Mourning and Comfort
“We
look at life through the eyes of reason and say that if a person will control
his instincts, and educate himself, he can produce a life that will slowly
evolve into the life of God. But as we continue on through life, we find the
presence of something which we have not yet taken into account, namely, sin—
and it upsets all of our thinking and our plans. Sin has made the foundation of
our thinking unpredictable, uncontrollable, and irrational.
We
have to recognize that sin is a fact of life, not just a shortcoming. Sin is
blatant mutiny against God, and either sin or God must die in my life. The New
Testament brings us right down to this one issue— if sin rules in me, God’s
life in me will be killed; if God rules in me, sin in me will be killed. There is
nothing more fundamental than that.” (Oswald Chambers, My Utmost For His
Highest)
“Because
of Your name, Yahweh, let me live. In Your righteousness deliver me from
trouble, and in Your faithful love destroy my enemies.” (Psalm 143:11b-12a
HCSB)
“Those
who mourn are blessed, for they will be comforted.” (Matthew 5:4 HCSB)
I don’t necessarily agree with the wording that
Oswald Chambers uses in the quote above. God Himself doesn’t perish ultimately
but I understand the concept that he is putting forth: if we live in sin – we will die. Either God lives in us or
we must die. Christ wasn’t defeated by sin in His death on the cross – He was
crushed for our sin. There was an hour of darkness because He had to suffer the
full brunt of God’s judgment and taste death but this was so that death might
be swallowed up in life. There is no room for self-confidence in Christ. How
can I defeat my enemies? The psalmist cried out rightly when he said “In Your faithful love destroy (or
“silence”) my enemies.”
There will be a day when all of God’s enemies will
be cut off. Jesus has already overcome
this world and the enemies that keep us in opposition to God Himself – sin and
death. The Law – which is holy, righteous and good – is the avenue through which
sin seems to derive its strength over me. Another way to put that is that the
Law shows sin’s dominion over me. The more I try to do good, the more I see my
inability to be good. It reveals my
rebellion against God and my captivity to that fallen nature. God’s wrath seems
harsh until we see sin for what it is: “blatant mutiny against God.” Every bad
thing we attribute to God’s nature is really what is in us. We see Him through
the leans of fallen people. Part of the depravity of our condition is that our
mind cannot be subjected to Him; it automatically puts Him in the wrong and us
in the right. We put Him on trial and assume He must answer to our standards.
In this way, our minds are veiled by self-righteousness (meaning: “I am right
in my own way”) to our sin and to God’s beautiful glory in Christ. This veil
must be torn; the nice exterior must be broken down like a wall that is
concealing mold behind it. A.W. Tozer said this regarding Christ: "He came to save us from our own moral and spiritual disorders - but it must also be said He came to deliver us from our own remedies" (Tragedy in the Church: The Missing Gifts).
Sin is death and leads us to death’s ultimate
fulfillment: being separated from God forever. True life was never meant to be
temporary and yet we substitute temporary things for the life that we are meant
to intimately have in God. These things cam numb us to the effects of sin much
like a drug addict has yet to face the reality of their wrecked life. God has
to detox us at times, allow us to cease to feel the natural pleasures that can
be stimulated by sin, the Bible says that sin actually does have pleasure “for
a season.” Once that season has run its course we are left with its
affects: shame, guilt, fear, etc.
We must mourn over sin if we are to experience the
corresponding promise of finding comfort in God. This isn’t merely a contrived,
outward display of emotion (it will involve emotions). Many cry and display
strong emotion out of regret and self-pity but this blessed mourning is different.
The blessed state of mourning that Christ spoke of is a state of being in which
we begin to see things for what they truly are. It means we are starting to see
starting to see darkness for what it is and light for what it is. Eternity is
in the heart of every person and when we see the eternal darkness in us, it’s
actually the beginning of becoming enlightened. When we recognize that darkness
exists in us apart from God and light (all that is good) is in God alone then
we begin to understand how we can only approach God through Christ.
