What Does God Expect of Me?
By Marilyn Adamson
If you are like
many Christians, you want to please God with your life. At the same time,
in all honesty,
sometimes you get tired trying to live the Christian
life. Sometimes it just feels like it’s way too much pressure.
When I was an
atheist, sin was never an issue to
me. I wasn’t particularly
aware of it. I didn’t really experience guilt. But when I became a Christian....whoa.
I found out there were things I was doing that God did not want in my life.
I also became aware of the need to love others, to read the Bible, to pray,
to witness, to disciple others, etc. And at times I thought, “It was
way easier being an atheist.” Now that I knew God, I felt a tremendous
sense of responsibility to please him with my life. I would read the Bible,
read a command, and it seemed that verse after verse I could honestly say, “Yep,
good idea. I need to do that more.”
Fortunately God
taught me something in Scripture that totally freed me from this highly responsible,
performance mind-set, so that I could see God again
and deeply enjoy my relationship with him. There is a huge principle in Scripture
that is throughout Romans, Galatians, Ephesians, 1&2 Corinthians...it’s
all over the place.
Here it is: God
does not demand perfection in you. God is not expecting you to measure up.
God never
thought that you could live the Christian life, nor
does he expect that you could actually meet his holy standards. If he thought
that you could, he wouldn’t have come to earth to die for you. But he
did.
Jesus said to
the crowds, “You therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly
Father is perfect.” So, it is true that God’s laws, his commands,
require perfection. And if we were to be accepted by God based on living up
to his commands, we would have to be perfect. No wonder Jesus came to save
us from the penalty of our sins!
God is aware of the gap between his perfection and your sinfulness.
Even as
Christians, there is a constant tension within us to try to close that gap,
so that we
feel
more comfortable, so that we feel closer to God.
Some will try to close the gap by trying to lower God’s standards: “God
doesn’t really mean...” Others will try to close the gap by trying
to raise their performance: “I’ll try harder...”
What does God
say about this gap? It’s there and it will always be there.
But you, who have put your faith in Jesus, received him into your life, have
been forgiven, declared righteous, precious in his eyes, held in his hand of
care. You are completely his and he loves you unconditionally, in spite of
the gap.
“Therefore,
since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through
our
Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access
by faith into this grace in which we now stand.”1
It is likely however that you will come to a point in your life where you
begin to think that surely God must now want some repayment.
The purpose of this article is to keep you from falling into the trap of feeling
like you must now perform for God. Scripture cautions against this, because
it will rob you of the joy of knowing Christ.
So, let’s take a serious look at what God says about your relationship
with him. Let’s look at the ground rules, what he says about relating
to him.
How you became a Christian
When you became a Christian, look at the weight of responsibility God carried
in that process vs. your effort:
- God chose you before the foundation of the world and called you to be his.2
- God came to earth for you.3
- God personally died for your sins.4
- God made sure someone explained the gospel to you.5
- God offered to come into your life.6
- God gave you the desire to know him and respond to him.7
- You turned to him and received him.
- God
entered your life, declared you righteous and forgiven, and called you
his own.8
You became a Christian
by simply responding to God in faith. That is the same way he wants you to
live the Christian life...by simply responding to God in
faith. The weight of responsibility (and ability) stays with God. You may be
thinking, “That seems simple enough. What’s the big deal?” The
problem is that almost every Christian gets tripped up on this at one time
or another. Why?
It is human nature
to think that you owe God for what he has given you. It is also human nature
to think
that now that you know the Bible a little, now
that you know a little bit about prayer, or now that you may understand a little
about talking to others about God...now it’s time to take on the responsibility
of being a “good Christian.” There is nothing that will more quickly
zap your joy in knowing God.
And if, on your
own, you don’t come to this erroneous conclusion that
you must now perform for God, then other Christians, unfortunately, are very
good at making you feel a measure of guilt, pressure and expectation to obey
God better. This article (hopefully) will give you an understanding from Scripture
about how to live the Christian life without beginning to feel a weight of
false expectations to perform for God. It will show you how deeply God loves
you and how he wants you to relate to him.
