Daily Devotionals

Leave No One Behind: Week 3 - Wednesday

 

My old self has been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. So I live in this earthly body by trusting in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. Galatians 2:20

Yesterday, we discussed Christ's invitation to believe in Him. Indeed, He offers the invitation to place all of our faith in Him because He is the only one who can save. We cannot stop there, however. You see, the invitation He offers goes beyond believing in Him. He offers the invitation for all of us to commit our lives to Him, giving every part of our lives to Him and Him alone. 

The apostle Paul serves as an example to us of what it looks like to commit our lives to Christ. Originally, the book of Acts tells us, Paul was opposed to Christianity. In fact, he was doing everything he could to stop the Jesus movement from spreading. Everything changed when he met Jesus one day, and he committed his life to Him. From that moment, Paul went from opposing Christianity and doing everything he could to stop Christianity from spreading to being the greatest missionary the world had ever and would ever know. Paul also wrote many books of the New Testament. In the book of Galatians, he wrote about his commitment to Christ. He said in Galatians 2, “My old self has been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. So I live in this earthly body by trusting in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me” (verse 20). After giving his life to Christ, Paul explained that he had died to his old self. His life was no longer his. It belonged to Christ. Everything he did and everything he lived for was for Christ and Christ alone. That is what it means to commit our lives to Christ. 

Paul's example serves as a reminder to all of us that committing our lives to Christ means making Christ known a priority and inviting others to commit their lives to Him as well. This means sharing with them the truth that we are all sinners and that our sin separates us from God, but we have hope because of what Christ has done for us. Who can you share the hope of Christ with today? 

 

Moving Toward Action

The Bridge Diagram is a helpful tool for sharing our faith with those around us. You can find the diagram here in video 4 if you need practice reviewing it. Then, share it with one person today who needs the hope that only Christ offers. Before you share, pray. Pray for that person and that God would make Himself known to them so that they will one day commit their lives to Him. 


Going Deeper

Galatians 2:1-21

1Then fourteen years later I went back to Jerusalem again, this time with Barnabas; and Titus came along, too. I went there because God revealed to me that I should go. While I was there I met privately with those considered to be leaders of the church and shared with them the message I had been preaching to the Gentiles. I wanted to make sure that we were in agreement, for fear that all my efforts had been wasted and I was running the race for nothing. And they supported me and did not even demand that my companion Titus be circumcised, though he was a Gentile.

Even that question came up only because of some so-called believers there—false ones, really—who were secretly brought in. They sneaked in to spy on us and take away the freedom we have in Christ Jesus. They wanted to enslave us and force us to follow their Jewish regulations. But we refused to give in to them for a single moment. We wanted to preserve the truth of the gospel message for you.

And the leaders of the church had nothing to add to what I was preaching. (By the way, their reputation as great leaders made no difference to me, for God has no favorites.) Instead, they saw that God had given me the responsibility of preaching the gospel to the Gentiles, just as he had given Peter the responsibility of preaching to the Jews. For the same God who worked through Peter as the apostle to the Jews also worked through me as the apostle to the Gentiles.

In fact, James, Peter, and John, who were known as pillars of the church, recognized the gift God had given me, and they accepted Barnabas and me as their co-workers. They encouraged us to keep preaching to the Gentiles, while they continued their work with the Jews. 10 Their only suggestion was that we keep on helping the poor, which I have always been eager to do.

11 But when Peter came to Antioch, I had to oppose him to his face, for what he did was very wrong. 12 When he first arrived, he ate with the Gentile believers, who were not circumcised. But afterward, when some friends of James came, Peter wouldn’t eat with the Gentiles anymore. He was afraid of criticism from these people who insisted on the necessity of circumcision. 13 As a result, other Jewish believers followed Peter’s hypocrisy, and even Barnabas was led astray by their hypocrisy.

14 When I saw that they were not following the truth of the gospel message, I said to Peter in front of all the others, “Since you, a Jew by birth, have discarded the Jewish laws and are living like a Gentile, why are you now trying to make these Gentiles follow the Jewish traditions?

15 “You and I are Jews by birth, not ‘sinners’ like the Gentiles. 16 Yet we know that a person is made right with God by faith in Jesus Christ, not by obeying the law. And we have believed in Christ Jesus, so that we might be made right with God because of our faith in Christ, not because we have obeyed the law. For no one will ever be made right with God by obeying the law.”

17 But suppose we seek to be made right with God through faith in Christ and then we are found guilty because we have abandoned the law. Would that mean Christ has led us into sin? Absolutely not! 18 Rather, I am a sinner if I rebuild the old system of law I already tore down. 19 For when I tried to keep the law, it condemned me. So I died to the law—I stopped trying to meet all its requirements—so that I might live for God. 20 My old self has been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. So I live in this earthly body by trusting in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. 21 I do not treat the grace of God as meaningless. For if keeping the law could make us right with God, then there was no need for Christ to die.