
Foreword
This is a message about the grace of God. Many people approach God expecting the same rule the world lives by: โLet the punishment fit the crime.โ We assume that if we have done wrong, we must pay it back in fullโand that Godโs response will be strictly proportional to our failures. But the New Testament reveals something higher than natural justice: the grace of God in Jesus Christ.
This message is written for anyone who feels disqualified, condemned, or trapped in the belief that God only gives people what they deserve. It also speaks to believers who know they are forgiven, yet still wrestle with consequences, correction, and seasons of restoration. The goal is not to weaken holiness or excuse sin, but to magnify the cross and clarify the difference between condemnation and correction, between justice and mercy, and between religion and reconciliation.
As you read, keep one truth in front of you: Godโs grace does not deny that sin is seriousโit declares that Christโs sacrifice is greater. If you are willing to be honest before God, you will find that He is not trying to destroy you; He is calling you back to Himself.
- Romans 8:1ย โ โThere is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesusโฆโ
- 2 Corinthians 5:19ย โ God is โnot imputing their trespasses unto them.โ
- Psalm 103:10ย โ โHe hath not dealt with us after our sinsโฆโ
Now, letโs walk through the difference between what we expect from Godโand what the gospel actually promises.
God Isnโt Into Giving You What You Deserve
Hearing that may make you rejoice, because this is what the New Testament is all about: the grace of God.
Part I โ Two Ways of Thinking: Justice vs. Grace
1) Grace: God Gives What You Donโt Deserve
Grace is Godโs unearned favorโHis mercy, help, and forgiveness given freely through Jesus Christ.
Grace means Godโs kindness toward you is not based on your performance. It is based on Jesus Christโwho He is and what He did. Thatโs why grace can reach people at their worst, not just at their best.
Many people think, โIf I do better, God will accept me.โ Grace says, โBecause God accepted you in Christ, He will help you do better.โ Grace is not permission to sinโit is power to come out of sin without despair.
Example: A person who has lived in addiction, sexual sin, bitterness, or violence may feel โtoo dirtyโ to approach God. Grace says: come now. You donโt clean yourself to come to Godโyou come to God to be cleaned.
- Ephesians 2:8โ9ย โ โFor by grace are ye saved through faithโฆ not of worksโฆโ
- Titus 2:11ย โ โFor the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all menโฆโ
- Romans 5:8ย โ โWhile we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.โ
God is not focused on giving you what you deserve in the natural sense. He is focused on giving you what you donโt deserve: grace, help, forgiveness, and reconciliation to God.
- 2 Corinthians 5:18โ19ย โ God โreconciled us to himselfโฆ not imputing their trespasses unto them.โ
- Psalm 103:10โ12ย โ โHe hath not dealt with us after our sinsโฆโ
2) Natural Justice: โLet the Punishment Fit the Crimeโ
The world teaches, โLet the punishment fit the crime.โ In the Old Testament, we see proportional justice expressed clearly.
Natural justice is the instinctive human sense of fairness: wrong should be answered with equal consequence. This is why people say, โThey should pay for what they did.โ Itโs also why guilt and shame feel so heavyโbecause the conscience knows wrongdoing deserves judgment.
In the Old Testament, proportional justice restrained chaos. It limited revenge and kept punishment from becoming excessive. But natural justice cannot change the heartโit can only measure the offense.
Example: If someone steals, natural justice says they should repay. If someone harms another, natural justice says there should be consequences. That principle is realโbut it is not the full story of redemption.
- Exodus 21:23โ25ย โ โEye for eye, tooth for toothโฆโ
- Leviticus 24:19โ20ย โ โAs he hath done, so shall it be done to him.โ
3) Natural Law (Definition)
Natural law is the belief that moral laws should be based on the way humans are designed, created, or intended to function. It claims that moral laws come from:
- human nature,
- the structure of reality, and
- Godโs design (in religious versions).
In Christian and Jewish thought, natural law is often connected to the idea that God built moral order into creation.
Natural law is the idea that God built moral order into creationโmeaning certain things are โrightโ or โwrongโ not merely because society votes on them, but because they align (or donโt align) with how God designed life to function.
This is why even people who donโt read the Bible still feel guilt, fear, or inner conflict when they lie, betray, abuse, or exploit. Conscience testifies that moral reality exists.
Natural law explains why โeye for eyeโ makes sense to the human mind: it feels balanced. But the gospel introduces something higher than balance: mercy and transformation.
- Romans 2:14โ15ย โ the work of the law is โwritten in their heartsโฆโ
- Genesis 18:25ย โ โShall not the Judge of all the earth do right?โ
โEye for an eyeโ (lex talionis) is often explained as a natural-law principle of proportional justice.
4) Grace Goes Beyond Natural Justice (Forgiveness and Love)
The grace of God goes beyond natural justice through spiritual laws such as forgiveness and love. This is central to what it means to be a Christian.
Grace does not deny justiceโit goes beyond it by offering forgiveness and love where the natural mind expects retaliation. This is one of the clearest marks of true Christianity: not just believing doctrines, but receiving a new heart that can forgive.
Forgiveness is not calling evil โgood.โ Forgiveness is releasing your right to revenge and placing the matter into Godโs hands. Love is not approving sin; love is choosing to seek someoneโs redemption rather than their destruction.
Example: Someone lies about you, betrays you, or harms your reputation. Natural justice says, โDestroy them back.โ Grace says, โI will not become what hurt me. I will forgive, pray, and keep my heart clean.โ
- Matthew 5:38โ39ย โ Jesus references โeye for eyeโ and calls His people higher.
- Matthew 5:44ย โ โLove your enemiesโฆโ
- Luke 23:34ย โ โFather, forgive themโฆโ
Part II โ The Reach of Grace: Nothing Is Beyond the Cross
5) Godโs Grace Is Greater Than All Our Sin
It doesnโt matter what youโve done or what you think you may doโGodโs grace is greater than all our sins. There is nothing the death, blood, and cross of the Lord Jesus Christ cannot forgive.
