Sunday, May 31, 2026

Exchanging Filthy Garments for Grace

 

Exchanging Filthy Garments for Grace

A Reflection on Zechariah 3:4 for the Busy Christian

“And he answered and spake unto those that stood before him, saying, Take away the filthy garments from him. And unto him he said, Behold, I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment.” — Zechariah 3:4 (KJV)

Modern life moves at a relentless pace. Between work, family responsibilities, church commitments, emails, appointments, and endless distractions, many Christians find themselves exhausted and spiritually drained. We often feel as though we are constantly running but never quite arriving. In the midst of such busyness, Zechariah 3:4 offers a powerful reminder of what God has already done for us.

The prophet Zechariah is given a vision of Joshua the high priest standing before God. Joshua is dressed in filthy garments, representing sin, guilt, and unworthiness. Satan stands nearby, accusing him. Joshua has nothing to offer in his defense. He cannot clean himself up. He cannot argue his innocence. He simply stands before God as he is.

What happens next is remarkable. God does not tell Joshua to wash himself. He does not command him to earn forgiveness. Instead, God orders the filthy garments to be removed and declares, “I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee.” Then He clothes Joshua with clean garments.

This is the gospel in miniature.

Many busy Christians live as though they must constantly prove themselves to God. They work harder, serve more, and try to maintain a perfect spiritual image. Yet beneath the surface they often carry guilt over failures, regrets, and shortcomings. The enemy whispers accusations: You should pray more. You should be better. You're not doing enough.

Zechariah 3:4 reminds us that our acceptance before God is not based on our performance. It is based on His grace. The clean garments were not Joshua's achievement; they were God's gift.

This truth becomes even clearer when we consider the larger message of Scripture. Isaiah tells us that “all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags” (Isaiah 64:6). No amount of effort can make us righteous before a holy God. Yet through Christ, God takes away our sin and clothes us in Christ's righteousness. As Isaiah later rejoices, “He hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness” (Isaiah 61:10).

For the busy Christian, this means your worth is not found in how much you accomplish today. Your standing before God does not rise and fall with your productivity. You are not loved because of what you do for God; you are loved because of what Christ has done for you.

This does not make obedience unimportant. Rather, it changes the motivation behind it. We serve, worship, and obey not to earn God's favor but because we have already received it. The burden of trying to save ourselves is removed. Christ has carried it for us.

Perhaps today you feel overwhelmed, inadequate, or spiritually exhausted. Take a moment to picture Joshua standing before God. Remember that God did not leave him in his filthy garments. He does not leave His children there either. Through Jesus, your sins are forgiven, your guilt is removed, and you are clothed in a righteousness not your own.

When life becomes busy and your heart grows weary, return to this promise: God has not called you to wear the filthy garments of self-effort. He has clothed you with the perfect righteousness of Christ.

Reflection Questions

  • Do you sometimes measure your relationship with God by how much you accomplish?
  • Are you carrying guilt that Christ has already forgiven?
  • How can resting in Christ's righteousness bring peace to your busy schedule this week?

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for removing the filthy garments of my sin and clothing me with the righteousness of Jesus. Forgive me for the times I try to earn what You freely give by grace. Help me to rest in Your love and live each day from the assurance of Your salvation. When life becomes busy and overwhelming, remind me that my identity is found in Christ alone. Thank You for Your mercy, forgiveness, and unfailing grace. In Jesus' name, Amen.


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Too Busy to Sit at His Feet?

 


The One Thing That Matters Most

Scripture: Luke 10:40–42

One of the most familiar stories in Scripture is the account of Martha and Mary. Jesus had entered their home, and both sisters desired to honor Him. Martha busied herself with preparing and serving, while Mary sat quietly at Jesus' feet, listening to His words.

As Martha became overwhelmed with her many responsibilities, frustration began to grow. She finally approached Jesus and asked, "Lord, do You not care that my sister has left me to serve alone?" (Luke 10:40). Martha expected Jesus to correct Mary, but instead He gently corrected Martha.

