No one is truly good except God. Jesus said that plainly. Yet human beings are not indifferent to goodness. We are made in God’s image. We possess a conscience. We admire courage, generosity, patience. We feel the quiet obligation to do what is right. Many lives are marked by real acts of kindness and sacrifice.
And Still, There Is Something Unsettled Beneath It All.
Conscience does more than commend us; it also accuses us. It reminds us of words that cannot be taken back, motives that were not pure, love that was partial and selective. The problem is not simply that we fail at times. It is that we do not love God with our whole heart, nor love others without self-interest. Scripture names this condition with uncomfortable clarity: “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Our nature has been bent inward. Even our good deeds cannot untangle that inward curve.
If acceptance with God rests on our moral record, then we stand on unstable ground. God’s standard is not comparison with other people, but His own holiness. To be received on the basis of righteousness would require a purity that runs deeper than behavior, reaching into thoughts, desires, and loves. However sincere our efforts, they cannot erase guilt or restore a fractured relationship with the God who made us.
This Is Why The Words In Titus 3 Are So Important.
It says that when “the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared, he saved us,” and then adds, “not because of works done by us in righteousness.” Salvation is not a reward for improvement. It is not God meeting us halfway. It begins in His character.
Salvation, In The Bible’s Sense, Is Rescue.
It is deliverance from sin’s guilt and from the just judgment of a holy God. It is the end of alienation and the beginning of reconciliation. It is forgiveness that cleans the record and new life that reshapes the heart. It is being brought back to the God from whom we have wandered.
And This Rescue Is “According To His Own Mercy.”
Mercy means that God sees the full truth about us and moves toward us in compassion. He does not minimize sin. He does not pretend rebellion is small. But neither does He leave sinners to bear the weight alone. In Jesus Christ, “the goodness and loving kindness of God” entered history. God did not remain distant. He drew near.
At the cross, something decisive happened. Sin was not ignored; it was judged. Justice was not set aside; it was satisfied. Christ bore what sinners deserved. The penalty fell, but it fell on Him. In this way, God remains righteous while extending forgiveness to the unrighteous. He does not compromise His holiness in order to love. He reveals the depth of His love by upholding His holiness at His own cost.
Titus speaks of “the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit.” This is more than pardon. It is new birth. What good deeds cannot accomplish, God accomplishes by grace. He cleanses the conscience. He renews the heart. He begins restoring the love for God and others that sin had distorted.
The Contrast Is Not Subtle.
Acceptance by good works depends on fragile human performance and leaves the soul uncertain, always measuring and comparing. Acceptance through mercy rests on the finished work of Christ and brings peace with God. One path clings to self-reliance and ends in continued separation. The other rests in grace and leads to reconciliation and eternal life.
This mercy is not achieved. It is received. It is not accessed by proving worth, but by admitting need. Repentance is honest acknowledgment of sin. Faith is entrusting oneself to Jesus Christ, relying on Him rather than on personal righteousness. It is coming empty-handed and being filled.
No one is truly good but God. And this good God is rich in mercy.
Turn to Christ and be reconciled.