|
Life is full of questions.
Some are trivial, some more serious
- and some tremendously important. Even
as you read these words you may have questions about
your health, your financial situation, your
job, your family or
your future. But the greatest, the ultimate
questions, are about God and your relationship to
him.
Nothing in life is more important
than this.
Good health, financial stability, secure
employment, a
contented family and a hopeful future are all things
that people
want.
Yet even these are temporary and eventually
pointless unless you have a living relationship
with God, one
that is clear and certain - and will last for ever.
In the following pages you will discover why
such a relationship is so urgently needed - and how
it is possible.
The questions that follow are the most
serious and important
that anyone could ask.
The answers are those that everyone
needs.
Please read these pages thoroughly and
carefully - and if necessary
more than once.
You cannot afford to miss their message.
Is Anyone There?
This is the fundamental question.
If God does not exist,
searching for him is pointless. Anyone
who comes to him must
believe that he exists.1
While it is impossible to 'prove' God
in a mathematical sense, the evidence is very
convincing. Take the existence of the
universe.
To call it the result of an
'accident' raises many questions - and answers
none.
The
same is true of the 'Big Bang' theory.
Where, for instance, did
the raw materials come from?
Not even a 'big bang' can make
something out of nothing!
The evolutionary idea is wide-spread, but just
as weak; how can 'nothing' evolve into something',
let alone earth's amazingly complex life forms?
All other theories are equally fragile.
The only satisfactory explanation is this: In
the beginning God created the heavens
and the earth.2
Our world is not the random result of a
gigantic
fluke involving ingredients that were 'always
there'.
Instead, the
universe was formed at God's command, so that what
is
seen was not made out of what was visible.3
Creation had a
beginning, and it was God who brought it into being.
He spoke,
and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm.4
This is reinforced by the amazing order and
design seen
everywhere and by the universal laws which hold
everything
together, from the vastness of outer space to
microscopic
organisms.
But design demands a designer and laws a
law-giver - and God is both!
The God who made the world and
everything in it is the Lord of heaven and
earth.5
But the strongest 'creation evidence' is man
himself.
Unlike
other animals, man has something we call
'personality'; he
makes intelligent choices, has a conscience and can
distinguish between right and wrong.
He is capable of love and compassion.
Above all, he has an instinct to worship.
Where
did he get these qualities?
Neither evolution nor an avalanche of
accidents could have produced them.
The clearest answer is
this: The Lord God formed man from the dust of
the ground
and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life,
and man
became a living being.6
Man is not an accident; he is fearfully
and wonderfully made7 by the Creator
of the universe.
Is God Speaking?
The question is vital.
Left to ourselves we are totally ignorant
of God.
Can you fathom the mysteries of god?
Can you probe
the limits of the Almighty?8
God is beyond our understanding
and we need him to reveal himself to us.
Creation is one of the main ways in which he
does so.
The
heavens declare the glory of God; the skies
proclaim the work
of his hands.9
The sheer size of the universe and its amazing
balance, variety and beauty reveal a great deal
about the God
who made it.
In creation God shows his stupendous power,
awesome intelligence and brilliant imagination.
Since the
creation of the world God's invisible qualities -
his eternal
power and divine nature - have been clearly
seen, being understood
from what has been made, so that men are without
excuse.10
When we communicate with one another we rely
heavily on
words.
God also speaks to men through words - the
words of the
Bible.
Nearly 4,000 times in the Old Testament alone (500
times in the first five books) you will find
phrases like 'the
Lord spoke', 'the Lord commanded' and 'the Lord
said'.
This is
why it is claimed that Scripture never had its
origin in the
words of man, but men spoke from God as they were
carried
along by the Holy Spirit.11 In
no other literature can we find scores of clear and
detailed
prophecies made by men claiming to speak from God,
and later
fulfilled to the letter.
The odds against this happening by
chance are too vast to be taken seriously.
Then there is the Bible's impact on people's
lives.
No other book
has had such a life-changing power.
Millions of people,
over thousands of years, have proved by
personal experience
that the law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the
soul.
