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| Copyright © 2004 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| March 1, 2004 |
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THE SCIENCE OF GRACE #11
WHAT A TASK TO ASK Is the most wonderful, absolutely free, no-strings-attached,
all-expenses-paid GIFT hard to get? Is it difficult to qualify for the
world’s greatest FREE offer? “He was most pleased,” he said, “to have in attendance three of his former jailers from Robben Island who had treated him with respect during his imprisonment. He asked them to stand so he could introduce them to the crowd.” And Mrs. Clinton adds: “His generosity of spirit was inspiring and humbling.” Well, that’s Part A of the story. Three years later, in their second term, the First Lady and Chelsea Clinton took another trip to South Africa, this time while a limping, leg-in-a-cast President Clinton was off to Helsinki, Finland for a meeting with Boris Yeltsin. Now in 1997, President Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu were both involved in a post-apartheid project called the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. “[The participants in Cape Town] were taking testimony from victims and perpetrators of violence,” she writes, “as a means of exposing the truth and encouraging reconciliation among the races after generations of injustice and brutality. Mandela and Tutu understood the challenges and the importance of institutionalizing forgiveness.” Isn’t that an interesting concept? “Institutionalizing
forgiveness”? I’ll tell you, friend, that ought to be emblazoned over
our church doors; what do you say? The official distributing of grace
should be what the Body of Christ is all about, 24/7. And what did you have to do to get it? The answer speaks volumes for the Christian gospel. All a person had to do was to step forward and ask for it. Confess your part in apartheid, say you were sorry, and ask for grace. And it was given! The double blessing was that victims now knew what exactly had happened. As Mrs. Clinton puts it: “Victims could finally have answers. As one victim put it: ‘I want to forgive, but I need to know who and what to forgive.’” So all you have to do is ask. I John 1:9 couldn’t be any plainer than this: “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify [or cleanse] us from all unrighteousness.” And of course, we remember the beautiful promise expressed by Jesus Himself, in His Sermon on the Mount. This is Matthew 7; listen: “ASK . . . and it will be given unto you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.” Actually, this is true of all God’s gifts, so it should certainly be true of His greatest gifts of all, forgiveness and grace. There’s a nice P.S. to this promise, found over in the gospel of John, chapter 15: “And I will do whatever you ask IN MY NAME,” Jesus asserts, “so that the Son may bring glory to the Father. You may ask Me for ANYTHING in My name, and I will do it.” Did it bring glory to God when people humbled themselves
before that “Truth and Reconciliation Commission” and either received
OR GAVE grace? Of course it did. When a brand new Christian comes to the
foot of the Cross and allows the generous river of grace to wash over
them, is God’s kingdom glorified? You bet it is. Did we study the Bible with them? Sure. Did they determine to honor God and become obedient Christians? I heard them say that with their own lips. But the condition of receiving grace was the same in Lusaka as it was in the days of Luke and Lazarus. You ask for grace . . . and you get it. Back in 1997, bestselling Christian author Philip Yancey
spent 282 pages asking and answering the question: What’s So Amazing About
Grace? You ought to read his eloquent answer, but the most amazing thing
surely is this: it’s free, and it’s for the asking. He writes about the
Samaritan woman sitting by the well. She’d had five husbands, five failed
marriages, and was now just living with guy #6. Jesus came along and asked
her for a drink, and subsequently offered her the gift of grace. She asked;
she got. John Newton was the captain of a slave ship. Talk about an evil
way to make your living in this world. But the gospel of grace hit him
full force like an Atlantic storm. He asked for grace; he got it. In fact,
he got it so good he wrote a little tune that talks about grace being,
you know, amazing. “We do this by humbly admitting to God that we’ve rebelled against Him and need His forgiveness and leadership. That simple act of trust and obedience results in our sins being pardoned and our debt being paid. Our relationship to God is firmly established, because we’re immediately adopted into His family as His son or daughter.” Well, Hybels – who’s not a bad preacher – took 56 words there. You can actually do it in four, I think: “You ask – you get.” |
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