10/40 Window Reach Out Series
Why Good People Still Need Jesus
— The Truth About Human Goodness and God’s Standard
By Missionary John | missionaryjohn.online | 10/40 Window Reach Out Series
The Most Common Assumption in the World
Ask almost anyone in any country, from any background, from any religion or none, whether they think they will be accepted by God — and the majority will give the same answer: yes, probably. Because I am a good person. I have not murdered anyone. I try to treat people fairly. I help my family. I am not perfect, but I am not evil either.
This assumption is so widespread, so deeply embedded in human thinking across every culture and century, that it feels self-evident. Of course goodness matters. Of course the kind person fares better than the cruel one. Of course God — if He exists — grades on a curve.
It is also, according to the Bible, one of the most dangerous assumptions a person can carry. Not because goodness is unimportant. But because of what it misunderstands about what goodness actually is — and about what God’s standard actually requires.
“There is none righteous, no, not one.” — Romans 3:10 (KJV)
The Problem With Comparing Yourself to Other People
The way most people decide they are good is by comparison. I am better than him. I am not as bad as her. My sins are small ones. The people I need to worry about are the ones on the news — the killers, the traffickers, the corrupt politicians. I am nowhere near that level.
This makes complete sense as a social calculation. Human communities run on comparison. Courts compare accused people to legal standards. Schools compare students to each other. Comparison is a legitimate tool for human ordering.
The problem is that God’s standard is not other people. The standard is God Himself — perfect holiness, perfect love, perfect truth, perfect justice in every thought, word, and action, across every moment of every day, without exception and without any private exemptions.
By that standard, every human being who has ever lived — including the best, most generous, most loving people you have ever known — falls short. Not because human beings are worthless. But because the gap between the best human being and the holy God is still infinite. You cannot bridge an infinite gap by being slightly better than the person next to you.
God does not grade on a curve. He grades against His own perfection. By that standard, we all need help.
What Sin Actually Is
The English word sin carries heavy religious baggage for many people. It sounds like a list of specific rules broken. But the biblical concept of sin is far deeper and far more personal than a list of prohibited behaviors.
The Greek word used most often in the New Testament for sin is hamartia — it means missing the mark. An archer draws back the bow and the arrow flies — but it lands wide of the target. Not because the archer is a terrible person. But because the target requires a precision the archer does not have.
God’s target is complete love — love for Him with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love for every person you encounter with the same care you give yourself. Every moment you have ever chosen yourself over God, chosen yourself over the person in front of you, chosen comfort over truth or advantage over kindness — that is the arrow missing the mark. Every one of us has been missing it our entire lives.
And here is the part that makes the moral math even more difficult: it is not just actions the Bible is concerned with. Jesus said that anger without cause is in the same moral category as murder. Lust is in the same category as adultery. The standard is not just external behavior. It is the interior life — the thoughts, the motives, the desires that nobody else can see.
Why Grace Is Not an Insult to Good People — It Is a Gift to Honest Ones
Here is where many good people feel that the gospel is insulting. The idea that a devoted parent, a generous community leader, a person who has spent their life serving others, needs the same salvation as a murderer — it seems to flatten all moral distinction.
But that is not what the gospel says. It says something more precise: no amount of goodness, however genuine, can bridge the gap between a finite sinful human being and a holy infinite God. The debt of sin cannot be cancelled by future good behavior, any more than a convicted criminal can have his past crimes erased by promising to be good going forward.
The gospel does not say your goodness is worthless. It says your goodness is not the payment. Jesus is the payment. And because He paid the debt — fully, finally, once — the gift of being right with God is available to anyone who receives it. The good person and the terrible person enter through exactly the same door, on exactly the same terms: grace, received by faith.
“Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us.” — Titus 3:5 (KJV)
The Parable That Jesus Told to Answer This Exact Question
Someone once asked Jesus directly — what does it take to inherit eternal life? He was, by every external measure, a good man. He knew the scriptures. He kept the law. He was respected in his community.
Jesus answered with the parable of the Good Samaritan. A man beaten and left for dead on the road. Religious professionals walk past him. Then a Samaritan — a member of a despised ethnic group — stops, gives his time, spends his money, and ensures the man is fully cared for.
The implication was devastating: the standard for love your neighbour is not keeping your hands clean and avoiding cruelty. It is active, costly, inconvenient, self-giving love for anyone in front of you who has a need. Has anyone ever lived that standard perfectly? Every moment of every day? Have you?
The problem is not that we are bad people. The problem is that the standard for goodness is higher than any of us has managed to reach.
The Invitation
If you are a good person — genuinely kind, genuinely caring, genuinely trying to do right — the gospel is not asking you to stop being that person. It is asking you to stop trusting that person to save you. It is asking you to transfer your trust from your own goodness to the goodness of Jesus Christ, who is the only human being who ever lived up to the full standard — and who died so that His record could become yours.
That is not religion. That is rescue. And it is available to you, right now, wherever you are, regardless of how good or how far-gone you believe yourself to be.
Lord Jesus, I have believed that my goodness was enough. Today I see that Your standard is higher than I have reached — and that You are the only one who ever reached it. I stop trusting in my efforts and I place my trust in You. Forgive my sin. Give me Your righteousness. I receive You as my Lord. Amen.
— Missionary John