God has not set up your relationship with him as contingent upon you, but
rather contingent upon himself. Let me illustrate from these verses:
How are we acceptable to God?
You were declared forgiven by his grace (his kindness), because of Jesus’ death
for you. You received his gift of forgiveness by believing that Jesus has paid
for your sin, right? You didn’t earn your forgiveness. You simply believed
God when he says he has forgiven you.
“...when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared,
he saved us, not because of deeds done by us in righteousness, but in virtue
of his own mercy.”9 “In him we have redemption through his blood,
the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace
that he lavished on us...”10
Ok, now that you
are a Christian, do the rules change? Does God now have a long list of expectations
for you? No. Now you may think, “Wait a minute.
The Bible is FULL of commands. You can’t read a paragraph without being
told what to do.” That is true. But while God gives you commands, he
also tells you that you can’t fully obey them. In fact, he tells you
that the harder you concentrate on trying to obey them, the more that you will
see your sin.11 Also, the harder you try, the more you might feel like a failure,
deserving of God’s judgment and condemnation, and thus the more distant
you will feel from God.
The apostle Paul
talks about this frustration that he also felt. He looked at God’s law and said, “The commandment is holy, righteous and
good.” Yet as much as he tried to live according to it, he kept on sinning.
He said, “I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it
out...the evil I do not want to do—this I keep on doing.”12 In complete
frustration he says, “What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from
this body of death?” His solution? “Thanks be to God—through
Jesus Christ our Lord!”13
The feelings of
failure, sin, condemnation need to be faced with Scripture. “There
is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”14 “For
if, when we were God’s enemies, we were reconciled to him through the
death of his Son, how much more, having been reconciled, shall we be saved
through his life!15”
So when you look
at God’s commands, don’t attempt to obey them
on your own effort...but instead ask God, who lives inside of you, to produce
that in you. If God says to love each other, he doesn’t intend for you
to march off with enthusiastic responsibility and show God how loving you can
be. Instead he wants you to depend on him, “God, I ask you to live in
my heart and cause me to see this person as you do, and put love in my heart
for this person in the same way that you love them. I cannot love them on my
own, but ask that your great love would be produced in my life for them.”
What is the difference?
It is the difference between independently trying to perform for God, verses
depending on God and relying on him to live through
you. We do not mature into independence from God. We mature only by remaining
dependent upon him, and that’s the way he wants it. He wants you to enjoy
the freedom and love of being in relationship with him, trusting him, depending
upon him. He is not expecting you to perform for him.
The Bible refers
to God’s commands as “the law.” Now that
you are a Christian, you are no longer under the law or under God’s judgment
and condemnation – instead you have forgiveness and eternal life. You
have been set free from the law’s demands.
Paul said, we “know
that a man is not justified by observing the law, but by faith in Jesus Christ.
So we, too, have put our faith in Christ Jesus
that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by observing the law, because
by observing the law no one will be justified.”16
How much does
Paul focus on God’s commands and trying to fulfill them? “...I
died to the law so that I might live for God...I have been crucified with Christ...Christ
lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God,
who loved me and gave himself for me. I do not set aside the grace of God,
for if righteousness could be gained through the law, Christ died for nothing!”17 
Before you received
Jesus, you were distant from God, able to only know God’s
commands, and you were under God’s judgment. But now you know Christ
and his Spirit lives within you.
God says, “I will put my laws in their hearts and I will write them
on their minds.” And in the same place he says, “Their sins and
lawless acts I will remember no more.”18 So, instead of the law being outside
you, hovering over you with its demands, God has placed his law within your
heart, and as the Holy Spirit changes you, he gives you an increasing desire
to do what pleases him. Over time, as you grow in your relationship with God,
he will continue to build in you the desire and capacity to live a holy life
before him.
“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this
is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no
one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus
to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”19
God has a plan for your life, to use your life to benefit others and for his
glory. Your relationship is now with God, with his life living in you, producing
good works in you.
What to do
with sin?
