And I heard a loud voice in heaven, saying, “Now the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God and the authority of his Christ have come, for the accuser of our brothers has been thrown down, who accuses them day and night before our God. Rev. 12:10
Satan goes to God to make accusations against me. First, He tempts me to sin, and when I give in, he has material to work with. He entices, then he prosecutes. He reports my sin and demands that the sentence of the Law be carried out. Oh, how he dreams of justice without mercy!
But when Satan arrives in heaven to accuse me, He meets Jesus. He is clothed in righteousness, standing in the presence of His Father on my behalf. “Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has ascended into heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to the faith we profess.” Hebrews 4:14
Jesus is ready with my defense. He does not deny that I have sinned. He answers with something greater. He lifts His wounded hands and says, “She’s forgiven. She’s justified. She is Mine.” This is the moment when the accuser loses his footing.
Having lost his legal case against me, he’ll then come directly to me to make the same accusations. If I forget my defense, I become vulnerable to condemnation. Satan is cunning. He knows how to mimic the voice of my conscience. He knows I want to please Jesus. He knows I take sin seriously. So he slips in and speaks in tones that sound almost righteous, as if shame is a holy thing.
Conviction and condemnation are not the same things. The Spirit convicts in order to restore. Satan condemns in order to crush. But the blood has spoken, once and for all, at the cross. So what is my strategy when the accuser comes? I do not answer Satan with my feelings, because my feelings fail me. I answer him with this ~ I have been bought, cleansed, pardoned, and declared righteous before God. Be gone!
Jesus, Your mercy is stronger than my failure, and Your righteousness is my covering. Amen