Monday, April 6, 2015

Hyper-Grace

I posted this last year and was reminded in a recent conversation that this discussion is ongoing, so I thought I would share it again...

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Sounds scary, huh?  Hyper-grace is the new “buzz” word being tossed around to express disapproval and in some cases, outright disdain for people that tend to focus their ministry or teachings on grace.  

I suppose that using the word “hyper-grace” must sound better and somehow kinder than saying “greasy grace,” or “sloppy agape!” But disparagement is intended.  I’d like to see that change.

There have been several articles and blogs written about the topic of “hyper-grace” (both pro and con), and it really seems to be a trending subject in Christianity.  

In fact, earlier this year a well-known bible teacher wrote a book about it. In the book, he calls “hyper-grace” the great deception of the 21st century.  In the preface of the book he writes that he plainly believes that that this difference of understanding of grace, is a difference for the most part, between believers (brethren).  I agree with him, it is a difference of understanding between members of the same family.

Sometimes when members of a family fight, they say things they later regret.  

They call each other names and say slanderous things to other family members.  In the church, often those names include; heretic, apostasy, false teacher, deceiver, false prophet, and the like. However, just because brothers disagree on how to interpret scripture does not stop them from being brothers.

To me, the challenge, is not to have a knee-jerk reaction to either side of the so called “grace debate,” but to delve deeper into what the bible teaches us about grace.   

We should keep in mind that a person does not need perfect doctrine to be a follower of Jesus. If perfect doctrine were necessary, no one would make it. No one person or denomination has perfect doctrine.  In any debate in biblical understanding or doctrinal difference, we should always side with grace, mercy, restoration, and love.

Just for fun, let’s define hyper-grace:

Hyper-   
Adjective
1.   Overexcited; over stimulated; keyed up.
2.   Seriously or obsessively concerned; fanatical; rabid
3.   Hyperactive.
4.   A prefix appearing in loanwords from Greek, where it meant “over,” usually implying excess or exaggeration; an over-abundance.

Grace-
Noun
1.   a:  Unmerited divine assistance given humans for their regeneration or   sanctification b:  A virtue coming from God c:  A state of sanctification enjoyed through divine grace
2.   a: Approval, favor, goodwill b: Mercy, pardon c:  A special favor, privilege d:  Disposition to or an act or instance of kindness, courtesy, or clemency

Sunday, April 5, 2015

HE IS ALIVE!

My favorite version of the resurrection is when Mary Magdalene is at the tomb weeping; fearful, confused, and grieved that someone may have stolen the body of her Lord, Savior, and Friend.

What she received outside that empty tomb must have caused her heart to leap with joy. Jesus was alive! What ecstasy she must have felt when she heard Him call her name.

 "Now when she had said this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, and did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, “Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?”She, supposing Him to be the gardener, said to Him, “Sir, if You have carried Him away, tell me where You have laid Him, and I will take Him away.” Jesus said to her, “Mary!”She turned and said to Him, “Rabboni!” (which is to say, Teacher). Jesus said to her, “Do not cling to Me, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, ‘I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.’ ” Mary Magdalene came and told the disciples that she had seen the Lord, and that He had spoken these things to her." John 20:14-18

Today, millions of believers celebrate Resurrection Sunday. Today, if you are unsure what to believe, let me assure you that JESUS is alive, and He is calling your name.

Please enjoy this new song from Third Day...
He is Alive!

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Are You Burdened?

Greetings,

First of all, I wanted to share something personally with you in this blog.  Some of you may know that my father went home to be with Jesus on December 23rd after a brief illness.  

During the last two months of his life, Dad and I talked about heaven and at one point he said he felt a little guilty because he was looking forward to it.  He said, "Won't it be great!  No more pain, no more sin, no jealousy.  Just pure love from the Lord."  

He was looking forward to seeing family members he hadn't seen, and especially Jesus, and was, well, sort of excited to go!  He did express that he would feel bad about leaving, but… Frankly, as much as I may have wanted him to stay, I could not blame him for wanting to leave.  

Anyway, one of the things we talked about  was the grace of God and how amazing His love for us is.  And I was thinking about that today and it reminded me of an allegory I wrote a few years ago, and I wanted to share it again with you.  I hope you enjoy it… again.
  
An Allegory

 "Welcome, Sojourner," said the shepherd. "I see you have laid your heavy burden down at the foot of the cross; How wonderful!"

 
"Now that you have received the wonderful gift of salvation, let me show you how to grow.  Follow me and I will guide you through your new responsibilities."