The
statutes of the Lord are trustworthy, making wise
the simple.
The precepts of the lord are right, giving joy
to the heart.
The
commands of the Lord are radiant, giving light
to the eyes.12
After 2,000 years no expert in any field has
ever disproved a
single statement in the Bible.
The reason is this: All Scripture
is God-breathed.13
We should therefore accept it not as the word
of men, but as it actually is, the word of God.14
What is God like?
This is obviously the next question to be faced.
To acknowledge that God exists is one thing,
and to acknowledge him in
the general sense that God speaks to us in
creation and through
the pages of the Bible is another.
But we need to know more.
What is God actually like?
The Bible gives us many clear and positive
answers to this
tremendously important question.
Here are some of them.
-
God is Personal.
God is not a 'thing', power, or influence.
He thinks, feels, desires and acts in ways
that show him to be a
living personal Being,. But he is not just 'the
man upstairs' or
some kind of 'superman'.
The Lord is the true God; he is the
living God, the eternal King.15
-
God is one.
There is only one true God.
He says, I am the first
and the last; apart from me there is no
God.16
Yet God has
revealed himself as a 'trinity' of three
Persons - the Father, the
Son (Jesus Christ) and the Holy Spirit,
each of whom is truly,
fully and equally God.
The Bible speaks of the glory of God the
Father;17 it says that the Word
(Jesus Christ) was God,18 and it
speaks of the Lord, who is the Spirit.19
While there is only one
God, there are three Persons in the
Godhead.
-
God is spirit.
He has no physical dimensions.
He does not
have a body, nor does he have any
characteristics that can
be defined in terms of size and shape.
God is spirit, and his
worshippers must worship in spirit and in
truth.20
This means that
God is invisible.
No one has ever seen God.21
It also means
that he is not confined to one place at a
time, but is everywhere
all the time: 'Do I not fill heaven and
earth?' declares the Lord.22
Quite apart from anything else, this means
that God is fully
aware of everything that happens everywhere.
This includes
not only everything you do and say, but
every thought that
passes through your mind.
-
God is eternal.
God has no beginning. In the Bible's
words,
from everlasting to everlasting you are God.23
There never was
a time when God did not exist and there
never will be a time
when he will not exist.
God describes himself as the one who is,
and who was, and who is to come.24
And he remains eternally the same: I the
Lord do not change.25
All that God ever was he
still is and always will be.
-
God is independent.
Every other living being is dependent
on people or things, and ultimately on God
- but God is totally
independent of his creation.
He can survive on his own.
He is not
served by human hands, as if he needed anything,
because
he himself gives all men life and breath and
everything else.26
-
God is holy.
He is majestic in holiness, awesome in
glory.27
There can be no comparison with the
holiness of God.
There is
no one holy like the Lord,28 who is
utterly without fault or
defect.
The Bible says of him, Your eyes are too
pure to look
on evil; you cannot tolerate wrong.29
And this holy God demands
holiness from every one of us.
His command to us
today is: Be holy, because I am holy.30
-
God is just. The Bible says that the Lord is
a God of justice and that righteousness31
and justice are the foundation of his
throne.32
God is not only our Creator and Sustainer;
he is also
our Judge, rewarding and punishing, in time and
eternity, with
a justice that is perfect and beyond any appeal
or dispute.
-
God is perfect.
His knowledge is perfect.
Nothing in all
creation is hidden from God's sight.
Everything is uncovered
and laid bare before the eyes of him to
whom we must give
account.33
God knows everything in the past, present
and
future, including all our thoughts, words and
deeds.
His
wisdom is perfect and utterly beyond our
understanding.
Oh,
the depth of the riches of the wisdom and
knowledge of God!
How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths
beyond
tracing out!34
-
God is sovereign. He is the sole and
supreme ruler of the
universe, and nothing whatever is outside of his
control. The
Lord does whatever pleases him, in the heavens
and on the
earth.35
With God there are no accidents or
surprises.
