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I walked into my first journalism class. Run of the mill stuff,
I figured — an introduction to the course, an explanation
of the syllabus, and a "tell me something unique about yourself?"
question. I breathed a sigh of relief when the professor asked us
to answer get-to-know-you questions on a blank sheet of
paper. I didn't have a story like the girl who spoke seven
languages fluently or the guy who visited every continent by age
10.
As she asked the questions, I scratched each of my
responses — born in York, PA; married; second semester;
hope to use writing for ministry. Then she asked if we had a
laptop computer.
Oh great, I thought. I didn't know a
laptop was required for this course. I can't afford that on top of
books, tuition, and course fees.
I scribbled "No."
We handed her our papers and took a short break. When we
returned, the professor talked to us about studying magazines
and sent us to the library to peruse periodicals. As students left
for the library, she called me and another student over.
The prof wants to see me already? I
wondered.
She explained that she read our information sheets and saw
neither of us had laptops.
Here we go. Off to the Registrar's Office to find
another class.
But instead of sending us away, she said something I never
expected. "I'm giving you both a free laptop."
Fifteen minutes later in the library, she handed me a laptop,
no charge. I was stunned.
I sat in the study carrel and held my head in my hands.
Certainly someone else deserved it more. Why
me?
Only one word could explain it: Grace.
Grace That Is Greater
I didn't deserve the laptop, but in the gift I saw a picture of
God, who longs to give blessings to people who deserve a
curse.
We see these people on the news. An
executive commits fraud, leaving hundreds of employees
without jobs or retirement. A mother drowns her children. Do
such people deserve anything good?
We hear their testimonies in church. Addicted
to drugs. A prostitute for 15 years. An abusive father. These
people did nothing to earn favor, but still received grace.
And we see them in the mirror. Not one of us
deserves good gifts. Not you. Not me.
Even as a Christian, I wrestle with sin, struggling each day
to follow Christ. I fume at a reckless motorcyclist. I gaze with
one eye at a billboard. I avoid my neighbor next door. What do I
deserve for my behavior? What have I earned?
Nothing but death. Even our best deeds fall short; God
compares them to a "polluted garment" (Isaiah 64:6,
ESV). Actually, the Hebrew words in Isaiah 64:6 for "polluted
garment" mean "menstrual rags." In other words, when we try
our best, when we think we're creating a beautifully ornamented
wedding dress, we're actually drenching a dirty rag in our own
bloody discharge. No wonder our English Bibles translate the
terms as "polluted garment"; this language paints a picture with
gruesome strokes. But this language also leaves no doubt about
our hopeless condition apart from God.
Yet the Father's grace overcomes all our sin and failure
— and only at great cost to Himself, the life of His Son,
Jesus Christ. He who deserves all glory "made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant," humbling Himself to the
point of death (Phil 2:7–8, ESV). God "made him who had
no sin to be sin for us" — people whose wills consistently
pursue courses contrary to God — "so that in him we
might become the righteousness of God" (2 Cor 5:21,
NIV).
Do we deserve it? Not for a millisecond. Yet God's love
propels His grace toward us, grace which, as Philip Yancey
explains, means there is "nothing I can do to make God love me
more, and nothing I can do to make God love me less. It means
that I, even I who deserve the opposite, am invited to take my
place at the table in God's
family."1
God, seeing my sin before I trusted Christ and knowing fully
the sins I would commit after, lavished grace on me. He offered
me the very thing I didn't deserve: Eternal forgiveness. And He
gave it to me at the cost of His Son's life. As Julia Johnston put it,
He gave us "grace that is greater than all our sin."
What the World Misses
The grace of God pervades our world, even amidst the pain
humanity inflicts on itself, a grace that reveals remarkable
evidence of God the Spirit's presence and activity in our world. It
distinguishes Christians from a graceless humanity.
God's grace operates oppositely of the world's expectations.
In the world's institutions, we expect to get what we deserve. If I
plagiarize a paper, I deserve to get kicked out of school. If I lie
to my boss, I deserve to lose my job.
We also expect life to give us awards when we do well. If I
get straight A's, I deserve a college scholarship. If I sell more
cars than my coworkers, I deserve a raise. In a capitalistic
society, we value hard work and achievement by giving attractive
rewards.
But God's grace says that even though we, perpetual
sinners, deserve to rot in a fiery prison forever, we can receive
eternal bliss because of Jesus Christ. We can be given the exact
opposite of what we deserve through Christ's redemptive work.
The murderer enters paradise.
It is only through Christ, though, that we can obtain grace.
We can't earn it like a college football player earns the Heisman
Trophy. We can't work for it like we work for a job promotion.
Everything we do falls short of earning God's grace; we can only
receive it by faith in Christ.
Some country stations play a popular country song sung by
Billy Currington called, "Must Be Doin' Somethin' Right."
Currington sings of the extraordinary love he shares with a
woman. He is amazed at such a wonderful love and concludes
that he must be doing something right to "earn" such a love like
that.
In God's economy, we aren't doing something right —
we're doing everything wrong. And there's no way we could ever
"earn" true love. Any love we receive isn't our rightful payback;
it's the grace of God. The world operates on karma. God
operates on grace.2
Discovering Grace
When my professor handed me that laptop, without any
expectation of compensation, she not only illustrated God's
grace, she was an instrument of His grace. As Christians, people
who have most concretely experienced grace, we must develop
eyes for discovering grace, both by seeing it and giving it.
Watch for Grace. God's grace surrounds us, and by training
our eyes to see it, we can discover its power to transform lives.
When some friends introduced me and my wife to a man who
rented us a small cottage for basically nothing while we were in
seminary, some people might have called us lucky. We called it
God's immeasurable grace. The opportunity to attend seminary
at all, when so many want to but cannot, was itself a
manifestation of God's grace. We can deepen our love for God
when we observe traces of His grace in our lives and
others'.
Give grace. I have a tendency to evaluate situations and
respond to people as they deserve. If I receive lousy service at a
restaurant, I want to give a small tip to make sure the server
gets what she earned. But perhaps the inattentive server is the
one I should give a 30 percent tip. As someone who has
experienced tremendous grace, I imitate Christ when I give grace
to others.
In her hymn, "Grace That Is Greater," Julia Johnston talks of
this "marvelous, infinite, matchless grace, freely bestowed on all
who believe."3 We who
believe in Christ have received amazing grace. We now have the
opportunity, as we ponder the grace God displays in corners of
our world, to mirror that grace to those we meet, and when we
show grace to those who don't deserve it, they will never forget
what we've done. I certainly won't forget receiving a free
laptop.
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NOTES
- Philip Yancey, What's So Amazing About Grace?
Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1997, 71.
- To more fully describe the way God deals with
humanity, we cannot embrace this statement alone, for God also
promises rightful punishment to those who refuse to place their
faith in His Son. As the author of Hebrews says, "Without faith it
is impossible to please [God], for whoever would draw near to
God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who
seek him" (Heb 11:4), and for the writer of Hebrews, the ultimate
object of our faith is none other than "Jesus, the founder and
perfecter of our faith" (Heb 12:2). So yes, God operates on grace,
but grace is only available to those who place their trust in Jesus
Christ.
- Julia Johnson, "Grace That Is Greater," public
domain.
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