Does God wait until...
Quoting
a great sinner (David), Paul in Romans 4:7-8 says, "Blessed are they
whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the
one against whom the Lord will not reckon sin." NRSV
He
uses a double negative in 4:8 to stress the non-occurrence. As if, "The
Lord simply will not do it!" Imagine someone asking a righteous man or
woman to do something that thoroughly lacks integrity, trying repeatedly
to get them to agree. Imagine the righteous person closing the matter
with a final, "I simply will not do it!" and you have the tone of Romans
4:8. "There’s little point in you trying to persuade me to do this.
There is no way that’ll happen."
What
do we have here? We have a sinner whose sin is recognised as precisely
that—sin! We have a Lord who simply will not hold that sin against this
sinner. No wonder David and Paul call such a person "blessed"!
But
not everyone is blessed in this way. A blessing of that magnitude
belongs to a certain class of persons. "Obviously—they’re God’s ‘pets’."
No, God has no "pets". God is a God of holy grace and life with him is a
gift of grace but the kind of life he gives cannot be other than a
relationship that takes its direction and shape from his own character.
Who are these blessed people? They are people who live in covenant with
God and have by faith embraced what "life" with God means. See http://www.jimmcguiggan.com/perplexed/lesson.asp?id=61
Within
that covenant life and union their sins are not held against them
(non-imputation, forgiveness and covering are all equivalent in Romans
4:7-8). This is a relationship of grace between two covenant partners
that are not equal. But the relationship doesn’t obliterate our
moral weakness or our capacity to sin. God knew and knows that—how could
he not know it? He called sinners to his side! It is sinners he makes his companions (see Luke 15:1-2 and elsewhere).
But
they aren’t sinners that actively despise him and rejoice in the scorn
they have for him. These are convicted, contrite and repentant sinners
that in his name seek to glorify God and bless his creation. But sinners just the same! To them, in holy grace God credits no sin.
But
surely they must be repentant. I’ve said so! But repentance is more
than a frame of mind we adopt at the moment when we have done something
wrong. It is a mindset that God in holy grace has drawn us into when we committed to him in covenant relationship. Repentance is an aspect of the relationship we entered!
Just like the purpose to honour and support our spouse or our friend
when we entered the relationship with them. The mindset permeates the
relationship. It isn’t an isolated act or thought or emotional response
that happens every so often.
It’s
impossible to have a true friendship with someone we think we can treat
as abominably as we wish anytime we wish. Such a mindset knows nothing
of friendship. Friendship has built into it an attitude and purpose
toward the other that leads to a certain kind of behaviour toward that
other. So it is with the friends and companions of God (compare James
4:4).
We
are not to think that a Christian commits a sin and her sin hangs over
her head until she goes through a specific mental and emotional act at
which moment God forgives her or decides not to record her sin against
her.
We
are not to think that the cross of Jesus Christ was to make it easier
for us to sin or to make evil appear less evil. Neither are we to live
with the spiritual jitters, ceaselessly wondering if, having committed
ourselves in faith to God, he is holding our sins over our head as an
ever-present threat.
There is no assurance of sins forgiven for those not covenanted with God; that’s what holy
grace means. But for those that are in a faith relationship with him,
sins are not credited against them because that’s what holy friendship means.