Boldness in Christ

Last Sunday, Joel Smith preached from Matthew 26:57-68, and we considered the truth that Jesus Christ is the Ruler of All. Specifically, Jesus is the promised Son of Man from Daniel 7 and is the One who sits at the right hand of the Father in Psalm 110. Since Jesus is the Ruler of All, we should welcome and normalize the disruptive Lordship of Jesus in our lives.

Read: Matthew 25:31-46

This Sunday, Pastor John Henschen will preach from Matthew 25:31-46, where we will see that certainty in the final judgment is found in Christ alone. As you prepare for our Sunday gathering, let this devotional from Milton Vincent encourage you with the boldness and freedom that is found in Christ alone.

Reflect: “My Manifesto”

Boldness is critical. Without boldness, my life story will be one of great deeds left undone, victories left unwon, petitions left unprayed, and timely words unsaid. If I wish to live only a pathetically small portion of the life God has prepared for me, then I need no boldness. But if I want my life to bloom full and loom large for the glory of God, then I must have boldness – and nothing so nourishes boldness in me like the gospel!

The gospel gives me boldness first by banishing my greatest fear, the fear of God’s eternal wrath. Indeed, Christ bore God’s wrath upon Himself, not simply so I could escape that wrath on some future day, but also that I might be released from the daily fear of such wrath as I think ahead to judgment day. Because this fear hinders the ongoing work of God in me, the love of God continually expels this fear (whenever it appears) and nurtures within me a confident eagerness to face God on judgment day (1 Jn. 4:17-18). Living in the daily relief of this fear frees me up to continue being perfected in confidence by the love of God, and it also serves to put all other fears, especially the fear of man, into perspective (Matt. 10:28).

Additionally, the more I experience the life-transforming power of the gospel, the more confident I am in speaking it to others, both saved and lost (Rom. 1:15-16; 1 Cor. 1:18). I know what the gospel can do in people’s lives if they would believe the fullness of it, because I see what it is doing in me and in others. Therefore, I have increasing boldness to speak the whole gospel to others (Acts 20:26-27), even amid opposition (Acts 4:29-31).

Also, the more I comprehend what God has done for me through Christ, the more I find myself confidently coming before God in prayer (Heb. 4:16; 10:19-22), speaking to Him in situations in which I formerly would have shrunk from Him, and offering requests that I formerly would have been too timid to offer (due either to the largeness of the request or my own sinful unworthiness). With greater boldness in prayer comes an increased enjoyment of God and the bounty that He gives, due simply to the fact that I was daring enough to ask for what was needed (James 4:2).

Preaching the gospel to myself each day nourishes within me a holy brazenness to believe what God says, enjoy what He offers, and do what He commands. Admittedly, I don’t deserve to be a child of God and I don’t deserve to be free of sin’s guilt and power. I don’t deserve the staggering privilege of intimacy with God, nor any other blessing that Christ has purchased for me with His blood. I don’t even deserve to be useful to God. But by the grace of God I am what I am and I have what I have, and I hereby resolve not to let any portion of God’s grace prove vain in me (1 Cor. 15:9-10)! And to the degree that I fail to live up to this resolve, I will boldly take for myself the forgiveness that God says is mine and continue walking in His grace. This is my manifesto, my daily resolve; and may God be glorified by this confidence that I place in Him.

“My Manifesto,” in A Gospel Primer for Christians, by Milton Vincent

Sing: Song List for Sunday

1. “God Is for Us,” by CityAlight
2. “Holy,” by Matt Redman
3. “Lord, Have Mercy (For What We Have Done),” by Matt Boswell & Matt Papa
4. “Maranatha (We Long to See the Day),” by Crosspoint Music

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