This point needs to be unmistakable: there is no category of sin that is โtoo bigโ for the blood of Jesus. People often believe God can forgive โsmall sins,โ but not their sinsโbecause their sins feel personal, repeated, shameful, or extreme.
But the cross was not a partial payment. It was a complete sacrifice. The issue is not whether Christโs blood is strong enoughโthe issue is whether a person will come into the light and receive what God offers.
Example: A person may say, โIโve done things I canโt even speak out loud.โ This point says: bring it to God. Confess it. Turn from it. Christโs cleansing is real.
- 1 John 1:7ย โ โThe blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.โ
- 1 John 1:9ย โ โHe is faithful and just to forgive usโฆโ
- Romans 5:20ย โ โWhere sin abounded, grace did much more abound.โ
- Hebrews 7:25ย โ He saves โto the uttermostโฆโ
The New Testament Christian life is about God giving you what you donโt deserve, instead of giving you what you deserve for your actions.
Part III โ Divine Equity: Grace Doesnโt Cancel Consequences
6) Divine Equity: The โReaping Yearsโ After Sin
Even after forgiveness, there can still be consequences in this life. When you come to Christ, there may be a season of amending with people youโve hurt. Not everyone will accept your apology. Some may remain hostile. This is part of the โreaping years.โ
Grace cancels eternal condemnation, but it does not always erase earthly consequences. โReaping yearsโ means: even after forgiveness, you may still walk through the aftermath of what you sowedโbroken trust, damaged relationships, legal consequences, financial loss, or emotional fallout.
This is not God refusing to forgive you. It is lifeโs realityโand often God uses it to mature you, humble you, and rebuild your character.
Example: A person is forgiven for adultery, but the marriage may still need time to healโor may not survive. A person is forgiven for crime, but may still serve a sentence. Forgiveness is real; consequences can still be real.
- Galatians 6:7โ8ย โ โWhatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.โ
- Romans 12:18ย โ โIf it be possibleโฆ live peaceably with all men.โ
- Matthew 5:23โ24ย โ be reconciled where possible.
Part IV โ For Believers: Correction, Fellowship, and Restoration
7) After Salvation: Correction, Not Condemnation
If you sin after you are saved, you will not be condemned to hell as though you were unsaved. Those outside of Christ remain under condemnation, but those in Christ are dealt with as sonsโthrough correction.
This point is about the difference between a judge sentencing a criminal and a father correcting a child. When you are saved, God does not relate to you as an enemyโHe relates to you as His own.
So when a believer sins, Godโs response is not โYouโre going to hell.โ His response is discipline, conviction, correction, and restorationโbecause He is keeping you, shaping you, and bringing you back into fellowship.
Example: A believer falls into pornography again, or returns to bitterness, or lies. God convicts them, exposes it, and calls them to repentanceโnot to destroy them, but to restore them.
- Romans 8:1ย โ โThere is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesusโฆโ
- John 3:18ย โ โHe that believeth not is condemned alreadyโฆโ
- Hebrews 12:6ย โ โWhom the Lord loveth he chastenethโฆโ
8) Broken Fellowship and a Hindered Anointing
A believer can experience seasons of broken fellowship with Godโtimes of correction where spiritual effectiveness is hindered. Sin can grieve the Holy Spirit and hinder prayer and power.
Broken fellowship means the relationship is strainedโnot because the Holy Spirit departed, or that God stopped being God, but because sin disrupts closeness, clarity, and spiritual sensitivity. A believer can still be saved and yet feel spiritually โdry,โ powerless, or distant because they are grieving the Spirit.
This is where many Christians get confused: they assume dryness means God hates them, or that God has left them permanently. Often it means God is calling them to deal honestly with something.
Example: A person keeps justifying bitterness, hidden sin, or rebellion. They still believe, but prayer feels blocked, worship feels empty, and spiritual power is hindered. That isnโt always โan attack.โ Sometimes itโs correction.
Details
In my experience, this often isnโt the devil fighting youโitโs God dealing with you. Because it feels like a fight, you assume itโs the enemy. But itโs your Lord correcting you. Discipline hurts, but the Lord isnโt going to let the devil punish you for Him.
Iโve also learned (again, from experience) that just as the Holy Spirit chooses which spiritual gifts to give (as written in First Corinthians, chapter 12, verse 11), and just as He is the One who brings about the new birth (as Jesus explained in the Gospel of John, chapter 3, verses 7โ8), it is also the Lord who decides when fellowship is restored after a season of struggling with sinโwhat Scripture often calls โbackslidingโ (as written in Jeremiah, chapter 3, verses 14โ15).
Now let me personalize what this means for you.
When Jesus said, โHave faith in God,โ and then spoke about speaking to a mountain and seeing it moved (as written in the Gospel of Mark, chapter 11, verses 22โ23), He wasnโt teaching that faith is a power you use to move things. He was teaching that God is the One who moves the mountain. Faith simply trusts Him to do it.
That means your fellowship with the Holy Spirit cannot be mixed with unforgiveness or a heart that is holding on to sinโthings like hatred, prejudice, sexual lust, or bitterness. Problems with people become problems with God, because God looks at the heart.
So if unforgiveness is present, fellowship is broken, and you wonโt have the anointingโthe โmoving powerโโbecause it is the Holy Spirit who does the moving through faith in God.
And where does faith come from? Faith comes from hearing the Word of God (as written in Romans, chapter 10, verse 17). Even โmustard seedโ faithโthe smallest, simplest faithโcan be enough, because that faith is produced by what you read in Scripture about what God can do.
But it still isnโt faith itself that moves the mountain. It is the Holy Spirit in you. And if you are holding on to unforgiveness, He will not move in that way. You can keep trying to โuse your faith,โ but nothing happensโnot because God is weak, but because sin disrupts fellowship. Scripture says your sins can separate you from God so that He does not hear (as written in Isaiah, chapter 59, verses 1โ2).
Scripture also teaches that God does not listen when a person clings to sin: โIf I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear meโ (Psalm 66, verse 18). And, โWe know that God does not hear sinnersโ (Gospel of John, chapter 9, verse 31). Yet when we ask according to His will, He hears usโand if He hears us, we have what we asked (First John, chapter 5, verses 14โ15).
