No Condemnation, Only Mission: Leaving the Perpetual Trial Behind as We Enter 2026
2 Corinthians 5:11
"Therefore, knowing the fear of the Lord, we persuade others. But what we are is known to God, and I hope it is known also to your conscience."
Paul earnestly seeks to convince people of the gospel’s truth, urging them toward faith in Christ. His ministry isn’t manipulative but driven by sincere devotion, aware that God sees his heart fully. His motivation is pleasing God. And he hopes the Corinthians’ consciences affirm his genuineness too, defending his apostleship against critics who questioned his motives.
I think too many get confused on this idea of "the fear of the Lord". This "fear" the bible is speaking about is not a cringing terror for those in Christ (we will not face condemnation, Romans 8:1). Rather, it is a profound reverence, a holy awe, a trembling desire to please the One who loved us, redeemed us, and will one day evaluate our lives. It's the same fear that moved Noah to build the ark (Hebrews 11:7) and that should be the mark of every servant of God. This isn't about fearing the gears of the institutionalized religious tradition. This isn't about fearing missing out on the "true" this or that. Paul is talking about living coram Deo, as before the face of God. Not a slavish, cringing terror (as if believers still live under the wrath of God) or a diluted mere "respect" that carries no weight or urgency. Both miss the rich, biblical nuance.
Religion is not meant to serve as a trial to determine your salvation (that was settled at the cross; there is now no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus, period. Romans 8:1). Rather, it is an evaluation of our lives as redeemed people. No longer living the self-entitled self-centered life, living a life dedicated and devoted to the gospel, a God-centered life. God-conscience, not religion-conscience, fellowship with God. A mind in The Spirit.
Unfortunately, religion, as it is so often practiced, turns faith into a perpetual trial.
"Have I done enough? Have I been sincere enough? Am I still saved?"
That anxious, uncertain spirit is the very opposite of the freedom Christ purchased. The verdict of salvation was rendered once-for-all at the cross and declared to every believer. The Judge Himself has absorbed the penalty, silenced the accuser, and clothed us in His own righteousness. Nothing can reverse that decree. And no human arbitration is required in addition to this direct divine propitiation.
This is the great tragedy of much that passes for "religion". It turns the finished work of Christ into an endless courtroom drama. Day after day, the believer is put back on trial, cross-examined by his own conscience, by religious rules, by comparing himself to others.
Have I done enough?
Have I been sincere enough?
Have I prayed the right prayer, felt the right feeling, avoided the right sins?
Am I still saved?
We see this drama being played out everyday everywhere. Uncertain spirits, not the fruit of the gospel.
Friends, if this seems familiar to you, what are doing? What are you thinking?
There is...
No condemnation.
Not now.
Not ever.
Nothing left to prove.
No further arbitration needed.
No human mediator, no additional sacrifice, no ongoing penance can add even one iota to what Christ has already accomplished.
ITS DONE!
Be okay with that, and then get on with the gospel mission God has given you. When religion puts us back under perpetual trial, it robs us of joy, weakens our witness, and distorts the glory of the cross. But when we rest in the finished work of Christ, something beautiful happens; gratitude overflows into glad obedience, confidence replaces fear, and we become bold ambassadors of the same reconciling message.
If the "perpetual trial"mindset has marked your walk with God, today is a good day to step out of the courtroom. Lay down the exhausting questions. Lift your eyes to the empty cross and the occupied throne. Then rise up, and get on with the gospel mission He has entrusted to you; loving, serving, proclaiming, persuading others with the freedom of one who is forever acquitted.
Closing Prayer
Lord Jesus, thank You for shouting from the cross the words that silenced every accuser..."It is finished." Forgive us for the times we have lived as though it wasn’t. Heal the hearts that have been worn down by religious trial. Flood us with the Spirit of adoption so that we cry "Abba, Father!" (Papa!) with unshakable confidence. Turn our weariness into worship, our fear into boldness, and our introspection into mission. As this year closes tonight, let us cross into 2026 not as defendants, but as dearly loved children and joyful ambassadors of Your reconciling grace. For Your glory and our everlasting joy, Amen.