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| Copyright © 2004 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| February 17, 2004 |
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THE SCIENCE OF GRACE #2
CATCHING GOD ON A GOOD DAY By anybody’s account it was a bloody bad crime. Robert
Lee Willie and Joseph Vaccaro, two young punks who were invariably drunk
and drugged up, went on an eight-day spree where a teenager named Faith
Hathaway was killed. They raped her, they stabbed her 17 times in the
neck and upper chest, and then left her to die out in some woods. It took
over a week before search-and-rescue teams found her decomposing body.
This bright young girl had just graduated from high school two weeks earlier,
and was planning to join the Army and travel abroad for her country, learn
a foreign language. But not now. This tragic story is told in the death-row saga, Dead
Man Walking, by Catholic nun Helen Prejean. You may remember a film by
the same title, where Susan Sarandon won an Oscar in the title role. How often does a person face the judgment bar, or their
day in court . . . and their fate really depends on what floor their trial
is held on? Or whether the court clerk just happens to assign them to
the “hanging judge” instead of the friendly one? Or on whether the jury
that particular morning got out of bed in a good mood and had a delicious
breakfast and a traffic-free drive to the courtroom? And the good news is this. Friend, not only does grace
come from God . . . it is also WHAT HE IS. God is grace all the time.
He doesn’t just put it on occasionally, or adopt it as a temporary creed
based on extenuating circumstances. Grace is part of what defines Him. “Our God is the God of grace,” he writes. And then this: “Grace is part of His divine CHARACTER. Grace means that God turns His ‘bright happy countenance’ toward us and blesses us with undeserved gifts or favors.” It’s just like where we say “God is love.” Not “God sometimes loves.” Or “God occasionally is in a loving frame of mind.” No, God IS love. He is love from first to last, from head to toe, in all corners of His realm and in every line of His Magna Carta towards us. You don’t have to worry that you might catch God on an un-loving day; that could never happen because God IS love. Friend, it’s the same with grace. To grant us “unmerited favor,” to forgive us, is, pure and simple, what He is. John 1:14 describes Jesus coming down to this earth in the form of a baby. How? “The glory of the One and Only, who came down from the Father, FULL OF GRACE and truth.” I like how the text notes reveal that the corresponding
Hebrew terms for this expression, “full of grace,” carry the idea of “unfailing
love and faithfulness.” And if you get a good concordance and just scan
down through the many, many references to grace, you discover that it
is perennially the grace OF God. “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
The “exceeding” grace. The “overflowing” grace. The Bible writers give
us this consistent picture of grace as a constant, reliable, faithful
attribute of God. “I like committing crimes. God likes forgiving them. Really the world is admirably arranged.” And you know, that is not the heart cry of a truly
thankful Christian. But it IS true that forgiving, extending grace, showing
mercy are what God “likes” to do. More than that, it is simply His divine
nature to shower grace upon us. How a humble, penitent, mature Christian
should reply to that gift is something we’ll study together in this series.
But I’m thankful that grace is one of the pillars in God’s nature. “Herein lies the central message of Mrs. Smith’s faith story,” he writes: “the personal revelation that God is not an oppressive, self-centered tyrant, but an UNCONDITIONALLY LOVING AND BENEVOLENT PARENT.” But all through this fascinating book, we share Hannah’s baby steps toward the goal of lasting happiness. For years she believed that her own behavior, her spiritual achievements, were the main factor in determining whether or not she would “catch God on a good day” and enjoy His approval. “In vain,” she writes, “I tried to work myself up into what I supposed would be the sort of feelings acceptable to God.” Then, as she came to understand the Christian message
and the plan of salvation, it was impressed upon her that all of us are
sinners and that all of us deserve condemnation. Which is certainly true.
But that because Christ died for us, we might be saved. True again. But
then the deadly trap was sprung, where she came to believe that an angry
God had His wrath “propitiated” or turned aside by blood sacrifices, and
that a God who didn’t really want to put on a “grace hat” relented in
His anger. That a God who didn’t really love us cooled down and learned
to sort of “love” us because Jesus had suffered on the cross. That grace
was what God was forced to cave in and accept because of Calvary. “Just as you can’t buy apples at an auto parts store you can’t get agape anywhere but from God. He is the exclusive source.” A bit later he adds: “I am pleading for an ENVIRONMENT of forgiveness in our homes, where people don’t have to wonder or endure some painful interlude before they can be forgiven.” Isn’t that good? And friend, once we comprehend the truth that God simply IS grace, we’re going to feel a lot safer showing up at His courtroom. |
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