


GRACE BLOGS COLLECTION
by Dudley Hall
There is a story in 2 Kings about Elisha and the widow of another prophet. It seems that after her husband's death, the widow and her two sons were in such debt that the creditors were threatening to take the boys as slaves. She cried out to Elisha who was willing to get involved.
All she had was a little oil but nothing to add to make a meal. Under the instruction of God, he told her to send the boys out over the village and borrow as many containers as possible. She did as she was told and began pouring the oil in the containers until all of them were full. Elisha then told her to sell the oil and pay the debt, and she and the sons could live on the rest. (See 2 Kings 4:1-7.)
The same grace that cancels the debt pays the bills for living in freedom. This seems to be a hard concept for so many. We tend to believe that it required grace to be saved initially, but our sustainability depends on our effort.
Such statements as, "Well, you can't just do nothing," or "God expects us to try," or "Watch out for that greasy grace," reveal a level of frustration felt by those astounded by mind-bending grace. Yet the apostle Paul plainly exhorts, "Therefore, as you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, rooted and built up in him and established in the faith." (Colossians 2:6). We don't start off in grace and then move to striving to be good.
We can't seem to make ourselves believe that we need grace as badly as we do. We, like the widow, can't survive unless grace does for us what we cannot do. We cannot negotiate with God. We have nothing to offer.
If we try to gain a blessing by our obedience, we discover hidden motives of the heart that betray us. Any obedience that does not originate from love is not heart obedience. That is why God negotiated for us. God the Father chooses to bless the obedient. God the Son chooses to be the obedient one. We get the blessing based on another's obedience. Our righteous standing is a gift.
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Adam and Eve left us a debt. So, Jesus came as the last Adam and paid the debt. Israel failed to bless the world, so Jesus came as Messiah to represent Israel in blessing the world. All humans are accountable before judgment for every word, thought and deed. Jesus steps in front of us and takes the judgment. The wrath of God is poured out on sin as Jesus became sin for us. We who trust him do not have to fear a coming judgment. Our vindication is based on Christ's finished work. Grace cancels our debt.
The gift of righteousness comes with the gift of the Spirit that makes Jesus real to us and empowers us to love with his new kind of love. We are forgiven our sins so that we can be free from guilt and condemnation. We are cleansed from our shame so we can be free to enjoy God and his world. His presence displaces the fears that have tormented us for so long. And, his continuous love delights us beyond the crippling power of temptation.
We are not idle, but we are not trying to gain some blessing by what we can offer. We are living as blessed people who are loved by unconditional and eternal love. For those still fearful that grace will make us lazy, I present Jesus who was and is full of grace. He was not lazy -- but he did not strive.
Going all the way back to the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were not lazy before sin entered. They were busy subduing the garden. We can be sure that as we are freed from the unpayable debt and sustained by the inexhaustible daily grace we will be joyfully engaged in doing the Father's will. We mustn't fear too much grace. It will only set us free.
by Sandra
How do we reproduce the life of Jesus? Hint: It’s not by trying harder! This teaching by Pastor Greg Riether, the pastor of Healing Grace Church in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, is powerful and this isn’t the only one that is. I’ve been devouring Pastor Greg’s messages on YouTube this past month or so and they […]
The post Reproducing the Life of Jesus appeared first on Sandra McCollom.
by Dudley Hall
I saw a social media meme recently that reflects a common error in how we relate to God. It is a photograph of a young man standing with an uplifting head as if looking to the heavens. The caption is, "The Lord is moved by the way you live. He is moved by your hunger for him and by your lifestyle choices."
It is a trap! It is wrong-headed according to the gospel proclaimed in the New Testament. The perspective is one of a distant god waiting for us to make the right decisions before he moves in our direction. It leads to a belief in the transactional gospel of contemporary American religion.
In this religion, God is always the responder. We initiate the transactions by what we offer. We purchase certain blessings by something we give in exchange. If we want God to move in our behalf, we must find the key ingredient that moves him for the particular blessing we desire. It spurs us to value the discovery of the key principle above the relationship we have in Christ. The good news is often just another announcement of a new coin we can put into the vending machine (sorry for such an outdated metaphor).
He ascended to the right hand of God not by popular vote, but by the sovereign grace of the Father.
Contrasting such a perspective with the one of the New Testament, we find God always initiating the moves. He came looking for Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden while they were hiding. He found Noah and made him a promise. He did the same with Abraham. He heard the cry of Abraham's descendants in Egypt and acted to deliver them. He fed them, watered them and fought for them in the wilderness.
They were always moving away from him, and he pursued them with his persistent love. If God had waited for Israel to move toward him, they would never have been in covenant with him. He chose David as their king. He gave them prophets to instruct and warn. He moved Cyrus to release them from captivity.
In the fullness of time, he caused John the Baptist to be born as the forerunner of the Christ. He appeared to Mary while she was minding her own business. Jesus came to his frightened disciples in the storm. They were too paralyzed by fear to move toward God. He paid the unpayable debt without any contribution from us. He was raised from the dead with no assistance from the faithful. He ascended to the right hand of God not by popular vote, but by the sovereign grace of the Father. He sent the Spirit without any request from the struggling disciples.
He still comes to us when we can't go to him. Even when our lifestyle choices have left us in complicated confusion, he appears and assumes responsibility for the chaos.
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We don't negotiate for blessings. The negotiations are closed. God the Father promised blessings to obedient humans. Jesus the Son is the obedient human. We get any and all blessings based on our relationship with him. In Christ, we are blessed and can experience the benefits of the inaugurated new creation as we focus on what he has done. The more we look at the beauty of the Savior, the more our mouths water for him; the hungrier our hearts become for deeper knowledge of him.
We don't move God. He has moved in our direction in Christ and continues to move toward us to open our eyes to the treasures in the Son. Stay out of the trap.
by Sandra
I’m sitting in an airport, thankful I’m alive! Well, at least I was sitting in an airport when I started writing this post much earlier today. My flight was suppose to take off at 7:15am this morning to land me back in St. Louis to see my awesome family in time for Thanksgiving after a […]
The post Happy Thanksgiving – I’m Thankful I’m Alive! appeared first on Sandra McCollom.
by Sandra
Because… We’re going to remind you that you are loved by God…unconditionally We’re going to remind you that you are righteous in Christ…as a gift We’re going to remind you that you are completely forgiven…all because of Jesus We’re not going to give you a list of things you have to do to qualify for […]
The post 20 Reasons You Should Come to a Women of Grace Conference appeared first on Sandra McCollom.
by Sandra
William Booth, founder of The Salvation Army, once sent a letter to all of his officers. When they opened it, it simply said others. Below is a short video clip from this past weekend when I spoke at the Secrets of the Heart event held at The Salvation Army’s beautiful 800 acre property in Bourbon, […]
The post The Salvation Army’s Motto – Others! appeared first on Sandra McCollom.