath and vengeance of God show themselves." Conversely, a justified person is one "who is reckoned in the condition not of a sinner, but of a righteous man; and for that reason, he stands firm before God's judgment seat while all sinners fall." This happens when we trust not in ourselves and our own works—because we will find nothing righteous within us— but in the righteousness of Christ through faith. That's good news!

Connecting

As human beings, we are constantly trying to justify ourselves before others. Fearful of our inadequacies and sins being exposed, we work tirelessly to prove ourselves. This leaves us only exhausted and joyless. But when we begin to grasp the truth that in Christ we are wholly accepted by God regardless of what we do, we experience a peace that allows us not to be preoccupied with ourselves—our successes or failures. Further, we can have confidence as we perform the work God has set before us, even with all of our human limitations. The doctrine of justification brings an incredible freedom in our work, because if God, the ultimate judge, has already deemed us righteous, then no one and nothing can steal our security or status in him.

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