It Is Finished was an amazingly confronting and encouraging book. You can read my full book review by clicking here, but below are some of the quotes from David Wilkerson that especially caught my attention…
âJesus was speaking as co-signer of the covenant. He said, âNow I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to You. Holy Father, keep through Your name those whom You have given Me, that they may be one as We areâ (John 17:11). He was saying to the Father, âWe agreed that I could bring into Our covenant everyone who trusts in Me. Now, Father, I ask You to bring these beloved ones under the same covenant promises You made to Me.â
âThe covenant, cut before the world was formed, has in it the sworn oath of almighty God to save and deliver His people from the power and dominion of satan. Faith in Christ brings us into Godâs covenant oath to keep us as faithfully as He kept His own Son.â
âThis is an ongoing problem with many Christians. We look to the Holy Spirit as some kind of booster shot to empower or energize our human will. We expect Him to build up our supply of grit and determination, so we can stand up to temptation the next time it comes. We cry, âMake me strong, Lord! Give me an iron will, so I can withstand all sin.â But God knows this would only make our flesh stronger, enabling it to boast. … Scripture says the Spirit of God actually âsubduesâ our sins and turns us from them: âHe will again have compassion on us, and will subdue our iniquities. You will cast our sins into the depths of the seaâ (Micah 7:19). Think of it! Not I, but my God, will subdue and conquer all my sins, by the inner working of the Holy Spirit.â
âGodâs Spirit will accomplish in us what our flesh never has been able to do. How? By indwelling us. The New Covenant is all about the Holy Spirit coming to live and work in us, by promise in answer to faith.â
âIt is vital for every follower of Jesus not to judge Godâs New Covenant promises according to past experiences.â
âGod says, âThere is one work the Spirit must perform in you before any of these others. He is going to put in you the true fear of God concerning sin. He will implant in you a profound awe of My holiness so you will not depart from My commands. Otherwise, your sin will always lead you away from Me.â Very simply, the Holy Spirit changes the way we look at our sin. … So He shows us how deeply it grieves and provokes Him.â
âMany flesh-driven Christians try to shake off the guilt that Godâs convicting arrows produce. They do not want to feel the dread of their sin, so they constantly claim the verse, âThere is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesusâ (Romans 8:1). But they neglect to read the last part of this verse: âwho do not walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit.â If you continue in sin, you are walking in the fleshâand you have no claim on Godâs promise of âno condemnation.â The guilt we feel under Holy Spirit conviction is actually a work of Godâs grace. It is meant to expose the deceitfulness of sin in us.â
âAsk the Holy Spirit to accomplish in you the precedent work of instilling godly fear in you, to keep your heart open and accepting of Godâs Word. When you do, the Spirit promises to give you a soft heart, one that is pliable in His hand. … The implantation of godly fear by the Holy Spirit is designed to produce obedience through surrender, rather than through discipline.â
âGod the Father gave His Son, Jesus, access to all of His own riches and wealth. In other words, He invested in Him all the wisdom, knowledge, power and glory of Heaven. And by being made wealthy in all these things, Jesus became the only One worthy to be co-signer of the covenant. âBy so much more Jesus has become a surety [guarantor, sponsor, co-signer] of a better covenantâ (Hebrews 7:22). Could there be any greater mercy than this? God so loved us that He made His Son rich beyond all comprehension. Then He made Him both our kinsman and our co-signer. He has become the person responsible to settle all our debts. He pays when we cannot.â
âIn this covenant, God pledges to do the following four things:
- He swears to write His law on our hearts and minds.
- He takes an oath that He will be God to us, and that we will be His children.
- He promises we will know Him and His ways because we will be taught by the Holy Spirit.
- He pledges to be merciful to our unrighteousness, forgiving all our sins and iniquities.â
âA stronghold is an accusation planted firmly in your mind. satan establishes strongholds in Godâs people by implanting in their minds falsehoods and misconceptions, especially regarding Godâs nature.â
âThe only weapon that scares the devil and his armies is the same one that scared him in the wilderness temptation of Jesus. That weapon is the truth of the New Covenantâthe living Word of God. Only the Lordâs truth can set us free.â
âThis is the doctrine of Godâs preventing goodness: He has anticipated all our strugglesâall our battles with sin, flesh and the devilâand in His mercy and goodness, He has paid our debt before it can even come due. Through the covenant, He has prepaid for all our failures and relapses. His covenant oath assures us of His preventing goodness in our lives.â
âIn Godâs eyes, our problem is not sin, it is trust. Jesus settled our sin problem once and for all at Calvary. He does not constantly harp on us now, barking, âWhat have you done this time?â or âNow youâve gone too far,â or âThis time youâve crossed the line.â No, never! Our Lordâs attitude toward us is just the opposite. His Spirit is constantly wooing us, reminding us of the Fatherâs lovingkindnessâeven in the midst of failure.â



