The Psalmist once asked a question which I pose to you all right now for a diligent consideration for appropriate answers: “If the foundation be destroyed, what can the righteous do? Psalm 11:3. A dictionary definition of what foundation means says- it is the strong stable base on which a building is built. As we embark on the journey of following Jesus, our foundation is very important. What are the things that form our foundation? Our understanding of who God the Father, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit is, our beliefs and doctrines forms the foundations. As Christians or believer, our understanding of what salvation is forms a critical aspect of our foundation. The book of Colossians 2:6 says ‘As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him. How did you receive Christ Jesus? If the way you received him is faulty then your walk in him will be faulty. You cannot then be properly rooted and built in him and established in the faith (Col 2:7). Such believer that have faulty beginning in receiving Christ fall victim of the philosophies, vain deceit, tradition of men (Col 2:8) and every wave of false doctrines. Some have received Christ as a miracle worker, a healer, need supplier etc. These are faulty ways in which some believers have received Christ hence they have faulty walk in him.
Let us quickly consider the scriptural steps or orders to follow in receiving Christ. Isaiah 40:3 says ‘The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, prepare ye the way of the Lord; make straight in the desert a highway for our God…’ This was a prophecy concerning the ministry of John the Baptist (Matt 2:3). Christ can only be received through the ministry of John – repentance. Jesus Christ stresses this point at the beginning of his own ministry (Matt 4:11, Mark 1:15). What then does this ministry of repentance entail? Let us look at Isaiah’s prophecy about John to have an insight of what the ministry entails.
Firstly, ‘prepare the way of the Lord.’ How do we prepare this way of the Lord? We prepare this way by being true to ourselves. Hebrew 10:22 says ‘Let us draw near with a true heart…’ This simply means that we acknowledge our true nature before God. We ought to acknowledge the declaration of God about our Adamic nature who is not just one who commits sins but a sinner. Consider these confessions and note the difference – ‘Lord forgive my sins of stealing, lying and fornicating’ and ‘Lord forgive me a thief, liar and fornicator for I have stolen, lied and fornicated.’ While the former separates himself from his sins, the latter acknowledges these characters as being his true nature. There is power in acknowledgement. It prepares the way for the Lord to help us.
Secondly, ‘make straight in the desert a highway for our God.’ How do we make a highway for God? We will find the answer in Proverb 16:17a which says ‘the highway of the upright is to depart from evil.’ After our acknowledgement of who we are before God, we are then to depart from the former ways. By this we make a highway for God.
Could you now say that you have received Christ or that you followed this order to you receiving Christ? Did you truly acknowledge who you are before God or were you separating your sins from yourself? Asking this question is not meant to disprove the fact that you are a believer or Christian but with the aim of trying to find long lasting solution to the problem which you now face in your walk as a born-again. As important as your receiving is, much more important will be your walk.
Consider Uzza, Nadab and Abihu who suffered death consequences from seeking the Lord wrongly. There is that urgent need by God for his children to make sure that they are building their faith on the Rock whom he had laid as the foundation of our beliefs.
How then do we receive Christ? We receive Christ as the Son of the living God (Matt16:16) who came in the human flesh (1John 4:3) to save us from our sins (Matt 1:21) through the shedding of his blood and by his death, delivered us from our sinful nature and from the kingdom of darkness and by his resurrection brings us the hope of eternal life in his everlasting kingdom.