Jesus Crushes Sin
By Ryan Peter
()
About this ebook
Are you struggling to live a holy life? Do you feel as if the goal posts keep shifting? Is there some sort of sin in your life that just won't go away? Are you tired of trying harder and harder and never succeeding? And does the "good news" seem to not be so good anymore?
If you're answering "yes" to these questions then this book is for you. Instead of offering an idealistic take on holiness full of another set of formulas that will only lead to despair, Ryan Peter delves into the scriptures and Christian theology and looks to uncover the good news once again: that Jesus will save you from sin, today, bringing you into his powerful and extravagant Rest.
Are you ready to rest? Then dive in.
Ryan Peter
Ryan Peter is a writer, journalist and ghostwriter from Johannesburg, South Africa. He writes fantasy, sci-fi, inspirational fiction, and on faith and theology. He is the author of "When Twins War", a fantasy epic; "Your Single Happiness", about how to find joy in your singleness; "The Butcher's Shadow", an upcoming ghost story thriller; "Jesus Crushes Sin", about a down-to-earth view of holiness; and an upcoming sequel to Robert Louis Stevenson's classic, Treasure Island. Ryan is also part of the New Covenant Ministries International (NCMI) translocal team.
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Jesus Crushes Sin - Ryan Peter
CHAPTER ONE:
Holiness is hard
Too many Christians find the idea of holiness frustrating and confusing and out of reach. While there are too many Christians who don't care about living a holy life at all, there are many others who do care very much indeed but find there are sins in their lives that just won’t go away. They live in perpetual spiritual despair or, at best, a couple of highs mixed with lows. Perhaps you’re one of those people. I know what it’s like. I lived in that place for too long in my Christian life.
But God promises freedom. It’s my belief that, unfortunately, today there is a real lack of a deep and down-to-earth, Jesus-centred holiness. Too much of what we see in the mainstream is motivational speaking, out-of-reach idealism, or (on the other side) a very negative view of how sin will plague us throughout life.
The sheer amount of prominent Christian leaders that fall in some moral way on a yearly basis should astound us. It astounds me, and not because I’m above them in any way, but because I realise that if they can fall, with all their strengths and abilities and gifts and personality, I’m really in trouble! If it was easy for them, it’s even easier for me!
So surely we must all be missing something. I know that it’s true to say that leaders that fall were perhaps focused on secondary issues, didn’t have good examples in their lives, overworked themselves, fell prey to the celebrity culture, were caught in an unhelpful church structure, and so on. These all need to be addressed. But I still think many of those things are symptoms of a deeper problem - that we’re missing some aspect of the Gospel that makes it lack a bit in power. We’re too quick to tick boxes and say all the right things without really looking at contemporary theology and asking: is this helping? Or is our teaching, perhaps, actually aggravating the problem?
For too many of us, holiness seems unreachable. It's like the goal post keeps shifting. We're just never good enough and never strong enough. Our modern epidemic of pornography, which too many Christians struggle with, is one clue into the general poverty of power we’re all experiencing. I’ll venture to guess that many people who read this book are struggling with that issue exactly. I’m no stranger to it. For too many, all our efforts to deal with lust and anger and covetousness and selfish ambitions and longing for material things, or anything else you can think of, lead only to a brick wall. The books and seminars and techniques and hyped-up preachers and motivational talks and great music really don’t mean much when temptation strikes.
On one hand we’re told that sin has consequences and so we must stop sinning at all cost (but we find we can’t), while on the other we’re told that we’ll always be sinners and will always probably fail. Is there any use, then, in trying?
But where’s the good news in that? Is this how God intended the Christian life to be? I mean: is this it?
I've lived in anguish and discouragement over this subject for most of my adult life. Try harder or let go and let God seem to produce no lasting fruit. The very popular post-modern answer of, Well, you were just born this way, so live this way,
is cruel and nihilistic (and we never seem to think that way about other disabilities) and is a cop-out. Secular humanism’s influence today, even in the church, has made us all think we’re nothing but slaves to our chemistry. If we can’t stop doing something, we think, then it must mean that we were made that way. We wrap our identity up in it. This is actually not humanism, it’s more like uselessism
!
Modern ‘hyper-grace’ ideas, where we’re told that God isn’t really interested in our sin anymore (and we’re told that belief in this as the ‘Gospel’ will actually lead us to sin less) doesn’t seem to produce the fruit we’re looking for either. Again and again those old sins, those wicked habits, those lusts, those egotistical ambitions, those old desires, flare up – like a squatter you thought was gone but found out was living in a different room all this time! How did they get in? Where did they come from? Why won't they just leave? You can never quite figure out what happened.
And let's never forget that, on the other side, there's also the same old legalism and religiosity that's been around since the fall of man. Holiness has, sadly, too often been wrapped up in legalism. We are often told that we have what it takes and we must just stop it: Pull ourselves together. But experience often fails this view. Maybe someone else ‘has what it takes’ but I know I’m not that kind of person!