So understand this: it is not โyour faithโ that moves the mountain. Faith means you believe God will do it. The Holy Spirit is the One who moves the mountain, and He does it when He is pleased with your obedienceโespecially obedience expressed through love and forgiveness.
When your heart is clean toward others, God can answer the smallest prayer with the biggest resultsโmoving mountains, stopping storms, doing what seems impossible. And what He does when He is pleased with your forgiveness will surprise you. It will be exactly as Jesus said: the tiniest faith will see the impossible happenโbecause God is pleased, and your fellowship with the Holy Spirit is intact.
This is what God wants you to understand tonight. I didnโt learn this merely through Bible study or church attendance, but through personal fellowship with the Holy Spirit. He helped me understand what these passages are really pointing to: pleasing God through forgiveness, and walking in unhindered fellowship with the Holy Spiritโthat is where โmountain-movingโ power is found.
Supporting Scriptures:
- Ephesians, chapter 4, verse 30 โ โDo not grieve the Holy Spirit of Godโฆโ
- Isaiah, chapter 59, verses 1โ2 โ Sin can separate and hinder fellowship.
- Psalm 66, verse 18 โ โIf I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.โ
- Acts, chapter 1, verse 8 โ โYou shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon youโฆโ
Can you explain more about how unforgiveness specifically disrupts fellowship with the Holy Spirit?
Unforgiveness disrupts fellowship with the Holy Spirit because it puts your heart in direct conflict with what the Spirit is doing in you: producing Christlike love, truth, and mercy. You can still belong to Christ, but your communion (closeness, clarity, freedom in prayer) becomes strainedโlike a relationship where you refuse to release someone while asking God for intimacy and power.
Here are the main ways Scripture shows it works:
- It grieves the Holy Spirit When you hold on to resentment, youโre choosing a posture the Spirit cannot affirm. Scripture says, โDo not grieve the Holy Spirit of Godโ (Ephesians 4:30). In the same passage, Paul connects grieving the Spirit with attitudes and actions like bitterness, wrath, anger, clamor, slander, and maliceโand then commands forgiveness (Ephesians 4:31โ32). In other words: bitterness and unforgiveness are not โsmall issuesโ; they touch the Spirit personally.
- It blocks prayer because it breaks agreement with Godโs heart Jesus tied forgiveness directly to effective prayer: โWhen you stand praying, forgiveโฆโ (Mark 11:25). Thatโs in the same teaching where He speaks about mountain-moving faith (Mark 11:22โ24). The point is not that forgiveness earns answers, but that unforgiveness puts you out of alignment with the God youโre asking. Youโre asking a forgiving Father while refusing to forgive.
- It invites self-justification instead of repentance Unforgiveness almost always comes with an inner courtroom: replaying the offense, proving youโre right, demanding payment. That posture resists the Spiritโs conviction and cleansing. Scripture says, โIf I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear meโ (Psalm 66:18). โRegardโ there is the idea of holding onto it, cherishing it, keeping it.
- It keeps you in darkness toward that person First John is blunt: โHe who hates his brother is in darknessโ (First John 2:11), and โIf someone says, โI love God,โ and hates his brother, he is a liarโ (First John 4:20). Unforgiveness may not always feel like โhate,โ but it often functions like it: withdrawal of love, refusal of mercy, desire for harm, or a settled coldness. Darkness and the Spiritโs fellowship donโt mix.
- It hands you over to torment instead of peace Jesusโ parable of the unforgiving servant ends with the man being handed over to tormentors, and Jesus applies it as a heart issue: โSo My heavenly Father also will do to you if each of you, from his heart, does not forgiveโฆโ (Matthew 18:34โ35). Many believers describe this as inner tormentโagitation, heaviness, confusion, drynessโbecause the Spirit is pressing the issue, not ignoring it.
What โbroken fellowshipโ looks like (practically)
- Prayer feels resisted or โhits the ceiling.โ
- Worship feels hollow because your heart is divided.
- The Word feels dull because the Spirit is confronting one specific area.
- You still believe, but you donโt feel the Spiritโs ease and flow.
What forgiveness is (and isnโt)
- Forgiveness is releasing your right to revenge and entrusting justice to God (Romans 12:19).
- Forgiveness is not saying what happened was okay, pretending it didnโt hurt, or removing wise boundaries.
- Reconciliation requires trust and repentance; forgiveness is something you can do before God even if the other person never changes.
9) The Holy Spirit and the Backslider: God Restores
The Holy Spirit does not abandon Godโs people, but He does correct, restore, and renew. Restoration is Godโs work and timing.
Backsliding is real: a believer can drift, compromise, or return to old ways. But restoration is also real: God calls the backslider back, cleanses them, and renews them.
Restoration is not only about tearsโitโs about turning. And itโs not only about turningโitโs about God renewing joy, strength, and spiritual stability over time.
Example: Someone who once prayed and walked closely with God becomes cold, distracted, and worldly. God begins to convict them again. They return, confess, and rebuild. The Spirit renews them.
- Psalm 51:11โ12ย โ โTake not thy holy spirit from meโฆ restore unto me the joyโฆโ
- 1 John 1:9ย โ confession and cleansing restore fellowship.
- Galatians 5:16โ17ย โ the Spirit wars against the flesh.
Part V โ Your New Position in Christ: Freedom and Transformation
10) Free From Sin and Death in Christ
When the Bible says, โthe wages of sin is death,โ it is speaking of sinโs final outcome apart from Christ. In Christ, you are no longer under condemnation, because you have been brought into life through Him.
This point is about your standing before God. Outside Christ, sin leads to deathโeternal separation. In Christ, you are transferred into life. That means your identity is no longer โcondemned sinner,โ but โforgiven and reconciled.โ
This doesnโt mean Christians never die physically. It means death no longer has the final word over your soul, and sin no longer has legal authority to condemn you.