Jesus said, "Martha, Martha, you are worried and troubled about many things. But one thing is needed, and Mary has chosen that good part, which will not be taken away from her" (Luke 10:41-42).

Notice that Jesus did not criticize service. Service is important. The problem was not Martha's work but her distraction. She had become so occupied with doing things for Jesus that she was neglecting time with Jesus.

How easy it is for us to fall into the same trap. We can become busy with church activities, ministry projects, work, family responsibilities, and daily obligations. While these things may be good, they should never replace a personal relationship with Christ. Before we can effectively serve Him, we must first sit at His feet and learn from Him.

Mary understood that the greatest privilege was not preparing a meal but being in the presence of the Savior. She recognized that spiritual nourishment was more important than physical preparation. The words of Jesus were eternal, and she did not want to miss them.

This lesson connects beautifully with the truth of Christ's righteousness.

Isaiah 64:6 reminds us that "all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags." No amount of service, good works, or religious activity can make us righteous before God. Like Martha, we can become so focused on what we are doing that we forget that our acceptance with God is not based on our performance.

Zechariah 3:4 presents a beautiful picture of salvation. Joshua the high priest stood before God clothed in filthy garments, symbolizing sin. Then God commanded, "Take away the filthy garments from him." God did not ask Joshua to clean himself up first. Instead, He removed the filthy garments and clothed him with clean garments. This illustrates the righteousness of Christ covering the sinner.

Isaiah 61:10 takes this truth even further: "He hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, He hath covered me with the robe of righteousness." Salvation is not something we earn; it is something we receive. Christ provides the robe. We simply accept it by faith.

This is why we must cling fervently to God's promises. If our hope is in ourselves, we will constantly fail and become discouraged. Our works, obedience, and service can never save us. But when we trust in Christ's perfect righteousness, we can have peace and assurance. The same Jesus who welcomed Mary to sit at His feet invites us to rest in His grace today.

The Christian life is not about striving to earn God's favor. It is about receiving His righteousness and allowing His love to transform our hearts. When we spend time with Jesus, our service becomes an overflow of gratitude rather than an attempt to earn salvation.

Today, take time to sit at the feet of Jesus. Listen to His voice through His Word. Remember that the "one thing needed" is not more activity but a deeper relationship with Him. Then, clothed in His righteousness, go and serve Him with joy.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You that our salvation does not depend on our own righteousness but on the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ. Forgive us for the times we become so busy with life's responsibilities that we neglect spending time with You. Help us choose the better part, like Mary, by sitting at Your feet each day and listening to Your voice. Clothe us with Your robe of righteousness and teach us to trust fully in Your promises rather than our own efforts. May our service flow from hearts that have first rested in Your grace. In Jesus' name, Amen.


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Friday, May 29, 2026

More Than Rule-Keeping

 


The Danger of Legalism

As Seventh-day Adventist Church believers, we cherish God’s law. We believe the Ten Commandments still matter, that obedience is important, and that God calls His people to holy living. But whenever people take truth seriously, there is always a danger of drifting into legalism—quietly beginning to trust in obedience instead of trusting completely in Jesus.

Legalism often begins subtly. We may never say out loud that we are earning salvation, but sometimes we act as though God loves us more when we perform well and less when we fail. We can start measuring spirituality by outward behavior while forgetting that salvation has always been a gift of grace.

A powerful thought experiment is to imagine standing before God in judgment. Every action, every hidden motive, every careless word is revealed before a perfectly holy God. In that moment, what would give us confidence? Our Sabbathkeeping? Our diet? Church attendance? Bible knowledge? Good behavior?

None of those things can erase sin.

The reality is that even our best obedience is imperfect. The law is holy and good, but its purpose is not to save us—it reveals our need for a Savior. The law is like a mirror: it shows the stain, but it cannot wash us clean. Only Jesus can do that.

That is why our only hope in the judgment is the perfect righteousness of Christ. Jesus lived the life we could never live and died the death we deserved. When we place our faith in Him, His perfect record stands in place of our broken one. We are accepted by God not because we performed flawlessly, but because Jesus did.

