
After Job had prayed for his friends, the Lord restored his fortunes. (Job 42:10)
“Jesus is not just beginning to save us— He has already saved us completely. It is an accomplished fact, and it is an insult to Him for us to ask Him to do what He has already done.”
This powerful quote from today’s Oswald devotional (below) says volumes about how we should view what Christ did for us. When he was on the cross He said “It is finished. ” He didn’t say It was begun, a work in progress or that He was just beginning, but that is was COMPLETED.
When we confess our faith in Him, and accept Him as Lord and Savior of our lives we are saved and that part is finished. From there we have the door of discipleship opened to us and we are invited down that path. How far we journey down is up to us. We can stay baby Christians, or we can choose to learn how to be more like Him, seeking daily to grow and learn more.
I choose to recognize the finished work of the cross, and to look for where I’m asking to be “more” saved rather than asking where I need to grow and learn more about Him. We don’t need to “level up” our salvation – that part is completed, but we can reach new levels in our knowledge of, and relationship with Him!
Have You Come to “After” Yet?
From a Daily devotional by Oswald Chambers
A self-centered, pleading prayer—the kind of prayer in which I vow to “get right” with God if only he’ll help me—is never found in the New Testament. Am I telling God that I’ll purify my heart if he’ll hear my plea? That I’ll make myself good and righteous if he’ll extend his grace to me? I have to realize I can’t make myself right with God; I can’t make my life perfect, no matter how I plead. The only way I can be right with God is by accepting the atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ as an absolute gift.
Am I humble enough to accept the gift Jesus bought for me on the cross? I have to stop every effort I’m making and leave myself entirely alone in God’s hands. If I find myself constantly trying to get right with him, it’s a sign that I’m rebelling against the atonement. Many prayers are made in total disbelief of the atonement. We beg Jesus to save us, forgetting he already has. Asking him to do it again is an insult.
“After Job had prayed for his friends . . .” If your fortunes haven’t been restored, if you aren’t getting insight into God’s word, stop praying in a self-centered way and start praying for others. Intercessory prayer is the real business of your life as a saved soul. Wherever God places you, no matter the circumstances, pray immediately for those around you. Pray that the atonement will be realized for others as it has for you. Pray for your friends; pray for your acquaintances; pray for all whose lives have been brought into contact with your own.
https://utmost.org/modern-classic/have-you-come-to-after-yet/
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