Luke
6:23, 35 (NASB)
“Be
glad in that day and leap for joy, for behold, your reward is great in
heaven……."But love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing
in return; and your reward will be great”
I
have been re-reading a 1998 Erwin Lutzer book entitled, “Your Eternal
Reward”. It is powerful reading. Even though I have taught and written on the
Judgment Seat of Christ (II Cor 5:10), I was especially struck this time by the
following words on page 17 of this book:
“Christ often and unapologetically motivated the disciples with the prospect
of rewards. He often promised them that
if they were sacrificially obedient, their reward will be great” (and quoted
Luke 6:35, Luke 6:23, and Hebrews 10:35).
When each Christian is judged individually by Christ for everything done
on earth, he/she will receive rewards for all the good you have done, but also
great loss for all the evil you have done.
Yes, because of Christ’s sacrificial death on the cross and your
accepting by faith his sacrifice for you, your confessed sins are forgiven, BUT
God still judges you for those sins that have been confessed and forgiven. As Lutzer points out, “judicial forgiveness
is one thing, but the discipline the Father inflicts on His wayward children is
quite another. We should not conclude
that every Christian will do well at the judgment seat of Christ. We can suffer serious loss; many Christians
will stand in shame before Christ as we see our lives pass before us. What happens at the judgment seat can have
permanent consequences. There are
degrees of reward in heaven.”
You
really need to read the entire book and all the Scripture that Dr. Lutzer uses
to teach about the judgment seat of Christ.
What I took away from this reading is the following:
1.
I
had misconceptions about sin in my life after conversion. While my sin is always forgiven when I
confess it, I will still be judged for that sin on Judgment Day. My sins will not kick me out of heaven, but
they will affect what I will be doing in heaven forever.
2.
Likewise,
the more good I do while on earth, the more rewards I will receive compared to
losses. The exact nature of reward vs
loss is not clear to me, but I know that I want to receive more reward than
loss, whatever they are, and the only way for this to happen is to minimize sin
and maximize obedience.
3.
The
fact that Christ Himself emphasized rewards in heaven, as Luke 6:23 and 35 (and
elsewhere) proclaim, strikes me more significantly that in the past when I’ve
studied these verses before. We should
not take lightly His emphasis on rewards and should orient our Christian lives
better to seek these rewards in eternity.
Examine your life as it stands right now and determine what you are doing that will reap rewards in heaven and what you are doing that will reap loss in heaven. Basically evaluate how you are using the three basic forces of your life---your time, your energy, and your money. At the Judgment Seat of Christ someday, each of us, individually, in front of witnesses, will face the Lord and be judged for how we used our time, energy and money. Think carefully about this and make necessary changes if necessary.
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