Christ’s death and punishment was ours and His death
was devastating. He knew no sin became sin for us. Sin is a devastating reality
for which there is no man-made remedy. Sin has positioned us to be God’s
enemies and the only answer to that dilemma is reconciliation on His terms. The
Gospel in a nutshell tells that we are wrong – wrong in who we are, sprung off
what from what God intended us to be. God is right – He is the standard of all
that is good. He doesn’t have a set of standards or some moral code that some
other higher authority set in place for Him to measure up to. He has no
advisors or counselors – He IS the standard. He IS good. He IS holy. He is also
love. All that He does He does to accomplish His purposes of holiness, love and
righteousness.
Before the foundations of the world God chose us in
Christ to be holy and blameless before Him in love, Ephesians tells us. This
eternal purpose has been upheld and has been accomplished in Christ. How? Jesus
had to overcome the obstacles that hindered these purposes. He had to be
innocent, completely sinless so that He could be a perfect sacrifice for the
human race. He had to become sin – taking the full expression of punishment as
though He were an enemy of God. He had to die – death would have had dominion
over us through sin. God showed that nothing has dominion over His
predetermined purposes, His love prevailed. In the devastating act of the
crucifixion Jesus seemed to be totally defeated. Payment was made for our sin
by God so that we could have life in Him again. We must come to terms with our
state of total defeat and know that Jesus took on that condition to remove it
by rising from the dead; He rose to publicly display the defeat of sin and
death. Not only that, but we have life presently in Him.
By “life” I don’t merely mean the most sensational
experiences of human existence. No, I mean having God Himself inside of us. The
eternal place once dominated by darkness now under the dominion of light. That
condition that caused such deep mourning and yearning now filled with life and
love. “Those who mourn are blessed, for they shall be comforted”. Jesus wasn’t
saying “you must start mourning if I am going to comfort you.” He was saying
that this kind of mourning is a blessed state of seeing life and death for what
they are. Death isn’t merely the cessation of our vitals and physical existence
– death is being separated from God, a position He never desired for mankind
but became a reality for us when man sinned and embraced darkness and rebellion
towards God. Life is being united with God, in Christ we are joined back to
Him. We are restored to the closest relationship that we were meant for; the
closest picture is that of a man and woman becoming one in marriage.
With the debt of our sin paid, we are free to love and serve and when we
fulfill this design we are walking in true liberty. The world has distorted the
beauty of servanthood with its notions of self-centeredness. You can’t love without service and you can’t
serve without love. God Himself is a Servant, the cross is His greatest act of
service towards mankind. How humble He is to have descended from unapproachable
light to human flesh! He took on our weaknesses and experienced the temptation
of sin. I would say that He experienced more temptation than any other person.
You don’t experience the battle of temptation until you really start trying to
resist it. Somehow the notion has infiltrated the church that someone has a
“good testimony” by having experienced great outward expressions of sin. There
is tendency to elevate such testimonies (great as they are) and hold up certain
people as “more relatable” to a non-Christian. This is probably a response to
some of the holiness movements that emphasized outward goodness, which
inevitably led to being judgmental. One extreme doesn’t answer another – Jesus
never sinned and yet no one can sympathize more with our weaknesses as sinners
better than Him. Those who experience blessed mourning and comfort in Christ
are those who understand how to relate to people regardless of what they’ve
done and extend grace to them.
We are also in the habit in the church at times of
wanting to cram theological truths into people and expect them to come a saving
knowledge of Jesus. These truths must be ours through personal identification
if they are to impact others. This takes time so that maturity can have its
perfect way in us. It means going through trials and learning how to overcome
by grace through faith in Christ. Paul said this in 2 Corinthians: “Blessed be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of
all comfort, who comforts us in all our afflictions so that we will be able to
comfort those who are in any affliction with the comfort with which we are
comforted by God. For just as the sufferings of Christ are ours in abundance,
so also our comfort is abundant through Christ” (2 Corinthians 2:3-5). What gives
substance to my existence and meaning to my experiences – whether they are
joyful or painful – is knowing Christ and being availed to His purposes. To
identify with His suffering and be comforted by the same grace that He relied
on and freely bestows to me, so that I might be sympathetic to the eternal
needs of others and be a purveyor of grace.
