Tag Archives: rebuke

God finds No Fault with You

Oshea Davis.

God finds no fault with you, and you need to do the same. Ask and Receive.

James 1:5 hits different when you really see what God is saying about how He relates to you right now. “If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you.”

Let’s get technical because this truth is too sharp to water down. The literal translation drives the consequence home: God “will not rebuke you” or “will not scold you” when you ask for wisdom. No “Not you again—you have too much sin to ask Me for stuff.” The Greek term (μὴ ὀνειδίζοντος) means He does not reproach, censure, or throw your failures back in your face. The NIV renders it that way for readability—“without finding fault”—but the logic is airtight and flows straight through. If God does not find fault with you when you come asking, then He has zero basis to rebuke or shame you for asking for wisdom, healing, or any other promise in the Good News. No lecture. No hesitation. No cosmic side-eye. This is not fluffy sentiment; it is the direct outcome of your justified standing.

This is exactly how God sees you in Christ. Jesus became sin for us so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God (2 Corinthians 5:21). All your sins—past, present, and every future one—were nailed once and for all. Hebrews drives it home: one offering has perfected forever those being sanctified, and God says He will remember your sins no more. In God’s mind there are no negative checkmarks waiting to be erased.

When we repent of sins, we are not asking God to remove a negative mark that He sees in His mind against us. No, that is not repentance for Christians. In repentance we admit we sinned, but we are not asking God to forgive us by removing flaws He sees in His mind against us—because in God’s mind He only sees us as perfect. The atonement is an event that already happened and already been finalized. There is no adding to it later. It is now reported as good news. The atonement is how God chose to forgave us. If we are asking God remove sin from us, we would be asking God to re-crucify Jesus, because that is how God has decided to forgive.  When we repent, we are agreeing with God that we are already perfect and righteous. In God’s mind there are only checkmarks of the very righteousness of God Himself stamped across your account—perfect, complete, unchanging. Faultless. Blameless. Accepted in the Beloved. In repentance we come to God and agree with Him that He is correct about us when He thinks we are perfect.

We say, “I was wrong when I sinned today. And I confess that to you. I also confess I am perfect, because you think I am perfect. You are correct God. I agree with you that you think I am blameless and you think I am God’s righteousness. Thank you Jesus for all You have done for me. You are correct about how righteous and awesome I am. Thank you.”

Repentance isn’t you grovelling like an outsider trying to earn your way back in. Nah. Repentance is you, as a son or daughter already seated in the Father’s house, agreeing with God that the blood already finished the job completely. You’re not asking Him to remove something He no longer sees. You’re simply lining your thinking up with the flawless reality He declared over you. The same for something like healing, prosperity, fame and blessings. You are not asking God to do something He hasn’t already done for you. You are agreeing with God they are already yours.

So when you come boldly to the throne for wisdom, God isn’t pulling out some fault ledger. He sees only Christ’s perfect righteousness on you. This is why the outcome is never some weak, watered-down “God will answer your prayer somehow.” The Bible doesn’t phrase it that way on purpose—people love to stick their unbelief exactly where it doesn’t belong. They twist it into the usual fleshly circus: “Well, God answers yes, maybe, no, or later when you learn your lesson.” But in His extreme faith doctrine Jesus says over and over: “Whatever you ask in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.” There is no way to water that down without contradicting Jesus. What you ask for is exactly what you get—period. No qualifiers. No loopholes.

James doubles down on the same faith doctrine in chapter five. Call the elders, pray the prayer of faith over the sick, and the Lord will raise him up. Same no-fault access. Same guaranteed result. Only unbelief can block what God has already promised and empowered. James starts off in chapter one saying God finds no fault with you, and so you get what you ask for. Then ends with chapter 5 saying, the prayer of a righteous man has huge effects.

Why would you ever doubt and waver? You’re not begging to become righteous—you already are in Jesus. In God’s mind the stripes Jesus took were for you, for your sickness, in your place, and the healing has already been given to you. The substitutionary atonement is finished. You’re not pleading for healing as if the stripe marks are not on Jesus’ back—you agree they already healed you. You’re not scraping for wisdom like some outsider hoping God might throw you a bone—you’re in the One who became wisdom from God for you. Fleshly thinking always drags your eyes back to symptoms, feelings, or yesterday’s failures, but that’s just unbelief trying to rewrite what the cross already sealed.

God’s sovereignty stands fully behind every single promise. He doesn’t tease His kids. Stop limiting the Holy One with half-hearted prayers that expect nothing or maybe. Ask Him today for the wisdom you need—bold, expectant, no wavering. Ask for healing over that body. Ask for every good thing the Good News promises. He gives generously because in Christ you are faultless in His sight. He will not rebuke you when you ask. He will praise you and give you what you ask. Believe it the moment you ask, thank Him like it’s already done, and watch reality line up with the word of faith. This is the normal Christian life.

The Kingdom is here. The Good News is better than you thought. The Good News is closer and more tangible than what the faithless tried to hide from you. Take what is yours.

God does not find fault with you. I don’t find fault with you. Ask and receive.

