The Award Goes To...

Would you rather be the best stamp collector in the continental U.S., or be that friend that everyone else can rely on? Would you rather be internationally renowned for being able to slice perfectly uniform pieces off of a loaf of bread, or be looked at as the best employee your office has ever seen?
Recognition is great. My guess is that you already knew how good it feels to be recognized for your skills, for the value you bring into other people’s lives. However, we appreciate when certain aspects of our personality are recognized more than others. I love you and I care about your opinion of me, but if you say, “Wow you know the perfect way to clear your throat, Mike!” it’s not really going to change my week.
We want our best qualities, our hard work will be recognized. We hope that it will. We sometimes drop hints and go out of our way to showcase them. We want to know it wasn’t all for naught.
Conversely, we don’t want our failures to be recognized. We want those to be ignored, understood, justified, or excused.
It would seem, then, that there’s a pretty big problem here with our relationship with God. We want to be recognized for our hard work, but what of our deeds count for anything before God? God, who is holy, recognizes holiness. On the other hand, we don’t want our failures to be highlighted. However, God’s holy character only throws our unholiness into greater contrast. So if we want our failures to be excused and looked over, and our hard work to be recognized, we won’t get either from a Holy God.
That’s where the Gospel’s foreign beauty hits us. Jude closes his letter to his Christian brothers and sisters this way:
To him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you before his glorious presence without fault and with great joy— to the only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power and authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord, before all ages, now and forevermore! Amen. (Jude 24-25)
Our failures are not brushed over or excused. They are punished on the cross of Christ. The guilt of our sin completely removed from us. It is not our duty to work hard enough to be recognized before God, we are already declared sufficient, holy, justified before God on account of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection.
Jude imparts upon us a confidence that when Jesus comes back, we will be recognized! Picture a Divine Award Ceremony, where you are rewarded with infinite riches for being blameless, without fault. Who of us can say we’ve earned it? But holiness, blamelessness, righteousness is draped over you. You are recognized for what Christ has done for you.
While we wait for that great day, the same Holy God who gives you forgiveness and holiness to you as a free gift is working in you right now, protecting you, growing you, and establishing you in that gospel. He doesn’t wait on the podium, or at the judge’s table, to see how you do. He works through his Word to teach and guide you. Through the gift of faith, he dwells in your heart to do amazing things through you. So while we hope to be recognized for some of our achievements here on earth, there is no question that we are recognized in God’s sight as holy, blameless, worthy, and valuable for the sake of Christ.





