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Showing posts with label abide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abide. Show all posts

The Shocking Price of Sin: Adam’s Lesson, Our Reality

This post and its message were inspired by a precious and beloved brother of mine who regularly preaches Christ on the street corners. One of his YouTube videos was the inspiration for this topic and the probable series of posts to come that trace blood, sacrifice, and atonement through Scripture.

Thank you for your faithfulness, Brother Lloyd. 🙏

The Shocking Price of Sin: Adam’s Lesson, Our Reality

Adam was created in perfection. He only knew life. Proof of this is the fact that he named his wife Eve because she was the mother of all living (Genesis 3:20). Death was not part of his world. But when sin entered, everything changed. Shame exposed their nakedness, and fig leaves—human effort—could not cover it.

Genesis 3:21 records: “Unto Adam also and to his wife did the LORD God make coats of skins, and clothed them.” This was no small act. For the first time, Adam saw death. An innocent animal was slain. Blood was shed. Life was taken so that his guilt could be covered. Imagine the shock, the horror, the weight of guilt pressing down as Adam realized: my sin caused this death.

The fig leaves they had sewn together represented man’s attempt to atone for sin by his own effort. But God rejected this. Nothing we do can cover guilt. Only blood, determined by God, can atone. This was not arbitrary—it was prophetic. It pointed forward to Christ, the Lamb of God, whose blood alone would bring true atonement. From the very beginning, God was teaching that forgiveness is not earned by human effort but provided through His appointed sacrifice.

The Mirror, the Sword, and the Seed

The Mirror, the Sword, and the Seed

Most people treat the Bible as a motivational quote—a quick pick-me-up, a soothing balm for the moment—when in truth, it was never meant to merely comfort us, but to confront us, to cut deep, to reveal what lies beneath the surface of our well-managed selves. The Word of God is not a decorative verse for the fridge door but a mirror that shows us who we really are, a sword that divides between soul and spirit, a seed that demands soil, surrender, and time.

If your reading feels dry or distant lately, don’t rush past it or blame your mood—pause instead, and ask the harder question: “What is this passage exposing in me that I’d rather not see?” Because conviction, though uncomfortable, is not the enemy of grace—it is its companion. It is the Spirit’s gentle way of saying, “There’s more for you than this.”

We are not called to read for reassurance alone, but for renewal. Not just to feel better, but also, more importantly, to be changed. And that change begins when we stop treating scripture as a checklist or a pick-me-up and start receiving it as a living conversation with the One who knows us fully and loves us deeply.

"Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth." (John 17:17, KJV)

So today, let the Word do its work. Let it search you, stir you, and sanctify you. Not because you’re failing—but because you’re growing.