NOW IS THE TIME FOR REPENTANT FAITH!

WORD FROM THE CENTER: MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 2024

Welcome to “Word from The Center” MONDAY, a devotional word from the Center of our faith, Jesus Christ, with reflections on His Word. I’m Gregory Seltz. Today’s passage is Mark 1:14–15, where the Bible says,   

14 After John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. 15 “The time has come,” he said. “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!”

 

NOW IS THE TIME FOR REPENTANT FAITH!

In a Charlie Brown cartoon, little brother Linus is looking very forlorn. He asks big sister Lucy, “Why are you always so anxious to criticize me?” Lucy, looking very self-righteous, replies, “I just think I have a knack for seeing other people’s faults.” Linus turns indignant. “What about your own faults?” he asks. “I have a knack for overlooking them,” says Lucy.

I think Lucy’s attitude is an endemic condition of the human heart. What do you think? Be honest now. It is so much easier to see the faults and sins of others, while virtually ignoring the enormous brokenness in ourselves. Human beings tend to judge themselves by their own noble intentions while judging others by their actions. We also have a natural tendency to learn to live with our “pet sins” while becoming extremely irritated and put off by the sins and weaknesses of others. Sin ravages our relationship with God, it devastates our relationships with each other, and it destroys a healthy sense of ourselves. The Bible is clear, “The wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23). No cryogenic freezing, DNA tinkering, or long-term health program is going to reverse what starts in our rebellious hearts. 

Now is the time to realize the sobering news that God will not overlook our sin. He’s holy; He cannot abide with sin. But He loves us and doesn’t wish for us to be ravaged eternally by our sin. Now is also the time to hear the great news that God, out of love, has done something about our sinful, human condition. The good news is in the second half of Romans 6:23 – “The wages of sin is death, but the gracious gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” 

The Gospel of Mark gets right to the point, doesn’t it? Of course Jesus had to be born, but Mark doesn’t spend time retelling the events of Jesus’ birth. Mark doesn’t even take time to talk about the early years of Jesus’ life. What matters most is the public ministry of Jesus. He has come to deal with the universal, eternal problem of the human race. He has come to deal with our sin and the judgment it deserves. He has come to save.

That’s why Jesus’ message in our reading today is as simple and multifaceted as, “The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news.” Can He be any more direct or straightforward?

So don’t be a “Lucy” who misses out on the good news of Jesus because you’re too busy telling yourself that you are just fine the way you are. On the other hand, don’t miss out on the good news thinking that you are too much of a lost cause for Jesus either. Jesus came for you, sins and all, to give you His gracious gifts of forgiveness, life, and salvation. The question isn’t whether you are too terrible a sinner for His grace. The question is, “Is His grace powerful and all-encompassing enough to include you?” The Bible’s answer is a resounding, “Yes!”

Sometimes we look in all the wrong places for healing from our brokenness. We look to self-help gurus, smooth talking politicians, and athletic or societal “heroes.” Ironically, even believers often tend to underestimate what Christ has done for us. I’m sure those first disciples had a hard time thinking that Jesus could do much of anything that would ultimately matter, especially the really big things. I know that they would see Him still the storm, feed the hungry, and heal those with diseases. I know that they would see glimpses of His greatness. But then they would also seem Him tired, hungry, and exhausted. They would ultimately see Him willfully hang on a cross and give up His life for us. Little did they know that the hands that were pierced with the nails of the cross were the “hands” that created and shaped the heavens and the earth; they would soon realize that the words of this Jesus of Nazareth were indeed the words of the One who created the heavens and the earth (see John 1:1-3, 14; Colossians 1:16-17).

This very day Jesus Himself calls you to “repent and believe the good news!” The word, “repent,” means “to turn around from the direction you are going.” That means turning away from living life on your terms or on those judgmental “Lucy” terms; it means to be honest with yourself and open your eyes to the Messiah named Jesus. Now is the time for a repentant faith which believes in HIS good news for you and places your very life into the hands of the One who came all the way from heaven to earth to be your Lord and Savior.  

 

PRAYER: Dear Lord Jesus, let Your simple invitation to repent and believe in Your good news move us to confident trust in You for our very lives, this day and every day! AMEN.

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One Flesh in Two Persons: Marriage