This does not make obedience unimportant. In fact, grace produces deeper obedience than legalism ever could. A heart transformed by Christ desires to obey Him out of love, gratitude, and surrender—not out of fear or an attempt to earn salvation. Obedience becomes the fruit of salvation, not the root of it.

The closer we come to Jesus, the less confidence we place in ourselves and the more confidence we place in Him. Like Paul, we learn to say that we want to “be found in Him, not having my own righteousness” (Philippians 3:9).

Our safety is not in trying harder to save ourselves. Our safety is in clinging daily to Jesus, who alone is righteous enough to stand before the Father on our behalf.

Prayer

Father, thank You that my salvation does not rest on my imperfect efforts but on Jesus’ perfect righteousness. Keep me from pride, comparison, and legalism. Teach me to obey You from a heart filled with love and gratitude. Help me trust completely in Christ as my only hope in the judgment. Amen.


More on: Lesson 9 Sin,the Gospel, and the Law    

Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Most Expensive Robe

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 10 - Thursday 

Clothed in Christ’s Righteousness

Scripture Reading: Matthew 22:1–14

In Matthew 22, Jesus tells the parable of a king who prepared a wedding feast for his son. The invitation went out to many people, but some ignored it while others rejected it completely. Finally, the king invited anyone willing to come, and the wedding hall was filled with guests.

But then the story takes a surprising turn. The king noticed one man who was not wearing a wedding garment. When questioned, the man had no excuse and was cast out of the feast.

This parable carries powerful spiritual lessons about salvation, grace, and righteousness.

The Invitation Is for Everyone

The wedding feast represents the kingdom of God and the salvation offered through Jesus Christ. God’s invitation goes out to all people. No one is excluded because of their past, failures, status, or background.

Yet many reject the invitation. Some are too distracted by the cares of life, while others resist God altogether. Jesus shows that salvation is offered freely, but people still must choose whether they will accept it.

God desires a relationship with us, but He does not force anyone into His kingdom.

The Wedding Garment

The most important symbol in the parable is the wedding garment. In biblical times, kings often provided special garments for wedding guests. Refusing to wear the garment was an insult to the king.

Spiritually, the garment represents the righteousness of Christ.

We cannot enter God’s kingdom clothed in our own goodness. Our works, achievements, morality, and religious efforts can never remove sin. Only Jesus can make us clean before God.

The man without the garment wanted the celebration without accepting the king’s provision. In the same way, many people want the blessings of God without surrendering fully to Christ.

Jesus offers us His perfect righteousness — a spotless robe covering our sin and shame. Salvation is not about pretending we are righteous; it is about receiving Christ’s righteousness by faith.

What Does It Mean to Be Clothed in Christ’s Righteousness?

To be clothed with Jesus’ robe of righteousness means that we place our trust completely in Him instead of ourselves. It means we accept His sacrifice for our sins and allow Him to transform our hearts and lives.

When God looks at the believer, He sees the righteousness of Christ covering them. That is why salvation is possible.

But this is not merely a one-time decision. Scripture says we should daily choose to walk with Christ. Every day we must surrender pride, selfishness, and sin to Him.

Being clothed in Christ’s righteousness means:

  • Confessing our sins honestly before God.
  • Trusting fully in Jesus for salvation.
  • Spending time in prayer and God’s Word.
  • Allowing the Holy Spirit to shape our character.
  • Choosing obedience out of love for God.
  • Depending on Christ daily instead of our own strength.

The Christian life is not about trying harder to appear holy. It is about staying close to Jesus so His character begins to shine through us.

Called but Chosen

Jesus ends the parable by saying, “Many are called, but few are chosen.” God calls everyone, but not everyone accepts His invitation or His righteousness.

The good news is that Jesus freely offers His robe to anyone willing to receive it. No sin is too great for His grace. No life is too broken for Him to restore.

The question is not whether the invitation has been given. The question is whether we will accept it fully and allow Christ to clothe us with His righteousness each day.

