Today’s Bible Reading: 1Timothy 1:12-17
“This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that
Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.”(V 15)
Words of Devotion
That sounds simple to us,
yet it is very profound. All of us were mixed up, confused, bewildered,
darkened in our understanding, and alienated from the life of God. Read Paul's
descriptions in Ephesians about what we were like before we came to Christ.
Everybody--those with brilliant minds, highly educated people--everybody is in
the same boat. Christ Jesus came to take away the darkness, unveil the
mysteries, remove the illusions, reveal reality, and awaken love, compassion,
mercy, and ministry to others. This is the purpose of Christianity.
Then Paul says the most
astonishing thing of all in this passage: Christ Jesus came into the world to save
sinners; of whom I am chief. If he had said, I was the chief; we
would all understand that, because certainly he was in the forefront of the
ranks. But now, looking back as he comes near to the end of his life, he says, I
am the chief of sinners.
That causes many people a
lot of trouble. They read those words and say, has he forgotten the words
he wrote in Galatians 2:20, 'I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer
live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in
the Son of God'? Has he forgotten what he said in 2 Corinthians 5:17: 'If
anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has
come!'? Surely he can't forget that he has been redeemed; he has been made
righteous. He cannot call himself the chief of sinners. But he does.
Some say that this is a
kind of humble exaggeration, like we sometimes say; I'm not all that good,
really. I do not think it is false humility. Paul means every word of
this. He has not forgotten what he has written. What he is thinking of is not
what he is in Christ (because in Him he was made righteous and delivered, the
power of sin was broken), but he is thinking about himself as a total man
living in a world of evil; he is thinking of himself as we have to think of
ourselves, made whole in Christ and yet with the flesh still active in our
lives. We still struggle against it. It is no longer us but an alien invader
still able to exercise its deceiving power over us.
There is hidden here a
very important principle that all of us will have to learn sometime or other.
Whatever the flesh once manifested itself to be in our lives--some extreme form
of evil, whatever we have done that is now, in our own sight, bad, ugly, and
something we are ashamed of--we have to remember that that is an area of
weakness that needs to be guarded very carefully, because we can return to that
in an instant, no matter how long we have been Christians. That is what Paul is
talking about.
Today: We
must realize that the enemy is out to destroy us and he is in us! The wonder is
that Christ died for His enemies. Confession makes us eligible for His
redeeming grace and forgiveness.
Prayer: Father, once I was blind; I could not see
myself for what I was. Yet I thank you that you came and invaded my life and
began to take away the veil and to help me to see what I was like. Amen
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