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Friday
Jan302026

The First Letter of Peter-10

Subtitle: Our Witness before the World- Part 2

1 Peter 2:16-20.  This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, January 25, 2026.

We continue in this first letter of Peter.  He is focused on how we follow Jesus, and how that affects the world around us.  God wants those who are following Christ to be a witness and a testimony to the world.

This witness will save some.  We will be a witness that they receive.  However, others will not receive our witness.  The things we share and do are then evidence against them.  Of course, this is not our goal.  Our goal is to help them see Jesus.

In many cases, it may seem unfair that God expects us to be a witness for Him to people who do not deserve it.  The rub here is that we are the ones determining who doesn’t deserve it.  No one “deserves” the Gospel, but the grace of God has chosen to make it available to all.  We either agree with that and help, or we disagree and ignore the commands of Christ.

It is common that Christians end up suffering for their active witnessing to the world.  This too may seem unfair.  Why should we suffer so that they can be forgiven?  The answer is Jesus.  He suffered death for you and them so that forgiveness could be possible.  If we believe in him, then we can agree that his purposes are worthy of the greatest of sacrifices.

Let’s look at our passage.

Submit to every human institution of authority (v. 16-17)

We had to stop in the middle of this section last week.  The main point comes from verse 13. We are to do this for the Lord’s sake (not ours), without respect to the level of authority, and in order to silence the ignorance of foolish men.

There are going to be people who reject God no matter what His decision is.  It is God’s will that we submit ourselves to the governing authorities in order to shut the mouths of those who would ignorantly accuse Christians of rebellion.

Of course, it is a spiritual rebellion.  We will not serve the devil and his angels.  However, our goal is not to fight the governments of this world.  It is to silence their mouths through righteousness.

Verse 16 then adds the instruction that we should use our freedom to be slaves of God.  Now, some of them are free people and others are slaves.  There is even a spectrum of from the least freedom to the most freedom.  It would start with those who were slaves and move up to those who are simply servants.  We then would come to those who are free but have no Roman Citizenship (the Apostle Peter) and move to someone like the Apostle Paul who had both freedom and Roman Citizenship. 

However, Peter is not talking about our natural freedom.  He is talking about the spiritual freedom that we have in Christ.  All Christians have been spiritually set free from the guilt of their sins and the rebellion of humanity.  We have been also set free from any claim that the devil may have on us.  Those who were Jews were set free from the Law of Moses.  This doesn’t mean that Christians are lawless.  Instead, we are under the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:2).

Many Christians make the mistake of using their situation as an indication of what they truly are in Christ.  If my circumstances are bad, then I am a loser in Christ, a failure.  If my circumstances are good, then God loves me, and I am a blessed winner.  Isn’t our Lord Jesus a rebuke to this kind of thinking?  Of course, he is!  There is no more victorious person who has ever lived than the Lord Jesus.  Yet his circumstances were so bad that “we considered him punished by God, stricken by him, and afflicted.” (Isaiah 53:4 NIV). 

Peter warns against using our freedom as a “covering for evil.”  We can sweep a lot of things under the carpet of freedom that are not in character with the freedom that God has given us.  Another way to describe this is to use grace as a license for immorality.  Did Jesus free us so that we can continue to sin, or God forbid, do even more sinful things?  Of course, he didn’t.

Those who protest the loudest that they are free from being judged are in bondage to the vices and lusts of their heart.  In fact, all of us have recognized how particular sins can get a hold on us.  We want to be free from it, but it seems to have powerful control over us.

This brings up the issue of political freedom.  What good does political freedom do for those who are in bondage to sin?  Only people who are spiritually free can remain politically free.  Those who are not will find their political freedom disintegrating before their eyes.  How much political freedom are we going to lose before we repent?  I don’t know.  God will let us lose it all, if we don’t do so.  It is up to us how far we will fall.

God will goad us along the way, trying to get our attention.  He doesn’t want us to be destroyed, but He may let it happen. 

So, Peter started this passage calling believers to abstain from fleshly lusts (v. 11).  Now he has described that further as not using your freedom in Christ as a covering for evil.

