Tag Archives: Choice

Stepping Into Grace

The more I learn about God, the more I realize that it is our active participation that keeps His plan moving. We are the gears and wheels and engine of the vehicle He designed. As long as we continue to function the way the Engineer intended, the vehicle works perfectly. And like a car that needs maintenance, when some of the parts aren’t working right, the car can still function, it just may not be quite as efficient.

This morning during my devotions, I came across this verse in Romans:

Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God.

Romans 5:1-2 (NIV)

As often happens, I’ve known this verse for a long time, but today I specifically noticed the end of verse 1. Grace is not something that is handed to us. It is freely given, but we have to do something to receive it. Faith unlocks the door, Christ opens it, but we have to step into it. This doesn’t mean we have to earn grace–that’s impossible. It just means that unless we claim the gift, it will stand empty and out of our reach.

Let me never forget that I cannot spend my life just praying and hoping and waiting for God to change me. He will, but it’s going to take work on my part to make it possible. It’s my obedience and the work that I do that activates the promises and starts them working in me.

Let’s Give It Up For God!

I recently heard a worship leader use this phrase during a service, “Let’s give it up for God!” The cheering and applause that ensued made it clear that the crowd was excited about praising and worshipping God. The phrase “give it up for” has worked its way into our language as a synonym for “give a round of applause.”

But what would we really give up for God? How much are we willing to sacrifice for him? Do we really love him enough to give it all up?

We’re in the middle of a series of studies in our church to refocus on what we as a congregation value most. Two of those four core values have to do with love: Jesus identified loving God and loving others as the two most important commandments. Because of this, I’m coming back to my own series here on examining the definition of love in 1 Corinthians 13.

Paul tells us that love is not self-seeking (1 Corinthians 13:5). Turning that around, I see that if I am not willing to sacrifice something for another, then I don’t truly love. When I need to give something up—whether it is for my friends or my wife or my God—my selfishness (and I have plenty of it) crawls out and tells me that I’ve given enough to them already and I deserve some “me time.”

What I tend to forget is that more often than not when I give up something, I tend to gain back more than I gave. Giving it up for someone else almost always ends up pouring the blessings back on me, often in ways that I could never have predicted.

But I have to watch my attitude—selfishness is insidious, and it’s a short trip from putting the other person first to giving with an expectation. That’s no longer sacrifice.

John Fischer, author of daily devotional The Fischtank, recently wrote an article on this topic. He identifies three levels of giving:

There is a kind of giving that also benefits the giver. There is a kind of giving in which the giver is ambivalent. And there is a kind of giving that pains the giver. The latter is the greatest and the hardest.

I’m fine with giving to God when it benefits me, even when I don’t know what that benefit might be. But giving when it hurts—and particularly when there is no chance for any benefit for me—that’s something I really struggle with. That sacrificial level is where I need to be. That would be the indication that my love for God is real, it’s honest, and it’s deep.

It also makes me realize that God doesn’t expect our love for him to be centered on a feeling. Yes, he wants us to feel love, but more than that he wants us to act on our love. Love is choosing to put him first. It’s acting as thought I love him even if I don’t feel like it. It’s thinking of his plan and his desires before mine.

I love my wife deeply and without reservations. Even if I tell her this on a regular basis (which I do), and every word of it is true (which it is), if my actions are selfish and don’t put her first, what good is that love? If I make my choices based on what’s best for me all the time, how does that honor her? She will quickly begin to doubt that my love is sincere.

Love at its core is not passion or emotion or feeling, though that is undeniably a part of it. It is first a choice to put the one you love first, it is a way of behaving to express that choice, and it is a discipline to keep making that choice consistently.

So what would I give up for God? Ask me that question today, and I’d have a long list of things. But there are some huge things that aren’t on the list. If I’m going to grow in my love for God, the first thing I have to do is start moving some of those things over onto the list.

Avalanche of Sin

AvalancheI’ve found that the sin in my life often works like an avalanche. At first, the sin seems inconsequential, like a dusting of snow on the ground. What harm could it do? Then, slowly, little by little, the snow builds up. The whole time, though, the snow is beautiful and quiet. It just rests there, and there is no obvious danger. I get complacent, used to the snow, and I forget that there was once dry ground, lush with vegetation, beneath that snow.

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The Kindness of Strangers

This past Saturday, Ellie Lofaro and Kathy Troccoli were at our church doing a women’s conference, and I was there as a member of the tech team, running lights and video for them. During one of the sessions, Ellie was talking about the realities of being a parent. She described a typical scene in her house—one which, based on the amount of laughter in the room, almost everyone there could relate to, including me.

Ellie explained that one moment she could be thoroughly annoyed with her kids, yelling and making a huge fuss. The scene was interrupted by the phone, however, and instantly she was transformed into the model of kindness, her voice dripping with more butter and sugar than a Paula Dean dessert.

It occured to me this morning that this phrase—”the kindness of strangers”—is a bit ironic. Why is it that we are kinder to people we’ve never met than we are to those who are closest to us?

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Let My Heart Be Fertile Soil

I’m really ticked at myself.

Instead of making time to write in my blog, to keep connecting with and reflecting on my spiritual journey, I’ve made time for just about everything but. It’s been over a month since I’ve written, and my spiritual life reflects it. Back in November I wrote about how I wanted to write here every day. That lasted two days. But at least I was writing a few times a month.

Now I’m slipping into bad habits. It’s so easy to drift into a pattern of letting it go, of procrastinating, of thinking, “I don’t feel like it now, I don’t have time, I don’t have the energy.” Everything in my life seems to be a reflection of my lack of discipline, and my spiritual life seems to always be the first thing to go.

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