Thursday, July 6

We've Got it Good

I read the following on James MacDonald's website this morning. I thought it was a great reminder. It meshes well with my last post on perspective and being thankful to our God. What would your life have been like if you had lived one hundred years ago? The average life expectancy was about 47 years, so that would settle it for some of us almost immediately. Six people out of one hundred graduated from high school. Only 14 percent of homes had a bathtub. If your family had a telephone, you would have ranked in the top 8 percent of the country. (Too bad a 3-minute long-distance call to your uncle in Denver cost almost a month’s income.) There were only 8,000 cars in the U.S. to drive on 144 miles of paved roads at a maximum of 10 mph. Ninety-five percent of all births happened at home, and 90 percent of all physicians had no formal training.

Sometimes we have to look back to realize how good we have it.

Hebrews 9 was written to help us do that. It describes in detail the precise regulations that the Old Testament saints were required to follow to approach God. Even then, it was a system of barriers: two lamb sacrifices every day, sin offerings, grain offerings, scapegoats, Sabbath rules, temple taxes, mandated tithes, what you could eat, how you could prepare it. 793 times the law said, do this, don’t do this, do that, don’t do that.

That was the way it was without Christ. The path to God was regulated, remote, restricted, religious, ritualistic; all of it saying, Step back from God—He’s holy and you’re not.

But verses 11-12 tell us when all that changed. “But Christ being come an high priest of good things to come, by a greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands, that is to say, not of this building; Neither by the blood of goats and calves, but by his own blood he entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us.”


In the old system, God was a long way away, and it was impossible to approach Him with any confidence whatsoever. To chance it meant risking your life. But all that changed when Jesus stepped into the gap. “But when Christ appeared as a high priest of the good things that have come…” Jesus became the hinge between sinful humanity and a God who is so holy that He dwells in unapproachable light and indescribable glory. First Timothy 2:5 calls Jesus the “Mediator between God and men.”

How did He do it? Hebrews 9:26 says it amazingly simple: “[Jesus] put away sin by the sacrifice of himself.” Jesus, the sinless, holy Son of God, became the last sacrifice necessary for the forgiveness of your sin. Through Christ, the barriers were lifted, the gate was flung wide open and a permanent sign was posted, “Come on in.”

If you’ve ever wondered how God would receive you if you knocked on His door, here’s your answer: No sin is too big, no time or distance away from God is too great that He will not receive you with open arms. The old system is gone; 793 barriers to God became a new and living way: Jesus Christ (10:19). Come boldly to His throne of grace (4:16).No question about it—we have it good, real good.

2 comments:

jw said...

amen!

This is the good life, I lost everything, I could ever want and ever dream of. This is the good life, I've found everything here in your arms.
(some old Audio A)

Radical One said...

sometimes, it really is so much more than my mind can comprehend...how He loves me so much, how He was willing to send His only Son to stand in the gap, for me.

thanks for helping us think!

blessings!
lisa