My knee-jerk response was to cower. To live in shame. I was a sinner—someone who had broken God’s good commands. I knew God was good, and I knew Jesus had saved me. I even knew God loved me. And yet I was beyond a healthy fear or reverence of the Lord (Proverbs 9:10).
My mom would say over and over, “Sweetheart, God doesn’t
have a big stick.”
I always took issue with that statement. God is the righteous Judge of our sin. He does too have a big stick! And He has every right to use it. Therefore, I responded by cowering in fear toward Him.
But here’s the amazing thing about our good God. Yes, in His justice, He has the ability and right to punish all of us sinful humans in an instant. But in His love, He took the big stick of His just wrath and turned it on Himself.
Jesus died a brutal death on the cross—a criminal’s death and punishment meant for us. He took on our shame and the actual beating we deserved. Therefore, if we know Him as our Savior, we don’t have to beat ourselves literally or metaphorically.
My sins were nailed to the cross. And Jesus’ goodness or righteousness has become who I am. I’m no longer a sinner in God’s eyes. I was once rightly under the stick of God’s wrath, but I’m now redeemed and made new by the very stick—the cross—that was meant to condemn me. That is God’s amazing love. God took His own good wrath on Himself, freeing us through faith in Christ.
What is the difference between fearing God and fearing punishment? How does knowing Jesus help us approach God with both reverence for His holiness and confidence in our relationship with Him (Hebrews 4:14-16)?
What questions do you have about the fear of the Lord?
If you know Jesus, how does the fact that He took your sins and gave you His righteousness affect your life?