CREATION ANEW
  • Home
  • The Gospel of Jesus Christ
  • Statement of Faith
  • Randy Weddle
  • A Celebration of Redmption Sermon Notes
  • A Celebration of Redmption Meditations

A Celebration of Redemption Meditations

A Celebration of Redemption: Wide Grace

4/24/2025

0 Comments

 
We humans struggle to grasp the magnitude of God’s grace. I theorize that our struggle is due to a general skepticism that God is truly gracious. This is especially true of those who comprehend the depth of their sins. How could it be that God would extend mercy to people who do such terrible things? God’s grace comes from His character, and the depths of His grace never run dry. Therefore, the right response to the Lord’s grace is to rest in it.

The Lord makes an astounding statement about the grace of God in Mark’s gospel. Jesus says that all sins shall be forgiven (Mark 3:28). In making this claim, the Messiah does not promise universal salvation, but a complete pardon from any sin entrusted to Him for forgiveness.

Jesus’ claim opens wide the doors of God’s grace. If we take the Master at His word (which would be the faithful thing to do), we would be motivated to run to Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of all our sins. I assure such a response would greatly please God.

The grace of God spans beyond our imagination, extending past our understanding. God does not demand a perfect comprehension of His grace. He wants us to simply trust His grace. According to the Lord, there is no sin which is beyond the forgiveness of God.

All sin is forgivable. This is what Jesus claims in Mark 3:28. This is how wide God’s grace is.
Think of the worst thing(s) you have ever done; those things you want no one else to ever know. The pain of our wickedness easily overwhelms us. 
 
I encourage you to ponder the Savior’s claim. Allow this magnificent truth to overwhelm you. And give in to the grace of God which is offered through Jesus Christ.

Do your sins shame you? Does the darkness of your heart frighten you? Embrace those feelings. Let the gravity of your sins humble you…then humbly come to the Savior. Let Him take your unrighteousness and accept His righteousness. Anyone who does so experiences the full grace of God.  
0 Comments

Propitiation

4/18/2025

0 Comments

 

A Celebration of Redemption: Propitiation
A beautiful part of Christ’s saving work on the behalf of sinners is His role as the propitiation for sins. A propitiation appeases wrath and sets the stage for mercy to be given.


God is holy and just. He cannot endorse nor can he excuse the smallest of sin (Ezekiel 18:20). Therefore every sin committed must be answered with God’s wrath. If God excused any sin at all, He would not be holy and just. The justice of God demands sin be rewarded with death (Romans 6:23). The reward or payment for sinning is death, a harsh but just reward. Justice alone satisfies God’s wrath.


The reason Jesus went to the cross was to die. He died to satisfy God’s justice for sins. The Lord’s death was a substitute for the death of sinners. He gave Himself to die, the propitiation for sins (I John 2:2). As the propitiation, Jesus Christ took God’s wrath upon Himself for all sins committed past, present, and future.


In taking God’s wrath upon Himself, Christ satisfied God’s justice (Isaiah 53:3-5, 10). God laid the full weight of punishment of the world’s sins upon the God-man, Jesus Christ (I Peter 2:24). Included in this punishment was that God the Son was abandoned by God the Father (Matthew 27:46).


Christ’s work was effectual. The Savior obtained eternal redemption through His blood (Heb. 9:11-14; 10:1-4, 10). Because His death appeased God’s wrath, Jesus reconciled God and mankind, making peace (Rom. 5:10; Col. 1:19-22; Col. 1:20). 

   
Christ’s death on the cross is the full payment which completely satisfies God’s justice[1]. Sinners can be free from God’s wrath because the punishment has been exacted. But freedom is not automatic. People are born into sin, not into salvation.


Freedom from God’s wrath is only available through Jesus Christ (Rom. 8:1; Gal 3:13). Anyone who calls out to Jesus Christ for salvation comes under no condemnation. Through Christ, sins are removed and new life is given.


[1] The resurrection of Christ was proof that God accepted Jesus’ death as payment for
​all sin (Romans 1:1-4). 

0 Comments

Bold Confession

4/7/2025

0 Comments

 
The Church has every reason to rejoice, especially as we prepare to remember the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. As a way to encourage believers to take joy, I offer reasons why the Church should celebrate the redemption we have been given through our Lord.

Early in my walk with Christ, I was drawn to the writings of the apostle John. I found his writing style to be quite simple, but with a depth that challenged my young, regenerated heart. God used John to communicate His truth in a way that drew me to keep walking with Christ.

I still find a connection to the Biblical books that John authored. The truths remain understandable but profound. One of those profound truths can be discovered within the first chapter of John’s first epistle.

Writing to a group of believers, John instructs his audience to confess rather than cover up their sin (I John 1:8-10). This instruction, if we will follow it, provides tremendous comfort and security in our Lord Jesus. Believers have the assurance that no matter how badly they transgress against the Lord, they can find a restored relationship with God by admitting their sin. John’s instruction should encourage Christians to habitually run to the Savior, falling upon His grace, any time they sin.

With such an invitation to perpetual grace offered to God’s children, why do we often try to deny or hide our sin? I wish to submit my opinion. Believers hesitate to quickly confess sin because they do not fully understand the nature of Christ’s redemptive work. Specifically, Christians fail to realize that God’s wrath has been satisfied through Christ’s death on the cross.

The Lord Jesus, when He hung on the cross, cried out these words.
And about the ninth hour Jesus gave a loud cry, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is, My God, my God, why are you turned away from me?
Matthew 27:46

God turned away from His Son, Jesus. The Father abandoned the Son. The Lamb of God had to be forsaken because He took the wrath of God for sinners. The Lord suffered God’s wrath so that sinners can be free of God’s wrath.

A believer’s only Biblical response to sin in their own life is confession. Confession is the act of agreeing with what God says about sin. True confession includes a repentance (a changing of the mind) and a turning away from whatever sin has been committed.

Some might say that confession alone is too simple or easy; there must be more required of me when I sin. But, dear Christian, there is nothing more for you to do because Christ took God’s wrath for you. The justice of God has been satisfied. Anyone in Christ (anyone who has believed in Christ for salvation) now stands under the mercy of God. They are not under His wrath.

Believers can celebrate Christ’s redemptive work. A way to celebrate is to take your sin directly to the Father. Boldly confess your sin, even the most vile sins, to the Father through the blood of Christ. Be confident in the Lord’s death and resurrection to continually cleanse and forgive.
0 Comments

    Author

    Randy Weddle pastors Renewal Bible Fellowship in Mooresville, Indiana and Mount Pleasant Christian Church in Monrovia, Indiana.

    Archives

    April 2025

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Creation Anew
Copyright © 2021
Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • The Gospel of Jesus Christ
  • Statement of Faith
  • Randy Weddle
  • A Celebration of Redmption Sermon Notes
  • A Celebration of Redmption Meditations