Romans 5:1-2
"Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God."
It’s like a king moving into a rundown palace he just bought and declared it his own.
The place is his now.
Even while the renovation crews are still tearing out the rot.
The presence of the King makes it royal, even as the work continues.
It's renovation.
It's deconstructing the old, demo. And renewing that home. It’s renovation, not instant perfection. There's going to be dust and debris. Things that need to be cleaned out, taken out to the trash.
1 John 1:8-10 is blunt about that:
"If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us."
Did you ask for forgiveness or permission?
Did you do that thing you do, and then talk to God about that thing in terms of forgiveness? Or permission?
Did you think that thought and then try to think it away?
Or did you think that thought and then capture those thoughts by speaking out loud about how you will not think that thought?
You see, when you think it, you can't think it away because your mind isn't going to capture it. But when you speak it out loud, with your words, you are taking it captive and owning it, confessing it, revealing it, naming it, identifying the truth about it. And there is godliness power in that declaration.
This is the rhythm of the Christian life. The foundation is we’re already justified, already standing in grace, already at peace with God through Christ. The title deed is signed in His blood. That never changes, even when the house looks like a construction zone.
So what's the problem?
Too many of us treat God like a lenient roommate instead of the Holy King who now owns the place.
If you're not going to name it for what it truly is, then why do you expect Him to pour out His blessedness on you?
Fact of the matter is, thoughts are slippery in the mind. The tongue has real authority.
Jesus said it:
"Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks" (Matthew 12:34).
I've heard it said so often by the ungodly atheists:
"why does your God allow endless suffering in hell? Isn't that unmerciful?"
My answer is simply this:
"Endless sin"
Every sin is against an infinite God, so it carries infinite weight.
If the renovation never happens, if the King is treated as a roommate, if the rot is never named, confessed, or yielded to the demolition crew; then the house stays in rebellion. The title deed says it belongs to the King, but the occupant lives as if it doesn’t. That’s not a small disagreement. That’s ongoing treason against the Owner.
God is holy. Sin is cosmic treason against that holiness. Endless unrepentant sin therefore deserves endless judgment. Hell isn’t God being cruel; it’s God being just while honoring the creature’s choice to say "I will not have this King rule over me".
The better question is, "How can a holy and just God not judge endless rebellion?"
Mercy has already been extended at infinite cost, the cross. To reject that mercy while continuing in "endless sin" is to choose the consequences. The offer is still open. The blood is still sufficient. The renovation is still happening for everyone who will cooperate with the King instead of treating Him like a roommate.
The King who bought the palace also specializes in turning even the worst ruins into dwellings of glory, for all who will let Him.
Pray:
Lord Jesus,
I know I’m a sinner and my life is a mess.
I’ve treated You like a stranger instead of my King.
I confess my sins and turn from them.
Thank You for dying for me and rising again.
Come into my heart, forgive me, and be my Lord.
I trust You now. Make me Yours.
Amen.