He writes
all the world's history and works out everything
in conformity
with the purpose of his will.36
God needs no advice or consent
for anything he chooses to do.
Nor can anyone prevent him
doing what he pleases: No one can hold back
his hand or say
to him: 'What have you done?'37
-
God is omnipotent.
He is all-powerful.
In his own words
I am the Lord, the God of all mankind.
Is anything too hard for
me?38 This does not mean that
God can do anything (he cannot
lie, or change, or make mistakes, or sin,
or deny himself) but
that he can do anything he wishes
consistent with his character.
These are just brief sketches of some of
the things God has
revealed in the Bible about his own nature
and character.
There
are other truths about God in the Bible though
there are many things about him we
cannot possibly understand.
He performs wonders that
cannot be fathomed, miracles that cannot be
counted.39
In that
sense, the Almighty is beyond our reach40
and no amount of
human intelligence or reasoning can change that.
This should
hardly surprise us.
If we could understand God he would be
unworthy of our worship.
Who am I?
The pressures and problems of modem living are
driving many people to a restless search for meaning
and purpose in life.
We have seen something of who God is; what
about us? Why do we exist?
Why are we here?
Does human life have any meaning or purpose?
The first thing to get clear is that man does not
merely 'exist'. He is more than an accidental
accumulation of atoms which all happen to fit
together into a convenient package we call 'a human
being'.
The Bible tells us that he was specifically
created by a wise and holy God. God created
man in his own image, in the image of God he created
him; male and female he created them.41
Man is more than a highly developed animal or
refined ape.
He is as different from other creatures as animals
are from vegetables and vegetables are from
minerals. In terms of size, man is minute
compared with the sun, moon and stars, but God has
given him a unique and honored place in the
universe. This is seen in one of God's first
commands to man: Rule over the fish of the sea and
the birds of the air and over every living creature
that moves on the ground.42
Man became God's personal representative on
earth, with authority over all other living
creatures.
But man was also given special dignity.
Being created 'in the image of God' does not
mean that he was made the same size or shape as God
(we have seen that God does not have 'size' or
'shape'), nor that man was a miniature of God,
possessing all his qualities in small quantities.
It means that man was created as a spiritual,
rational, moral and immortal being, with a nature
that was perfect.
In other words he was a true reflection of God's
holy character. What is more, man gladly and
constantly chose to obey all God's commands and as a
result lived in perfect harmony with him.
Man had no 'identity crisis' then!
He knew exactly who he was and why he was in
the world, and he obediently took his God-given
place. But not only was man totally fulfilled
and completely satisfied with his position in the
world.
God was satisfied with man!
We know this because the Bible tells us that
when his work of creation was complete, with man as
its crowning glory, God saw all that he had made,
and it was very good.43
At that point in history, perfect people lived
in a perfect environment in a perfect relationship
with each other and in perfect harmony with God.
That is hardly the situation today! What happened?
What went wrong?
The straightforward answer to the question is this:
sin entered the world through one man, and death
through sin.44 The first man and
woman (Adam and Eve) were given great freedom, but
also one serious warning: You must not eat from the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you
eat of it You will surely die.45
This was an ideal test of man's willingness to
obey what God said simply because God said it.
But the devil tempted Eve to disbelieve and
disobey God's words, and she did.
When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree
was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also
desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate
it. She
also gave some to her husband, who was with her, and
he ate it.46 At that moment 'sin
entered the world'.
By his deliberate disobedience man cut himself
off from God. Instead of loving God, Adam and
Eve were terrified of him: they hid from the Lord
God among the trees of the garden.47
Instead of being assured, confident and happy,
their sin had made them ashamed, guilty and afraid.
But God had said that man would die if he disobeyed,
and he did.
Death means separation, and in one terrible moment
man became separated from God; he died spiritually.
He also began to die physically, and now had a dead
soul and a dying body. But that was not all:
the children of Adam and Eve inherited their corrupt
nature and sinful character.
