Daily Devotional
"And her husband Joseph, being a just man and unwilling to put her to shame, resolved to divorce her quietly. But as he considered these things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream."
Matthew 1:19-20a
If you had been a first-century Jew waiting for the Messiah, what would you have expected Him to save you from? The answer is obvious: Rome. For generations, God’s people had lived under foreign oppression – first Egypt, then Babylon, now Rome. They longed for a deliverer who would throw off the yoke of their oppressors and restore Israel to political and economic freedom.
So imagine the disappointment when the angel announces that this promised child will save His people from their sins. Not from Rome’s taxes. Not from Caesar’s legions. Not from the injustice and humiliation of occupation. From their sins. From themselves.
This wasn’t the kind of salvation they wanted. They wanted a political savior, a military hero, a revolutionary leader. Instead, God sent a Savior who would deal with the deeper problem – the sin in their own hearts that was more dangerous than any external enemy.
We’re not so different. We come to Jesus wanting Him to fix our circumstances. Save me from this difficult marriage. Save me from this financial crisis. Save me from this health problem. Save me from this anxiety. And while Jesus cares about all those things, He refuses to let us use Him as a divine problem-solver while ignoring the root issue: our sin.
Jesus didn’t come to help us demonize our enemies or blame our circumstances. He came to save us from ourselves. He came to deal with our selfishness, our pride, our unbelief, our rebellion against God. That’s a harder salvation to accept because it requires us to stop pointing fingers at everyone else and look honestly in the mirror.
But here’s the good news: when Jesus saves us from our sin, He addresses the root of every other problem we face. Sin is what separates us from God. Sin is what poisons our relationships. Sin is what produces anxiety, bitterness, and despair. Deal with the sin problem, and you’re dealing with the source, not just the symptoms.
Today's Challenge
In what ways have you wanted Jesus to save you from your circumstances rather than from yourself? What would it look like to let Him deal with your sin instead of just asking Him to fix your problems?
Prayer
Father, forgive me for the times I've treated Jesus like a divine problem-solver instead of recognizing Him as my Savior from sin. I confess that I often focus on my external difficulties while ignoring the sin in my own heart. Help me to see that my greatest need is not changed circumstances but a changed heart. Thank You for sending Jesus to save me from myself. In His name, Amen.