Robert Griffith | 25 July 2023
Robert Griffith
25 July 2023

 

The Christian life sometimes feels like trying to hold a beach ball underwater. We are constantly fighting to keep our bad parts (temper, materialism, lust of the flesh, etc.) from popping up for all to see. Every once in a while, we lose our grip, and that sin nature wriggles free and pops up – sometimes high in the air – metaphorically speaking. It’s embarrassing, so we grab it and shove it back down under the water.

People who feel like their beach ball is going to pop above water any minute are caught in two religious traps: performing and pretending.

The performance trap is thinking that you have to maintain a certain standard in order for God to accept you or bless you – and, if you fail to meet that standard, God will punish you.

So, you’re always wondering, “Have I been good enough?” and “Have I done enough?” And, if something bad happens to you, you wonder, “Is God punishing me for something?”  This kind of life leads to constant anxiety and eventual exhaustion.

Closely related to the performance trap is the pretending trap, where you are always trying to act like you have everything together, even when you don’t feel like it. Fake it till you make it, right?

Church people are really good at this. Have you ever seen a perfect-looking family come into church, all bows and Bibles and smiles? The husband pats you on the back and says, “Bless you, brother.” You see a gleam in their teeth and … is that a faint glow coming from behind their heads? Here’s what you may not know about this family. There’s a good chance that on the way to Church he and his wife were screaming at each other, and as they pulled into the parking lot, one or both of them were threatening their kids to make sure they behaved in Church!

We all have our moments of pretending. For many of us, social media seems to extend this moment indefinitely. We post the shiny, happy moments of our lives, whether or not they accurately reflect the way our lives are really going. We may be dying inside, watching our lives crumble on the outside – but on Instagram and Facebook, everything’s filtered and the envy of the world!

For people who feel caught in one or both of these traps, religion offers no freedom at all – religion never does – religion is a prison.

The gospel, however, as Paul explains in his letter to the Romans, frees us from performing and pretending.

Romans 7:24  “Who will rescue me from this body of death?”  

You could paraphrase that to say, “Who will rescue me from this endless cycle of performing and pretending?”

The answer?

Romans 8:1  “Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus.”

Condemnation is, of course, a legal term. It means there is a charge held against you; you owe a debt or a payment is due. But for those in Christ, that debt no longer exists and that payment has been made in full – by Jesus.

What I love about this is that the debt was paid before any of my sins were even committed.

Think about it: When Jesus died on the cross, how many of our sins had we committed yet? None! We weren’t even born yet! He paid for all our sins in advance. Jesus’ death wiped out not only the presence of existing condemnation; he also wiped out the possibility of future condemnation. And that means there is nothing we could do right now that would make God love us any more – or any less.

God doesn’t love you to the degree that you are like Christ. He loves you to the degree that you are in Christ, and that is always 100 percent.

That means God is just as pleased with you on your very worst day as He was with His Son Jesus when He walked among us and lived a perfect human life.

Let that sink in.

This frees us from the performance trap. We don’t ever have to be unsure of God’s love for us. In all our mess, in all our Romans 7 struggles, we have the unconditional love and absolute acceptance of the Father. And that frees us from the pretending trap. We don’t have to pretend we’re something we’re not for others.

There is nothing about you or me that can be revealed that Jesus has not already seen and that his blood has not already covered. When someone points something out, we can say, “Yes, God saw that, too, and he set his love on me anyway and has promised to change that in me.”

Whatever we are embarrassed about right now, whatever it is we don’t want others to know about, God has already seen it, and He declares: there is no condemnation. Jesus paid for it in full, and He receives us in love.

No more performing. No more pretending.

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