Your Stage and Your Standing
I write to you, dear children, because your sins have been forgiven on account of his name. 1 John 2:12
John says, ‘I am writing to you, dear children, because your sins have been forgiven on account of his name’ (v. 12). When you’re baptized and believe in Jesus Christ, the only thing you know is that your sins are forgiven and you’re in right standing with God. But you have a lot more to learn. The Greek term for ‘children’ refers to toddlers. And toddlers keep tripping and falling. Until they learn to walk, they need someone to pick them up and reassure them that falling down doesn’t mean they will never walk or they’re not part of the family.
In spiritual childhood, it’s essential that you understand two things: the difference between your stage of growth and your standing before God. Don’t get them mixed up! Trusting in the finished work of Christ gives you right standing with God as a fully accepted, redeemed child of His. If you forget that, every time you fall, the devil will make you doubt your salvation. When you sin, it doesn’t mean that your standing before God is altered; it means your stage of spiritual growth needs work.
The forgiveness you receive at the new birth is a judicial act, making you a member of God’s family in good standing. But the forgiveness you receive on a daily basis is a relational act. For example, when you enter some wrong numbers into your calculator, what do you do? There is a little button called ‘clear entry’ that lets you erase your mistake and start over again. That’s what the blood of Jesus does. Repentance allows you to override sin by triggering God’s forgiveness, so that the flow of His grace continues. And when grace flows, growth follows.
Prayer
Heavenly Father, thank You for Your grace and forgiveness to me that I do not deserve but You freely give. Keep me learning to walk more and more in Your steps. In Jesus’ Name, Amen
ITTT
Can you please speak about Narcissism within Christianity and how this is viewed by God?
I have been struggling mightily with God when he says all who believe will inherit the kingdom of God yet I have a former business partner who has viciously removed me from our partnership, used a former employee to do his bidding and harm me (by helping him).
My former business partner is trying to destroy me financially and mentally by dragging out legal proceedings for the last 3 years until he can delay no more. All the while proclaiming how he has been the victim.
Help me understand how someone who claims to be a believer can do so much harm and damage to others and at the end of the day, inherit everlasting life and be in heaven for eternity.
I do not understand how God views this person the same as someone who lives a faithful and moral life and does right by others.
Thank you for any biblical reference and knowledge you can share on this.