Reasons WhyYouNeed Jesus
Jesus loves you! He desires to have a relationship with you,
and to give you a life full of joy and purpose. Why do you need Him in
your life?
If you’d like to begin a personal relationship with Jesus today, please pray this prayer:
Lord Jesus, I invite You into my life.
I believe You died for me and that Your blood pays
for my sins and provides me with the gift of eternal life.
By faith I receive that gift, and
I acknowledge You as my Lord and Savior. Amen.
1. Because you have a past.
You can’t go back, but He can. The Bible says, “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8). He can walk into those places of sin and failure, wipe the slate clean, and give you a new beginning.2. Because you need a friend.
Jesus knows the worst about you, yet He believes the best. Why? Because He sees you not as you are but as you will be when He gets through with you. What a friend!3. Because he holds the future.
Who else are you going to trust? In His hands you are safe and secure – today, tomorrow, and for all eternity. His Word says, “For I know the plans I have for you…plans for good and not evil, to give you a future and a hope. In those days when you pray, I will listen” (Jeremiah 29:11-12 TLB).If you’d like to begin a personal relationship with Jesus today, please pray this prayer:
Lord Jesus, I invite You into my life.
I believe You died for me and that Your blood pays
for my sins and provides me with the gift of eternal life.
By faith I receive that gift, and
I acknowledge You as my Lord and Savior. Amen.
A passenger
on a recent plane trip happily divulged his spiritual views. Raised in a
conservative religious home, he proudly dismissed traditional
Christianity, with its radical claims about Jesus of Nazareth, because
it substitutes dogma for reason, he said. Fifteen minutes later, he
became an apologist for a sacred cosmos, with tarot cards and astrology.
But of course, he said, these were true just for him.
The encounter epitomized what we have all experienced in a culture that
identifies reason with naturalism and faith with feeling. And it comes
from a deeper problem: the attempt to "climb to heaven" on the rungs of
reason, morality, and experience. The "search for the sacred" is what
happens when our God-centered nature is taken captive by sin. Religion
and spirituality are all about what we feel and think deep within our
precious, delightful, individual souls. The true God calls us outdoors
into a history that sweeps us into its wake. Yet we prefer to sit inside
our own souls and minds, stewing in our own juices.
Biblical faith emphasizes that we cannot ascend to God on our own;
rather, the God of the Bible descends down to us. Our inner self is not
the playground of "spirit," but the haunted plains on which we build our
towers of Babel. In other words, our hearts are idol factories, in
bondage to sin and spin. As Jeremiah declared, "The heart is deceitful
above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?" (17:9,
ESV, used throughout). We look for a god we can manage rather than the
God who is actually there.
In Romans 1 and 2, Paul affirms this. He says that everyone knows God
exists and is a sovereign, righteous, and all-knowing judge. Jew and
Gentile alike know God's moral will and so "are without excuse," but "by
their unrighteousness suppress the truth" (1:18-23). Quoting the
psalmist, Paul presents the universal indictment: "… all, both Jews and
Greeks, are under sin, as it is written, 'None is righteous, no, not
one; no one understands; no one seeks for God. All have turned aside;
together they have become worthless; no one does good, not even one'?"
(Rom. 3:9-12).
Given all this, we need to receive an external word from outside our
hearts and to our hearts—one that stops our spin and gives us new hearts
even as it is spoken. That's just where Paul turns next in Romans:
But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it—the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. For there is no distinction: for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus …. (3:21-24)
In other words, our hearts create spiritualities, therapies, and
programs that arise out of our natural knowledge of the law, which we
distort. Outside our hearts, and at the core of special revelation, is
the surprising God, known uniquely in his Son.
There are, however, strong forces that tempt us to grasp the divine on our own accord.
Enslaved to Naturalism
Many people today act like someone created a peace treaty between
reason and faith after reason won the war. Reason cedes territory to
faith, as long as faith relinquishes its rational claims. Reason is in
the realm of public, objective truth, while faith is relegated to the
realm of private experience and personal therapy. So, responding to my
airplane acquaintance, who said faith is "whatever works for you," I
said, "Would you say that about World War II—that it happened for me but
not for you?" Of course, the resurrection of Christ is more significant
than the Battle of the Bulge, but no less historical.