Falaite Fepueli 20, 2026
NOMIPA 21-22; SAAME 96:10-13
God, the righteous Judge, is also a gracious Redeemer. Because sin exists and leads to death, both judgment and atonement are necessary.
Ko e ‘Otua, ko e fakamaau faitotonu, ka ko e Huhu’i ‘alo’ofa. Ka koe’uhi ko e kei ‘i ai ‘a e angahala ‘oku iku ki he mate, ‘e kei fiema’u pe ‘a e fakamaau mo e totongi huhu’i.
You would not want to live in a city where there was no law, no punishment for crime, and no restoration for the criminal. Life in such a city would be dangerous and unbearable. In the same way, you and I should be thankful that God is a perfectly holy Judge who hates sin in all of its forms. You and I should be thankful that sin has consequences and penalties. You and I should be thankful that the one who sits on the throne of the universe takes sin seriously and is angry with sin every day. If God were to turn his back and let sin reign on the earth, we would have no hope. At the same time, you and I should never stop celebrating that, because God is who he is, he not only judges sin but also extends grace for sinners. This is the overarching plot of the biblical story: sin, judgment, and atonement.
That plot plays out in brief form in Numbers 21:4-9. The people of Israel attacked the very character of God: his goodness, his faithfulness, and his commitment to provide. They said they hated where God had led them and loathed what he had provided. There is no way that a holy God who loved his children could have turned his back on this rebellion. So God sent deadly serpents among his people. The serpents were both a discipline and a warning.
But God was not done. He had no intention of wiping out his children. As he disciplined them in righteous anger, he remembered his covenant to them and provided for them a way of escape. He commanded Moses to put a bronze serpent on a pole; those who looked upon it would live. Here again is the great plot of the biblical narrative: sin, judgment, and atonement. But here also is a foreshadowing of where the biblical story is headed. There would be another tree. Nailed to it was not a serpent but the Son of God. He hung there as the atoning sacrifice for my sins and yours (John 3:14-15). We, too, have questioned God's goodness. At times we have loathed what he has provided. We have rebelled against his authority, choosing to follow our own way. We have looked back longingly at the idols that once enslaved us. We deserved God's judgment, but he met us at that tree outside the city walls. His anger with sin and his grace toward the sinner drove Jesus to the cross.
Because of God's unrelenting anger with sin and because of the magnitude of his grace, there will be a day when sin will be no more. There will be no more rebellion. There will be no more questions of his goodness. There will be no more challenges to his authority. And we will be with him in a place of complete peace and righteousness forever. God takes sin seriously, and, because he does, we have hope now and for all of eternity.