Peter then gives a quick list of the kinds of things we can do as free people who are serving God in verse 17. 

The first is to honor all people.  Honor is something that is nobler than submission.  At its root is the idea of value.  It can be a person who has value, or it can be a person who is in a valuable position of authority.  Of course, a high position is not needed for a person to have great honor (value).

A person who has no honor is a person who has become worthless.  Many worthless people end up in positions of honor.  This can be a difficult and oppressive thing to endure.

To honor someone who has honor requires me to see beyond myself.  It really should be easy to do.  Yet a person of honor who is in a position of honor should see the value of the people for whom they are responsible.  Shouldn’t a king see the value of the people he serves, even the peasants?

Ultimately, value comes from God.  It is He who has made us and not we ourselves.  It is a common occurrence that we do not live up to the value that God has given us.  Peter challenges us to see the value in all people and give the honor that God wants you to do.  We must use our freedom to honor all people appropriately.

The second thing in verse 17 is to love the brotherhood.  Brotherhood here contemplates the family of God as a band of brothers, which includes both men and women.  The devil loves to tempt Christians into the path of hating one another, or at least not caring to love one another.

We are called to love one another as Christ has loved us.  This is not a fake honor and not a fake love.  We should not love sparingly or begrudgingly.  We are to use our freedom to love our brothers and sisters in Christ.

Love always begs the question, “What does it mean to love now?”  I know a man whose son ended up in prison for a period of time.  When the son was released, the dad tried to help the son get back on his feet by giving him a place to stay and a job in his shop.  It is clear that the dad loved his son when he could have written the son off.  I’m sure the dad wrestled with what the love of Jesus would have him do.  After some time of working in his dad’s shop, the son began to dip into the till.  At some point the dad suspected it and eventually caught his son’s sin.  What can the dad do now?  He is faced with the hard question.  What does love do now? Yes, you want to help your son, but his problem is clearly far deeper than just needing a helping hand.  What would you do in that situation?  Loving people is difficult, but it is what Jesus calls us to do.  Love doesn’t always do the same thing.  Sometimes love has to say no more.  Sometimes it has to tell someone to leave before they can be received back in repentance. 

Peter also tells us to use our freedom to fear God.  This may sound like a contradiction, but God has not set us free so that we can live a life of not having proper respect for who He is, and what He has done.  He is our Father, but He is also our Judge.  He will not pervert truth in order to make you feel good.  He loves you too much to do that.

We are told in the Bible that the Fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.  Yes, you are free to be a moron, but that is not what God had in mind when He gave you freedom.  We will all give an accounting to God one day.  There will be consequences for the way we have lived our lives.  However, there is more to the Fear of the Lord than just being afraid of hell.
Moses, when confronted with the idea that God might not go with along the way to the Promised Land, feared not having relationship with God.  God, You must come with us.  Otherwise, people will not know that Your favor is upon us.  Can you imagine eternity without Him Who is the greatest good?  Lack of relationship with God should be a far more fearful thought than eternity in a Lake of Fire.

Peter also tells us to honor the king.  This is clearly added to deal with the obvious question that would follow the earlier command to honor all people.  Should we honor even a wicked man like Nero?  We are to treat the king with respect and the honor that is due to his position and authority.  Again, that is in order to shut the mouths of foolish and ignorant people.

Household servants are to submit to their masters (18-20)

This word for servants has the idea of a household servant of various types.  Some may have greater freedom, but some may be actual slaves.  This is similar to the previous category under the king, or civil authority.  Even free people are under some authority in life.  Yet slaves and servants would have an extra layer of authority over them.

Peter calls slaves to use their freedom to submit to their earthly masters.  They are to choose to take their proper place under the master’s authority.  It may not be proper in the sense that God made them to be that way.  However, under the laws of the society, they are under a master.

