Tell Me The Old, Old Story

My dear sister,

Don’t you love a good story…especially a story in which things begin rocky but the favorite characters end up living happily ever after? When I was a little girl my mama had the habit of reading voraciously to us, her four children. The stories were spell-binding. Saggy Baggy Elephant. Robin Hood. A Tale of Two Cities. Little Pilgrim’s Progress. Lorna Doone. Our little minds were transported to other places, other times–and we were enthralled.

Did you know, my sister, that I grew up on the mission field? I have my share of snake and tarantula and leper colony tales. It was there that our mama read to us and lived for us another story, this one timeless. It was the story of Jesus, the God who came to our planet as a baby to live on earth as the God-Man–to live the perfect life I could never live. It was the story of me and my sin, my dark alienation from God with no hope for life and death and resurrection to eternal life; the story of the true and just God who loved me so much that He, in the person of His Son, chose to reconcile me to Himself by being punished for my sin in His death on a rough and splintered cross, receiving His Father’s wrath upon Himself, in my place, so that I would not be required to bear my own deserved punishment. It was a good story, a scary story, an unforgettable one, but of this particular story I wearied as I grew up. I had believed the story, prayed “the prayer”, and could argue the merits of it with the best of them–all the while being dead to God, deceived by the desperate wickedness of my own heart (Jeremiah 17:9). I became interested in things which were opposed to the story. If I concentrated on the story, I would have difficulty doing the things my heart hankered after and therefore suppressed it in my mind. At first, I loved the fun of pursuing what I wanted, but it wore thin with time and my heart and my conscience grew weary with rationalizations and justifications and dissonance.

Through a series of events, of agonies and frustrations, broken relationships and a broken heart, guilt and misery, my heart remembered that story I learned as a child but had purposely forgotten. My sin had risen above my head. My guilt was so heavy it left me exhausted. I was tired of running from the Jesus of my childhood memory, the story of the One who could break the bonds of that heavy, chained burden upon my back and send it hurtling down the hill at Golgotha–as He had done for Little Christian in my childhood version of The Pilgrims’s Progress, as He did for Abraham and David and Peter and Paul.

I was lying in my bed one night, spent from the struggle, when thoughts of Christ were planted in my head, thoughts of that bloody death, thoughts of a sinless God dying in my place, all my rebellion and disobedience, despair and hopelessness imputed to His sinless dying self. My darkness was suddenly made light in the recesses of my mind. The meaning of the phrase, “the finished work of Christ on the cross”, finally made perfect sense as our great and mighty God regenerated my heart and mind and made me His child, taking all my sin upon Himself, declaring me clothed in Christ’s righteousness in His sight. My sin debt to God was fully and finally paid by Christ and His Father’s wrath was satisfied. Amazing grace that had once “taught my heart to fear” (as that crusty and vile slave trader of old, redeemed by our Christ, wrote), also “my fears relieved”. The story of my youth came full circle, God granted me faith in Him, and I was made new. I am not so arrogant as to compare myself to the great Apostle Paul, but it was my Damascus moment, my Saul to Paul renaming, the old passing away and all becoming new.

We are told in Scripture to not look back, we should forget the things behind and look forward and press toward the goal of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus (Philippians 3: 13-14). But Paul also tells us to look back and remember (I Corinthians 10). We are asked to remember the stories of what took place in the wilderness when Israel of old lived in rebellion, grumbling and ungrateful–and God killed many of them. Paul tells us it is a warning and we do well to look back and remember and not repeat. Israel was also commanded to make memorials for remembrance of God’s faithfulness to them, a looking back and recalling and thanking, as well as for teaching the next generation. When we celebrate the Lord’s Supper, we look back and remember and look forward in anticipation. When we confess our sins in repentance, we look back at the cross, but not to wallow in our sins. We look back in remembrance for warning, for rejoicing, for gratitude. We look forward in hope when all things will be made right at His coming.

Have you heard and read a hundred times that we are to look back and recall the gospel story, to preach it to ourselves daily? Take the advice from the sages in our lives. Look back. Tell yourself the story in the morning, at noon, at night. Remember from where you came. Remember where you are going. Christ has died. Christ is risen. Your sin is gone. Our Father reigns and in His power and control He is the Always Good. He is coming again. Preaching this to ourselves rearranges our perspective on our present and gives cause for rejoicing and tranquility of heart, not for grumbling or panic or anger.

So, dear sister, remember the story, dwell on it, live it. When He comes, if we belong to Christ, we will be like Him for we shall see Him face-to-face, as He is, finally unfettered by our sin–trials and sorrows gone, living eternally in unbroken praise and thanksgiving.

Now, believe it and go tell it.

MARANATHA! Even so come Lord Jesus!

