Jesus Takes Away Your Spiritual Trash
It was garbage pick-up day for my
elderly parents. My dad had wheeled his trash receptacle down to the curb as
usual. However, later he noticed someone in a truck taking their neighbor’s
garbage while ignoring my parent’s trash. Thinking they had been forgotten,
they called the waste service. They were informed that their workers had not
made it to their neighborhood yet. The business had actually received several
other calls about an unauthorized individual who seemed to be collecting a few
select people’s garbage. Why would someone do that? I guess in our day you have
to wonder if this person had some nefarious purpose, such as looking for
personal or financial information that could be used for identity theft.
Meanwhile, the neighbors whose
garbage was taken, also mistakenly thought my parents’ trash had been
forgotten. So they graciously decided to make an exchange, rolling my parents’
still-full trash can over to their curb as their responsibility while leaving
my parents with an empty receptacle. It was all rather confusing until the real
garbage workers showed up later, collected everyone’s waste, and straightened
it all out.
This strange situation got me to
thinking about what Jesus has done for us. He took our sin – our moral filth –
our garbage – upon Himself. His receptacle was empty of any uncleanness. He was
pure and sinless. Yet the Bible declares that God “made Him who knew no sin to
be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (II
Corinthians 5:21). Jesus graciously exchanged our sin for His righteousness. He
didn’t take our spiritual garbage in order to steal our identity but rather to
help us discover our identity in Him. Because of Him and His sacrifice for our
sin, we can have our hearts cleansed of the guilt and condemnation that we
deserve. We can be forgiven of our sins and find our place in God’s family as
one of His beloved children. God no longer sees the mess we have made of
ourselves, but He sees the righteousness of Christ in us. And even better yet,
He changes us so that we can actually quit making such a mess but start living
more in line with His will for us.
Some of us may want to argue that
we aren’t such a big mess, at least not when compared to other people we know.
We may look at ourselves as being basically good people. However, it is kind of
like the garbage receptacles we sometimes see. Some people’s trash is unbagged,
messy, and overflowing out of the cans. Another person’s trash may be neatly
tied up in one little bag. Nevertheless, it is still all garbage. The Bible
rightly notes that “we are all like an unclean thing, and all our
righteousnesses are like filthy rags” (Isaiah 64:6). Your sin may not seem as
bad as someone else’s, but it is still sin. It still falls short of God’s
standard. Instead of comparing ourselves to others, we should compare ourselves
to Jesus. In light of His purity, we all have fallen short of the mark, no
matter how good we think we may have been.
This exchange Jesus has executed on
our behalf doesn’t take place automatically. We have to choose to accept it. He
has made it possible for us to be righteous, but we have to recognize our need,
repent of our sins, believe in what He did for us on the cross, and put our
trust in Him to cleanse us. Have you done that?
Let’s be thankful for Someone who
so loves us that He not only takes away our spiritual garbage but leaves us
with His own righteousness and purity in its place. What a Savior!