The Power of Motivation: Why We Obey God
What drives your obedience to God? Is it fear of punishment? Guilt over past mistakes? A sense of obligation because of what He's done for you? Or is it something deeper—something rooted in love and gratitude?
The answer to this question reveals everything about our relationship with God and the kind of spiritual life we're living.
When Motivation Matters
Our world understands that motivation matters. In our legal system, we distinguish between accidental harm and premeditated crime. At work, we recognize the difference between someone who merely completes tasks and someone who works with genuine passion. As parents, we know there's a world of difference between a child who obeys out of fear and one who obeys out of love.
Yet somehow, when it comes to our spiritual lives, we often forget this truth. We reduce Christianity to a checklist of behaviors, forgetting that God cares deeply about the heart behind our actions.
Grace Is Greater Than Sin: Understanding Our Story in Adam and Jesus
Have you ever been caught in the wrong place at the wrong time? You know that feeling when someone else makes a terrible decision, and you find yourself swept up in the consequences even though you had nothing to do with it? You want to protest: "Wait, I wasn't even involved in this!"
This natural reaction reveals something profound about how we view ourselves and our relationship with the rest of humanity. We want to believe we're independent operators, that our choices are ours alone, and that we shouldn't be held accountable for anyone else's mistakes. But what if our entire understanding of salvation depends on accepting a reality that works completely differently?
The Problem of Adam
Romans chapter 5 presents us with a challenging truth: we are all connected to Adam's original sin. Through one man, sin entered the world, and through sin came death. And this death came to all people because all sinned. This isn't just ancient history or a metaphorical story. It's the foundation of understanding our broken relationship with God.
The immediate reaction most of us have is resistance. "That's not fair! I wasn't in the Garden of Eden. I didn't eat from that tree. Why should I be held responsible for what Adam did?" Our modern individualistic culture makes this concept especially difficult to swallow. We want to believe that if we had been in Adam's position, we would have made better choices.
But here's the uncomfortable truth: given enough time in that same situation, every single one of us would have made the exact same choice. Adam wasn't chosen because he was worse than the rest of humanity. He wasn't selected because he was uniquely flawed. He was chosen because he perfectly represented what all of humanity would do when given the choice between trusting God and trusting ourselves.
The Dangerous Deception of "Good Enough"
here's a particular kind of person who appears throughout history with remarkable consistency. They live respectable lives, maintain strong moral standards, and often find themselves looking down on those they consider less virtuous. They're the ones who shake their heads at society's decline, who point fingers at obvious sinners, who pride themselves on being decent human beings.
But what if this very posture—this confidence in personal goodness—is one of the most dangerous spiritual positions a person can occupy?
The Mirror of Judgment
Romans chapter 2 confronts us with an uncomfortable reality: "You therefore have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else. For at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things."
This isn't about refraining from all moral discernment. The Bible clearly calls believers to recognize evil and call it what it is. Isaiah warns against calling evil good and good evil. The issue isn't judgment itself—it's hypocritical judgment, the kind that condemns in others what we excuse in ourselves.
Consider the person who looks with disgust at someone caught in adultery while harboring lust in their own heart. Jesus made it clear that looking at someone with lust is committing adultery in the heart. The external actions may differ, but the heart condition is the same.
When we judge others while practicing the same sins, we reveal something profound: we already know there's a standard of right and wrong. Our very judgment testifies that God's moral law exists. But here's the problem—that same law condemns us too.