Plus there are the sciences and philosophies and psychology - and pop versions of these, from positive thinking to positive confession to reliving birth experiences to managing your diet properly. Professions have their place, to be sure, and wisdom is a good thing, but many of us are running from the one thing to the next in a desperate attempt to find that silver bullet. We try again and again, hoping that maybe this next thing or this next idea or theory is what we need to get rid of our sin once-for-all.
The problem with all our solutions is there comes a time when we fail to do them or we doubt them. And then we know the all-too familiar voice: You're just not good enough.
I reached a place in my life when I realised, however, that it's true that I'm not good enough but it’s more true that it's these things that just aren't good enough. They’re not good enough to really sort out my sin issues. None of these or even spiritual disciplines seem to be able to really root out sin in our lives.
So we have to re-align our trust. We have to rely on what is good enough.
Many say that we’re going to live with our sin and sinful desires side by side with our new life and desires in Christ until the day we die. God's spirit and your sinful flesh will always be fighting inside you until you pass on to freedom in the next life. Your job is to ‘feed the Spirit’ and ‘starve the flesh’. You are always going to feel as if you're two people until the day you die. Here’s a typical scripture to support this view:
For the desires of the flesh are against the Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh, for these are opposed to each other, to keep you from doing the things you want to do.
(Galatians 5:17.)
But does this scripture really support this kind of internal dualism? Or is it, perhaps, taken out of context? This scripture may mean something very different than what you've been brought up to believe. I hope to uncover that in this book.
Theology is not everything – any theology that draws us to itself as the source of our joy and peace instead of Jesus is not a real theology at all. And theology isn't formed in a classroom as much as it's formed in our own walk with God. As my friend Shaun Mackay says, everyone does theology, some just do it better than others! I don't put experience above the Bible, but the Bible tells us that we live in Jesus and on Jesus, the living Word; the Holy Spirit lives in us and guides us into all truth. These all have to do with walking through the experience of life with the Spirit. Theology is not done in a vacuum. If our theology and experience aren’t matching, something must be wrong. If we’re serious about the subject and believe that good theology leads to joyful, fruitful, God-glorifying living - in experiencing - as I do, then we actively wrestle with God over issues and challenge our theology. And there really seems to be no greater issue than this, in my opinion. So much revolves around it. We want to know what holiness looks like and we want to know if we can live in it. We want to know if Christianity really works. We want to experience a Christianity that does.
When we were born again most of us certainly did experience something, sooner or later – peace, joy, a new love bursting out of us, new desires, and even the ability to say no to the old desires. But as time goes by things seem to get harder – the little birds come and steal away some of the seed that was planted; the cares and worries of life strangle a little bit of what's grown up. As John Wesley once put it:
‘How naturally do those who experience such a change imagine that all sin is gone; that it is utterly rooted out of their heart, and has no more any place therein! How easily do they draw that inference, I feel no sin; therefore, I have none: it does not stir; therefore it does not exist: it has no motion; therefore, it has no being!
‘But it is seldom long before they are undeceived, finding sin was only suspended, not destroyed. Temptations return, and sin revives; showing it was but stunned before, not dead. They now feel two principles in themselves, plainly contrary to each other; the flesh lusting against the Spirit
; nature opposing the grace of God. They cannot deny, that although they still feel power to believe in Christ, and to love God; and although His Spirit
still witnesses with their spirits, that they are children of God
; yet they feel in themselves sometimes pride or self-will, sometimes anger or unbelief. They find one or more of these frequently stirring in their heart, though not conquering; yea, perhaps, thrusting sore at them that they may fall
; but the Lord is their help.’ ¹
What we need is a down-to-earth, powerful, Jesus-centred holiness. We need a theology that makes sense and deals with things as they are, without leaving them as they are. It takes a long time to unlearn the rubbish we may have encountered in our walk. This book is, in many ways, a summary of my unlearning and relearning this difficult subject. I’m still learning, of course, and I’m not some sort of expert (who is?). My Christian life has been littered with persistent sin and my own faith in Jesus has often gone through heavy trials and dark nights
as a result. Perhaps this is how it's meant to be, but yet when I turn to the scriptures it seems clear that it’s not. From Jesus’s teachings to the apostles, and the Old Testament, there seems to be a clear promise that we must be able to cease from sin
and spend the rest of [our] time on earth concerned about the will of God and not human desires.
(1 Peter 4:1,2 NET.)
How I will approach the subject
In my quest to get to the bottom of this subject I’ve tried to look at the scriptures as objectively as I can, while looking for a running theme that runs across the lives of the best of our saints and the whole of Christian theology, from Protestant (Arminian and Calvinist), Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox sources. There are certain characters in Church history who I believe have articulated this theme very well and, better yet, have actually lived it out. Obviously, I wasn’t able to read every single Church Father or modern theologian out there, and I obviously spent more time in the Bible than anything else, as prayerfully and as thoughtfully as I could. This book is the result of a lot of wrestling!
