A Prayer and Fasting Devotional
As a distant relative of Adam and Eve who has inherited their sin nature (Romans 5:12), I am well acquainted with the overwhelming sense of shame that I feel when my sin is exposed in God’s presence. It’s an awful feeling that can cripple my prayer life as I try to “hide from God” and thus forfeit the grace that God promises to give us when we seek Him (Hebrews 4:14-16).
The beauty of the Gospel is that when Adam and Eve tried to hide from God, God sought them out, covered their transgression, and set the plan in motion to restore man’s broken fellowship with God. The animal skins provided by God to cover Adam and Eve’s nakedness (Genesis 3:21) foreshadowed the blood of the sinless lamb that was shed for the sins of mankind when He was slain on a cross. Because Jesus the Christ was naked and unashamed as he “endured the cross” in our place (Hebrews 12:2), in Him we can draw near to God, free from guilt and shame, covered by His blood, and clothed in His righteousness. In the hymn “Rock of Ages”, songwriter Augustus Toplady sang of the beauty of the deep, inner covering that Christ provides.
“Nothing in my hand I bring, Simply to Thy cross I cling; Naked, come to Thee for dress; Helpless, look to Thee for grace.”
Being naked and unashamed in God’s presence frees us up to have the same disposition in the context of Christian community. My little boy was naked and unashamed because he didn’t know any better. Clothed with the righteousness of Christ, I can be honest (naked and unashamed) about my struggles with brothers and sisters in Christ who can remind me of the worth and value of God’s promises (Galatians 6:1-3). Pastor Matt Chandler once said, “The church is a gathering of men and women who have covenant with one another and Christ to do life together.” James 5:16 reminds us that “doing life together” looks like confessing our sins and praying for one another. Let us find grace in the God who calls us out of hiding and back into a covenant relationship through Christ, so that we might draw near to Him, naked and unashamed, and find healing and rest for our souls.
Yolanda Solomon
Ministry Fellow at Columbia