Your Blessed: Even If You’re in the Wrong

September 28, 2025 

Let’s dive straight into the heart of God’s unshakeable covenant with His people, a truth that shines through the stories of Abraham and Isaac like a divine spotlight cutting through the fog of human failure. In Genesis 12:10-20, Abraham, driven by famine, heads to Egypt and pulls a fast one: he tells Pharaoh that Sarah is his sister, not his wife, fearing for his life. Technically, she’s a half-sister, but the omission is a lie by any honest measure. Yet, when Pharaoh takes Sarah into his palace, God doesn’t thunder down on Abraham with a rebuke. Instead, He plagues Pharaoh’s household, forcing the king to confront the deception and send Abraham away loaded with wealth—silver, gold, livestock. Abraham is in the wrong and God slaps Pharaoh instead. Think about that.  Abraham walks out richer, unscathed, while the pagan ruler gets the divine smackdown. Fast-forward to Genesis 26:6-11, and Isaac pulls the same stunt with Rebekah in Gerar, claiming she’s his sister to King Abimelech. Again, no heavenly finger-wagging at Isaac. Isaac not only escapes harm but reaps a hundredfold harvest in a drought-stricken land (v. 12), blessing upon blessing despite his fear-driven fib.

This isn’t sloppy storytelling in Scripture; it’s a deliberate showcase of God’s covenant loyalty, a Contract so ironclad that it overrides human sins and turns them into triumphs. God’s unmerited favor supplies man; man does not supply God. Abraham and Isaac weren’t earning brownie points here—they were fumbling in fear, yet God’s promise to Abraham in Genesis 12:2-3 (“I will bless you… and you will be a blessing”) kicks in like an unstoppable force. The Almighty rebukes kings, plagues palaces, and pours out prosperity, all while His chosen ones learn on the job. It’s almost comical, in a sobering way: picture Pharaoh scratching his head over sudden household chaos, or Abimelech sweating through a nightmare, while the real culprits—Abraham and Isaac—stroll away with upgrades. God isn’t winking at sin; He’s demonstrating that His Contract isn’t fragile like human deals. It’s sovereign, absolute, and directly orchestrated to showcase His glory through imperfect vessels.

Now, zoom out to the bigger picture: this covenant power isn’t ancient history; it’s amplified in the New Contract through Jesus Christ. Galatians 3:29 declares, “If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” That promise? The blessing of Abraham, including supernatural favor that makes kings back off and resources multiply, even when we’ve messed up. Jesus became the curse for us (Galatians 3:13), swapping our failures for His righteousness, so that God’s contract with us—sealed in blood—guarantees ongoing goodness. Hebrews 8:10-12 spells it out: God writes His laws on our hearts, calls us His people, and remembers our sins no more. This isn’t license to abuse grace, as Paul warns in Romans 6:1-2—we don’t sin so grace abounds. But it is a reminder that God’s favor isn’t performance-based; it’s promise-based. When we stumble, He doesn’t abandon ship; He rebukes the “kings” in our lives—be they bosses, circumstances, or even demonic forces—and redirects the fallout to our benefit. Think of it: your mistake at work leads to a promotion because God stirs favor; a health scare turns into miraculous recovery because the Contract (not your performance) demands healing. Reprobates scoff at this, calling it “health and wealth heresy,” because they would rather trample Jesus blood and believe in Him.  

Yet, here’s where faith enters the fray, and it’s not optional—it’s the ignition switch. Abraham and Isaac’s stories show God’s initiative, but our response matters. In both cases, their partial truths stemmed from fear, not faith, yet God honored the underlying covenant. For us, post-cross, we’re called to higher: Our faith needs to catch up to who we already are in Christ. Ephesians 2:6 seats us with Christ in heavenly realms, far above earthly kings and blunders. But if we wallow in guilt or unbelief after a slip-up, we limit God, confessing our mess instead of His mercy. Jesus modeled this perfectly: even when Peter denied Him, Christ didn’t rebuke with threats but restored him (John 21:15-19), focusing on future fruit. We’re not to abuse grace by plotting deceptions, but when we falter by the weakness of the flesh, God’s contract kicks in. He promises in Romans 8:28 to work all things for good, rebuking obstacles and supplying needs.

This truth dismantles defective ethics that peddle guilt as godliness.  Faith-fumblers, preach a gospel where God’s always mad, ready to zap you for every misstep. Nonsense. The same love the Father has for Jesus, He gives to His elect. If God rebuked kings for Abraham’s sake, how much more for us, united with the resurrected Christ? We’re His children, not probationary hires. He promises in Psalm 105:14-15, “He allowed no one to oppress them; for their sake he rebuked kings: ‘Do not touch my anointed ones; do my prophets no harm.'” That’s Contract protection, extending to us as Abraham’s heirs.

Let these stories fuel bold confession: “God, even in my stumbling, Your Contract stands; rebuke the ‘kings’ in my path and pour out Your goodness.” Faith catches up by meditating on promises day and night (Psalm 1:2-3), assenting to God’s definitions over our feelings. You’re not defined by mistakes; you’re defined by the Contract—accomplished, effective, eternal. And if He rebuked pharaohs for patriarchs, imagine what He’ll do for you. It’s not arrogance; it’s agreement with Scripture.