I don’t really want to bring anything new but rather bring out the treasures in Christian theology, and moreso the scriptures themselves, that I believe point to the truth of Christ and holiness. My approach to the subject is effectively to view it through four lenses:
1. JESUS: Christ is the real ‘secret’, as it were, to holiness. The Christian life is about being in Christ and Him being in us. It is a life of being obsessed with Jesus. Holiness is all about Christ and is impossible without him.
2. JUSTIFICATION: We always rely on Christ's work, never our own, and live in a continual process of living in God's saving grace.
3. INHERITANCE: God has an inheritance of fruitful holiness for us. There is a moment in our lives when we enter into this inheritance, which includes a completed holiness.
4. LOVE: Holiness is about God's mission purposes. It’s not about us being polished and put on a shelf.
I know that this book will not answer every question there is and that there are many books and opinions I simply do not know nor will ever have the time to get to know. Obviously my knowledge is limited and my choice of words may often be the wrong choice. But I’ve tried my best. If anything, the point of the book is to show that God really does change lives and really does deal with sin, and hopefully it will set you on a journey to explore that. My prayer is that this book will encourage you to look to Jesus and Jesus alone. If it does then it has served its purpose.
CHAPTER TWO: The Sanitised Life
Matthew 5
"Seeing the crowds, [Jesus] went up on the mountain, and when he sat down, his disciples came to him.
And he opened his mouth and taught them.
Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Are you poor in spirit? Struggling to live a holy life? Do you find that you just can't measure up?
This is the good news of Jesus – if you can't measure up, then you are blessed! If you are struggling, count yourself blessed! God has his eye on you. Not for judgement but to give you his blessing. You're on the right path!
It's those who have reached the point where they realise that they can't be holy without God who are poised to receive holiness from God as a free gift. It's those who are poor in spirit – who just can't do it anymore; who have given up on the path of progress and self-sufficiency and self-righteousness – who God is ready to bless, and bless abundantly.
The Kingdom of Heaven does not belong to the winners and the strong and those who can take life and sin by the horns
and wrestle it to the ground. The Kingdom of Heaven, rather, belongs to those who are poor in spirit. Those who are needy. Those who hunger and thirst
for righteousness, rather than those who believe they have, or can conjure up, righteousness for themselves.
It is from the basis of the God of grace and mercy who gave us the amazing gift of Jesus that we have to approach the subject of holiness. It’s not until you realise that you’re incapable of dealing with sin that you let Christ step in and deal with it. It’s not until you realise the depths of your own self-righteousness and your continual self-justification before God, yourself, and others, that the Spirit can do what He does: save you from sin.
Seeing sin differently
What does it mean to be saved from sin? Most of the time we tend to think of sin as bad things we do or think. If we can change these two things we believe we will then finally see progress in our spiritual life. But all of these terms are not always helpful and can lead us to the wrong conclusions. Sin is not primarily about morality. The Gospel is not primarily about morality. The path of moralism is often just a guise for the path of self-righteousness. Moralism comes in all forms - today’s prevailing secular liberal worldview, for example, is just a different kind of moralism. The good news of Jesus, however, is that we are not supposed to walk by morality but walk by His Spirit - the path of his healing, love, and order, encapsulated in Jesus. Progress
is not what the Christian life in the Spirit is about. Progressing in the spiritual life is a never-ending goal that is layered with our own self-righteousness, not God’s righteousness, who is Jesus - who we are to live in. It also seems to always make us look to the future instead of living in the now. But now is the day of salvation! How many of our relationships do we measure according to progress
?
Sin is firstly a state of being (or, rather, non-being, as sin is a corruption of our being that eventually leads to death). We are under sin
(Romans 3:9) before we come to faith in Christ, but after we come to faith the body of sin
no longer dominates us as our old man
is crucified with Christ (Romans 6:6) and now we are in Christ. Sin is how we are (before Christ) but not who we are (before or in Christ). Once we come to Christ we are no longer under sin and no longer slaves to it. Romans 5 - 8 is one long exposition of this fact, reiterating again and again that we are new creatures who are not under sin’s power. But many of us don’t experience that and the question is: why?
We’ll get to looking at that. For now, however, I am bringing this in to help make the point that Jesus has to be central in our approach to this subject. We are not under sin as Christians but are found in Christ. Sit and think about what ‘in Christ’ means, for a moment. That change in dynamic cannot be understated. We often want to move on too quickly on what ‘in Christ’ means, but our impatience results in misunderstanding the powerful dynamic at play here.
Jesus’ righteousness versus our own
The old man
of sin² is not the man who just performs obvious sins - things we would call immoral
. In fact the old man
is the man that seeks to become like God, just as Adam and Eve did. This is the way the scriptures begin to uncover what sin really is, at its core. The serpent did not tempt Adam and Eve with