I have been speaking and writing more recently about various aspects of our faith in Yeshua (Jesus) and the WONDERFUL grace of God. Without His grace, we would never be in the kingdom. It’s that simple. I’ve spoken and written on faith in the Messiah; on being justified by faith, and on various aspects of the grace of God. Some people become uncomfortable with anyone preaching faith in the living Son of God, instead of faith in what we ourselves have to do.
Folks, my faith is not just blind belief, but a solid anchoring of my soul in believing on and in the Messiah, Yeshua of Nazareth. My confidence of being in the better resurrection rests in HIS life. After all, we all know we’ve been forgiven and reconciled to our Father by his death for us, if we accept it. But do we also remember that Romans 5:10 says we are saved by HIS life? Not by our own lives. No sir, no ma’am. HIS life. That’s what saves us.
Now – does receiving God’s grace and relying on Him cause us to sin more? That’s the lie that Satan himself tries to put out there, so that we don’t receive God’s grace. (Watch for an upcoming sermon soon on “How Well do you RECEIVE?) If Satan can make us feel that the topic of “grace” is so poisoned, is so dangerous, then we tend to distance ourselves from this wonderful truth – and we refuse to receive it. Then Satan has scored a victory.
Abba’s grace in me and over me won’t let Satan win if we keep looking to our Father’s love and in prayer asking Him to be our covering through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Can the grace of our loving Father be perverted? Yes it can. Jude and Peter write of the misapplication of grace quite a bit in their epistles. But neither does it mean we should not speak of gracecorrectly. Even Jude ends his warning epistle with words of GRACE. In verse 21 he speaks of keeping yourselves in the love of God. Look how Jude ENDS his short epistle even after all his stern warnings:
Jude 24-25
“Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling,
And to present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy,
25 To God our Savior, Who alone is wise,Be glory and majesty,
Dominion and power, Both now and forever. Amen.”
WHO is the One able to keep us from stumbling? Ourselves? NO! WHO is able to present us FAULTLESS before Him with great JOY? GOD OUR SAVIOR… to HIM BE THE GLORY and majesty.
THAT is how JUDE ends his treatise on false grace! Look to the TRUE GRACE of God. In verse 21 he says to keep yourselves in the love of God looking to the MERCY of our Lord.
Peter, who also warns against becoming lax on sin, and on submitting to one another and to the authorities over us, and speaks so much about our conduct – also says a lot about GRACE in the first verses of his first epistle. He ends 1 Pet 1:2 with words of grace. Then verses 3—he blesses God for his abundant mercy and for the resurrection of Yeshua. Then in verse 5 he speaks of how are “kept by the power of GOD through FAITH for salvation…” In verse 10 he speaks of how the prophets foretold this GRACE that would come upon us.
In the 2nd Epistle of Peter, he starts and ends his letter with words all about grace. Go read it. Then in between he has stern warnings about continuing in sin. Then he ends the letter of 2nd Peter telling us all to “grow in the GRACE and knowledge OF OUR LORD Jesus Christ…” The possibility of sin did not keep him from speaking of Grace. Oh, not this Peter, the one who denied his Master 3x then went on to preach on Pentecost with 3,000 being converted as a result! God’s GRACE allowed Peter to go from self-condemnation to speaking about God’s grace for them in Acts 2, if they would repent and receive it.
John ENDS the whole New Covenant scriptures with words of grace in the last verses of Revelation, though he also has much to say about becoming spiritually sleepy or dying Christians In Revelation 2-3. So we teach the balance. Let’s absolutely talk of Grace – while also talking about using that grace to be impetus to more change and growth (Romans 8:12-15).
Paul gives his OWN experience to make the point that when we appreciate God’s grace, the last thing we really want to do is go sin again or to sin lightly. Read 1 Cor 15:9-10. He was heartbroken by the fact that he had so persecuted the Body of Christ, the brethren, that some of them even cursed God as Paul tortured them (1 Tim 1: 12-15; Acts 26:11). So he calls himself the least of the apostles and even the “chief sinner”. He received God’s grace while on the way to Damascus to arrest and torture more Christians (Acts 9). One could hardly say he received Grace because he was a good man! No, he was a mean and cruel man before his conversion. He thought torturing believers and making them recant was the right thing to do.
So Paul received a lot of GRACE. What did it lead him to do?
1 Corinthians 15:9-12
“For I am the least of the apostles, who am not worthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. 10 But by the grace of God I am what I am, and His grace toward me was not in vain; but I labored more abundantly than they all, yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me. 11 Therefore, whether it was I or they, so we preach and so you believed.