Herein is love, not that we
loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for
our sins. 1 John 4:10 KJV
Today, I want you to read
the parable of the father of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11–32). As you read,
keep in mind that this son utterly rejected and completely humiliated and
dishonored his father, then only returned home when he remembered that even his
father’s hired servants had more food than he did! It was not the son’s love
for his father that made him journey home; it was his stomach. In his own
self-absorbed pride, he wanted to earn his own keep as a hired servant rather
than to receive his father’s provision by grace or unmerited favor.
God wants us to know that
even when our motivations are wrong, even when we have a hidden (usually
self-centered) agenda and our intentions are not completely pure, He still runs
to us in our time of need and showers His unmerited, undeserved, and unearned
favor upon us. Oh, how unsearchable are the depths of His love and grace toward
us! It will never be about our love for God. It will always be about His
magnificent love for us. The Bible makes this clear: “Herein is love, not that
we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for
our sins” (1 John 4:10 KJV).
Some people think that
fellowship with God can only be restored when you are perfectly contrite and
have perfectly confessed all your sins. Yet we see in this parable that it was
the father who was the initiator, it was the father who had missed his son, who
was already looking out for him, and who had already forgiven
him. Before the son could utter a single word of his rehearsed apology, the
father had already run to him, embraced him, and welcomed him home. Can you see
how it’s all about our Father’s heart of grace, forgiveness, and love? Our
Father God swallows up all our imperfections, and true repentance comes because
of His goodness.
Do I say “sorry” to God and
confess my sins when I have fallen short and failed? Of course I do. But I do
it not to be forgiven because I know that I am already forgiven
through Jesus’ finished work. The confession is out of the overflow of my heart
because I have experienced His goodness and grace and because I know that as
His son, I am forever righteous through Jesus’ blood. It springs from being
righteousness-conscious, not sin-conscious; from being forgiveness-conscious,
not judgment-conscious. There is a massive difference.
If you understand this and begin practicing this, you will begin experiencing new dimensions in your love walk with the Father. You will realize that your Daddy God is all about relationship and not religious protocol. He just loves being with you. Under grace, He doesn’t demand perfection from you; He supplies perfection to you through the finished work of His Son, Jesus Christ. So no matter how many mistakes you have made, don’t be afraid of Him. He loves you. Your Father is running toward you to embrace you! (Article & Picture; courtesy of Joseph Prince Ministries used with kind permission).
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