7 Reasons I Celebrate Easter:  #1 - For All Have Sinned

Do you want the bad news or the good news?


If someone asks you if you want the good news or the bad news, are you ever tempted to say, "I don't want the bad news!"

It really wasn’t that long ago that I began to realize that if we didn’t have the bad news, then good news wouldn’t really be impressive.

For instance, let's imagine someone told you that your 16-year old made it safely to their destination the first time she drove somewhere on her own.  You'd be relieved.  That's definitely good news.  But let's say that they told you the bad news first - "She was in a 4-car pile-up on the highway."  Does that change the impact of the good news?  You bet!

The same goes with the story of Jesus.  And I have known it for a very long time.  My parents loved us enough to tell us the story verbally and live it out for us to watch.  And they kept us in churches that told the old, old story.  

But as I matured, I spent years when I loved the Lord and desired to serve Him but wasn’t really amazed by grace all that much.  Maybe it was just because I had known the story so long and it lost its luster.

And so, as I have dug deeper into the gospel (good news) over the years, I have been impressed over and over and more deeply with the bad news.  And understanding the gravity of the bad news, makes the good news even better.

It's right there in the Bible

Paul teach us that “…No one is righteous — not even one.”  Romans 3:10 NLT   And then he points to passages from Psalms where he goes into detail about what that means. 

Then he summarizes and explains the bad news very simply, “For everyone has sinned; we all fall short of God’s glorious standard.”  Romans 3:23 NLT

Sin – falling short…missing the mark

God is holy – completely set apart and above all that we can imagine.  He is righteous – sinless.  But we are not.  

I hope you'll join me for the week

As we go through the week we will see the progression of the good news.  But to find the good, we’ll have to dig a little more into the bad.

Whether you’re a sinner saved by grace or a sinner who hasn’t accepted God’s great gift of grace, won’t you join me for this series?  Click here to subscribe.  I don't usually post daily, but this week is special.

In the meantime, checkout this music video by MercyMe that gives you a preview of what he’s done for those who accept that amazing grace.  





2 Comments

  1. That Jesus is our righteousness and that He alone is able to cleanse us from our unrighteousness always humbled my heart and I am walking in the good news
  2. Thank you, love the message, love this song. I might have been 10 seconds in be fore the tears started. You are such a blessing.

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Meet Beth

 
Beth was blessed to be raised by parents who taught their children to love the Lord.  She trusted in Christ for salvation and followed in believer’s baptism when she was eight years old.  

Beth thanks the Lord for leading her parents to First Baptist Church in Jefferson City, Missouri, where the youth choir practiced and sang in the 8:15 am Sunday service each week.   This was great preparation for understanding the joy and the responsibility of serving Christ’s church.

Throughout her adult life, Beth has served in many roles across various church ministries – most of them while working full-time.  Her favorite roles involve discipling women by studying and teaching the Bible and its power for our lives.  

She has taught an adult Sunday School class on Sunday mornings since 2010.  In addition, since 2021, she has enjoyed writing and teaching two Women’s Bible studies each year.  She also blogs at bethipock.com about discipleship and daily Christian living. She recently had an article published at thegospelcoalition.org.

Other church roles include co-directing VBS, singing in the choir, chairing the personnel committee, and filling in at the piano when needed.

Beth and her husband, Ellis, have five grown children, three daughters-in-love, 16 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

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