The church’s mission is that of reconciliation – to
demonstrate God’s reconciliation in Christ in action and word. True divine love
is also supernatural – it is God expressing Himself through His people so that
others come to know the love He has for them. May God help us in this by His
Spirit. Without the Holy Spirit it is impossible, He is just as much God as the
Father and the Son. How much do we need Him to be and do what God desires. Let
us not forget that God desires mercy over judgment. The world is already
condemned and Jesus came to save, He came so that God’s desire might be
accomplished for any who place their trust in Him. God did not make us like plants
that are just dependent but have no power to choose. We must choose dependence
on Him. We must choose to die to sin through faith in Christ’s death and
embrace life by faith in His resurrection. He is the One from whom are all
things and for whom are all things.
For the one considers themselves a Christian in this
culture, this means we must have to forsake the cultural notion that we can be
self-sufficient and be a Christian. He must be our source by choice if we are
to be powerful, loving witnesses of Him. We must know by experience and not
just theory that His love is better than the intoxicating wine of this world.
Death to self, service is the path to joyful intimacy – not seeking security
through comfort and the pursuit of things outside of God.
For the one who does not consider themselves a
Christian but sees any part of this as putting words to what you are
experiencing inside, go to Jesus yourself and ask Him to reveal Himself to you.
When I first heard some of this, someone told me to even just say “sign me up,
God, show me if this is true.” That was all the faith I had in that moment. You
may grieve more before you find the comfort found in Christ. Grief is a part of
dying to self if we would have Christ living in us. I had to actually pray that
I would feel what was right and wrong in my life at one point because I had
become so numb to everything. When I finally wept, I knew it was a good thing
and I have never experienced the comfort I did when I surrendered my life to
Christ. The One who diagnoses our festering wounds and peals back our man-made,
temporary Band-Aid solutions is the One who brings true healing and wholeness.
He is compassion. He is love. There is no greater love than Christ laying down
His life for us when we were His enemies. He is love and we cannot know love
for all that it is until His love has prevailed over our rebellion. His grace
opens our eyes to what the world and the devil would have us be blind to. But
the world and the devil cannot stop us from choosing. Whoever believes in Him
will not ultimately perish apart from Him. Whoever – there is no distinction or
qualifications that need to be met. He has mercy without distinction because He
has met all the qualifications.
Here is my prayer: God, open our eyes that we would
see. Let our hearts comprehend the love that You have for us so that we might
be purged of every form of rebellion against You inside of us that leads to
death. Sober us from the things in this world that distort our perceptions and numb
us to real pain and comfort. Awaken us to love and fill every need that we
have. Let us recognize the blessedness of godly sorrow that leads to genuine
intimacy and union with You. Let us be genuine and transparent with You. Help
us because You know our hearts better than we do and let us see how beautiful
Your heart is. Forgive us for accusing You, for accusing Your character and not
trusting You. Forgive us for blaming You for what is wrong in this world
instead of taking responsibility for our sin against You, confessing it and
receiving Your forgiveness and grace. You are love and You are eager to forgive
– help us, Your people, to love and to be eager to forgive. Forgive us for
judging and blaming other people instead of considering our own spiritual state
before You. Let us receive Your mercy and walk in it. Thank You for loving us
with an everlasting love and forgive us for accusing You of being evil when all
You did was what was needed for us to be saved. Forgive us for seeking
completion outside of You and embracing worldly, man-centered wisdom instead of
the wisdom in Christ. The Gospel is beautiful and powerful, let us return to it
and live in the power of it by Your Holy Spirit. Come and fill us and let us
love as You love and let divisions in the church be overcome by humility and
love – that can only be done with the help of Your Spirit. In that unity, the
unity that You prayed for, Jesus, may the Father command an unprecedented
blessing that will affect communities in every nation and let it result in
people before Your throne from every tribe, nation and tongue praising You for
unfailing love and mercy. In Jesus’ name I pray and thank You that You are able
to do above and beyond all that we can ask, think or imagine according to the
power that is at work in Your church. Amen and amen.
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