In my opinion, this is the main reason why our quiet times “fail.” Even if we maintain a time of prayer and Bible reading for 365 days a year, if it’s divorced from the good news of Jesus, we haven’t gained much. The gospel of Christ is the fuel for our quiet times. It is the foundation upon which we stand. If we do a quiet time because we think it makes us more pleasing to God, or if we believe we are less pleasing because we stumble through these disciplines, then we’re missing the gospel.
Guilt and shame are horrible motivators. This is why we so often begin with passion in January, then fall off the wagon around February. We get busy. We miss a day or two. We feel guilty, feeling as if we’ve failed the Lord. And then we, like Adam and Eve before us, skittishly hide behind the bush of our failure — assuming that a new resolve will make us once again acceptable.
The gospel frees us to be realistic. When we know that our standing with God is based upon what Christ accomplished on our behalf, we can restore the purpose of quiet times. We can rest in the reality that because of the work of Christ, our connection with God will not be severed. We do a quiet time because we are accepted by God, not in order to be accepted.
Tip: Make preaching the gospel to yourself a part of your rhythm of quiet times. You can do this by reminding yourself of the gospel story as you engage the Scriptures. Recite either Creation-Fall-Redemption-Glory or God-Man-Christ-Response.
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