Devotions. What does that word mean to you? What immediately comes to your mind when you see the word devotions? Do you immediately feel calmed as you remember your time with the Lord this morning? Do you smile at the thought of talking and interacting with your God? Do you feel the unexplainable need to again go open God’s word and let the truth flow into you?
If any of you are like me a year ago, none of those thoughts flew through your mind. More than likely you envisioned a check sheet, where you can quickly mark that you got your devotions done and move on to the next thing on the list. For some of you, devotions are just an empty practice that you do every morning because that’s what Christians do, right? Or, you are one of those people who sit down, read their Bible, but get done feeling nothing, changing nothing, and gleaning nothing from the reading; and you wonder every morning why those thirty minutes are so dull and drab.
But, God never intended for us to have this outlook of frustration, hurry, and duty towards the Bible and spending daily time with Him. The Psalmist writes of his time with his God, “How sweet are thy words unto my taste! Yea, sweeter than honey to my mouth.”And “Thy word is very pure: therefore thy servant loveth it.”How many of us can say that we have this same mindset about God’s word?
For me, the problem that I encountered with my devotions was that I didn’t really want to do them, but I felt that if I wanted to be right with God, I had to read my bible, pray, and journal what I learned. That sounds good. And many times that is what goes through our brains.
But it’s horribly unbiblical.
Those thoughts spit in the face of the One who died for our sins.
By now, some of you are about ready to denounce me as a heretic. As a worldly Christian just trying to get out of doing what any other Christian has to.
But let’s go to Galatians chapter 2. Here in this chapter, Paul is telling the Galatians that there is no difference between the Jew and the Gentile when it comes to Christ’s saving grace. In verse 16, he says, “Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the lay, for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified.”
Look at that again. “… for by the WORKS… shall no flesh be justified.”
Hold that thought, we’ll be back. Moving to Galatians 3:2-3, we see the same thought put even more bluntly. “… Received ye the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? Are ye so foolish? Having begun in the Spirit, are ye now made perfect by the flesh?”
Can it get any clearer? The Christian Jews were trying to relegate the Christian Gentiles (anyone who wasn’t a Jew) to the Mosaic Law. But Paul asks if the Christian Jews were saved based on their good works- how they had kept the law? Of course not, because not one person is ever perfect, and no one can do anything to merit God’s forgiveness. They were saved by faith in Christ’s finished work on the cross, the same way that the Gentiles were saved. And here, Paul says that if we were made perfect (clean and holy before God) in salvation, the same is true in our day to day life. Faith. What we do is not the issue: it is our relationship with Christ that is predominate in God’s mind. And yes, there is a basis of right and wrong. But if we have that strong, vibrant closeness to God and His will, the Holy Spirit will show us the wrong in our lives.
That was the part for me that made it all click! I didn’t have to do ANYTHING to have a relationship with God. Nothing I could do would make me a better Christian in God’s eyes. (And, really, He should be all that matters!) God knows what goes on in the inner-most part of my soul; what would make me think that what I DO would affect how God sees me?
I am going to say something that many of you when you read this will just about put your fist through the computer screen. Just bear with me until the end.
You do not have to read your Bible to be right with God.
Hold back those fists, please!
You don’t have to do ANYTHING to be right with God. Nothing that you can do can even come close to the connection that you have to God right there in your soul-because you are saved and you have the Holy Spirit living inside of you. No one on the outside can ever correctly judge or condemn you for your relationship with God. Because God did not designate people to see the intimate relationship He has with you.
Now, I am not saying that there is not a right and wrong. I am not saying that there are not issues that have a definite line that when you cross them, you are in sin. What I am saying is that nothing you DO will add to how God sees you. And if you base your relationship with your Loving God on how you perform the Christian life, you are missing the point entirely.
Instead, I should be so deeply in Love with my Savior, Redeemer, and Friend, because that pleases God more than any amount of time I would spend dutifully reading my bible. Why not read your Bible because you can do nothing else to satisfy the ache and longing you have to know your God more? Why not have devotions because you are so enamored with your God that everything else seems to fall away, unimportant and meaningless compared to your intimate interaction with your Savior? Why not live the Christian life rather than doing the Christian life!