Decision Magazine

Grace So Amazing

March 1, 2010 - We’re saved by grace through faith.” This phrase, which expresses so succinctly the means of our salvation, can become so familiar that we lose the meaning of what God has done in us. On the one hand, we can fall into legalism, trying to earn God’s favor by works. On the other, we can fall into sin, taking God’s grace for granted and rationalizing that “God will forgive me anyway.” We need to regain a biblical view—one that relies completely on God’s grace but does not trample on it by continued

Grace So Amazing

The venerable Heidelberg Catechism, published in 1563, is one of the most widely circulated books of all time. What makes the catechism so popular is its unique three-part structure, popularly known by three words: guilt, grace and gratitude. These three words taken together help us understand the true meaning of grace and can prevent some prevalent misunderstandings.

First, consider the concept of guilt. Why is guilt a part of this three-word trilogy on grace? The answer is that grace presupposes guilt on the part of the recipient. All my life I have heard the definition of grace as unmerited favor. While that is certainly true, it fails to do justice to the concept of grace because it ignores the idea of our guilt.

When I was growing up in the Depression years of the 1930s, men known as hobos would travel on rail cars from town to town looking for work. Occasionally one of them would appear at our front door asking for food. My mother would go to the kitchen and prepare a plate from whatever food she had on hand. That is an act of unmerited favor in that the hobo did nothing to earn the food, but that is not grace.

Suppose, however, at some time a hobo had actually robbed our house. Some months later that same hobo shows up at our front door asking for food. My mother is certain he is the robber, but instead of calling the police, she again goes to her kitchen and prepares a plate of food for the man. Now a new factor is involved. The man is not simply undeserving, he is actually ill-deserving in the sense that he deserves to be punished for his crime.

This is true of all of us. Ephesians 2:8, “For by grace you have been saved through faith,” is a favorite verse for Christians. We believe it, and we rejoice in it. But before Ephesians 2:8, Ephesians 2:1-3 tells us of our guilt and sad state as objects of God’s wrath. We deserve to be punished by God, but instead we are saved from His wrath by His grace. Until we see ourselves as justly deserving God’s eternal wrath, we will not understand grace. That is why guilt is the first word in the catechism’s three-word trilogy.

One of the problems in evangelicalism today is that we don’t see our guilt. We tend to define sin in its more flagrant forms of sexual immorality, greed, violence and the like. We don’t see our anxiety, selfishness, envy, pride and gossip as sin. Consequently, we don’t take seriously our guilt before a holy God, and therefore we don’t appreciate grace.

Now let’s consider the meaning of the word grace.at Christ’s expense.
So let me offer a definition of grace that goes beyond the idea of unmerited favor. Grace is God’s blessings through Christ to people who deserve His curse. The key words are through Christ. It is through Christ that we do not receive the curse we deserve. And it is through Christ that we receive the blessings we don’t deserve.

Note the plural word blessings in this definition. We are not only saved by grace, we are blessed by grace every day of our lives. A common misunderstanding is that we are saved by grace, but we earn God’s blessings by our obedience. I believe this misunderstanding is not just common, it is the unspoken assumption of the vast majority of Christians.

Let’s examine that assumption. When Jesus was asked which is the greatest commandment in the law, He responded, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (Matthew 22:37-39). This is a standard none of us meets any day of our lives. So how can we think we’ll earn God’s blessings by our performance? Does God grade similarly to the academic community, where 70 is passing? No, God requires absolute perfection (Galatians 3:10, James 2:10). But that’s where Christ’s perfect obedience comes to our rescue. That’s why we can say that grace is indeed God’s riches at Christ’s expense. Jesus, through His lifelong, perfect obedience, earned for us every blessing we will ever receive.

There’s another truth about grace we need to understand if we are to live by this precept every day. God is sovereign in dispensing His grace. From our vantage point, it seems as if God blesses some people more than others. In fact, it often seems He blesses those whom we feel are less deserving than we are.

In Matthew 20, Jesus told a parable about workers in a vineyard who each received the same wage, a full day’s pay, despite the fact that some workers had worked a full 12-hour day while others had worked less, some only one hour. When the 12-hour workers grumbled that those who had worked only one hour received the same pay as they did, the owner of the vineyard replied, “Am I not allowed to do what I choose with what belongs to me?” (Matthew 20:15).

This is God’s answer to us when we begin to compare ourselves with others who seem more blessed than we. Sometimes when I have spoken on this parable, I have asked the audience how many have been troubled by the apparent unfairness of the vineyard owner in paying the same wage to the one-hour workers as he paid to the 12-hour ones. Always a great majority raises their hands. Why is this true? It is because we tend to identify with the 12-hour workers.

The truth, however, is that we are all essentially one-hour workers. Our righteous deeds are like a polluted garment in God’s sight (Isaiah 64:6). Paul counted his obedience as rubbish (Philippians 3:8). In fact, rubbish is really a polite word. Our word garbage better captures Paul’s disdain for his own righteousness.

