Body

Devotions

Jesus Ransomed Us

David Wilkerson (1931-2011)

By Adam’s sin, we all were made sinners; by Jesus’s sacrifice, we are made righteous. Jesus ransomed us and paid the price so that the devil would have no claim on those who repent and trust in Christ and his completed work.

All along God knew that man could not keep or fulfill his divine law. He had instituted the law to bring order to the human race, lest we destroy ourselves. The law was for our own protection; it was to make us realize that in our own strength and righteousness, we could not stand before a holy God. The law was a mirror God held up to us, saying, “Let me show you what I expect, what my justice requires. Here is my law and here is where you’ve failed, where you’re living in sin. You have failed at this point…this point…and this point. No one is righteous enough to fulfill my law.”

The Pharisees tried to fulfill the law. They observed more than 600 regulations, from the washing of hands and pots to refusing to touch a Gentile. They tried to keep all the law, believing that one day they could stand before God and say, “I kept all your laws. I did this, this and this. Now you are obligated to save me.”

However, no one can expect his good works to merit justification. God’s Word answers, “If you’ve failed just one point of the law, you’ve failed the whole law.” If you expect God to accept you for your good behavior, forget it! You’ll never be able to keep the whole law.

Because we couldn’t meet justice’s demands to fulfill God’s law, Jesus came to earth and perfectly fulfilled the law of God. He never failed one point of it, and he did it all out of pure motives of love. “Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil” (Matthew 5:17, NKJV).

When Jesus ascended to the Father, his perfect obedience had fulfilled all the demands of the law, and his blood was presented in full payment for our sin. Here stood a man in the presence of God whose righteousness was perfect and therefore acceptable to the Father.

Our Inheritance

David Wilkerson (1931-2011)

When Elijah went up to heaven, he left Elisha his cloak (see 2 Kings 2:11-13). Likewise, when Jesus went up to the Father, he left us his own garment which is his perfect righteousness. He cast it upon us as surely as Elijah cast his garment upon Elisha. The prophet’s action was a type and shadow of what was going to happen when Jesus was translated to the Father. Indeed, we are heirs to a wonderful garment of righteousness that covers us completely, making us acceptable in God’s holy presence.

This garment is our inheritance, and God expects us to value it. He expects us to seek after it, to be willing heirs to his legacy. You may remember what happened when King Ahab came against Naboth, coveting his vineyard. Naboth valued his vineyard so much that he rejected Ahab’s offer to buy it, saying, “The Lord forbid that I should give the inheritance of my fathers to you” (1 Kings 21:3, NKJV). He was saying, “God forbid that anyone should take my inheritance from me. It’s mine!”

I believe the most important thing you can seek from God is the understanding that this inheritance is yours, and it is waiting to be claimed. The knowledge of the perfect righteousness of Jesus will put you on a rock that is unshakable. It will end all your useless struggles and put you in God’s presence justified and accepted.

God has provided you with an inheritance whereby you can stand before him with perfect righteousness in Jesus Christ, and you should want it. It should be an inheritance nobody can take from you. No lie of the devil should be able to remove it from your spirit; no man should be able to steal it from you, and no emotion should drain you of it.

Because God said it, you must lay hold of it! You need to seek it, go after it, allow your soul no rest until you get your hands on it. “But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you” (Matthew 6:33).

Outrunning the Chariots

Gary Wilkerson

Jezreel was known as a city of chariots. It excelled in warfare because of its vast fleet of iron vehicles made for swift movement in battle. Chariots represented the strength of men. They signified the power to speed ahead with great agility and the ability to accomplish something through a powerful, dominating resource.

Today, there is something I call a “chariot lifestyle”, one of comfort and ease where all our needs are provided. If we need something, we write a check for it. If we want to do something, we go ahead and do it. 

To a Christian, the chariot lifestyle can have great appeal. In the world’s standard of success, we see impressive “chariots” and “stallions.” These are the means and material wealth that provide people with ease, security and comfort at all times.

The servant of God does not seek those things. Instead, he seeks to obey his master’s voice and pursue the concerns of his kingdom. Many believers, though, may sometimes find themselves without the needed resources to do certain things for their family. A calling or ministry isn’t being fulfilled. These Christians may be tempted to think, “The resources are out there, and the world is using them to great effect, but I don’t have any of them. I need them to accomplish God’s work. How can I get hold of them?”