Example: A believer may still struggle, but they are no longer living under the sentence of eternal death. They are living under the gift of eternal life.
- Romans 6:23ย โ โThe wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal lifeโฆโ
- Romans 8:2ย โ โThe law of the Spirit of lifeโฆ hath made me free from the law of sin and death.โ
- John 5:24ย โ the believer โis passed from death unto life.โ
11) Slaves to Sin (Before) vs. Freedom (After)
Before salvation, you were a slave to sin and could not truly obey God from the heart. After salvation, sin no longer has dominion over you. You may stumble, but you return to Godโbecause you belong to Him.
Before salvation, sin dominates. People may want to change but feel unableโbecause sin is not just an action; it becomes a master. After salvation, sin is no longer your master. You may still be tempted, and you may still stumble, but you are no longer trapped in hopeless bondage.
Freedom doesnโt mean โnever tempted.โ Freedom means you are no longer compelled to obey sin as your ruler.
Example: Before Christ, a person says, โI canโt stop.โ After Christ, they may still fight, but now they can say, โI donโt have to obey this. I can repent. I can get up. I can walk forward.โ
- Romans 6:14ย โ โSin shall not have dominion over youโฆโ
- Romans 6:17โ18ย โ โYe were the servants of sinโฆ being then made free from sinโฆโ
- 1 John 3:9ย โ Godโs seed remains in the believer.
Details:
What the Devil Did to You
Through sin, the devil erected a barrier between you and Godโone no human strength can breach. He took our power to choose from us. Inside, we quietly desire to choose good, but we cannotโbecause he introduced what Scripture calls โthe bond of iniquityโ into human flesh. Acts 8:23 warns, โFor I see that you are poisoned by bitterness and bound by iniquity.โ And Jesus declares the consequence of that bondage in John 8:34: โMost assuredly, I say to you, whoever commits sin is a slave of sin.โ
You still make real decisions, yet the fallen nature bends those decisions toward sin and away from God. The will may consent to what is right, but the flesh resists the doing of it. Paul spoke this with painful honesty in Romans 7:18โ19: โFor I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not to do, that I practice.โ This is why Scripture says in Romans 8:7, โBecause the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be.โ
This captivity began in Eden. When Adam sinned, he did more than break a commandโhe opened the door to a corrupted nature that passed to every human being. Romans 5:12 declares, โTherefore, just as through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men, because all sinned.โ Romans 5:19 adds, โFor as by one manโs disobedience many were made sinners.โ And 1 Corinthians 15:22 states it plainly: โFor as in Adam all die, even so in Christ all shall be made alive.โ
That sinful nature does not merely tempt youโit binds you. Jeremiah 17:9 exposes the root: โThe heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; who can know it?โ Galatians 5:17 reveals the inward war: โFor the flesh lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary to one another, so that you do not do the things that you wish.โ And Romans 6:20 names the slavery beneath it: โFor when you were slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness.โ
This is why the devilโs work was so devastatingโand why only God could undo it. 1 John 3:8 declares, โHe who sins is of the devil, for the devil has sinned from the beginning.โ Yet God sent a Deliverer, not a lecturerโOne who breaks chains, not merely exposes them. Hebrews 2:14โ15 proclaims, โInasmuch then as the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He Himself likewise shared in the same, that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and release those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.โ
Here is the hard truth: you are bound to the very things you hate. Romans 7:15 confesses, โFor what I am doing, I do not understand. For what I will to do, that I do not practice; but what I hate, that I do.โ And the cry of the captive rises in Romans 7:24: โO wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?โ But heaven answers with authority in John 8:36: โTherefore if the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed.โ
The devil has made you your own worst enemy. Your fiercest adversary is not merely around you, but within youโyour fallen โself,โ the flesh that resists God and wars against what is holy. This is the truth behind the old Christian saying: โThe enemy – en-a-me.โ
12) The Bond of Iniquity: From Chain to Habit
The curse of sin is broken by the presence and work of the Holy Spirit. What once ruled you becomes something you must retrainโold patterns of the flesh that no longer own you.
This point explains why some sins feel like โmuscle memory.โ When the curse is broken, the legal bondage is brokenโbut habits, triggers, and patterns may remain. The difference is: what used to be a chain becomes something you can retrain.
Sanctification often looks like re-training: renewing the mind, changing routines, cutting off access, building new habits, and learning obedience in practical steps.
Example: A person is delivered from drunkenness, but still has triggersโstress, certain friends, certain places. They must retrain their life: new boundaries, new routines, new thinking. God works in them, but they also cooperate.
- John 8:34โ36ย โ โIf the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.โ
- Romans 12:1โ2ย โ transformation through renewed thinking.
- Philippians 2:13ย โ God works in you โto will and to doโฆโ
Details
What Jesus Did for You
Everything the devil did to enslave you, Jesus Christ came to undo. He didn’t just forgive your sins โ He dismantled the very power that held you captive and restored your ability to choose God.
He Forgave Every Sin โ Past, Present, and Future
Jesus took the full weight of your sin upon Himself so that you could be made completely right with God. Romans 3:25 tells us that “God presented Christ as a sacrifice of atonement, through the shedding of His blood โ to be received by faith.” He who was without sin became sin on your behalf, as 2 Corinthians 5:21 declares: “He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.” And those sins are not merely covered โ they are removed entirely. Psalm 103:12 assures us: “As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us.”
He Destroyed the Devil’s Power Over You
Jesus didn’t just save you from sin โ He publicly defeated the one behind it. Colossians 2:13โ15 declares: “Having forgiven you all trespasses, having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us… He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross. Having disarmed principalities and powers, He made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them in it.” This victory was intentional and complete. Hebrews 2:14โ15 confirms: “Through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and release those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.” And 1 John 3:8 makes the purpose unmistakably clear: “For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.”
He Freed Your Will Through the Holy Spirit
Before Christ, you were dead in your sins โ powerless to choose God. But through Jesus, that changed forever. Colossians 2:13 declares: “You, being dead in your trespasses… He has made alive together with Him.” And 1 John 3:9 reveals the result of being born of God: “Whoever has been born of God does not sin, for His seed remains in him; and he cannot sin, because he has been born of God.”