From then on, like pollution at the source of a
river, the poison of sin has flowed to all Adam's
descendants, and in this way death came to all men,
because all sinned.48 Notice that
important word 'all', which obviously includes the
writer and the reader of this page.
We may never meet on this earth, but we have
this in common - we are sinners and we are dying.
If we claim to be without sin we deceive
ourselves and the truth is not in us,49
and if we claim not to be dying we are being
ridiculous.
Fooling around with the facts does nothing to
change them. Many of today's newspaper,
television and radio headlines remind us of the fact
that the world is in a mess.
It is easy to condemn violence, injustice,
disorder and wrongdoing in society, but before
criticizing others ask yourself whether you are
perfect and living a life pleasing to a holy God.
Are you absolutely honest, pure, loving and
selfless?
God knows the answers to these questions - and so do
you!
All have sinned and fall short of the glory of
God.50
You are a sinner by birth, by nature, by
practice and by choice, and you urgently need to
face the facts and the consequences.
Is sin serious?
When disease is diagnosed, it
is Important to ask the question: 'Is it
serious?' It is even more important to ask
that question about the spiritual disease of sin.
Many people will almost cheerfully admit to
being sinners, because they have no idea what this
means. They treat it as being 'just human nature',
or they shelter behind the fact that 'everybody does
it'. But those statements dodge the real
issue: is sin serious?
Here are some of the things the Bible says about you
as a sinner.
-
You are debased.
This does not mean that you are as bad as
you can possibly be, nor that you are constantly
committing every sin. Nor does it mean that you
can not tell right from wrong, or do things that
are pleasant and helpful.
But it does mean that sin has invaded every
part of your nature and personality - your mind,
will, affections, conscience, disposition and
imagination.
The heart is deceitful above all things and
beyond cure.51 The root of your
trouble is not what you do but what you are! You
sin because you are a sinner.
-
You are defiled.
The Bible pulls no punches here: For
from within, out of men's hearts, cone evil
thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder,
adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy
slander, arrogance and folly.52
Notice that the list includes thoughts,
words and actions.
This shows that in God's sight sin is
equally serious. Some
people limit their idea of to things like
murder, adultery and robbery, but the Bible it
clear that we have no right to think of sin in
this way.
Sin is anything that fails to meet God's
perfect standards.
Anything we say, think or do that is less
than perfect is sin.
Now face up to this question: Who can say,
'I have kept my heart pure; I am clean and
without sin'?53 Can you? If
not, you are defiled.
-
You are defiant.
The Bible teaches that sin is lawlessness,54
deliberate rebellion against God's authority and
law.
No civil law forces you to lie, cheat, have
impure thoughts, or sin in any other way.
You choose to sin. You choose to break
God's holy law.
You deliberately disobey him and that is
serious, because God is a righteous judge who
expresses his wrath every day.55
God can never be 'soft' about sin, and you can
be sure that not even one sin will go
unpunished.
Some small part of God's punishment of sin
comes in this life (though we may not recognize
it).
But the final punishment will be inflicted after
death, when on the Day Of Judgment each one of
us will give an account of himself to God.56
Where do I go from here?
There are many ideas about what happens when we die.
Some say we are all annihilated, some that we
all go to heaven. Others believe in a place
where sinful souls are prepared for heaven.
But nothing in the Bible supports any of these
ideas. Instead, we read this: man is destined
to die once, and after that to face judgment.57
Those in a right relationship with God will
then be welcomed into heaven, to spend eternity in
his glorious presence.
All others will be punished with everlasting
destruction and shut out from the presence of the
Lord and from the majesty of his power.58
The Bible's most common word for this is
'hell'.
Here are four important truths about it:
-
Hell is factual. It is not something
'invented by the church'. The Bible says
more about hell than it does about heaven and
leaves no doubt about its reality.
It speaks of people being condemned to hell59
and thrown into hell.60,62
-
Hell is fearful.
It is described in the Bible as a place of
torment;61 a fiery furnace;63
a place of everlasting burning and un-quenchable
fire.64
It is a place of suffering, with weeping
and
gnashing of teeth65 and in which
there is no rest day or night.66 These
are terrible words, but they are true.