Now let me pose this question: What if you ask him to produce something in
your life or to free you from a particular sin, and you still struggle? What
if you still see your bad temper or you still see yourself giving into temptation,
or you see yourself failing to pray or read your Bible like you think you
should? Then what? Would that be the time to begin taking on the responsibility
of the Christian life and give it your full effort? No. The moment you begin
to try to perform for God, the more you will see your failure, the more you
will distance yourself from God, and the less joy your will have in knowing
him.
It is easy for
a Christian to think that God rewards effort, because that is how our entire
society
is set up...be responsible, work hard, give it your
best effort...and you will be rewarded. A Christian can look at the commands
in the Bible and think, “Yes, if I try hard enough I can do this.” And
they are headed for a lot of frustration, because the Bible says that focusing
on the law brings only one thing...an awareness of your sin. God has not set
up your relationship with him as effort & reward. He has set it up that
instead, he wants you to trust him to produce in your life what pleases him.
As long as you
live on this earth you are going to sin. You will never be perfect in this
life. Not only
do you know that, but God knows that. As you
recognize sin in your life, confess it, and believe
what he promises you:
“If we
confess our sin, he is faithful and just
to forgive us our sin and cleanse us from
all
unrighteousness.”20
Be patient in
letting God change you
Focus on getting to know God. Pursue knowing him
better through
prayer, reading the Bible, being in fellowship and
teaching with other Christians...all of that is good. But your faith is not
to rest in your effort, but instead in God’s ability to work in your
life. Jesus said it’s like grapes on a vine. Jesus is the main vine and
he said we are like the branches. “Remain (or abide) in me and I will
remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine.
Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.”21
Jesus went on
to say, “As
the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Now remain in my love.”22
What about Jesus
saying “obey my commands”?
The right way to live, the way that you will experience a more abundant life
as Jesus talked about, and become more easily convinced of his love for you
is by doing what he says. Jesus said, “If you obey my commands, you
will remain in my love, just as I have obeyed my Father’s commands
and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy may be in you
and that your joy may be complete.”23 He wants you to live according
to what he says is right and experience his love and have joy as a Christian.
But the way that you obey his commands is by relying on him as you approach
those commands.
So when I see
a verse in the Bible where God says, “Do this....”,
I immediately say to God, “Good idea. I want my life to please you and
I ask you to build that into my life through your Spirit. Give me the ability
to obey you in this way. God, I am headed for disaster if I think I could obey
this on my own. But I ask you to change my thinking or work in my life whatever
way you need to, that my life would line up with this verse.” And then
I don’t worry about it. I might write out that verse and learn it, think
about it, maybe even memorize it. But my faith to do it remains in God.
He has freed you from the demands of the law, and welcomes you to rest in
him, dependent upon him...where you can fully enjoy the intimacy of knowing
him.
“So, my
brothers, you also died to the law through the body of Christ, that you might
belong
to another, to him who was raised from the dead, in order
that we might bear fruit to God.”24
“We have
been released from the law so that we serve in the new way of the Spirit...”25
“Christ
is the end of the law so that there may be righteousness for everyone who
believes.”26
"And to one
who does not work but trusts him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is
reckoned
as righteousness..."27
1. Romans 5:1,2
2. Ephesians 1:4; 2 Timothy 1:9
3. John 3:16
4. Romans 5:8
5. Ephesians 1:13
6. Revelation 3:20; John 1:12,13
7. Revelation 3:20
8. I John 3:1; Colossians 1:13,14; Ephesians 1:4; John 1:12
9. Titus 3:3-7
10. Ephesians 1:7
11. Romans 3:20
12. Romans 7:18,19
13. Romans 7:24,25
14. Romans 8:1
15. Romans 5:8-10
16. Galatians 2:16
17. Galatians 2:19-21
18. Hebrews 10:16,17
19. Ephesians 2:8,9
20. 1 John 1:9
21. John 15:4
22. John 15:9
23. John 15:10,11
24. Romans 7:4
25. Romans 7:6
26. Romans 10:4
27. Romans 4:5
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