He Gave You a New Nature
When the Holy Spirit makes you born again, He doesn’t simply improve your old nature โ He replaces it. 2 Corinthians 5:17 declares: “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” And with that new nature comes the very character of God Himself. As 2 Peter 1:4 promises, you become “partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.”
He Gave You the Holy Spirit to Overcome the Flesh
Finally, Jesus gave you the Holy Spirit โ not only to seal your salvation, but to mortify your flesh and sanctify the bond of iniquity within it. Romans 8:13 declares: “If by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live.” And Galatians 5:16 promises: “Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.” The same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead now lives in you โ empowering you to walk in the freedom Jesus purchased for you.
What the Holy Spirit Does for You โ The Work of Sanctification
Obeying God requires effort on your part โ but it is never effort in your own strength. Every step of obedience is empowered entirely by the Holy Spirit living within you. This is what Scripture calls the mortification and sanctification of the flesh โ the ongoing work of the Spirit to transform you from the inside out.
You Were Set Apart for Obedience
This work didn’t begin with you โ it began with God. As 1 Peter 1:2 declares, you are “elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, in sanctification of the Spirit, for obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ.” Sanctification is not optional โ it is the very purpose for which you were chosen. And as you yield to the Spirit in obedience, your soul is purified. 1 Peter 1:22 confirms: “Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren.”
You Put Sin to Death by the Spirit
The flesh does not die on its own โ it must be actively put to death. But this is not something you do alone. Romans 8:13 makes the distinction clear: “For if you live according to the flesh you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live.” It is the Spirit who gives you both the desire and the power to mortify what is sinful within you (Philippians 2:13).
You Break the Power of Sin by Doing Righteousness
Sin loses its grip when you actively replace it with righteousness. Daniel 4:27 gives this practical command: “Break off your sins by being righteous, and your iniquities by showing mercy to the poor.” This is not merely avoiding evil โ it is the aggressive pursuit of good. Romans 12:21 echoes this truth: “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”
Conclusion: God Reconciles You Instead of Condemning You
Sin no longer controls your life. God does. In Christ, He reconciles you instead of condemning you to eternal death.
- 2 Corinthians 5:21ย โ โThat we might be made the righteousness of God in him.โ
- Romans 5:1ย โ โBeing justified by faith, we have peace with Godโฆโ
From โCannot Obeyโ to โCannot Sinโ: Romans 7 and 1 John 3 Explained Through the New Birth
1 John 3:8-9 Authorized (King James) Version
From Sinโs Dominion to New Birth:
8 He that committeth sin is of the devil; for the devil sinneth from the beginning. For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that he might destroy the works of the devil.
9 Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.
Romans 7:15-20 Living Bible
The Inner War:
15 I donโt understand myself at all, for I really want to do what is right, but I canโt. I do what I donโt want toโwhat I hate.
16 I know perfectly well that what I am doing is wrong, and my bad conscience proves that I agree with these laws I am breaking.
17 But I canโt help myself because Iโm no longer doing it. It is sin inside me that is stronger than I am that makes me do these evil things.
18 I know I am rotten through and through so far as my old sinful nature is concerned. No matter which way I turn I canโt make myself do right. I want to but I canโt.
19 When I want to do good, I donโt; and when I try not to do wrong, I do it anyway.
20 Now if I am doing what I donโt want to, it is plain where the trouble is: sin still has me in its evil grasp.
1) 1 John 3:8โ9 (KJV) โ โhe cannot sinโ
John is not saying a born-again believer never commits an act of sin. Heโs describing a new nature and a new direction of life.
- โWhosoever is born of God doth not commit sinโ (present, ongoing sense): the one born of God does not live in sin as a settled practice, identity, and love.
- โHis seed remaineth in himโ: God puts something real inside the believerโnew life from God (His life, His nature, His Spirit).
- โHe cannot sinโ: not โphysically impossible to ever fail,โ but morally/spiritually impossible to be at peace with sin as your way of life. The new birth makes sin incompatible with who you now are. When a true believer sins, he cannot stay comfortable thereโGodโs life in him wars against it.
Johnโs context in the chapter is about who you belong to:
- A life characterized by sin shows the devilโs work.
- A life characterized by righteousness shows Godโs work. So โcannot sinโ is about identity and dominion: sin is no longer your master.
2) Romans 7:15โ20 (Living Bible) โ โI want to do right, but I canโtโ
Paul is describing the experience of a person who knows Godโs law is right but finds another power inside pulling the opposite way.
Key phrases:
- โI really want to do what is right, but I canโt.โ
- โIt is sin inside meโฆ that makes me do these evil things.โ
- โMy old sinful natureโฆ I canโt make myself do right.โ
This is the truth about the human condition without the Spiritโs power:
- The mind can agree with God.
- The conscience can condemn wrongdoing.
- But the flesh (sinful nature) has a grip that the person cannot break by willpower.
Romans 7 is the โcannot obey Godโ reality: the law can diagnose sin, but it cannot cure it.
3) Comparing them: โcannot obeyโ vs โcannot sinโ
At first glance they seem to clash:
- Romans 7: โI want to obey, but I canโt.โ
- 1 John 3: โBorn of Godโฆ cannot sin.โ
They tie together when you see theyโre describing two different states:
A) Before new birth (Romans 7 reality)
A person may:
- respect Godโs commands,
- feel guilt,
- try hard,
- make promises,
- even have religious knowledge,
โฆbut still be trapped in cycles: anger, lust, bitterness, lying, addiction, pride, fear, unbelief, etc.
Why? Because the problem isnโt only โbad choices.โ Itโs a nature and a power:
- Sin is not just something you do; itโs something that dwells (Romans 7:17).
- The law tells you whatโs right, but it doesnโt give you the power to do it.
So, the honest confession is: โI cannot obey God in my own strength.โ
B) After new birth (1 John 3 reality)
When someone is born again:
- God gives a new heart and a new Spirit.