Those in hell are cut
off from all good, cursed by God and
banished from even the
smallest help or comfort that his presence
brings.
-
Hell is final. All the roads to hell are
one-way streets.
There
is no exit.
Between hell and heaven a great chasm has
been
fixed.67
The horror, loneliness and agony of hell
are not in order to purify but to punish - for
ever!
-
Hell is fair.
The Bible tells us that God will judge the
world
with justice,68 and he is perfectly
just in sending sinners to hell.
After all, he is giving them what they have
chosen.
They reject
God here; he rejects them there.
They choose to live ungodly
lives; he confirms their choice - for ever.
God can hardly be
accused of injustice or unfairness!
In the light of these terrible truths, you
need to think very
carefully about a question once put to a
group of people in the
New Testament: How will you escape being
condemned to
hell?69
Can religion help?
Man has been called a religious animal.
The Encyclopedia of
Religion and Ethics lists hundreds of ways in
which men have
tried to satisfy their religious longings and
feelings.
They have
worshipped the sun, moon and stars; earth, fire and
water;
idols of wood, stone and metal; fish, birds and
animals.
They
have worshipped countless gods and spirits
which have been
the products of their own perverted imagination.
Others have
attempted to worship the true God through a vast
variety of
sacrifices, ceremonies, sacraments and
services.
But 'religion', however sincere, can never solve
man's sin problem, for
at least three reasons.
-
Religion can never satisfy God.
Religion is man's
attempt to make himself right with God, but
any such attempt
is futile because even man's best efforts are
flawed and so are
unacceptable to God.
The Bible could not be clearer: all our
righteous acts are like filthy rags.70
God demands perfection;
religion fails to meet the demand.
-
Religion can never remove sin.
Your virtues can never
cancel out your vices.
Good deeds can never remove bad ones.
If a person gets right with God it is not
by works, so that no one
can boast.71
No religious efforts or experiences -
christening, confirmation,
baptism, holy communion, churchgoing,
prayers, gifts, sacrifices of time and
effort, Bible reading or
anything else - can cancel out a single
sin.
-
Religion can never change man's sinful nature.
A
person's behavior is not the problem, only the
symptom.
The
heart of man's problem is the problem of man's
heart, and by nature
man's heart is corrupt and depraved.
Going to church
and taking part in religious ceremonies may
make you feel
good, but they cannot make you good.
Who can bring what is pure
from the impure?
No one!72 Some of the
religious activities mentioned above are
obviously 'good' in themselves.
For example, it is right to go to church,
to read the Bible and to pray, because God tells
us to do
these things.
But you dare not rely on them to make you
right with God.
Not only are they powerless to do so;
trusting
in them actually adds to your sin and to your
condemnation.
Is there an answer?
Yes there is! - and God has provided it. The central
message of
the Bible is summed up in these words: For God so
loved
the world that he gave his one and only Son,
that whoever believes in him shall not perish but
have eternal life.73
We saw earlier that a just and holy God must
punish sin.
But
the Bible also tells us that God is love.74
While God hates sin he loves
sinners and longs to forgive them.
But how can a sinner
be justly pardoned when God's law demands his
spiritual and
physical death?
Only God could solve that problem, and he did
so in the person of Jesus Christ.
The Father has sent his Son to
be the Savior of the world.75
God the Son became a man by taking upon himself
human nature.
Although Jesus became fully man, he remained
fully God:
the Bible says that in Christ all the fullness of
the Deity
lives in bodily form.76
He remained as completely God as if he
had not become man; he became as completely man
as if he were
not God.
Jesus Christ is therefore unique and the Bible
confirms this in many ways.
His conception was unique; he
had no human father but was conceived in a
virgin's womb by the miraculous power of the Holy
Spirit. His words were
unique: people were amazed at his teaching,
because his message
had authority.77
His miracles were unique: he went
about healing every sickness and disease among
the people,78
and on several occasions even raised the dead.
