Summer 2026

Daily Devotional: Friday, June 26 – The Greatest Double Play

“God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” — 2 Corinthians 5:21

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One of the most beautiful plays in all of baseball is the double play, when the defensive team records two of an inning’s three outs during a single continuous action. Double plays shift the momentum of the inning, and sometimes even of the game itself. Precise timing, sound game awareness and rapid execution are all needed to orchestrate a successful double play. That’s what makes them so pleasing to witness, so deflating for offenses, and so galvanizing for defenses.

Yet even the most perfectly performed double play pales in comparison to the type of “double play” Jesus accomplished during His life, death and resurrection.

You’ll often hear Christians say that Jesus died for their sins, and they are right, for so He did. Each and every person has chosen to rebel against God and the righteous life He calls us to, sometimes in small ways and sometimes in big ones.

Yet every sin, no matter how “small,” has incurred for us a penalty of death and separation from a perfectly holy God. Jesus placed that penalty on Himself. His all-surpassing love for His people impelled Him onward toward His death on a cross, where He experienced every anguish we deserve. Then He rose again to defeat sin and death so they wouldn’t have the final say over our lives.

But it gets even better. This is only half of the Good News of the Gospel. It’s only one of the outs in Christ’s glorious double play.

Jesus — God Himself — walked among us as a man. Fully God and fully man. He got tired and hungry, sleepy and sad. But He never sinned. Not once. Where you and I fail every day, Jesus did not. He was perfectly obedient to the Father, even in His agonizing death.

Jesus was perfectly righteous, doing all things just as the Father called Him to. He lived the life we simply could not. And then, He bestowed that righteousness on His children. On you, if you are in Christ. When God looks at you, He sees Jesus’ perfect record. This, my friend, is the God we worship.

What I’ve just explained is known as the doctrine of the double imputation — our sins were assigned to Jesus, and Jesus’ righteousness was assigned to us. Theologians through the years have basked in the glory of Jesus’ double play, what they call the Greatest Exchange. May we rejoice in it too.

“You have taken upon Yourself what is mine and have given to me what is Yours,” the great reformer Martin Luther once wrote. “You have taken upon Yourself what You were not and have given to me what I was not.”

— Kevin Mercer

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