- Sin loses its rightful rule.
- The believerโs life direction changes from โserving sinโ to โserving God.โ
So, Johnโs point is: a person truly born of God cannot continue in sin as a lifestyle because Godโs life remains in him.
Thatโs the shift:
- From sin as master โ to sin as enemy
- From bondage โ to war and victory
- From identity in Adam โ to identity in Christ
4) The bridge between them: born again by the Holy Spirit through faith in Jesus
Hereโs the โwhyโ you asked for:
Faith in Jesus is how the Holy Spirit comes
Faith is not merely believing facts; it is trusting JesusโHis death and resurrectionโas your only righteousness before God.
When you believe:
- God justifies you (declares you righteous in Christ).
- God gives you the Holy Spirit (His presence comes to live in you).
- God begins sanctifying you (changing you from the inside out).
So, the order is crucial:
- You donโt clean yourself up to earn the Spirit.
- You receive the Spirit because you receive Christ by faith.
5) What the Holy Spirit does that changes โcannot obeyโ into โcannot sinโ
1) He gives a new nature (new desires)
Before: you might want to do right, but your deepest pull is still self, sin, and independence. After: you receive new desiresโlove for God, love for truth, hatred for sin.
Example:
- Before: you avoid sin mainly to avoid consequences.
- After: you grieve sin because it grieves God, and it contradicts who you are now.
2) He breaks sinโs dominion (sin is no longer your owner)
Romans 7 describes captivity; the Spirit brings liberation. Sin may still tempt, but it no longer has the legal right to reign.
Example:
- Before: โI canโt stop.โ
- After: โI donโt have to obey that anymore.โ (Even if the battle is intense.)
3) He convicts and corrects (you canโt stay comfortable in sin)
This is part of โhe cannot sin.โ The Spirit makes sin bitter, not sweet.
Example:
- A believer falls into pornography, bitterness, or lying.
- The Spirit presses the conscience, removes peace, exposes the lie, and calls to repentance.
- The believer cannot settle there as โnormal life.โ
4) He empowers obedience (real power, not mere willpower)
The Spirit supplies strength to say โnoโ and to do what is right.
Example:
- Before: you explode in anger and justify it.
- After: you still feel the surge, but you can stop, pray, walk away, apologize, and grow.
5) He produces fruit (a changed pattern over time)
The Spirit grows love, joy, peace, patience, self-controlโthings the law commands but cannot produce.
Example:
- Before: you try to be patient by forcing yourself.
- After: patience grows because the Spirit is reshaping your reactions and your heart.
6) He keeps you (Godโs seed remains)
This is the โseed remaineth in himโ reality: God doesnโt visit and leaveโHe abides. That abiding presence is why the believer cannot make peace with sin as a way of life.
6) So, what does โcannot sinโ mean in real life?
It means this:
- A born-again person may stumble, sometimes seriously.
- But he cannot live in sin comfortably, continually, and without repentance.
- Over time, his life shows a new trajectory: repentance, confession, growth, and increasing victory.
A simple picture:
- Before Christ: sin is your home; even when you feel guilty, you return and settle.
- After Christ: sin becomes a foreign land; you may fall there, but you cannot stayโyour heart is pulled back to God.
7) Bringing out the truth: from โI canโt obeyโ to โI canโt keep sinningโ
Romans 7 tells the truth about the powerless man under sinโs grip: โI want right, but I canโt.โ 1 John 3 tells the truth about the new man born of God: โGodโs life remains in him; he cannot continue in sin.โ
The truth tied together is:
- The law can expose sin.
- Only Jesus saves from sin.
- Faith receives Jesus.
- The Holy Spirit is Godโs power in the believer.
- That new birth changes what is possible:
- from cannot obey God (bondage)
- to cannot sin (sin no longer fits your new identity and cannot rule you)
Jesusโ Tender Mercy: He Wonโt Break the Bruised or Quench the Faint
Thereโs a deeply tender passage about Godโs love revealed in Jesus that fits perfectly with this postโs message: God isnโt looking to give people the judgment they deserve. He wonโt harm youโHe will help you. At first glance, itโs easy to skim past this verse, but when you slow down and study what itโs really saying, its gentleness becomes unmistakable. I want to share what makes this verse so compassionate:
Matthew 12:20 (Authorized King James Version)
โA bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax shall he not quench, till he send forth judgment unto victory.โ
The Living Bible edition makes it clearer to understand.
Matthew 12:20 Living Bible
20 He does not crush the weak,
Or quench the smallest hope;
He will end all conflict with his final victory,
The verses around it testify that it is Jesus that this verse is talking about.
Matthew 12:14-21 Authorized (King James) Version
14 Then the Pharisees went out, and held a council against him, how they might destroy him. 15 But when Jesus knew it, he withdrew himself from thence: and great multitudes followed him, and he healed them all;
16 and charged them that they should not make him known:
17 that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying,
18 Behold my servant, whom I have chosen; my beloved, in whom my soul is well pleased: I will put my spirit upon him, and he shall shew judgment to the Gentiles.
19 He shall not strive, nor cry; neither shall any man hear his voice in the streets.
20 A bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax shall he not quench, till he send forth judgment unto victory.
21 And in his name shall the Gentiles trust.
The Living Bibleโs wording helps clarify the picture: the โbruised reedโ represents someone weak and worn downโsomeone who feels they have no strength left. The โsmoldering wickโ points to a person whose hope is almost gone, as if theyโre ready to die.
Thatโs why the details matter. When someone seems beyond helpโunable to save themselves and with no one else able to rescue themโthe world can treat their life as expendable, as though the โmercifulโ thing is simply to put out whatโs fading. As if they deserve to be snuffed out because nothing can be done.
But God is not like that. He doesnโt give people what they deserve; He gives what they donโt deserveโhelp. He will not crush a reed thatโs already breaking, and He will not extinguish a flame thatโs barely holding on.