His character
was unique: he was tempted in every way just as we
are - yet was
without sin79 so that God the Father
could say of him, 'This
is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.'80
Notice that last sentence!
This means that as a man Jesus kept
the law of God in every part and therefore was
not subject to sin's
double death penalty.
Yet he was arrested on a trumped-
up charge, sentenced on false evidence, and
eventually crucified at Jerusalem.
But his death was not a 'freak' or an
unavoidable accident.
It was all part of God's set purpose and
foreknowledge.81
The Father sent the Son for the very purpose
of paying sin's death penalty, and Jesus
willingly came.
In his own
words, the purpose of his coming into the world was
to
give his life as a ransom for many.82
His death, like his life, was
unique.
This makes it vital that you understand what
happened when
Jesus died, and what his death can mean to
you.
Why the cross?
All the Bible's teaching points to the death of
Jesus.
Neither
his perfect life nor his marvelous teaching nor his
powerful
miracles are the focus of the Bible's message.
These are all important, but above all else
Jesus came into the world to die.
What makes his death so important?
The answer is that he died
as a Substitute, a Sin-bearer and a Savior.
-
Jesus the Substitute.
This demonstrates the love of God.
Sinners are guilty, lost and helpless in
the face of God's holy
law, which demands punishment for every
sin.
How can they
possibly escape God's righteous wrath?
The Bible's answer is
this: God demonstrates his own love for us
in this: While we
were still sinners, Christ died for us.83
As part of an amazing
rescue plan God the Son volunteered to take
the place of sinners
and bear the just penalty for their sin.
The sinless Son
of God willingly suffered and died for
them, the righteous for
the unrighteous.84
-
Jesus the Sin-bearer.
This demonstrates the holiness of
God. There was nothing 'faked' about
Christ's death. The
penalty for the sins of others was paid in
full by the death of God's
sinless Son.
As he hung on the cross he cried out, 'My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?'85
At that terrible
moment God the Father turned his back on his
beloved Son,
who then endured the penalty of separation
from God.
Notice
how this shows God's perfect holiness.
All sin, every sin, must be
punished - and when Jesus took the place of
sinners he
became as accountable for their sins as if he
had been responsible for them.
The one man who lived a perfect life
suffered
the double death penalty of the guilty.
-
Jesus the Savior.
This demonstrates the power of God.
Three days after his death, Christ was
declared with power to
be the Son of God by his resurrection from
the dead.86
He gave
many convincing proofs that he was alive87
and he cannot die again;
death no longer has mastery over him.88
In raising Christ
from the dead, God powerfully demonstrated
that he accepted
his death in the place of sinners as the full
and perfect payment
of sin's penalty and as the basis on which he
can offer a full and
free pardon to those who would otherwise be
doomed to spend eternity
in hell.
But how does all this apply to you?
How can you get right with
God?
How can Christ become your Savior?
How can I
be saved?
Having read this far, do you genuinely want to be
saved?
Do you
want to get right with God - whatever the cost or
consequences?
If not, you have not grasped the importance of the
pages you have read.
You should therefore read them again,
slowly and carefully, asking God to show you
the truth.
If God has shown you your need, and you do want to
be saved, then
you must turn to God in repentance and have faith in
our Lord
Jesus.89
-
You must repent.
This means a complete change regarding
sin.
There must be a change of mind.
You must admit that you
are a sinner, a rebel against a holy and
loving God.
There must
be a change of heart - genuine sorrow and shame
at the vileness and
filthiness of your sin.
Then you must be willing to forsake
it and change the direction of your life.
God challenges people
to prove their repentance by their deeds.90
You must do this.
God will not forgive any sin you are not
willing to forsake.
To
repent is to go in a new direction, seeking
wholeheartedly to
live in a way that pleases God.
-
You must have faith in Christ.
First of all, this means
accepting that Jesus is the Christ, the Son
of the living God91 and
that Christ died for the ungodly.92
Secondly, it means believing
that in his power and love Christ is able
and willing to save you.