“Responsibilities?” Sojourner wondered?  “Let me show you,” said the shepherd.  With those words, young Sojourner began a journey into a new life.

As each day progressed, he was excited to learn from the shepherd and others in the flock how he was to now live and what things he needed to do to please the Master.

There was so much to learn, so many new things he needed to accomplish!

The shepherd and the people of the flock helped him as he began to absorb all the great principles that were so new to him.  It was explained to him that the shepherd and flock discovered these ideas in a book they said contained the "Great Standards of Life."

"Oh, there is so much to comprehend,” he fretted. “How will I ever please my new Master?"

"Follow my lead," said the shepherd, I have lived by these Great Standards for many years.

"But how can I ever live up to such Great Standards."

"The Master’s grace will help you fulfill the Great Standards. You see, the reason He gives us grace so we can live up to them. No one can fully carry them out without help, so we must ask the Master for grace to help us."

"I think I understand," whispered Sojourner. "You are saying that I should ask the Master for grace to help me live up to the Great Standards of Life, and in that way I will someday earn the Master's approval."

“You are a fast learner!” said the shepherd.

As the days passed, no one worked harder in the flock than Sojourner. He performed excellently. He was there with the flock whenever the doors were opened, and he faithfully studied the parts of the Great Standard he was told about. 

He faithfully accomplished everything the shepherd taught him to do to please the Master. The desire of his whole heart was to please the One who had taken his heavy burden, and the way he was taught was to obey the tenets of the Great Standards.

Yet, something was missing.

Sojourner was unfulfilled and sort of, well… disappointed.  And yet, he could not put his finger on the reason why.  

Even with all the effort he was putting in he didn't feel he was doing enough.  

He was reading the book every day – sometimes for hours.  He was praying and seeking and asking for help. He went for days without food just to have more time to learn about the Great Standards. And even then, something was absent in the new life he had found.

So he decided he must try harder.


He said to himself, “I will follow the Great Standards yet closer than before. I will achieve even more than the shepherd has taught me.  Then I will be satisfied, because then I will know I have pleased the Master."
So, he began to act upon his newly found fervor.

He passionately lived his life as close to the Great Standards as humanly possible. He performed even the minutest details (within reason and common sense) of the standards, and constantly prayed for more of the Master's grace to live up to even more.

“What more is there to do and to learn, when will I ever please the Master?”

He also learned about the "Rules for the Flock," which included suggestions on how the flock should live differently from the other people of the world so that other people could see that they were part of a flock, and not just wanderers in the shadows.


Sojourner also executed these rules flawlessly.

He out-performed all of the other members of the flock, and the shepherd began to point to him as another example for the flock to follow. He spent immeasurable hours reading the book and would always stumble upon more things to do that he hoped would please the Master.

He discovered increasingly more ways to labor, more things to do, which he was sure, would succeed in gaining the Master's favor. He spent days praying and crying out to the Master for the ability to please Him more.

Yet, deep in his heart, Sojourner was unconvinced that he was pleasing the Master.

As the weeks, and months, and years wore on, Sojourner became frustrated with his new life.

The precepts and the tenets that he rejoiced to learn at the first, now had become heavy burdens that weighed his life down. The harder he toiled, the more he seemed to leave undone.

"Is this all there is to it – a life of performance-based living and never knowing for sure if I am pleasing the Master? Even when I obey all of the rules, I never feel that I have done enough!"


As he sought the counsel of the shepherd and the older wiser members of the flock, they all seemed to agree that there must be something wrong in the way that Sojourner was performing. They assured him that if he had been performing correctly, he could be sure that he was pleasing the Master.

They suggested to him, "You simply need to read further about the Great Standards and the Rules for the Flock. After all, they have been our guide all of these years."

"Sojourner, if you would just fast and pray more often, these thoughts would not trouble you."

He could hear the others whispering, "Perhaps there is disobedience in Sojourner's life, or worse, a transgression of the Great Standards... "

"Maybe he needs to go to the cross again and repent.”

“Maybe he just needs to re-commit.”

“There must be something he is doing wrong or he would not have these thoughts…"

Yet the harder he tried to perform, the more frustrated he became.
 
He began to read other things in the book that suggested he didn't have to perform to gain the Master's approval, but when he brought those ideas up to the shepherd and flock, they quickly squelched them.

"Don't talk to us about sloppy agape and greasy grace!"  "Are you trying to get a license to sin!"

The only thing that was in Sojourner's heart was to somehow please his Master.