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Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson thinks he redeemed himself. He’s wrong.

 After being riddled with guilt for years over his sins as a teenager, Dwayne The Rock  Johnson arguably Hollywood’s highest-paid actor made amends. We are told that he was able to redeem himself. A video posted online shows him returning to the scene of the crime and buying up hundreds of Snickers bars, giving them to the store, and telling them to give them away to anyone who was tempted to steal.Before making amends he said three times in one interview that he wanted to  redeem himself for his theft. The media loved it saying that he was indeed making things right.

Is that true? Can we balance the scales of justice by doing good works? Millions would say a big  amen  that it’s certainly the right thing to do. This is because doing religious works or good works is the basis for their religion. After all wasn’t this what Zacchaeus did in the Bible.   Then Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord Look Lord I give half of my goods to the poor  and if I have taken anything from anyone by false accusation I restore fourfold.



Actually it’s not. Zacchaeus wasn’t trying to redeem himself. He was redeemed the moment he put his faith in Jesus. His righting past wrongs was done as an act of gratitude for God’s forgiveness. It was what Scripture calls fruit of repentance . It was evidence that he had just been saved.

And Jesus said to him Today salvation has come to this house because he also is a son of Abraham for the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost.It was evident that Dwayne Johnson wasn’t trusting in the Savior. Instead he was trusting in his own attempt to redeem himself something the Bible says cannot be done:

If Dwayne Johnson bought the entire store and gifted it to the owner, it wouldn’t make things right. Paying off the victim from whom we’ve stolen doesn’t work in criminal court, and it certainly won’t work on Judgment Day. If a one-time monetary payment for theft was able to satisfy God, how would we redeem ourselves for adultery, for fornication, for blasphemy, or for lying? How would we make things right for the sin of lust — which Jesus said is adultery of the heart . 

Good works don’t cover our sins in the slightest. A multimillionaire giving $500 to a store may impress the media, but it doesn’t impress God. Any payment we try to make for sin is an abomination to Him . Yet millions deceive themselves by pacifying their guilty conscience with what the Bible calls dead works .

 On a cold winter morning way back in 1979  I sat in the back seat of my neighbor’s car as they kindly drove me to work. The husband had heard me speak at a service club about Christianity and drug prevention earlier that week. To my surprise he suddenly asked  Ray good people go to Heaven. Bad people go to Hell. Where does the average person like me go? 

I explained that the Bible teaches that in God’s eyes no one is good. Not one. Despite that, most people will say that they are morally good. That is probably humanity’s most prevalent deception. Perhaps the second is to admit that they have moral failings but believe that if they do good it will balance the scales on Judgment Day. 

There was once a hardened criminal who had murdered a number of people. As he faced the judge he had a twofold defense. The first was that all of the victims were prostitutes. He maintained that he had done society a favor. In other words his crime wasn’t serious. The second line of defense was that even though he was guilty of the crimes he had been involved in a number of good works during his life. He had often given to charities and he never hesitated to help others. He said that he hoped the judge would take into account all the good that he had done and because of that let him go.

No legitimate judge will free a murderer because he has done good things. His good works are irrelevant. That’s how justice works. If doing good things doesn’t justify us in man’s court it certainly won’t justify us in God’s court on Judgment Day. So, how do we awaken the person who is deceived into thinking that their works will justify him before God? I have found the following to be effective. 

Most of humanity doesn’t see sin as being a serious crime against God. They believe that they make mistakes or have moral failures. After all nobody’s perfect. However the Bible gives us something to show us differently. It says that the wages of sin is death. In other words God is paying us in death for our sins. It is like a judge who gives the death sentence to a flippant murderer. He says I’m giving you the death sentence. This is your wages. This is what you’ve earned.  That sentence shows the criminal his crime was serious. 

Sin is so serious to a holy God that He’s given every one of us the death sentence capital punishment. In other words our death will be evidence to us that God is deadly serious about sin  even if we’re not. Death is an arresting officer with a divine summons in his hand. And God isn’t going to withdraw that summons just because a guilty rich man slaps $500 on a counter. The payment was infinitely greater than that. It took the agonizing death of the perfect Lamb of God to redeem us from the curse of the Law. It is in Jesus alone that we are sheltered from death and from God’s wrath. 

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