Thirdly, it means actually putting your
trust in Christ, relying
upon him and him alone to make you right
with God.
Your
proud, sinful nature will fight against
abandoning trust in your
own 'goodness' or religion.
Yet you have no alternative.
You must
stop trusting in anything else and trust only in
Christ, who
is able to save completely those who come to God
through
him.93
If God has shown you your need, and given
you this desire,
then turn to Christ - and do it now!
Ideally, pray aloud to him; this
may help you to be clear about what you are
doing.
Confess that you are a guilty, lost and
helpless sinner, and with
all your heart ask Christ to save you, and
to take his rightful place
as the Lord of your life, enabling you to turn
from sin and
to live for him.
The Bible says that if you confess with
your mouth, 'Jesus is Lord'
and believe in your heart that God raised him
from the
dead, you will be saved94 and that
everyone who calls on the
name of the Lord will be saved.95
If you truly trust Christ as your
Savior and acknowledge him as your Lord,
you can claim
these promises as your own.
-
Which way now?
If you are now trusting in Christ there are
many
wonderful
things in which you can rejoice.
For instance, you are now in
a right relationship with God: the Bible
calls this being 'justified' and says that since
we have been justified through faith,
we have peace with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ.96
Through Christ, your sins have been dealt
with: everyone who
believes in him receives forgiveness of
sins through his name.97
You are now a member of God's family: all
who trust in Christ
are given the right to become children of
God.98
You are
eternally secure: there is now no condemnation
for those who
are in Christ Jesus.99
God himself has come into your life in the
person of the Holy Spirit: the Spirit of
him who raised Jesus
from the dead is living in you.100
What great truths these are!
Now you need to grow in your new spiritual
life.
Here are four
important things to which you will need to give
close attention:
Prayer
You are now able to speak to God as your Father,
something you have never been able to do
before.
You can worship
him, praising him for his glory, power, holiness and
love.
You can ask for daily forgiveness.
Not even those who
become children of God are perfect, but if we
confess our sins,
he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins
and purify us
from all unrighteousness.101
You can thank him every day for his
goodness to you.
There are so many things for which you will
want to thank him, including the everyday
benefits of life that
we can so easily take for granted.
But you will specially want
to thank him for saving you, for accepting you
into his family,
and for giving you eternal life.
You should never find it difficult
to do this!
You can also ask for his help, strength and
guidance in your own life and in the lives of
others.
In
particular, you will want to pray for other
people you know
who are away from God as you once were.
Bible reading
In prayer, you speak to God; in the Bible,
God speaks to you.
It is therefore very important that you read
it every day, to find out what pleases the
Lord.102
As you do this,
ask him to enable you to understand its meaning
and to obey
its teaching, so that by it you may grow up in your
salvation.103
If you need help in beginning to study the
Bible, just contact Grace Church of DuPage.
Fellowship
Now that you have become a member of God's
family, he wants you to meet regularly with
your brothers and
sisters!
Let us not give up meeting together... let us,
encourage one
another.104
This means joining a local church, so make sure
that you do this as soon as possible.
Choosing the right church
is not always easy, and you will want to find
one which clearly
believes and teaches the biblical truths you have
been reading
in these pages.
In your local church you will find out more
about God; you will benefit from the experience
of others; you
will learn the importance of God's special
directions about baptism
and holy communion; and you will discover the joy of
sharing with others the gifts and abilities God
has given you.
You need the church, and the church needs you!
Service
It will now be your privilege to serve the Lord your
God with all your heart and with all your soul.105
Always
remember that God has saved us and called us to a
holy life.106
Make holiness an absolute priority; it is God's
will that you
should be holy.107
Then, seek to use your particular gifts in
God's service;
bear in mind that you were created in Christ Jesus
to
do good works.108
Finally, be alert for opportunities of telling
others how much the Lord has done for you.109
Telling others about
Christ is not only the duty of those who trust him,
it is an
exhilarating experience!
From now on seek to live in such a way that in
every part of your
life you declare the praises of him who called you
out of
darkness into his wonderful light!110
|