Grace for Everyone

“Grace isn’t a little prayer you chant
before receiving a meal.
It’s a way to live.”

– Jackie Windspear

Learn to do right!
Seek justice,
encourage the oppressed.
Isaiah 1:17 (NIV)

We are fragile creatures that can easily be crushed by rejection and defamation of character. This can trigger both defensive and offensive actions to protect our name. We seem to have even more courage however, to be incensed when wrong is done to a friend. We are ready to fight injustice when someone we love has been wronged. However, God reminds us that our worship means little if we do not also protect those who are weak, marginalized, oppressed, and forgotten. It’s not just our friends who need our help; it’s also those who have no friends who need us. “To do right” doesn’t just mean being a good person and avoiding evil in our sanctified little enclaves; it also means to care, comfort, and encourage those no one else wants to notice. Our circle of caring and comfort is often far too small… it is time to change!

Forgive me please, dear Father,
for being selfish
with your love and grace.
I confess that I often find it
easy to stay near
those who are like me —
who look like me,
think like me,
and dress like me.
I know that there are so many
in the world around me
that do not have a friend,
much less a defender.
Open my eyes, dear LORD,
to see those in my world
that you would have me protect,
encourage, and bless.
In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen.

Defeat is not an option…

Humble yourselves, therefore,
under God’s mighty hand,
that he may lift you up
in due time.
Cast all your anxiety on him
because he cares for you.
1 Peter 5:6-7 (NIV)

In a universe so incomparably vast, in a world so marvelously diverse, we can be paralyzed by our insignificance and impotence in the face of such staggering enormity. But in moments of simple faith, we can be calmed by our reverence and dependence upon the Creator and Sustainer of such wonders and find great comfort that our lives are in his hands. Christians and the church must engage in the business of sharing Christ so souls can be rescued. As long as we are silent and passive, the ways of the world prevail. Some are timid because evangelism seems so dangerous… belonging to Christ has always been so.

“The people of the world
will hate you because
you belong to me,
for they don’t know God
who sent me.”

John 15:21 NLT

Almighty and wondrous God, thank you for knowing me even though I can’t begin to comprehend your glory. I need your love, care, protection, blessing, grace, forgiveness, and presence. Without you, I have nothing of lasting significance. Help me to share his message of faith with someone today. Please be near. In Jesus’ name I humbly ask.  Amen.

 

When we weep deeply…

In his heart a man plans his course,
but the LORD determines his steps.
Proverbs 16:9 (NIV)

What is the proper response to violence? In an increasingly violent culture, this is a question we must all ask ourselves. It isn’t just a question of what “works” to reduce violent crime; it’s also a question of how God has called his people to live and witness in a troubled world.

Genuine loves means that we hate what is evil. Think about it… We detest it creeping into our hearts and ruining our relationships. We abhor its effects on those we love. We are repelled by the eternal destruction it causes in those whose lives are tender, or weak, or wavering. So we strive to do the very best thing we can do for those we love by clinging to what is good and staying far away from evil and wickedness.

Christians still have the ministry of comfort and care to help alleviate the aftermath of evil in this world. We are called to minister to the weak, helpless, abused, and ravaged victims of evil. We are also called to hate the horrible actions and not the perpetrator of evil deeds. It is not easy being a follower of Jesus, in fact it can be heart-wrenching, but that is our calling. We must allow God to work through us even when we cannot comprehend the circumstances.

Love must be sincere.
Hate what is evil;
cling to what is good.
Romans 12:9 (NIV)

Loving Father,
May my life be a source of goodness and joy
in my family and with my friends.
Please give me wisdom to see what is good
and the courage to pursue it with passion.
Please protect me from the evil one and
forgive me when I have followed his temptations.
Please protect those I love from the fallout
of my own selfish and evil decisions.
Please purify and cleanse me so that my life
may be lived holy, and wholly, to you.
Help me to offer grace and forgiveness
even when I cannot do so with ease.
Comfort the afflicted and redeem the lost.
In the name of your Holy Son, Jesus. Amen.

