Point-of-View
Discover transforming power of feeling mercy
By John Piper
Desiring God Ministries
Published December 5, 2002
What a difference it makes in everything, if we feel like we have
just been rescued from torment and death! Picture your attitude
on a Navy ship after being plucked from the ocean where you spent
weeks adrift on a life raft. Or picture yourself rescued from a
deep, collapsing mine in Pennsylvania. Or think of a nine-month
battle with malignant cancer, only to hear the doctor say, "I
can't explain it, but it's gone." Think about your powers of
patience and kindness and forgiveness in those early hours of
relief and rejoicing.
Now add this to your imagination (though it shouldn't take
imagination, only Biblical revelation), that you don't deserve to
be rescued. Let it sink in-pray right now that God would make it
sink in-that you and I deserve nothing but trouble and
persecution and sickness and death and hell. We are, the Bible
says, "by nature children of wrath like the rest of mankind"
(Ephesians 2:3). "All ... are under sin ... and every mouth
[is] stopped, and the whole world ... accountable to God" (Romans
3:9, 19). The "wages" of our sin is eternal death (Romans
6:23). We are under the curse of God's law, because "cursed
be anyone who does not confirm the words of this law by doing
them" (Deuteronomy 27:26). Our natural mind is "hostile
to God" (Romans 8:7). We are "strangers to the
covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world"
(Ephesians 2:12). We are destined to be cast into "outer
darkness" where there is "weeping and gnashing of teeth"
(Matthew 8:12; 25:30). If something doesn't intervene, our lot
will be in the lake of fire where "the smoke of their
torment goes up forever and ever, and they have no rest" (Revelation
14:11).
Therefore, all you Christians-all you believers rescued by the
blood of Christ, who has become a curse for us-add to the relief
and happiness of your rescue the bewildering wonder and the
brokenhearted joy that you deserve none of this, but are lavished
with unceasing mercy.
Then look upon your afflictions in this light. Think with
Jonathan Edwards on your condition: "How far less [are] the
greatest afflictions that we meet within this world ... than we
have deserved. ... The greatest outward troubles and calamities
that we meet with ... must needs appear very little things to the
misery which we have deserved ... A man may meet with very great
losses ... his cattle may die, his corn may be blasted, his barn
may be burnt down and all the goods consumed, and he may be
brought from a comfortable living to a poor, low, stricken state.
This is very hard to bear, but, alas, how little reason have such
to complain if they do but consider how little this is, compared
with that eternal destruction that we have been informed of"
(Jonathan Edwards, Works, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997,
p. 321).
Is it any wonder that Paul said to such people, "Do all
things without grumbling" (Philippians 2:14). Ponder how you
would react to things if you lived hour by hour in the heartfelt
awareness that you are rescued from horrible death and eternal
suffering, and that, in spite of deserving no help, you are
lavished with mercy every day (even in the hard things) and will
be made perfectly and eternally happy in the age to come.
Then add one more thing to your thinking. The one who rescued you
had to die to do it, and He is the one Person in the universe who
did not deserve to die. "Christ suffered once for sins, the
righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God"
(1 Peter 4:18).
O Christian, know your condition-the misery and the mercy. And
let the horror from which you have been rescued, and the mercy in
which you live, and the price that Christ paid, make you humble
and thankful and patient and kind and forgiving.
You have never been treated by God worse than you deserve. And in
Christ, you are treated ten million times better. Feel this. Live
this.
Piper is pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis,
Minn. and president of Desiring
God Ministries .
Copyright (c) 2002 Desiring God
Ministries. Used with permission.