This post was written by Matt Meyer, CCM board member and director emeritus.
“Those who forsake the law praise the wicked, but those who keep the law plead against them” (Proverbs 28:4).
After a number of weeks of coming for counseling, a young Chinese woman recently* called on God to forgive her sins. For several weeks before that, she was sure that God was real and good and that she was a sinner, but she was having a hard time connecting her sin with the death of Christ on the cross. When she was asked to describe what she meant by “being a sinner,” it was clear that her focus was horizontal instead of vertical. She thought she was sinning against her husband, her family, and herself. When she finally understood that our sin (or lawlessness as John describes it) is first against God, the lights came on. “I’ve broken God’s laws,” she repeated numerous times as the realization finally hit home.
Do we have the same sense that we are breaking God’s laws when we avoid Bible passages that hit too close to home or perhaps are just a little too inconvenient?
This woman had a number of good questions that followed her prayer of confession. What church should I attend? Do I need to support the church now? How do I pray? How often should I pray? I’m such a little baby, and I need to learn so much.
As we worked through the Lord’s teaching on prayer, we also turned to 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18:
“Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, and in everything give thanks, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”
Instead of worrying about everything in the Bible, we suggested that she start by just practicing these three verses diligently.
“But this is impossible,” she responded.
We assured her that this was the point. If you really try to give thanks for everything, you will find yourself praying continually—either confessing your sin of thanklessness, or asking God to help you be thankful, or praising Him with thanks. Then, when you are thankful, rejoicing will surely follow.
Like this new believer, we need to be diligent that our joy is not burdened by active disobedience or unconfessed sin.
“Those who forsake the law praise the wicked, but those who keep the law plead against them” (Proverbs 28:4).
In the Living translation, the second half of this verse reads: “those who obey the law fight against evil.” Like much of the Bible, this verse is much more understandable and applicable than we would at first think.
Isn’t it enough to have just read or even memorized the passage? No. James commands us to “become doers of the Word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves.”
Matt Meyer
*Written January 2007.
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