“For Thee” – My desire to be free from sin can’t be based on
anything but God’s holiness and the righteousness He gives me in Christ. It’s
not a self-improvement kick, to make me look better or even to be a better
witness for Him. It’s not about my pride in overcoming sin. Nor is it about the
flip side of pride, self-contempt for my failure to overcome sin. My only
motivation should be “for Thee,” out of love for the One who loves me
regardless of how good or bad I look.
“All” – Is it really my desire to give up all sins, or just the ones that are
evident or shameful? I may be able to hide certain sins from most people, but
not from God. Pride makes me want to keep up a good façade, but nothing is
hidden from God’s judgment. Is it His standard I follow, or the “average
Christian” standard? I know I won’t be sin-free in this lifetime, but that
should be my desire.
“The follies of sin” – Do I really believe that sin is
folly? From various dictionaries, folly means foolish, costly, unwise, stupidity,
evil, and wickedness. It is not just a mistake or error, but a foolish choice
to elect sin over obedience, wrong over right. I don’t want to make stupid
choices when I know what is right. But again, it should not be because I need
to be right, but because God is holy and right and good.
“I resign” – I can’t just take a vacation from sin, or
change positions within the company, but I need to quit. I don’t work for that
master anymore. I have a new Master in Christ, and I need to listen to Him.
Even when the old master promises benefits and rewards I think I want, I can’t
return to his employment.
The second verse begins, “I love Thee because Thou hast
first loved me, and purchased my pardon on Calvary’s tree…” On my own I can do
nothing. I would be bound to serve the enemy forever. But because of Christ’s
love I can love, I can overcome sin, and I can live in the freedom of Divine
pardon. I’m not just let out of prison, but I am pardoned from all guilt and my
record is wiped clean.
Sam Storms writes in Pleasures
Evermore, “The power that the pleasures of sin exert on the human soul will
ultimately be overcome only by the superior power of the pleasures of knowing
and being known, loving and being loved by God in Christ” (p. 20). And in The Singing God, “I can accept the fact
that God is love and that He delights in pouring out His affection on us. But
my heart yearns to feel the gentle and reassuring warmth of His love for me with all my faults and failures, with
all the secret sins no one else knows about but God, without my first changing
and becoming different… or better. I need to know that God loves me just the way I am now… today!” (p.
7).
I feel like I keep repeating the same themes in my blog
posts, but that’s because I have to keep being reminded of what God is trying
to teach me. And from what I’ve read and heard, I know I’m not the only one who
struggles to believe that the Christian life is not about what I do but about
being loved, accepted, chosen, and redeemed by the God of the universe.