When God Convicts
When God Convicts

When God’s Holy Spirit convicts you of sin, what is your response?
Do you minimize your sin by flippantly saying it’s not that big of a deal?- Do you legitimize It by saying “everybody does it”?
- Do you “Adamize” it by blaming someone else?
- Do you run and hide?
- Do you become sick at heart – distraught that you have offended the heart of God?
- Do you admit the magnitude of your sin, throw in the towel and decide you’re unredeemable – thereby “cancelling” yourself?
- Do you humble yourself before the Almighty God and beg Him to have mercy on you?
While the Pharisee doesn’t see the need to acknowledge any sin in his own life, the tax collector comes to the temple with a totally different spirit – a spirit God loves -- and a sinner God is eager to forgive. Let’s listen to his prayer:
“And the tax collector, standing afar off, would not so much as raise his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, ‘God, be merciful to me a sinner!’” (Luke 18:13)
The tax collector, whose reputation is in the ditch, has come to the end of himself. He positions himself “afar off” – making himself pretty much invisible to the other temple-goers. He doesn’t feel worthy to look up to the heavens. He has his hands in tight fists beating his breast, indicating an intense grief (the kind of grief Jesus’ friends experienced at the crucifixion). He is completely humiliated by the magnitude of his sin; yet somehow he’s aware that Jesus is his only hope. He’s exactly where God wants him.
Scripture makes it clear how God responds to such a humble spirit:
God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble. (James 4:6)
Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up. (James 4:10)
And that’s exactly what happened with the tax collector in our parable:
“I tell you, this man went down to his house justified…” (Luke 18:14)
Today let’s agree that it’s best to humbly admit when we have sinned against God and run to Him for the mercy only He can give. And when he grants that mercy, accept the fact that the Redeemer has redeemed the unredeemable.
By Judy Shrout