Elijah knew better than to look to the world’s resources. Imagine the scene as he addressed King Ahab. The king was perched in his brilliant chariot, towering over the lowly prophet. Nevertheless, Elijah boldly said, “Prepare your chariot and go down” (1 Kings 18:44, ESV). Next we read, “The hand of the Lord was on Elijah, and he gathered up his garment and ran before Ahab to…Jezreel” (1 Kings 18:46). God’s man outran a chariot over a distance of many miles! 

The apostle Paul tells us we have been called by God to run a race. We need to prepare ourselves for the contest by reinforcing our belief and trust in the Lord. When you see chariots in front of you, carrying people swiftly toward their goals, don’t despair. Do not be dismayed at the power they have and you lack. God has a different way for you. When you set your eyes on the Father and let his powerful hand come upon you, you too can outrun chariots.

A Sign of God’s Power

Carter Conlon

When God sent Moses back to Egypt to set his people free, they had known 400 years of captivity. That generation and their parents and their grandparents had never known anything other than this dominant, oppressive culture telling them when to go to bed, when to get up, what to think, the parameters around their behavior. They probably lived with the constant mockery of people saying, “You’re supposed to be the children of God. If that is true, why are you being dominated by us? Where is your God? Where is the strength of your God?”

I know that believers today fight those thoughts all the time. Many who have known Christ their whole life still have the devil whispering into their hearts, “If you really are a child of God, why do you struggle the way you do? Where is he now when you really need him?”

Look at how God answered this question for the Israelites. “Aaron spoke all the words which the Lord had spoken to Moses. Then he did the signs in the sight of the people. So the people believed; and when they heard that the Lord had visited the children of Israel and that he had looked on their affliction, then they bowed their heads and worshiped” (Exodus 4:30-31, NKJV). 

When we walk into a situation and we’re not there in our own strength, when we give God the glory and we’re not there for ourselves, we can see God move. God is calling us to face our greatest fears oftentimes. I know what this is about. I suffered from panic attacks for nine years. It was nine years of hell on earth, sometimes even being taken to hospital by ambulance because of this affliction.

One night, I found myself in the midst of one of these panic attacks, and I finally said, “Satan, you can only kill me if God allows you to; and if he does, heaven is my home tonight. In life or death, I win.” A heat went through my whole body, and God delivered me in a moment. 

This deliverance was not in the natural or by men’s power, and so will be your deliverance. God will look upon your affliction, and his power will heal. 

Carter Conlon joined the pastoral staff of Times Square Church in 1994 and was appointed Senior Pastor in 2001. In May of 2020, he transitioned into a continuing role as General Overseer of Times Square Church, Inc.

Perfect Righteousness

David Wilkerson (1931-2011)

God accepts only one kind of righteousness: perfect righteousness. Nothing else will stand in his presence on Judgment Day. Unless our righteousness is absolutely perfect, he cannot save us, justify us, recognize or accept us. This perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ our Lord can be had only by faith.

The writer of Hebrews introduces us to the truth that this righteousness is the inheritance of all true believers. It is something Jesus has left for us, something that belongs to us, a legacy. “By faith Noah, being divinely warned of things not yet seen, moved with godly fear, prepared an ark for the saving of his household, by which he condemned the world and became heir of the righteousness which is according to faith” (Hebrews 11:7, NKJV).

Noah became an heir not by building an ark but by what he believed and preached. He grasped this knowledge of righteousness which God had revealed to him, a righteousness that is by faith; and he became an heir of a perfect righteousness.

Beloved, you and I were given a great inheritance when Christ departed the earth. He left us a title and deed to his very own perfect righteousness. Of course, Jesus lived in absolute poverty while on this earth; he owned no land, had no money; but he left us riches greater than the diamond mines of South Africa, greater than the oil fields in the Middle East, greater than the gold and silver buried under America’s mountains. Jesus gave us an inheritance that can make us far richer than any person on the face of the earth. It is an inheritance to a perfect righteousness that allows us to stand before God without condemnation.

Once you understand this inheritance, you can stand against every devil in hell. Satan will not be able to accuse you before the Father, your brethren or your own conscience because you are an heir to the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ!