What is your life?
It is a vapor.
The Bible says your life
is like a puff of steam.
There for a moment, and then it's gone.
My name is Kevin.
I grew up in Manchester in England
in the seventies,
into a background in those days,
you were either considered
a Roman Catholic,
or like us, we were considered an Anglican
which is Church of England now.
We never went to church.
All that means is I was
christened as a child.
Infant baptism is a big ritual there.
It's a big superstition.
People believe that you
can't get into heaven
without some sort of infant ritual.
So the only times in my childhood
I set foot in a church
was at one of these christenings
or was at somebody's wedding.
And then, when I got to secondary school
or high school
I just professed to be an atheist
back in those days.
Really, even though I didn't know much
about the Bible back then,
and I didn't know much about Jesus Christ
I did really know one thing.
I knew deep down it was all true
even in the days when I professed
to be an atheist.
There was just something inside of me -
a nagging thought - my conscience
which told me it was all true.
And so as time went on,
I left school and I just became
a big sinner.
I drank up as much sin as I could
in various ways.
And I did things which are
real shameful to speak about
in that time.
And so time went on and I became
a worse and worse sinner.
And I got to my mid-twenties,
and I started asking those questions
that everybody asks at some point in life.
Why are we here
and what happens when this life is over?
And I would philosophize.
I remember each day
I would just philosophize more and more.
And I'd come up with the silliest
interpretations of things.
This would keep on going.
But I knew there was a God at this time.
I just looked at the whole creation,
the Bible says, declares His handiwork.
And my conscience again
just keeps telling me
this is true.
At first, I would look at other religions.
I wanted to become
anything but a Christian.
And I remember, I looked
at things like Buddhism.
But it was just all fairy tale stuff.
It was just nonsense really.
And then eventually,
I started to open the Bible and look at it
as like a history book.
It was an old Bible that was passed down
in the family from my granddad,
and I just started in Genesis 1:1,
"In the beginning, God created
the heavens and the earth."
And I just kept on reading
and it seemed to make sense.
Now, I didn't really
understand it at that time,
and I was trying to interpret it
through my atheistic
worldview I still had.
Even though I wasn't an atheist,
I still had a naturalistic worldview.
I remember reading about
the manna in the desert.
I was thinking, well, that must be snow.
These people must not really understand -
these primitive people.
But I still knew it was all true.
And about the same time,
I started to go to a high Anglican church,
which is basically like Catholicism
but without the Pope.
It's all prayer book rituals.
The sermons there were
only 10 to 15 minutes.
And there wasn't really
the Gospel preached there -
the message of how to get saved.
And what truth I did hear there
was all surrounded in hypocrisy.
It was all filtered through that.
Now, I was doing things in that time
that I just become
more and more religious.
I thought I was a Christian
for about six years.
I went to that church,
but I never knew Jesus Christ.
I never really knew Him.
But there was so much hypocrisy going on.
For instance, me myself,
you would have thought
that for an hour and a half on a Sunday
I was deeply religious.
But for the rest of the week,
I just lived like a complete hypocrite.
You know, I'd go to nightclubs and things
and do shameful things
and then I'd be in church on a Sunday.
Now, I knew that was wrong,
but I'd look at other people in the church
and they'd be getting blind drunk as well
on a Saturday night.
And I'd just think, well,
they've been Christians
longer than me.
So this time just went
on and on like this.
Eventually, I always knew
that there was something
more to Christianity
that I didn't have.
Now, of course, it was Jesus Christ,
because in this time,
God was just always a distant deity to me.
I didn't really know Him.
I had a cliche - I would say,
I've got a relationship with Jesus.
Christianity is a relationship with Jesus,
but I didn't really know Him.
And so I started to listen to sermons
and messages and look at teachings
outside of the church I was in.
And I was going through a series
on the Sermon on the Mount,
and then one day I sat in the garden
listening to a sermon
and I heard the words of Jesus
from Matthew 5:27-30
where Jesus said, "You have heard
that it was said of old,
'you shall not commit adultery,'
but I say unto you, if you look at a woman
to lust after her,
you've already committed adultery with her
in your heart."
And Jesus went on to say there,
"cast your eye out, because it is better
to enter heaven with one eye
than to enter hell with both."
Now, the context there
is of course adultery.
It's not saying it's a sin
for a man to have sexual
desire for his wife
and vice versa,
but Jesus does clearly say in those verses
that to lust over someone
you're not married to
is a sin that will surely take you to hell
if it's not repented of.
Now, I had heard those
verses many times before.
And in fact, I remember discussing it
only a few weeks earlier.
I explained them away every time
saying surely it doesn't mean
what He says there
because everybody does that.
Everybody just lusts all the time.
But that day, when I
heard those words of Jesus,
I knew He meant what He said.
I knew for the first time,
I realized that God was a holy God
Who I could no longer play games with.
And in all this, it just felt like
the love of Jesus Christ
because I realized that God could have
killed me.
I mean, my life is in His hands,
and He could have killed me
and put me in hell a week before,
or a year before or two years before,
knowing the shameful things I did.
And He would have been
perfectly just in doing so.
But the kindness and
the long-suffering of God
which is meant to lead
a person to repentance,
led me to repentance,
because I just saw the great love of God.
And I'd been mocking Him for so long
and playing games with God.
And He just loved me.
And He just died for me.
In 2 Corinthians 5:21, the Bible says,
"He Who knew no sin became sin for us
that we might become
the righteousness of God."
Jesus Christ on a cross 2,000 years ago,
He became a sin offering for us.
He became a sin offering for me.
He died in my place.
And on that cross,
all the guilt of my sin,
the shame of my sin,
just all my wrongdoings I ever did
were placed upon Jesus on that cross.
Not only did Jesus pay for that,
and take away all my sin,
so there is therefore now
no condemnation left for me
because Christ has already been condemned
in my place.
But He also lived a
righteous and perfect life.
You see, the greatest commandment
in Scripture we are told
is to love God the Father
with all our heart,
soul, mind, and strength
and to love our neighbor as ourselves.
Now, in the life of Jesus,
He always perfectly loved God the Father
with all His heart,
soul, mind, and strength
and He always perfectly loved His neighbor
as Himself for every
millisecond of His life.
But since becoming a Christian,
we never do that for even one second.
We never perfectly love God.
But from the moment
I believed on Jesus Christ;
from the moment I saw
His great love for me,
then not only was all my sin gone,
gone forever,
as far as the east is from the west
the Bible says,
He remembers our sin no more,
but God now looks at me
as if I have lived the perfect,
righteous life of Jesus Christ.
So, God now looks at me and says
this is My beloved son,
in whom I am well pleased.
The cross of Jesus Christ
is such a wonderful thing.
There's an old hymn that goes,
Oh my sin, oh the joy
of this glorious thought;
my sin, not in part,
not just part of my sin,
but the whole,
is nailed to the cross
and I bear it no more.
Praise the Lord!
Praise the Lord, O my soul!
And if you don't know Jesus,
if you were like me
with just not knowing your sin's forgiven,
not really knowing God,
then I plead with you,
Jesus really paid it all
for you on that cross.
He paid every drop of my wrath in hell.
All of my hell Jesus
paid for on the cross.
That is what He did for us.
If you will come to Him,
if you will surrender to Him,
I plead with you,
Jesus - He doesn't want part of your life.
He wants all of your life.
And He is so worthy.
He is so good. He is so kind.
All together lovely.
I had no life.
I just had a miserable, worthless,
and pathetic life
for so much of my life.
I wasted so much of my life.
But it was by coming to Jesus Christ
that I now have true joy,
true peace of the heart,
and true life.
He offers that to you
if you'll come to Him.
And He offers that to you this day.
You see, the love Jesus has
for the believer is just perfect.
The Bible says - as Jesus said,
"As the Father has loved Me,
even so, I have loved you."
You know, the Song of Solomon says
that Jesus - He comes to the believer
leaping across the mountains.
After all my sin and all
my shame before God,
when I go to Him,
Jesus comes running to me
with His arms open wide,
hands that were pierced for me,
with holes in them for my sin.
He just comes to us ready to embrace us
in His everlasting love for us.
Eternity!
The next life is forever.
there is nothing more important
than being right with God
for eternity.
The Bible says
it is appointed unto men
once to die, but after this,
the judgment.
After death, there are no second chances
to get right with God.
But you must make peace with God
before you meet Him.