I Can Do All Things Without Jesus Christ? You Think
It’s Because of Christ
I am who I am because of Christ.
I am where I am because of Christ.
I have what I have because of Christ.
It is because of Christ from the beginning to the end. There is no ‘me’ or ‘I’ in the middle. That’s my attitude; that’s what I believe.
Christ came into the world for a purpose.
He suffered for a purpose.
He hung on the cross for a purpose.
The moment we set aside this purpose and begin to focus on our own sufficiency, we begin to drift away from the path of grace.
Sadly, there are attempts by some Christians to exalt the ‘me’ over the ‘Him’. “It was because of me that the Lord blessed me,” they say. “It is because I am this and that and have done this and that before the Lord that I now have this and that,” they say.
The question then becomes, “If you are self-sufficient, why did Christ have to go through all the suffering for you?”
Salvation is a mixed bag. Every good thing that one may require is already in the bag. The moment one enters the Kingdom, he enters into everything that God provided through Jesus Christ – eternal life, family, friends, love, hope, mercy, grace, health, wealth, peace, food, drink, clothes, accommodation, income, joy – what people generally refer to as all-round prosperity.
The Bible says, “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.” - Ephesians 1:3 (NIV). Note this – He has blessed us. It starts in the spiritual realm, after which it becomes reality in the natural. The blessings are already available. God has already blessed us through Christ.
Are you a believer? If so, then you are blessed in Christ Jesus - you have entered into the realm of what Jesus has already provided for you! Is it because of what you had done? No, not at all! It was actually for His name’s sake! In fact, you deserved punishment for what you had done!
I have heard some Christians declare, “When I get into challenges, I simply point at all that I have done for God, and I pray, ‘Lord, check my record.’”
I get chills whenever I hear somebody say this!
Which record should God check - your own record or your record in Christ? If God were really to check your record - really, really checking it, do you think you would pass the test?
Would God do anything for you based on your own record? Because God would not check just the aspect you are proud of, but the entire record, if you really want Him to go by records!
Isn’t it that Christians are hidden in Christ – it is no longer them that live but it is now Christ who lives in them? Why not let just your ‘yes’ be ‘yes’ and your ‘no’ be ‘no’? Where could this ‘me’ and ‘I’ mentality be resurrecting from?
The ‘me’ or ‘I’ mentality reminds me of the Pharisee and the tax collector praying. The Pharisee stood and prayed something like this, “Thank you Lord because I am just awesome in every way! I am not like the rest!”
But the tax collector humbly prayed, “Have mercy on me…”
The Bible says the tax collector’s prayer was accepted, but the prayer of the awesome one turned out to be solely for his own consumption!
If you want to ask for something from the Lord just go ahead and do just that; it’s your right. But never try to justify yourself by the works that you have done. If you did, God would respond, “Now that you are relying on your goodness, what does my Son have to do with it? It’s now all about you. So you’ve got to see this through to the end!”
Here is what the Bible teaches: “Therefore, as it is written: “Let the one who boasts boast in the Lord.” - 1 Corinthians 1:31 (NIV).
That’s the point.
Never boast in yourself or in the works that you do or have done before God. Instead, whenever you want to boast, boast in what the Lord has accomplished for you, something you did not deserve in the first place!
“May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.” - Galatians 6:14 (NIV).
Let us not void the cross of its energy by stressing our own particular works. By stressing our own works we keep on crucifying Christ and influence His anguish of non-to impact. We invalidate the explanation behind His coming. We likewise take ourselves once again into servitude, into living by our own particular works, not by the beauty of God.
Be that as it may, what is the position in regards to doing benevolent acts?
The appropriate response is: I am yet to see an extremely conceived again individual who avoids benevolent acts or is defiant in seeing God.
Acts of kindness are the DNA of each offspring of God. The hazard we confront, be that as it may, is the inclination by some to substitute Christ with the acts of kindness - with them approaching yelling, "I am the man!" or "I am awful! I am awful! You know it!"
Doing acts of kindness - being dutiful to the Master - is the thing that Paul alluded to as living "lives deserving of God."
That is the thing that I accept. That is the way I live.