 

What can you do about it?

Do you have the gift of speaking?
Then speak as though God himself
were speaking through you.
Do you have the gift of helping others?
Do it with all the strength
and energy that God supplies.
Then everything you do
will bring glory to God through Jesus Christ.
All glory and power to him
forever and ever! Amen.

1 Peter 4:11 NLT

We tend to busy ourselves and over-book our calendars in an attempt to justify our relevance. We can become frustrated and discouraged when our lofty goals are not achieved. There is the urge is to do more and more until we become exhausted. Failure to achieve success can be deflating and this misdirection takes us down a path of self-pity and perceived failure. This may be God’s way of keeping us humble. When we get to the end of a day, sometimes there is nothing left for us to do except thank and praise God!


Now all glory to God,
who is able,
through his mighty power
at work within us,
to accomplish infinitely more
than we might ask or think.

Glory to him in the church
and in Christ Jesus
through all generations
forever and ever! Amen.

Ephesians 3:20-21 NLT

While we may often dream of doing great things for God and his Kingdom, the dreams aren’t as big as God’s plans. While we may be richly talented, influential, powerful, or rich, these are merely tools in God’s hands, not symbols of our sufficiency. “God is able” has to be one of the best and most accurate phrases in the Bible. But this time, it’s said about his work in you in me. He is able of much more than we imagine to work through and in us. What can we say to that?  Just say, “Hallelujah! Praise the Lord!”

Loving Father,
please help me to know
and live your will in my life.
I want to be your vessel of ministry,
healing, blessing, and hope
to those around me
at work and play.
Please use me to your glory today,
and always. In Jesus’ name I pray.
Amen.

Taking a bite out of sin…

A new command I give you:
Love one another. As I have loved you,
so you must love one another.
By this all men will know
that you are my disciples,
if you love one another.
John 13:34-35 NIV

 

How do you recognize Jesus’ followers? How do you find Christians? Jesus said they love each other just as he loved the disciples. In the immediate context this means he is willing to give sacrificially and extravagantly by dying for them at the cross, and he is also willing to love selflessly and practically by washing their feet. His ministry reveals he will do almost anything in between extravagant and practical. Imagine if we all read the Gospels and committed to love each other in the same way Jesus showed his love to his disciples!

 

Father of Compassion and God of all grace,
I thank you for teaching me to love
through the example of Jesus.
May my words and actions
reflect his love toward your people today,
tomorrow, and until you bring us all home to you.
In the name of Christ, my Great Example, I pray.
Amen.

 

Sweet, semi-sweet, or nasty?

“All you need is love.
But a little chocolate now and then doesn’t hurt.”

– Charlie Brown (Charles M. Schulz)

Therefore, anyone who refuses
to live by these rules
is not disobeying human teaching
but is rejecting God,
who gives his Holy Spirit to you.
But we don’t need to write to you
about the importance of loving each other,
for
God himself has
taught you to love one another. 

1 Thessalonians 4:8-9 NLT

God keeps on giving us the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit in our lives. One of the great blessings about this presence is that God pours love into our hearts through the Spirit (Rom. 5:5). Along with the great example of God’s love in sending Jesus (John 3:16-17), the Father uses the Spirit to teach us to know how to love each other. This is part of the Spirit’s fruit (Gal. 5:22-23) as well as the work of the Spirit that brings us into fellowship (2 Cor. 13:14), that holds us together in the bond of peace (Eph. 4:3-4), and that fills us as we submit to one another (Eph. 5:17-21). Loving each other is not only a command; it is also part of God’s continuing work in us through the Holy Spirit. The reward for this obedience is kind of like good chocolates… heavenly!

Dear God, I confess
that I do not always love others as I should.
I ask you to make me more like Jesus
in my love for others.
I am thankful for the presence
of the Holy Spirit
to help me see those
whom I need to show your love
and to empower me to love them
when it is difficult.
In Jesus’ name I pray for this grace.
Amen.