Now there were some Christians who had slaves.  The letter of Philemon is written to a master asking him to receive a run-away slave back and treat him as a brother.  However, most Christians were not masters.  In fact, quite a few were slaves themselves.  You could understand that a slave might hear the Gospel and rightly think to themselves, “Christ has set me free!  No man can own me.”  Of course, God did not make any person to be the chattel property of another.  Yet this is not a perfect world.  In this imperfect world, God does not ask us to kill the masters with a slave revolt.  Instead, He calls the slaves to show the masters Jesus by giving them respect.  In fact, Peter calls them to show “all respect” in the way they submit to their masters. 

This term can mean something like terror.  However, the emphasis is on being very careful in your submission.  What if the masters are not respectable?  We are to respect them for Christ’s sake.  It is the respect of Christ that overshadows the whole issue.  I do it because I respect Christ who asks me to do it.

Jesus will not force us to submit to our master with all respect.  But He will work on our hearts by His Spirit.  He will call you to this and challenge you in it. 

The average American is no longer dealing with actual slavery.  Yes, there is some underground illegal slavery happening, but this is not what is being talked about here.  This best maps over to our relationship with an employer in this life.  Do you have a “good and gentle” boss?  It does happen!  The same thing was true of slaves in the first century.  Some of them had good situations and were happy to work for their master.  Even if they were told they were free, they might choose to stay.  However, many slaves had bad situations, even oppressive situations under masters who were evil men.  These slaves didn’t have a choice about their master.  He was who he was.  Peter challenges them to submit especially to the unreasonable masters.

It would be easier to serve someone who is good and gentle.  Anyone in the position of a lord over another person should have the qualities of being good and gentle because these are the qualities of Christ.

However, when a master is unreasonable, it seems unreasonable to expect a slave to submit to them.  The word unreasonable has the sense of being crooked, perverse, or wicked.  How can God expect us to serve a wicked master?

Many people in our society rail against the Bible and the God of the Bible.  Yet they are often using their political freedom as a license of sin, and a cover for evil things.

Freedom is a puzzle that is much more complex than we would like to admit.  Being politically free is one thing, but being spiritually free is quite another.  God is concerned about bigger issues than rather we are politically free or not.  Yes, He did not make us to be under tyrants and dictators.  However, the only way to break through to hard hearts is to remove their freedom and put them under the heavy hand of another sinner.  God is speaking to our hearts in these times, calling us to turn back to Him.  This is why nations rise and nations fall.  It is something that this rising nation should take to heart.  We have only risen because God has allowed it.  Yet He may cause us to fall as well.

God can help us through oppressive things, like a master who is unreasonable, if we will ask Him.  Rather than complaining, we can choose to trust God and submit to trusting Him.

Peter explains that a slave who endures the unreasonable actions of an evil master will find the favor of God.  Just like Noah found favor (grace) in the eyes of the Lord, we are called to be people who put their trust in God’s way and not our own.

To put a finer point on this, imagine a slave being able to choose between two doors.  Behind one is political and economic freedom and behind the other is favor with God.  Which would you choose?  In truth, it would be suicide to choose freedom over against the favor of God.  What good does freedom do for a person who has drawn the ire of God?  It does none whatsoever.

Verse 19 is somewhat choppy in English, but let’s work through it.  The point is not just suffering unjustly but also enduring under the suffering.  A person will only do so for one of two reasons.  They either have no hope and have been beaten into submission, or they have hope in God.  This latter reason is the testimony of slaves throughout history, even those in America.  They had faith in God and were able to endure great suffering.

African American slave culture had developed great faith in God.  It is the wellspring of the Negro Spirituals that surfaced in that era.  If you read the words to “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” the “Black National Anthem,” you will be surprised at the level of faith and prophetic warning to America and black people themselves.

In the time of suffering, they learned something about God that was invaluable.  Yet they also knew that it could be lost.  This is a challenge for all people of all races.    God is found in times of suffering if we will put our trust in Him.  However, we can lose Him in the comfortable times that follow.

Peter tells us that there is no credit before God when we endure harsh treatment due to our own sin.  As free people, we may not have to suffer an evil master punishing us for our sins.  But we can suffer evil men due to our sins.  If I want God’s favor in such a situation, then I need to repent of my sin.

But, if we suffer for doing what is right and patiently endure it, there is favor with God.  Do you remember the Beatitudes of Matthew chapter five?  Jesus listed things that make us feel like we are not favored with God and told the people that they were blessed if they fit into those not so blessed categories.  Why are those who mourn blessed?  They are blessed because they have a Heavenly Father who has determined a time of comfort for them, at least if they will hang on in faith, continuing to draw His favor.

These unreasonable masters (and unreasonable, evil men) will stand before their Master one day.  They will be judged with a stricter judgment because they were in a position of power and authority.  They abused their power and will thus be treated with their own harsh treatment.

This is not an instruction that makes our flesh feel good.  It is an instruction that delivers our soul from our own sinful tendencies.  You can either be concerned with what you are getting out of life, or you can freely serve God and His purposes.  One thing is certain, you can’t do both!

Our Witness 2 audio

Saturday
Jan042025

The Character of God- Part 4

Subtitle:  God is Gracious

Exodus 34:6-7.  This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on December 29, 2024.

Today, we move to the second aspect of God’s character that is revealed in these verses.  He is Gracious!  What does that really mean?

The concept of God being gracious is closely connected to the previous word, compassion.  In fact, they are often connected as pairs throughout the Old Testament.  God is compassionate and gracious!

A definition of Grace

They are somewhat synonyms, but they have different connotations.  Much like comparing Nacho Cheese Doritos with Cool Ranch Doritos.  They are both Doritos, triangular chips, and made of corn meal.  However, they have a different flavor.  Similarly, synonyms can point to the same thing, but with a different flavor, connotation.

The word compassion has the connotation of an inner softening to the plight of another, which leads to helping them.  The same act can be described with the words grace and gracious.  Yet, the word for gracious here begins in a different place.  It has the concept of favor or delight.  The giver of grace favors the recipient, may even delight in them.  This leads to some action on their behalf, which is intended to delight the recipient.

Like compassion, the noun form, grace, can refer to what is happening in the giver, i.e., God has favor for us.  It can also focus on the act itself.  Jesus is the grace of God.  Yet, it may focus on the resultant effect upon the recipient.  Salvation is the grace of God.

In fact, grace does not require a context of the recipient needing help.  It may simply be a gift for the sake of causing delight in another.  This is typically what is behind gifts that we give around Christmas.  The recipient may or may not have asked for the grace.  The situation may or may not involve needing help.  Yet always, the response is about favor and delight rather than merit.

God is gracious in the Old Testament

In the immediate context of Exodus 34, we were told in chapter 33, verses 12 and 17, of God favoring, having grace for Moses.  It is clear that God’s favoring of Moses is not so much about the job he is given.  Moses does not seem to delight in leading 6 million plus stubborn people through the wilderness.  Rather, the grace is seen in the relationship that God has with Moses.  God is with Him.  God reveals Himself, His character, His designs and purposes, to Moses.

We must be careful that we don’t narrow God’s grace only to powerful works.  You see, God favored Moses, and he did powerful works by obeying the Lord.  But, Exodus 34: 6,7 shows us that this is part of His character.  His favor is not just for Moses, but extends out to the Israelites God sent him to.  However, His favor is not just for Israel, but extends to the nations before whom Israel is to be a witness and bring forth the Anointed One who would fix humanity’s sin problem.

Just as Moses found grace in the eyes of the Lord, so we read the same of Noah in Genesis 6:7-8.  In this situation, there is an immediate threat.  Humanity has become so wicked that the chosen line of the “serpent-crusher” (see Genesis 3:15), is being threatened, which threatens the salvation of humanity.  There is an irony in the Flood passage regarding this.  God has to bring destruction upon humanity in order to protect His plan of saving humanity.  This is how horrible sin is.  God must judge humanity, but Noah found favor, grace, in the eyes of the Lord.  God delights in Noah, and leads him to make an ark that allows his family and many animals to be spared the devastating effects of the flood.

This irony crops up in the lives of individuals as well.  Sometimes God allows the destruction of certain things in our life to protect the possibility of our redemption.

These stories are not about Noah and Moses being the “teacher’s pet.”  He does see a faithfulness to Him within them and it draws His favor, but His work of grace in their lives is all about His larger desire to help, favor, humanity in our current problem of sin.

We see a similar thing in the story of Abraham.  We don’t end up with a statement, “Abraham found grace in the eyes of the LORD.”  However, Genesis 18 implicitly says it.  The LORD and two angels have approached Abraham in the heat of the day.  He sees them and runs out to them.  “My LORD, if now I have found favor (grace) in Your sight, please do not pass Your servant by.”  We then see that they come and eat a meal with Abraham.  The LORD even reveals to Abraham that the time for Sarah to finally conceive has come.  Within a year, she will give birth to a son!  On top of this, the LORD also reveals to Abraham the coming destruction upon Sodom.  Abraham intercedes for the cities of the plain.  He is pictured as the man of God’s favor interceding for a people who are in the dark about His coming judgment.  The intercession doesn’t save the city, but it does save Lot and his family.  The whole passage is dripping with the answer to Abraham’s conditional, “if I have found favor…”  Abraham has found grace in the eyes of the LORD.

Thus, the description of God as gracious has been highlighted throughout the passages leading up to this and continues on throughout all of the Old Testament.  Genesis three and the Fall of Humanity doesn’t have the words grace or gracious in it.  Yet, it is absolutely clear that Adam and Eve were dwelling in the favor of God in the garden.  It was His gift to them, a paradise.  Yet, the serpent tricks them into distrusting God and taking hold of their own benefit.  In the scene where all three of them are being judged before the LORD, it is clear that God favors humanity against the serpent.  Even the punishment upon Adam and Eve bears a grace in teaching them the goodness of God even in their unfaithfulness.

Thus, even though grace is simply a gift and doesn’t require the concept of help, this is and has been the true condition of humanity from the Fall to this day.  We are a world full of sin and distrust of God.  We are a world trusting in our own wisdom and our own ability to benefit ourselves.  If God doesn’t help us, then we are not going to make it.  The good news is that God has help us, is even now helping us, and will help us even more in the future.

Israel becomes a picture of God’s larger desire to help humanity in the face of our inability to trust Him enough to make that happen.  The chosen line, and then in Israel, the chosen nation, is not about those who obtain grace and those who don’t.  It is about God protecting the means by which He will give grace to all of humanity.  There are two more scenes of grace in the Old Testament that I want to visit.

In Genesis 33:10, Jacob has returned from what we call northeast Syria after being gone for 20 years.  He had taken advantage of his brother’s hunger to obtain the birthright (a double portion of their father’s estate, etc.), and then, through deception, stole the blessing that Isaac was going to give to Esau.  Jacob left because he knew Esau was angry enough to kill him.

Here, twenty years later, God has told Jacob to go back “home.”  He knows that he has to face Esau if he is to live there.  He needs Esau’s forgiveness, but can’t see how that is going to happen.  This verse is at the end of all that Jacob does to appease his very dangerous brother (who was coming with 400 very dangerous men).  Jacob is asking forgiveness.  “If now I have found favor in your sight, then accept my gift from my hand, for I see your face as one sees the face of God, and you have received me favorably.”  Notice that Jacob uses language of Esau as his master and lord, even as God.  This is how important forgiveness from Esau is to him.  Shocker of shockers, Esau gives grace to Jacob, and he is enabled to dwell in the land without fear of reprisals from his brother.  However, sin and forgiveness are not always at the heart of the recipient’s need for grace.  Let’s look at a part of the story of Esther.

Esther 8:5 has Esther approaching king Xerxes in order to ask for grace for her people.  The king has been manipulated by the wicked Haman to empower him to exterminate the Jewish people.  The king did not know that his queen was also a Jew.  Yet, Esther is not a queen like we might think.  She could not enter the king’s presence without a summons from him.  To do so carried the penalty of death, unless the king gave his grace, his favor, and forgave the offense.

The king does delight in Esther, and so, he is gracious to her and her people.  This gives a picture of the intercessor who approaches the king for the sake of their people, rather than for themselves.  We saw this intercession with Moses in Exodus 33.

This becomes a backdrop for understanding the person of Jesus, and ultimately his Church.  In Jesus, God has become a part of the human family.  Thus, he intercedes before God the Father on behalf of humanity, but particularly those who have put their faith in him.  Yet, it may be more proper to see Esther as a picture of the Church of Jesus.  Because God’s favor rest upon Jesus, He will grant him his requests, so our relationship with Jesus brings upon us the favor of the Father too.  We are to use that favor to intercede on behalf of our people who are in jeopardy of the judgment because we too were under a death sentence.

Jesus is the grace of God

This brings us to understanding Jesus as the grace of God.  John’s gospel presents Jesus as a gift from the King of Heaven.  In John 1:14-18, we are told that Jesus is “full of grace and truth.”  In verse 16, he is even “grace upon grace.”  The sense here is that Jesus is the capstone of a long series of God’s grace.  He is both the fullness of grace and the overflow of God’s grace.

In verse 17, the NASB says that Grace and Truth were “realized” through Messiah Jesus.  It literally came into being and came through him.  The body of Jesus began at a point of time.  Prior to this, the Word existed with God and as God throughout eternity past.  Thus, we can contemplate the man Jesus as the fulfilling of the grace of God through what he did.  However, as the Word, we understand that he was always the fullness of God’s grace set in the heavens where no devil could touch it.  Awaiting the moment when the Father would signal the time for incarnating into this world as a human.

When the Word took on flesh and became a human, it opened the door for a new relationship with God the Father that was not available before, at least not in that intimate sense.  Jesus is more than a vehicle of God’s grace.  Rather, He embodies the graciousness of God. 

This leads us to John speaking of the Son being given to the world as a gift in John 3:16-17.  Somehow, humanity has drawn the favor of God.  Yet, God has given His favor in such a way that we must believe in Jesus, trust in him, in order to receive that eternal life.  Imagine this.  The Bible presents both Israel and the Gentiles in a sinful fallen state, and yet, He favored us by sending a gift of His Grace, Jesus.  A gift is given as opposed to a paycheck.  We did not merit it.  Any of our works fell woefully short of accomplishing any salvation.  Yet, God gives us what we don’t deserve.

The Apostle Paul picks up on this in the classic verses on grace, Ephesians 2:8-10.  It says that we have been saved by grace (God delighting to do it) through faith.  If you look at the verses, they emphasize that salvation is a gift.  The work of salvation is entirely the work of God.  “Not by works, so that no one may boast.”  Yet, in verse 10, God does have works for us to do.

The point is that we are not to imagine that we can do a work that merits His grace.  Instead, we are to do works of thankfulness for His gracious salvation in Jesus.

Sometimes people over emphasize that it is faith that is the gift of God.  In other words, you couldn’t even trust God if He didn’t give you a gift of faith.  However, the gift of God refers not just to faith, but to the whole grace of salvation.  It is not just a gift of ability to trust, but of the whole grounds upon which trusting could obtain the grace of salvation.  It was the grace of God that created humans in a way that we could be redeemed.  It was the grace of God that sent a redeemer who would be faithful to do what we could not (would not, even if we could) do for ourselves.  It is the grace of God that our trust in Jesus is acceptable to him in our disqualified state.  It is the grace of God that we are able to believe even after a lifetime of being in bondage to sin.  This is the mystery of the immense grace of God lavished upon humanity.  All of it is grace; all of it is a gift from God.

John presents to us that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus is offered as a generous gift of life that is more powerful than our mortality, than death itself.  We now have a relationship with the Father through Jesus in which He pours His eternal life into us each day.  This eternal life works to displace sin and fill us with the works of true righteousness out of thanks.  We can question if it is working, but God’s grace is working in our life.  We were saved when we believed in Jesus (from judgment), we are being saved (from sin and its effects), and we shall be saved on that day when He completes our redemption through the resurrection from the dead!  You can have assurance now because of the faithfulness of God Himself, not because of your perfect performance in the now.

This grace of Jesus is more powerful than our experience of life.  Imagine an Israelite who was a slave in Egypt, and had waited for God’s deliverance all of their life.  Imagine that they die the year before Moses comes out of the wilderness to confront Pharaoh with God.  Did that person miss out on the grace of God?  That is often how we picture it.  If such and such doesn’t happen in my life, then God doesn’t love me, doesn’t have grace for me.  The same is true for things that do happen.  God doesn’t have grace for me because I was born as a slave in Egypt!  These are the ways we tend to think about God’s grace.

But, the testimony of scripture is that God’s grace is bigger than our experience of life.  Of course, as Americans, we have had an experience of life that is better than most of humanity has ever experienced.  Yet, when you are in a problem, that line of reasoning doesn’t comfort you.  It is still the truth nonetheless.  The promise of the resurrection of the righteous will fill with delight even the most tragic of lives.  Countless numbers of people who were martyred via horrible methods will rise and shine like the stars.  They will bask in the favor and delight of God while being filled with delight themselves.  Their past lives of pain and sorrow will only cause the present glory to be all the more flavorful, all the more glorious!

Another thing we see in this story of God’s grace is that gifts only require a person to accept them.  We can also over-emphasize that God’s grace is a gift.  “You don’t do anything,” is the mantra of some.  Yes, but a gift does require someone to receive it, to take hold of it.  It happens every day that God’s offer of salvation is rejected by people.  “You can keep your ‘gift!’ I don’t want it.”  God is saying to the whole world that He has a gift of salvation for us.  However, He will not force us to take hold of it.  A person can spurn the gift of God, the grace of God, and miss it, walk away from it.  In fact, it is rare for those who do accept God’s offer of salvation to have not missed it throughout their life.  Few belief at the first presentation of God’s grace to them.

So, what makes us delightful and favorable in the eyes of the LORD?  Yes, Noah found grace in the eyes of the LORD, but how will it ever be said that Marty (insert your name) found grace in the eyes of the LORD, to be favorable to Him?  We tend to look for merit.  Yet, this cannot obtain the grace of God.

In one sense, there is nothing we can do, should do, because we already have the favor of God.  He has favored humanity and made salvation possible for all, if they will only trust in Jesus.  He has done the heavy lifting and put the salvation of Jesus in front of you.  You don’t deserve it, but there it is.  God’s favor to you.  This is because of who He is and what He made us to be.  He made us to be His imagers.  He doesn’t crush failed imagers.  In His favor, He makes a way for us to be redeemed and image Him in truth!

Yet, in another sense, we do need to take hold of this favor.  If His current favor is to effectively bring me to favor at the final judgment, I must properly take hold of it.  We do this by owning our sin.  We quit making the case for our own righteousness (self righteousness), and we agree that it took Jesus dying on a cross to effect our salvation (my salvation).

Those who insist on their own works, and even deride the idea that Jesus paid the price for our sins, are being proud.  Their ego refuses to see the grossness of their sin.  Such pride and arrogance in the face of God’s grace is not lovely to Him.  But, humbling yourself and recognizing that you do not deserve the grace that He has lavished upon you, this is lovely and beautiful to God.  When we surrender and put our trust completely in Jesus and His wisdom, then the current favor of God becomes the same favor that will protect us when we stand before Him on the shores of eternity future.

Like the prodigal son who approaches the father only hoping to be a slave, we come to God knowing we really don’t even deserve to be His slave. Yet, He takes us in His arms and clothes us with robes of righteousness.  He slaughters the fattened calf and holds a celebration that, “My son who was dead is now alive!”

Our belief in Jesus is not just intellectual belief that he lived, or that he was resurrected.  It truly is a trusting in his work and his teaching to us.  Are any of us absolutely perfect in our trust?  Of course, not.  We often have times of doubt, selfishness, even choosing our way over the top of His.  Yet, God’s grace is not about perfect performance.  It is about trusting His character even in the midst of our own mistakes and failures.  Our goal is not to get away with sin, but to become like Jesus.  May God help us to see His great favor in our life despite all the things that we could point to in order to deny its reality.

God is Gracious audio