Letโs look closer at the details so we can understand this more deeply:
๐ฟ โA bruised reed shall he not breakโ โ Full Explanation
In the ancient world, a reed was a tall, hollow plant that grew along riverbanks. It was used for simple tools: measuring rods, writing pens, musical pipes, and even makeshift walking sticks. But a reed was extremely fragile. If it became bruisedโbent, cracked, or weakenedโit was considered worthless. People would simply snap it off and throw it away because it could no longer serve its purpose.
When Jesus is described as not breaking a bruised reed, it means He refuses to discard people whom the world considers useless, damaged, or beyond repair. A โbruised reedโ symbolizes:
- someone emotionally wounded
- someone morally or spiritually weakened
- someone who has failed
- someone society has given up on
- someone who feels bent under pressure
Instead of snapping the reed and tossing it aside, Jesus supports it, binds it, straightens it, and restores it. His character is the opposite of harshness. He does not crush the vulnerable or shame the broken. He treats the most fragile soul with tenderness, patience, and dignity. This reveals the Messiah as a healer, not a destroyer; a restorer, not a judge of the weak.
๐ฅ โAnd smoking flax shall he not quenchโ โ Full Explanation
Flax was used to make the wick of an oil lamp. When a lamp was burning properly, the wick produced a bright, steady flame. But when the oil ran low or the wick was damaged, it would smolderโproducing smoke instead of light. A โsmoking flaxโ is a wick that is:
- barely glowing
- struggling to stay lit
- producing more smoke than flame
- on the verge of going out
In daily life, people would simply pinch it out, throw it away, and replace it with a new wick. It was easier to extinguish it than to nurse it back to life.
But Jesus does not quench the smoking flax. He does not extinguish the faintest spark of faith, hope, or desire for God. Instead, He gently tends itโadding oil, trimming the wick, protecting the emberโuntil the flame burns again.
A โsmoking flaxโ represents:
- someone whose faith is weak
- someone discouraged or exhausted
- someone whose spiritual fire is almost gone
- someone who feels like theyโre failing God
- someone who has only a tiny spark left
Jesus does not say, โYour flame is too small.โ He honors even the faintest glow. He nurtures it. He breathes life into it. He protects it from being snuffed out by shame, fear, or condemnation.
โจ Core Meaning (Short Version)
Jesus is describing His gentleness toward the weak and His unstoppable victory over evil. A bruised reed and smoking flax represent people who are hurt, failing, discouraged, or barely hanging on spiritually. Jesus does not crush them or snuff them out. Instead, He restores them until His final judgment brings complete victory.
โ๏ธ Together, these images show the Messiahโs character
- The reedย speaks of external weaknessย โ brokenness, failure, damage.
- The flaxย speaks of internal weaknessย โ fading faith, dwindling hope, spiritual exhaustion.
And Jesus destroys neither. He does not give them what they deserve.
โ๏ธ โTill he send forth judgment unto victoryโ
This means:
- Jesus will continue His gentle, patient work
- He will keep restoring the weak
- He will keep saving and healing
- UNTILย the final moment when He brings justice, righteousness, and complete victoryย over sin, Satan, and evil.
This is a quote from Isaiah 42:1โ4, a prophecy about the Messiah.
Grace Beyond Justice: Jesus Helps the Weak and Protects the Smallest Hope
Jesusโ tenderness climaxes in this: He is strong enough to bring judgment, yet gentle enough to handle the weakest soul without crushing it. Matthew places this prophecy right in the middle of a scene where Jesus is opposed, threatened, and huntedโyet instead of striking back, He withdraws, and He heals (Matthew 12:14โ15). That is not weakness. That is mercy in full control.
When Scripture says, โA bruised reed shall he not break,โ it shows that Jesus does not deal with damaged people the way the world does. A bruised reed is already bentโalready failingโalready one pressure away from snapping. Most would finish it off and throw it away. But Jesus refuses to add the final blow. He does not shame the wounded, discard the fallen, or crush the fragile. His hands do not destroy what life has already bruised.
And when it says, โSmoking flax shall he not quench,โ it reveals something even more tender: Jesus does not despise the faintest remaining spark. A smoking wick is not giving lightโonly smokeโalmost out. Many would pinch it out and replace it. But Jesus does not extinguish what is barely alive. He does not treat weak faith as useless faith. He does not treat struggling hope as hypocrisy. He protects the ember. He tends it. He restores it.
That is why the Living Bible captures the heart of it so plainly: โHe does not crush the weak, or quench the smallest hope.โ This is where the verse becomes personal. It means that when you are at your lowestโwhen you feel bent, spent, ashamed, or nearly goneโJesus is not coming to finish you. He is coming to help you. He is not looking for a reason to condemn you; He is looking for a way to restore you.
And the final line lifts the whole promise into a holy climax: โTill he send forth judgment unto victory.โ His gentleness is not temporary softness, and it is not permission for evil to win. It means Jesus will keep dealing tenderly with the weakโall the way until He brings final justice and complete victory. In other words: the same Savior who refuses to break you is the King who will one day break the power of everything that broke you.
Grace, Correction, and Romans 6:1
Now that youโre under graceโand you know God will not condemn you once youโve received the Holy Spirit through faith in Christโitโs time to hear what the Holy Spirit is saying through the apostle Paul:
โWhat shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?โ (Romans 6:1, KJV)
To understand this, you first have to understand what grace is really about: God doesnโt give you what you deserve for sinโpenalty. He gives you what you donโt deserveโhelp.
What Iโm sharing has been taught to me by the Holy Spirit through personal experience. I read Paulโs words for years without truly grasping them, until I understood this: God does not send His children to hell when they stumble after being saved. He draws us back to Himself through loving correction and restoration.
When you understand that, something changes inside you. You donโt collapse into fear and guilt every time you fall. Your joy doesnโt have to shrink. You can still come into Godโs presence with confidenceโbecause grace is not fragile, and sonship is not cancelled by weakness.
But hereโs the tension: when you stop expecting condemnation, you may notice you donโt feel the same sorrow you once did. Repentance can feel harder when you still have joyโbecause itโs easier to repent when you feel crushed than when you feel secure.
So, what do you do?