This is again why our realization of our own personal guilt before God is so necessary to a biblical understanding of grace. Because we see ourselves as good people who don’t commit any of the flagrant sins, we think we earn God’s favor on our lives. And when we think this way, we are no longer living by grace. We may be saved by grace, but we are living by works.

The third word in the catechism’s grace trilogy is gratitude. A true understanding of our guilt before God, which leads to a true understanding of the nature of grace, always produces gratitude. And the more deeply we sense the depth of our guilt and experience the reality of God’s grace, the more expressive our gratitude will be. It will be more than a mere attitude of gratefulness. It will be a gratitude that expresses itself in humble obedience and sacrificial service.

In the familiar story of the sinful woman who anointed the feet of Jesus with ointment (Luke 7:36-50), Jesus said, “He who is forgiven little loves little.” The opposite, which is the whole point of the story, is, “He who is forgiven much loves much.”

Most commentators believe that this woman must have had a prior encounter with Jesus, had become painfully aware of her sin and had received from Him assurance of the forgiveness of her sin. The acute consciousness of her sin and the assurance of His forgiveness produced in her the gratitude that prompted her bold act of entering the Pharisee’s house to anoint the feet of Jesus. She loved much because she had been forgiven much.

So if we want to regain the sparkle of our Christian lives, let us take a lesson from the Heidelberg Catechism and continue to grow in an ever increasing awareness of our remaining sinfulness, coupled with a deeper appreciation of God’s grace, resulting in an ever vibrant expression of grateful obedience and service to our Lord Jesus Christ.

 

7 Comments

Lori says 3.13.2011, 00:03 a.m.

All I can say is "Wow!" Thank you for posting this message because I have a much better understanding of God's Grace!

pkwanted says 10.4.2010, 3:41 p.m.

kanawha1kanobi, I'm going to borrow some of your comment. I too have been up and downwith the Lord throughout the years and was brought up in a Christian home. He has been faithful to me, not because of who I am and certainly not because of what I've been, but simply because of who He is. This is where I differ and have much difficulty. Does He love me? I do not know. I know that He loves other people who have done the same things I have and worse. I can see it in their lives and faces. They excude His presence. I know my guilt beyond any doubt but I don't know His saving grace beyond any doubt. My issue then is my commitment and knowing that God truly forgives and loves me. I don't pray daily, but I do pray for the Holy Spirit to renew my heart, renew my mind; to put in me a spirit of steadfastness, an exuberence that I cannot contain and to realize that Christ gave His life for me and that He died for me. How can I feel His love for me? I know that others are forgiven and that Christ died for their sins, but for some reason I feel that His love, mercy, grace and forgivenss is for others and not for me. I know that His word says He loves me but I see Him as someone who is withholding all of what He gives others because of my past life and the fact that I should have more faith and knowledge becasuse I grew up in the church. So, for those of you who may read this posting, I ask that you pray for me to be able to find the Christian walk.

kanawha1kanobi says 10.4.2010, 09:25 a.m.

Thank you for an excellent article and excellent clarification. In my personal life of (numerous) years, I have been up and down with the Lord but throughout the years He has been faithful to me, not because of who I am and certainly not because of what I've been, but simply because of who He is and His eternal love for (me). why He loves me, I do not know; I simple know that He does. I know my guilt beyond any doubt and I know His saving grace beyond any doubt. My issue then is my commitment. I pray daily for the Holy Spirit to renew my heart, renew my mind; to put in me a spirit of steadfastness, an exuberence that I cannot contain, that I must share with my world around me, to realize that Christ gave His life for me and that He died for me, How can I not share that with others? yet, I don't, I fail miserably. so, for those of you who may read this posting, I ask that you pray for me because i have a message to share; even if it's only for one person, I have a message of salvation for someone of God's love and saving grace.

Anthony says 10.3.2010, 10:49 p.m.

Flesh and blood cannot reveal this, except the HOLY SPIRIT reveals it to us. i thank GOD for this revelation and also thanking HIM for giving me full understanding through the HOLY SPIRIT. GOD BLESS U.

Jo says 10.3.2010, 1:42 p.m.

This article was so helpful to me because I have so much trouble accepting that God can forgive me when I repeat the same sin. I'm constantly asking for forgiveness, especially for judgemental thoughts.

Carol says 8.28.2010, 10:30 a.m.

What a wonderful article. But I think most Christians live like the one hour workers who don't deserve the 12 hour pay. They find it hard to accept blessings from God if they haven't earned them. They live like paupers. They neither recognize the ones they have nor accept the ones God wants to give them. They feel so guilty about how they behave, they can't imagine God still wants to bless them. The Mathew 20 parable was a good example of a christian who thinks he has worked harder for God therefore he deserves more blessings.

Priyanand says 8.28.2010, 04:24 a.m.

Thank you very much for this message now I think I have a good insight on what I have to do. God bless you all.

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