Why should we struggle against...
Illustration
Why should we struggle against Christ who is stronger than the strong? If he conquered the evil one, should we not permit him to conquer our hearts? Herzog, the weary distressed subject of Saul Bellow's prize-winning novel, confesses on one of his many scribbled notes to himself, "I cannot justify." Yet he wearies and wears himself down in trying to do just that. He takes himself through tortuous attempts and struggles to find a little peace and comfort for his sensitive heart. How easy it is to acknowledge on paper that we cannot save our own lives; yet when we are thrown into the struggle of living we thrash away as though we had never learned the truth about ourselves. Christ comes to be the assurance to us that we can face the real truth about ourselves, because in him we learn the truth about God. While we learn we cannot justify ourselves in him, we learn that God has justified us. He has given us a claim on heaven. We would be fools not to press our claim. Then we should be like the foolish miner in Mark Twain's novel, Roughing It, who staked out a rich claim, but allowed the claim to lapse. Christ is the perpetual offer of God to us that the claim that he has staked out for us will not lapse. In the lesson the prophet describes for us the role of the Servant who came to work our justification for us. We see this role fulfilled in the Christ.