You recognize this as part of the Holy Spiritโs work in you. You bring it to God honestly. You confess it, and you trust Him to transform youโnot by threatening you with eternal death, but by renewing your life from the inside out.
When God Speaks, Healing Begins
After you confess the sin to God, you have to understand something important: you canโt stop this sin in your own strength. You canโt change yourself. Only God canโby the Holy Spirit.
Healing begins when God starts speaking to you about it. And when He does, rejoiceโbecause the fact that Heโs speaking means He has heard your prayer. It also means the healing has already started, because when God speaks, things happen. His word brings change.
His word is proof that He accepted your confession and repentance, and that He has begun the sanctifying work the Holy Spirit will finish. Yesโwhen God speaks to you, itโs a sign of life, not death: eternal life ahead of you, not eternal death over your struggle.
Scripture says:
โWhosoever is born of God doth not commit sinโฆ and he cannot sin, because he is born of God.โ (1 John 3:9, KJV)
That doesnโt mean believers never stumbleโit means sin is no longer your nature, no longer your identity, and no longer your destiny. When someone keeps tripping in the same area, it often reveals a place that still needs to be put to death and made holy by the Spirit. But you have Godโs divine nature within you, and you will not remain trapped foreverโnor will God condemn you back into eternal death.
Thatโs actually a deeper reason to rejoice, even when you fall: not because sin is good, but because grace is stronger than your weakness, and God is faithful to finish what He started in you.
And as Paul commands:
โRejoice evermore.โ (1 Thessalonians 5:16, KJV)
It can feel almost strange at firstโrejoicing while youโre being correctedโbut that joy is part of the new life of Christ being formed in you. The Holy Spirit is conforming you into Jesusโ image, even through moments where your flesh is exposed and your need for sanctification becomes clear.
Once you truly understand there is no more eternal death hanging over you for your failures in Christ, then Romans 6:1 becomes clear. Paul is not inviting us to sinโheโs exposing the twisted logic of the flesh that says, โIf grace covers me, why not keep sinning?โ
And the answer is: that is not the way of God. Grace doesnโt produce rebellionโit produces transformation.
Epilogue: The Hands That Could Judge Are the Hands That Heal
If youโve read this far, hold on to what the Scriptures have been saying all along: Godโs goal in Christ is not to condemn you, but to reconcile you. The gospel does not pretend sin is smallโit declares that the cross is greater. And the proof of that grace is not that Jesus ignores what is wrong, but that He refuses to destroy the one who is wrong.
This is the line the religious mind often misses. Religion expects God to break what is bent and extinguish what is failing. But Jesus reveals the Father differently: He does not crush the weak, and He does not quench the smallest hope. He corrects His people as sons, not as criminals. He convicts to restore, not to discard. He exposes sin to heal the heart, not to shame the soul.
So, if you are bruisedโby your own choices, by other peopleโs sins, or by years of spiritual exhaustionโthis is what Matthew 12:20 is telling you: Jesus is not your executioner. He is your Shepherd. If your faith feels like smoke instead of flame, He is not offended by your weakness. He protects the ember. If you are coming back from backsliding, He is not waiting to strike you. He is waiting to receive you.
And if consequences remainโif there are โreaping years,โ strained relationships, or hard rebuildingโdo not confuse that with condemnation. Condemnation says, โYou are finished.โ Correction says, โCome home.โ Condemnation drives you into hiding. Correction draws you into the light. Condemnation makes you run from God. Correction teaches you to run to Him.
This is where the message lands: the same Jesus who will send forth judgment unto victory is the Jesus who will not break you in your weakness. His victory does not require your destruction. His victory includes your restoration.
So, donโt let shame interpret God for you. Donโt let fear preach a false gospel. If you will be honest before Himโif you will repent, forgive, and returnโyou will find what the Word has promised: in Christ, there is no condemnationโonly mercy, truth, and a Savior gentle enough to heal what He could have judged.
Closure
If you are bruised, you are not disqualified. If you are smoking, you are not rejected. The gospel is not God standing over you with a sentenceโit is God coming to you in Christ with a Saviorโs hands.
So donโt run from Him. Come into the light. Confess what is true. Release what youโve been holding. Forgive as you have been forgiven. And trust this: Jesus will not break you for being weak, and He will not quench you for struggling to burn.
Bring Him your bent reed and your fading wickโHe knows exactly how to restore what is fragile. And He will keep working with you, patiently and faithfully, until He sends forth judgment unto victory.
๐ต YouTube Playlist โ โGod Isnโt Into Giving You What You Deserveโ

๐ถ Songs Included in the Link
These are the 10 songs in the same order:
- Scandal of Grace โ Hillsong UNITED
- Mercy โ Elevation Worship
- Run to the Father โ Cody Carnes
- Create in Me a Clean Heart โ Keith Green
- Broken Vessels (Amazing Grace) โ Hillsong Worship
- Holy Spirit โ Bryan & Katie Torwalt
- Death Was Arrested โ North Point Worship
- Chain Breaker โ Zach Williams
- Living Hope โ Phil Wickham
- Goodness of God โ Bethel Music
โ๏ธ Playlist Description
A journey through grace, restoration, and the relentless mercy of God. These songs echo the message that God isnโt interested in giving you what you deserve โ He gives you Christ instead.
This playlist moves from conviction to cleansing, from brokenness to restoration, from bondage to freedom. It reflects the truth that there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, and that the Holy Spirit restores, renews, and leads us back into fellowship with God.
If youโre in a season of rebuilding, repentance, or returning, let these songs remind you: Grace overrules your past. Mercy rewrites your story. And God finishes what He starts.
โWhere sin abounded, grace did much more abound.โ Romans 5:20.
โGod Isnโt Into Giving You What You Deserveโ
Click Me to listen to, โGod Isnโt Into Giving You What You Deserveโ (Playlist) (Compiled by Darrin Pegram – 2026)
๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐ฌ๐๐๐

All Scripture quotations are taken from the Authorized King James Version (AKJV) unless otherwise noted. This message may be freely shared for the glory of God and the salvation of souls.
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