Because of Christ,
I am your sister,

Cherry

Choose Joy

Dear sisters,

“What makes you happy Colleen?”  My husband asked.  I thought for a second.  After a tough day of the constant training of a tenacious two year old, I do find respite in a frothy latte and a bowl of cookies and cream ice cream.  A smile comes to my face as I lounge and indulge in the smoothness of both on my tongue.  The delicate delights of this special treat may last that night, but the doleful doldrums of training a sinful heart return in full force the next morning.  I feel like in this world I often seek immediate happiness in my circumstances, but what I really desire is a deep lasting joy.  But what is joy?

Joy is not contingent on a dessert or massage.  As a believer, the Lord commands me to have joy in all circumstances…even ones that are difficult and painful.  James writes to dispersed Christians to “Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds.”

But how do we do that, sweet sisters?  How do we have joy when all our children are crying at once?  When a loved one dies?  When we have another miscarriage?  When our adoption falls through?  When we feel as though our marriage is falling apart?  Oh, it is tough.  It is so tough to choose joy.  Yet we are commanded to throughout scripture.  The hope we have is that scripture tells us from where true and lasting joy comes.  It comes from Christ!  When we find our joy in the fact we have been forgiven of our sins and saved from the eternal wrath of God because of what he did on the cross, we have joy!  We are thankful Jesus took our ultimate fate of death and gave us eternal life in heaven!  That means our trials on earth get put in the proper perspective so even in the sadness of our circumstances, we have a deep joy in our hope in Christ!  Even in our disappointments and hardships, we know this world is not our home.  Our home is yet to come and sadness, death, tears, fears, and disappointments will all be forgotten!

If that is not encouraging enough, scripture also tells us we find joy in trials as we realize the Lord is drawing us to Himself during these times.  He is near to the broken hearted and hears all our cries.  He is making us more dependent on Him which is where we want to be.  He is shaking off the chaff of our lives, making us more like Christ.  He loves us so much that our trials bring us closer to Him, rather than further away.  Our trust in the goodness of our Sovereign God in difficult times brings us unadulterated joy!

Oh, live here sister!  Choose the joy that only comes from Christ!  Don’t settle for the fleeting happiness of a latte or ice cream.  Don’t live in the despair of circumstances.  Lift your eyes to the heavens where your help comes because in our weakness, He is strong.

Your sister,

Colleen

Grace or Merit?

My Dear Sister,

It’s been a long day.  Annabelle, my 14-month-old daughter woke up cranky and continued to be so throughout the day.  She would not eat the food I prepared for her and she even gave me angry eyes as she forcefully pushed it away.   She wouldn’t play in the grass and she complained when I took her for a walk.  No treats for her tonight!  I don’t want her to think she can get away with how she behaved today.  As a parent I should correct consistently so she won’t build bad habits, right?  Finally, bedtime came complete with cries and leg kicking.  I shut the door to let her cry it out.

Giving her grace was nowhere in play this day.  And what is grace? Grace is getting what you don’t deserve.  Grace involves two parties where one party has wronged the other in some way, yet the one who was wronged gifts the wrong-doer not according to what he or she deserves, but rather out of a heart of unconditional generosity.  Wow, that’s a lot of words.  There is a difference between merited favor and grace.  Often we treat people with merit thinking its grace…if Annabelle is normally a well behaved child, then I will gladly give her a treat or overlook an act of disobedience because she is normally well-behaved. That is merit, not grace.  What if a badly behaved child does the same disobedience?  Would I give them the same treat or overlook the same offense?  If I was honest, I probably would not because I give treats based on past or overall behavior.  That is not grace.  Grace is given freely without regards to good or bad behavior.

The gospel is our example of grace.  Jesus lived a perfect life with no sin and was crucified a horrible death to take the entire penalty of sin.  He then arose three days later thus conquering the penalty of death.  This is called the “great exchange”…where Jesus took on ALL the sin of His children and then put His perfect righteousness on them so that God now looks them as righteous, as His adopted and chosen sons complete with the full inheritance of heaven!  Nowhere in the gospel are believers chosen for what they have done or not done…for how they behaved or did not behave.  They are gifted salvation by God’s unconditional generosity.

This day with Annabelle could have been so different.  If I had only remembered what God has gifted me in Christ (forgiveness of my sins, eternal life, righteousness, adoption, and the riches of heaven) and that He gave me this not because I deserved it, earned it, or merited it, then maybe I could have looked at Annabelle in the same manner.  I should have loved her in grace, had patience with her in grace, and not gotten flustered or frustrated with her lack of obedience or her foolishness.  Christ loved me before I believed; he gave me grace in my bad behavior…how much more should I give grace to my daughter (or husband, family, and friends)?  How would Annabelle act if I treated her with grace instead of merit?  Sure, there is a place for discipline, structure, and obedience, but it should be under the umbrella of the gospel of grace.  To give her a treat when she doesn’t deserve it and tell her that is what Jesus did for me!  He gave me life when I deserved death!  To play with her, when she “deserves” a time-out, to show her that the Father never turns His back on His children.  These actions and training can only come when her mom remembers the unmerited grace that was given her.  Annabelle might not have acted any different in this day, but her mom would have.

~Colleen