Prayer

Father, thank You for inviting us into Your kingdom through Jesus Christ. Thank You that we do not have to earn salvation through our own efforts, but that You offer us the perfect righteousness of Christ. Forgive us for the times we try to rely on ourselves instead of fully trusting You. Teach us what it means to walk closely with Jesus every day. Help us to surrender our hearts completely, to turn away from sin, and to reflect Your character in our lives. Clothe us daily with Your grace, mercy, and righteousness. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Sufficient Grace

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 10 - Wednesday 

Grace Greater Than Our Sin

Scripture Reading: Exodus 34:1–10

After Israel sinned by worshiping the golden calf, Moses returned to Mount Sinai carrying two new stone tablets. The people had broken their covenant with God almost immediately after promising to obey Him. Yet in Exodus 34, instead of completely destroying them, God revealed something incredible about His character.

“The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abounding in goodness and truth” (Exod. 34:6, NKJV).

This passage reveals a crucial truth: God is both perfectly holy and unbelievably merciful. Sin is serious and brings destruction, but God’s heart is always reaching out to save, restore, and forgive those who come to Him in repentance.

Throughout Scripture, we see this same message repeated again and again.

The Wages of Sin

Romans 6:23 says:

“For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Sin always produces death. Like wages earned from a job, death is the natural result of rebellion against God. Sin destroys peace, joy, relationships, and ultimately separates humanity from the Source of life itself.

Many people try to minimize sin or excuse it, but the Bible never does. God’s law reflects His character of love, and breaking that law damages both ourselves and others.

But this verse does not end with death.

God offers a gift — eternal life through Jesus Christ. A wage is something earned, but a gift is something freely given. We cannot earn salvation through good works, religious activity, or human effort. Eternal life comes only through Jesus, who took our punishment upon Himself at the cross.

Grace That Is Greater Than Sin

Romans 5:20–21 says:

“But where sin abounded, grace abounded much more.”

That is one of the most hope-filled promises in the Bible.

No matter how deep sin goes, God’s grace goes deeper. Human failure can never outrun God’s mercy. The cross proves that God is willing to forgive completely those who surrender their lives to Him.

This does not mean grace excuses sin. Grace changes us. Grace teaches us to hate what destroys us and to love the God who saved us. Through Christ, grace reigns “through righteousness to eternal life.” God does not merely cover our guilt; He begins transforming our hearts.

Some people carry shame from past mistakes for years. Others feel they have gone too far for God to forgive them. But the gospel says otherwise. God specializes in restoring broken sinners.

When sin increased in the world, God did not respond by giving up on humanity. He responded by sending Jesus.

Love Proven at the Cross

Romans 5:8 says:

“But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

Christ did not wait for humanity to become worthy before He loved us. He loved us while we were still lost.

That is the heart of the gospel.

Jesus saw every sinful thought, every act of rebellion, every failure we would ever commit — and still chose the cross. His sacrifice was not based on our goodness but on His love.

Sometimes people think God loves them only when they are doing well spiritually. But God’s love is not fragile or temporary. At Calvary, He demonstrated once and for all how far He was willing to go to save humanity.

The cross shows both the seriousness of sin and the greatness of God’s mercy. Sin is so deadly that Jesus had to die for it. Yet God’s love is so powerful that He willingly gave His Son to rescue us.

Living in God’s Grace

Exodus 34 reminds us that God is compassionate and forgiving, yet also holy and just. He does not ignore sin, but He provides a way for sinners to be redeemed.

Every day we must choose whether we will cling to our sin or surrender to Christ. Grace is available, forgiveness is offered, and eternal life is promised to all who trust in Jesus.

No matter your past, God’s grace is greater.

Prayer

Father, thank You for revealing Yourself as merciful, gracious, and full of love. Thank You that even though sin brings death, You have offered us eternal life through Jesus Christ. Help us never to take Your grace lightly. Teach us to turn away from sin and walk closely with You each day. Thank You for loving us even while we were still sinners and for sending Jesus to die in our place. Fill our hearts with gratitude, humility, and faith. Transform us by Your grace and help us reflect Your love to others. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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