Pastor Sam's Weekly Devotionals
Count Yourself
Verse for Meditation:
“Count yourselves dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus.” – Romans 6:11
In this second week of Lent, here is a devotion that calls on us to reflect on our mortality – not that we will die, but that we will miss out on life:
IN WORD Nowhere is there a clearer connection between wisdom—the renewed mind that God gives us in Christ—and our life in the Spirit than in this verse. Our encounter with life in Christ, according to Paul, stems from what we know to be true. The truth of our life is a matter of what Jesus did for us on the Cross and the third day; our experience of it is a matter of our mental grasp of this truth. We are to count ourselves dead but also alive. Other translations also make it an issue of our thought-life. We are to consider, to reckon, to count on the truth: We died with Jesus and we are raised with Him.
Many Christians miss out on experiencing the victorious, joy-filled life, not because they aren’t in fact crucified and raised in Jesus, but because they don’t know it. Perhaps it is only a theological belief or a matter of creed. Perhaps it is misunderstood as something to strive for rather than to accept. Perhaps it is seen as a future possibility rather than an established position. None of that is enough.
A Christian will really experience the joy and power and victory of the Christian life when he or she believes its foundation: We were crucified with Jesus, and now we are raised in His life. And it must be more than belief; we must know it, count on it, cling to it as a rock-solid event as certain as the day we graduated, got married, or signed a contract.
IN DEED Too many Christians are trying to make the Christian experience true for them. They have put the cart before the horse. Experience doesn’t lead to truth; truth leads to experience. Instead of praying for the resurrected life, accept it and live it. Instead of hoping you will die to sin, count on the fact that you already have. Our struggles are often only a product of how we see ourselves. If we see ourselves as sinners trying to be better Christians, that is how we’ll live. If we see ourselves as sinners who were buried with Christ and raised to new life, that too is how we’ll live. Romans 6:11 tells us what to see. Count on it, and watch your experience line up with truth. “You do not need to wait . . . before beginning to live eternally.” —James S. Stewart (in “Walking with God” by Chris Tiegreen)
The Christian life is indeed a paradox. We want the abundant life and expect God to bless us so that we can have it. But the pathway to the abundant life is through putting ourselves to death each day. Only when we are able to let go of ourselves can we experience the eternal life of God. We need to die either in spirit and/or in the flesh.
C.S. Lewis wrote, “If you live for the next world, you get this one in the deal. If you live for this one, you lose both.” Use this season of Lent to reflect on whether you are gaining or losing this world and the next. May the Lord’s Spirit help you to discern your spiritual condition and set you on the path to God’s eternal, abundant life, in this world and the next. Have a blessed week! - from Singapore, Pastor Sam