Thursday, September 06, 2007

YOU ARE PARDONED!

Imagine a pair of whimsical scenarios. In the first, you find in your mailbox a letter bearing the Colorado state seal and the Governor’s return address. Tempted to pitch it with the rest of the junk mail, your curiosity gets the best of you, so you open it and read these words: “By the power vested in me by the State of Colorado, I, Governor Bill Ritter, do hereby exonerate and absolve you from your crimes against the state, which crimes rightly resulted in your just and proper punishment, and from which you are now permanently released.”

What a surprise! You’ve never been tried for “crimes against the state,” never been convicted, never even been arrested. The letter must be a huge mistake, or else somebody has pulled a colossal practical joke on you. You decide to show the letter to some friends, knowing they’ll get a big laugh out of it. “You,” somebody will say, “pardoned?! Shoot, I didn’t even know you were condemned.”

The second scenario is different. An inmate awaiting execution on Colorado’s death row receives a letter bearing the same seal and return address, containing the same message: “By the power vested in me by the State of Colorado, I, Governor Bill Ritter, do hereby exonerate and absolve you from your crimes against the state, which crimes rightly resulted in your just and proper punishment, and from which you are now permanently released.”

While this man’s surprise is as great as yours, his response is quite different. He jumps and shouts. His wildest dreams have been realized. His life is saved, his future is restored, and his freedom is granted; and all because he received an unearned pardon. Had he done anything to deserve it, or even to merit any notice from the Governor? Of course not. It’s a gift, plain and simple.

The first scenario shows how people react to the Gospel when they don’t know that their sins have placed them under the righteous wrath of a holy God: “God is willing to forgive me? So what. I don’t need forgiveness. I’m really not all that bad.” But when folks realize how desperately in danger of eternal condemnation they are, then the offer of an unconditional pardon from the Judge of the universe is good news indeed. It is something no sane person would refuse.

That’s why any presentation of the Good News must also include the bad news: pardon makes sense only to those who acknowledge their condemnation. As C. H. Spurgeon put it, “Sin deserved God's wrath; that wrath has spent itself on Christ.” The pardon is not without cause, nor is it an impulse of heaven’s whimsy. Forgiveness is offered to you because God, in His mercy, depleted His wrath on His only-begotten Son.

Christians then, may say, with all the redeemed, “Forgiven? Really? But, I deserved to be in hell forever! Oh, thank You, God! Thank You for pardoning me!”

Can you say that?

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