
Mark Twain said, “The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why.” Good points. There’s one very critical day you would not want to miss though: the day you find out what could stop you in your tract. Paul clipped it:

I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature. I want to do what is right, but I can’t. I want to do what is good, but I don’t. I don’t want to do what is wrong, but I do it anyway.” (Romans 7:18-19)
Pause a moment and let that statement sink in. If it resonates, it is because the experience is all too familiar. What would stop us? It is ourselves. Yet, we’ve seen the ascendancy of the humanists view claiming that people are by nature good, quite the opposite of the reality. The humanist’s vision has inspired us to work tirelessly to bring progress. We have what it takes to thrive: education, science, technology, all fill our arsenal to conquer the world. That’s what we thought. Then World War II struck. It was like demons were let loose. The good man theory popped. Worse, the very means of progress and prosperity were used against humanity in gruesome genocides.
So as it turns out, knowing your purpose is not enough. Having an ambition is a start. You still need to have the power to actualize it. So, the next place Paul took his readers sealed it. No, he did not spit out condemnation nor pessimism for our inadequacies and imperfections. He talked of forgiveness and transformation. It’s a spiritual healing and empowering. That day is to become a turning point when we become aware of our true self, admit that we are spiritually poor, sick to the core, hopeless and helpless beings without God. As Jesus puts it succinctly in Matt 5:3, “Blessed (happy) are the poor in spirit for the kingdom of God is theirs.” In short, the day we acknowledge that we are sinners, torn and tattered inside out, that we can’t even save ourselves from harming ourselves, or our fellow humans and environment. To call it a day of salvation is not an exaggeration. It’s like a new day dawning for this salvation gives us a new nature: a new purpose, perspective, and power.
Quick check: What experience makes you aware of your spiritual poverty?