 

Vitally Empowered

Samuel took his flask of oil and anointed [David], with his brothers standing around watching. The Spirit of God entered David like a rush of wind, God vitally empowering him for the rest of his life.
— 1 Samuel 16:13 MESSAGE

Throughout the Old Testament, God’s Spirit would come on leaders for a time and empower them in special ways. However, David was led and empowered by the Spirit for his whole life after he was anointed by Samuel, although his sinful time with Bathsheba made him question whether God would remove the Spirit and his leadership because of his sin (Psalm 51:10-11). The remarkable thing about the Holy Spirit under the new covenant is that he comes upon all Jesus’ true followers: men and women, young and old, leaders or followers (Acts 2:1-39; Acts 5:32; Romans 8:9), and he stays with us. We have this “vitally empowering” gift living inside us, to guide us, convict us, empower us, equip us, intercede for us, and transform us. What a precious gift!

Thank you, Father, for the incredible gift of the Holy Spirit. As I continue on this journey to learn more about your Spirit, I want to yield my life fully to the influence of the Spirit. I want to reflect Jesus and honor you in all that I do and all that I am. I ask that this “vitally empowering” presence of your Spirit do what needs to be done in me to honor you. In Jesus’ name, I pray. Amen.

Shaped for a Mission

For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
— Ephesians 2:10

Did you know that God is an artisan? Even more importantly, did you know that you are|one of his masterpieces? God has designed us to be beautifully useful for doing good things! So let’s not let anyone, especially not the evil one, convince us that we are not worth anything to others or to God. His grace has made our lives canvases upon which he will provide the world more masterpiece works of his artistry! Let’s live up to God’s high opinion of us.

Thank you, dear Father, for knowing me and re-making me by your grace in Jesus. Use me to do your will and lead me to the appropriate people so that I can most effectively minister to them. In Jesus’ grace-filled name I pray. Amen.

Joining the Spirit in Prayer

I urge you, brothers and sisters, by our Lord Jesus Christ and by the love of the Spirit, to join me in my struggle by praying to God for me.
— Romans 15:30 NIV

The Holy Spirit intercedes for us when we pray (Romans 8:26-27). The Holy Spirit pours love into our hearts to give us hope and endurance (Romans 5:5; Colossians 1:9-11). So it shouldn’t surprise us that the love we have from the Holy Spirit moves us to pray for others in their struggles. Praying for others, what is sometimes called intercessory prayer, is a great gift empowered by the love that comes from the Holy Spirit’s presence in our lives. In today’s verse, Paul wanted this Spirit-led and love-driven prayer to focus on his desire to proclaim Jesus, something we’ve focused on for several days. However, this Spirit-led and love-driven kind of prayer can be offered for anything that another brother or sister in Christ needs. Let’s remember that the love we feel for others and the intercession we are given by the presence of the Spirit are there as gifts to equip us to pray for others!

Today, Father, I want to pray for a number of folks on my heart who face struggles of all kinds. Some are family members… some are friends… some are faithful servants of your kingdom doing your work in hard places… some are grieving… some face tough times… some are making hard decisions… some have family struggles… some have great opportunities they don’t want to miss… some are overcoming addictions… and there are many others. Please hear my prayer for them today. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Right Relationship

So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness.
— Colossians 2:6-7

Jesus is our center! He is the hub around which we turn. Rather than trying to add on to the truth of Jesus, we must learn to accept it and trust it in child-like faith. But that child-like faith must be nourished and grown. As Jesus remains our central focus and our hearts remain thankful to God for his grace, we will that our faith is strengthened and that Jesus is more real than ever.

Holy and Righteous God, please give me eyes to see evil and avoid it. Please give me wisdom to know deceptive and false teaching when it is placed before me. Empower me to live a thankful life of holiness so that I can live in Jesus to your honor and glory. In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen.