Thinking further about whether we see ourselves as 'just sinners saved
saved by grace or saints,' I've been thinking that another part of our
problem is speed. Today there seems to be pressure to produce disciples
overnight - as if knowledge and maturity is something that can just be
taught in just a few lessons; but life is not like that.
In the natural realm growth takes time, and part of that growth is the
knowledge of who we are. A child may well be born into a family with a
given identity, but they don't immediately realise who they are. It is
only as time goes by that that begins to sink in as they grow up into
it.
Then again when people are born again/become Christians, we tend to want
to get them involved in doing something, but there is a very real
danger in doing before being. It buys into the world's way of thinking
that our identity is found in our doing rather than our being.
The fact is we need to slow down... . . . . . . .
. . speed kills - it kills the spiritual life.
The Bible talks about "waiting on the Lord" (some Psalms and Isaiah
comes to mind), but it's interesting and concerning that some modern
versions are now translating this as "trust in the Lord" - now that is a
part of it, but waiting on God is more than that.
Too many of us are spiritual Martha's - we are too busy, we don't know
how to stop, we don't know how to wait, and so we don't know who we
really are because all that we are is wrapped in in what we are doing.
Take that away, and we are lost.
Waiting on God involves stopping and spending time with Father,
listening to him and learning about his love and care for us as his
children - as it says, "Beloved, we are now the children of God..." -
Mary had it right, she knew when to stop and how to stop.
Is your Christian life just too busy? Is it more about doing than
delighting? More about rules than relationship? Getting things done than
grace?
Then stop, get into the Father's presence, go to the scriptures, search
them, listen to the Father's voice, you'll be the better for it.
Showing posts with label children of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children of God. Show all posts
Wednesday, 13 June 2012
Tuesday, 5 June 2012
A Sinner saved by grave or a saint? Part 2
Following on from last week here are some further thoughts…..
So if we are more than ‘sinners saved by grace’ why is it that we struggle with being called ‘saints’?
Here are three possible reasons:
Have you crossed the line into the kingdom? If not I urge you to believe in him who lived and died that you might have a new identity, and know the power of the life to come.
Are you still a babe in Christ? It’s time to start growing – feed on him and his word; draw on the new life he has given you.
Are you taking responsibility for your decisions and their consequences? It’s time to start behaving as well as believing.
Are you caught in the battle, your shield is down and you’ve dropped your sword – it’s time to pick them up again and start fighting for your spiritual life.
Have you dropped out of the battalion – the local church – you need to get back into it, find your family and fellow soldiers.
So if we are more than ‘sinners saved by grace’ why is it that we struggle with being called ‘saints’?
Here are three possible reasons:
- We look the same – we have not been noticably transformed or are identifyably any different, we don’t suddenly have ‘halos’ or possess a ‘holy auror,’ or walk around 6 inches off the ground.
- We don’t necessarily feel like it. We have some measure of a ‘born again’ experience. I say some measure, because for some it’s more dramatic than others, yet no less real – some can name a date, for others it happened over a period of time and they are not sure when they actually crossed the line; for some it was a dramatic experience, for others it wasn’t…..
- We still find ourselves struggling with sin. I mean if I am a new creation why is that? Perhaps you think, what changed? Did anything change?
- In some ways becoming a Christian is a bit like moving from one country to another and then becoming a citizen of that country. You may well take on the new identity but you you still have memories and thinking patterns that reflect your previous history or citizenship.
- Then there is the matter of growth in knowledge and understanding. A child doesn’t understand immediately who he or she is, but over a period of time learns who they are, and grows into it.
- Then theres the not so small matter of experience. It’s not just knowledge and understanding but the working out of it through decision and action. Such decision making and action can confirm or work against our knowledge of who we are.
- Lastly Christians are in a ‘war zone’ and the enemy will contest everything. Even as Satan confronted Jesus as to who he was, so he will confront those who believe in and seek to follow him.
Have you crossed the line into the kingdom? If not I urge you to believe in him who lived and died that you might have a new identity, and know the power of the life to come.
Are you still a babe in Christ? It’s time to start growing – feed on him and his word; draw on the new life he has given you.
Are you taking responsibility for your decisions and their consequences? It’s time to start behaving as well as believing.
Are you caught in the battle, your shield is down and you’ve dropped your sword – it’s time to pick them up again and start fighting for your spiritual life.
Have you dropped out of the battalion – the local church – you need to get back into it, find your family and fellow soldiers.
Sunday, 27 May 2012
Saved Sinner or Saint?
Following on from last week one of the outcomes of worm theology is to think of the Christian as ‘just a sinner saved by grace’.
There may be some truth to that statement but theres an awful lot of truth missing – enough to make it wrong. The scriptures repeatedly state in various ways that we are not what we were, that we are new creations, no longer in Adam but in Christ, in fact the letters are addressed not to ‘sinners saved by grace’ but to those who have become ‘saints by grace’! The problem is that in many of the older versions of the Bible many of the letters were addressed to those who were ‘called to be saints’, but the ‘to be’ was in italics which means that it wasn’t in the original.
Now whoever we are, we all live out of our perceived identity, and if we take this as our cue we will always be Romans 7 Christians, and Romans 8 will always be elusive. The flesh will always be the powerhouse of our lives and not the power of the indwelling Spirit of God. My observation as a pastor/minister was that people who thought like this lived this.
Are you a Christian listening to the lies of the enemy? There is a higher truth than your past truth, and it is God’s truth that in Jesus you are a new creation – ransomed, healed, restored, forgiven; you have a new identity as a child of God, you have the Spirit of God dwelling in you saying ‘Abba, Father.’ You have the power to live a different kind of life.
There may be some truth to that statement but theres an awful lot of truth missing – enough to make it wrong. The scriptures repeatedly state in various ways that we are not what we were, that we are new creations, no longer in Adam but in Christ, in fact the letters are addressed not to ‘sinners saved by grace’ but to those who have become ‘saints by grace’! The problem is that in many of the older versions of the Bible many of the letters were addressed to those who were ‘called to be saints’, but the ‘to be’ was in italics which means that it wasn’t in the original.
Now whoever we are, we all live out of our perceived identity, and if we take this as our cue we will always be Romans 7 Christians, and Romans 8 will always be elusive. The flesh will always be the powerhouse of our lives and not the power of the indwelling Spirit of God. My observation as a pastor/minister was that people who thought like this lived this.
Are you a Christian listening to the lies of the enemy? There is a higher truth than your past truth, and it is God’s truth that in Jesus you are a new creation – ransomed, healed, restored, forgiven; you have a new identity as a child of God, you have the Spirit of God dwelling in you saying ‘Abba, Father.’ You have the power to live a different kind of life.
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