Christine Lan |
Christine Lan understands her role as an ambassador in
God’s Kingdom. In her writing, she clearly communicates the Kingdom message and
God’s original design for man. A proud graduate of United Graduate College and
Seminary, she strongly supports education that inculcates a divine mind that
transforms the world we live in.
__________________________
Last Friday, I attended a Christian concert/worship
roadshow performed by a number of prominent artistes such as Mercy Me and
Jeremy Camp. Bart Millard of Mercy Me spoke a very convincing message and I was
thrilled that he was disseminating the message of righteousness through his
sharing. He mentioned that he grew up in the Baptist church where as a youth
leader, he would bash the people who attended church and when they left worse
off than before, he and the church leaders would “high-five” one another and
thought they had done a great service to Christendom. God’s revelatory grace
through a renewed mind caused his songs and messages to point people to His
love, righteousness and worth in Him.
“The cross is not the revealing of sin but the
unveiling of your worth,” someone wrote anonymously on the first page of a
prayer journal at a University chapel. I just had spent sometime playing on the
chapel piano and was about to leave when the Holy Spirit spoke to me to write
something on the journal, too. So, I wrote this,
“Father, I thank you that I
can come boldly before the throne of
grace. I am righteous
because you have redeemed me
from the curse of the law. Thank you that once I have embraced you as my Creator and Almighty Father, God
and King, I am no longer a sinner but your son/daughter whom you are
well-pleased. Amen.”
Throughout church history, men and women of God had to
fight the supposed sacred truths upheld by the church of the day. Martin Luther
through the revelation of the Holy Spirit opposed the holy church rites and
propagandized the Scriptural Truth of Romans 1:17 which says, ‘For in the
gospel a righteousness from God is revealed, a righteousness that is by faith
from first to last, just as it is written: “The righteous will live by faith”’
(NIV).
Righteousness is the foundational theology or doctrine
of God’s Kingdom. Simply stated, righteousness is synonymous with justification
which most people understand is “just as if you have never sinned.”
Righteousness
Consciousness
According to Funk
& Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary of the English Language,
righteousness means “conformity to law or to right and justice; the state of
acceptance and of harmony with God; specifically, the state of being justified
and blessed because of the atonement of Christ and the faith that renders it
available and effectual” or “the active and passive obedience of Christ
regarded as the ground of the sinner’s justification.” The Greek word for
“righteousness” is dikaiosune which
means “equity (of character or act), specifically, justification, usually
translated “righteousness” (Strong 1343).
In
his book, The Two Kinds of Life, E.
W. Kenyon noted that when Luther had limited revelation of one truth, justification
by faith, he brought civilization to Germany.
There was no “clear conception of a New Birth, of righteousness, of God as a
Father, or of our place as sons and daughters of God.” (Kenyon 31). The church
has been guilty of disseminating a gospel that is a blend of human philosophies
and religions passed down from the Middle Ages. Galatians 4:4-7 specifically
emphasizes our identity as God’s sons, ‘But when the fullness of the time had
come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem
those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption as sons. And
because you are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your
hearts, crying out, “Abba, Father!” Therefore you are no longer a slave but a
son, and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ.’ (NKJV).
Noah and Abraham (the Father of Faith), were reckoned
as righteous by God. They led morally virtuous lives powered from the realm of
Heaven and were chosen by God to fulfill specific purposes. Noah helped save the
remnant humankind from extinction. Abraham was reckoned righteous as he
believed God and was made righteous by faith. “He believed the promise
regarding the Heir (Christ) who was to come out of his bowels via Isaac who was
as yet unborn; he believed that through this Heir, his (spiritual) seed would
be in number like the stars of heaven” (Lenski 289).
When a person is born of the Spirit of God from above
or Heaven, he is a new creation. He has the indwelt Holy Spirit of God and the
baptism of the Holy Spirit with the evidence of speaking in tongues empowers
him to walk in His will as God’s son. Jesus, the Perfect God-Man is sinless and
spotless but He became sin on our behalf “that we might become the
righteousness of God in Him” (NKJV, 2 Corinthians 5.21). There is a powerful
exchange transacted at calvary. Observing a set of rules to do good is
subjecting one to the bondage of legalism and works mentality. Jesus has
already fulfilled the law. There is no necessity to sacrifice animals, burn
candles and incense to make one righteous. Paul says it aptly, “For sin shall
not have dominion over you, for you are not under law but under grace.” (NKJV,
Romans 6.14).
If you know your identity as righteous sons of God in
His Kingdom, you will fulfill God’s purpose on Earth. You will proclaim His
Name unashamedly everywhere you go. You know you bear God’s image and represent
Him boldly. Righteousness, peace and joy, the fruit of the Holy Spirit will
invariably be evident in your life. You will walk with integrity and purity
before all man. You will display His glory as shining examples of supernatural
creative kings, priests and sons.
“Works Cited”
Funk, Isaac K. Funk &
Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary of the English Language. New York:
Funk & Wagnalls Company,
1952.
Kenyon, E. W. The Two Kinds of
Life. Lynwood, Washington: Kenyon’s Gospel Publishing Society,
2002.
Lenski, R. C. H. Interpretation
of Romans. Minneapolis, Minnesota, Ausburg Publishing House,
1936.
Maxwell, John C., Elmore, Tim. The
Maxwell Leadership Bible. Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas
Nelson, Inc., 2007.
Strong, James. Strong’s
Exhaustive Concordance. McLean, Virginia: MacDonald Publishing
Company, n.d.
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