If God Is "I AM", then Who Am I? - Day 22


Day 22 – our sin and God’s love

 

Not only was the participant mentally disabled, he was also blind! When he suddenly fell, every single runner stopped to comfort him and make sure he was all right. Only when the young man got up did they resume the race.  football coach GENE STALLINGS, recalling a Special Olympics race in which his son JOHN MARK participated               


            Amazing grace! how sweet the sound
            That saved a wretch like me;
          I once was lost but now am found,
            Was blind but now I see. 
                       – former slave trader JOHN NEWTON

 

What we have discovered about ourselves the past few days is at the same time encouraging and discouraging. On the positive side, God has chosen to reveal Himself to us so that we might have a loving relationship with Him. He has also placed within us some of His own traits—reason, morality, purpose, love, etc.—as channels through which communion with Him may occur. Because true love must be free and not coerced, He has given us the choice to participate in this relationship or go our own way. The discouraging part is that all of us have often spurned His love, going 180 degrees from His Moral Law and purpose. We have done an about-face before Him, turning our backs and walking away. In short, we have sinned. Unrighteous, we find ourselves hopelessly separated from a righteous and holy God. No amount of benevolence or ritual on our part can cleanse us and make things right. Our only hope of restoration is in the One we have forsaken.

This leads us straight to a wonderful paradox described by Paul in his epistle to the church in Rome. Early on, Paul declares that we are separated from God by our sins.¹ Later, he proclaims that nothing can separate us from God.² According to Paul, we are separated from God but never separated from Him. How can this be? The answer is this: our sins may separate us from communion with God, but they can never separate us from His love.

Jesus, in his two most famous parables, punctuates this point.³ He describes a rebellious young man who succeeds in distancing himself from his father, only to find it impossible to flee beyond the reach of his love. Likewise, Jesus tells of a fallen traveler, reminiscent of the handicapped boy in Coach Stallings’ story, who discovers that true love refuses to ignore—nay, it stops and comes alongside—the outcast and the broken. So it is with God and us.

Paul's apparent contradiction, then, is no contradiction at all. Yes, our sins have separated us from God. We all are prodigals. We have fallen by the wayside. Still, the loving Father waits patiently for us to come to our senses and, when once again we desire His embrace, would fain meet us halfway down the road to pick us up and welcome us home. For nothing can ever separate us from His love.




¹Romans 3:23, 6:23a, 7:24.
²Romans 8:35-39.
³Luke 15:11-32, 25-37.

SELF-REFLECT

 1
Place your name in the blank and read the verse aloud: “Nothing can separate _________ from the  love of God.”

2
Think of two people you love who are separated from you by distance. Think of how much you love them regardless of the distance between. Now think of God’s love for you even though you have distanced yourself from Him.

3
Offer a prayer of thanksgiving for God’s unending love.


 
Daily Quotation
Gene Stallings, Another Season (Boston: Little Brown, 1997), 163.
John Newton, Amazing Grace (Public Domain).

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