Just As You Are


Video is too old to play online. Consider listening to the audio, or downloading and playing with VLC Media Player.

Video is too old to play online. Consider listening to the audio, or downloading and playing with VLC Media Player.

Exams are a big part of life in high school and in college. The trouble is, sometimes we transfer our worries about exams to our standing with God.

Program Transcript


It’s summertime again! The dreaded final exams are over, grades are in, school
is out and kids are home for the summer.

Exams are a big part of
life in high school and in college. A lot hinges on them, and that can make
them rather frightening, especially if you haven’t studied, or if a teacher is
known for being especially hard.

The trouble is, sometimes we transfer our worries about exams to our
standing with God. We sometimes think of God as a rigid accountant who keeps a
careful tab of everything we do wrong. And we dread the final Judgment as the biggest and worst final exam in the world.

But nothing could be farther from the truth. God wants you saved, not condemned! That is why he
sent his Son. John 3:17 says, “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world,
but to save the world through him.

You might know the song, “Come Just As You Are.” Those words,
“come, just as you are,” serve as a reminder that God sees everything: our best
and our worst, and he loves us anyway. The apostle Paul wrote, “…God demonstrates his own love for us in
this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8, NIV).

In her book, The Rock That
is Higher,
Madeleine L’Engle relates a story about an English household who
had a famous actor to dinner. After the meal, the household custom was for
everyone to give a recitation, sing, or offer whatever talent they might have
to entertain the others. When it was the actor’s turn, he chose to recite the
beloved Psalm 23. The Lord is my
shepherd. I shall not want.
His rendition was magnificent, and there was
much applause.

At the end of the evening, someone noticed the little old great
aunt, who had fallen asleep in a corner. Being deaf in her old age, she had
missed most of what was going on, but she was urged to get up and recite
something. She launched right into the Twenty-Third Psalm. When she finished,
there was hardly a dry eye in the room. Later, someone approached the famous
actor and said, “You recited that Psalm absolutely superbly. So why were we so
moved by that funny, little old lady?”

The actor replied, “I know the Psalm. She knows the shepherd.”

Because we know Jesus, we also know the Father. Anyone who has seen
me has seen the Father
,” (John 14:9) Jesus said,. The Father loves us just like Jesus
loves us.

“Come just as you are” means that God does not wait for us to get righteous
before he includes us in Christ. He loves us already, despite what we have done,
and he will never let us go. Through Christ, he has already removed every
obstacle that could separate us from him before
we ever believed. All we need to do is trust him and accept his gracious gift
of love and a new life in Christ.

I’m Joseph Tkach, Speaking of LIFE.

Archive