I was nine years old when my parents decided to send me to a new school, a private Christian school. I hated every minute of that first year. I'd gone from being the popular kid to the weird new kid. The jeans and tees I wore to my old school were a much better fit for my boxy frame. My new school required I wear dresses, and I felt like a hippo in a tutu. I went from being a straight-A student to being in what was then known as "the slow class" because of my poor placement scores. I even got into trouble twice that year --a huge difference from the one teeeeny-tiny incident in all my years at public school. BUT one of the very first Bible verses I recall having to memorize was 2 Corinthians 5:17, Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new. It and the verses surrounding have become some of my favorites.
Our pastor spoke recently on this passage. He gave the example of a neighbor committing a crime: I can't go to jail for that because I'm not him. We no longer have to be bothered by, to live in guilt over the things we used to do before coming to Christ; we are no longer bound to those things because we are not that person anymore. And when we choose to daily, faithfully follow Jesus, our sins --past, present, and future --are remembered by God no more. As I listened, I recalled a coworker making light of the premise. Oh, I can just do anything: I'm forgiven for it anyway. In fact, he often pointed out the wrongdoings of Christians and churchgoers over the years, and would sardonically reply to his own remark, But it's okay; we're forgiven. Now, Dietrich Bonhoeffer would probably have preached him a sermon on "cheap grace" had he been present, but as I thought about my coworker, I wished I'd asked a single question: What's wrong with that? I don't mean the idea of cheap grace (basically, taking license to do as I please on the premise I am forgiven anyway) --of course it's wrong (Rom. 6:1-14). But what is wrong with believing you are forgiven? What is wrong with believing the One who created you, who is perfect and holy, who made a way through His Son for you to be counted righteous, who gave His Holy Spirit to work in and through you for your sanctification and God's glory --what is wrong with believing He remembers your sin no more?
Acts 3:19 says, Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord. Clearly there is no continuing in sin. Clearly, we are called to turn away from our old nature and walk in the new nature we are given --"new creation," right? But walking around debt-free? How cool is that?! Have you ever paid off a credit card? Made your last payment on a mortgage? What a feeling of freedom that is! I am never getting into debt again! Right? What's wrong with that? You see, we haven't been freed, our slate has not been wiped clean so that we might go out and act the fool again; we have been made new, our accounts settled, our sins cast into the sea, so that we might know the freedom of being unshackled, of being forgiven! Therefore if the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed (John 8:36).
As time passed, I went from being the new weird kid to being relatively popular again. As I matured, I looked forward to school shopping and selecting new dresses and skirts to wear. My grades improved as I learned what was expected of me, and I not only didn't get into trouble, but I even babysat for some of my teachers. I joined the Bible quizzing team which required me to memorize large passages of Scripture. Change had come, slowly and not without its problems. In fact, it wasn't until years later 2 Corinthians 5:17 really resonated with me. But the longer I hung in there, the easier it got. I didn't want to go back to where I'd been before; I liked "the new."
The change Jesus produces in us, the pardon and freedom He provides through His shed blood on the cross spurs us on not to license for sin, the perfecting of our old nature, but to boldness and greater faith, to the works ordained for us to do, to the fulfilling of the Great Commission, to the loving of God with every part of ourselves and the loving of one another as we have been loved, to life, free and new!