Tag Archives: Practice

Hard Work

My child,  you want something that only comes from hard work and much discipline. If you want to be good at something, you have to work at it. It will not just come naturally or fall in your lap. To master a craft it takes time, knowledge, discipline and practice. Too many people are taking the easy way. They want comfort over success, pleasure over hard work. Set your heart and mind on Me and I will lead you in the way you should go. Will it be easy? No, but it will be worth it. Do not grow weary in doing good My child, for in due time you will be rewarded. 

Free to Sin?

On the flip side of this freedom in Christ coin lays a very relevant question, which Paul specifically addresses in Romans 6:15: “What then? Shall we sin because we are not under law, but under grace?” This is a very real issue, because if I’m truly free from law it seems like I should be able to do anything I want. Paul’s critics in fact accused him of teaching this very thing. But of course that’s not at all what Paul was saying. As we discussed earlier, he repeatedly warns against sin, saying that those who make it a practice of their life will not inherit the kingdom of God. Free to sin? Obviously not!

Time and again Paul made this point abundantly clear: “Do we then nullify [law] through faith? May it never be! On the contrary, we establish [law].”(Romans 3:31) Of course we’re subject to obeying the law of God! But in what way then have we been freed from law? Are we merely responsible for keeping the moral aspects of law, while being freed from performing its rituals? How might one pick and choose what to obey and what to ignore? The Church has sought answers to these questions down through the centuries. But sadly, what they conclude often results in a whole new set of rules to conform to.

More law is obviously not the answer to being freed from law. But the question remains: how can we be subject to law and freed from law at the same time? Certainly a very difficult one to answer, don’t you think? Still, there is an answer—a very simple and straightforward one: in Christ we are dead to sin because we are dead to law. But until we actually understand what this means, it seems to raise more questions than it answers.

The Life I’ve Planned

My child, commit your works to Me and your plans will be established. Seek My plan for your life and I will bring it about. Be obedient and diligent to do what I have told you and I will bring about success. Make this the practice of your life and you will enjoy all your days. Faith and obedience. Love and joy. This is the life I have planned for you.

Proverbs 16:3

Sin: Pitfall vs. Practice

If our sin does not in fact separate us from God, why would the Bible encourage believers to strive for sinlessness? And why would it bother to give dire warnings to those who practice sin in their life? “But immorality or impurity or greed must not even be named among you…for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience.”(Ephesians 5:3-6). Make no mistake about it; Paul is addressing the Church here, not non-believers. And he makes it abundantly clear that no such person “has an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God.” Such warnings are repeated many times throughout the New Testament.

When the Bible speaks about sin as it concerns the Christian, it is actually talking about two broad categories of sin: that of walking in sin (the practice of sin as a lifestyle) and that of periodically falling into sinful behavior (what I’ll call a pitfall). So we need to understand that even though such biblical passages serve to caution us against stepping into the pitfall of sin, their primary purpose is to warn those who may be moving toward making sin the practice of their lives—those who time and again choose to live in sin.

We’d all be in big trouble if separation from God resulted merely from periodically falling into sin through the weakness of our flesh. Still, we must not discount sin, no matter how minor, as somehow being insignificant in God’s eyes, because the very nature of sin is that it has potential to grow and spread just as a cancer does in the body. All sin runs along a path that leads somewhere. And this, of course, brings up a very important question: when does sin as a pitfall develop into sin as a practice? Where is the dividing line between sin that merely displeases God and sin that drives His Spirit from us?

Excerpted from: Free from the Power of Sin: The Keys to Growing in God in Spite of Yourself