Growing in Grace

I work in business. One of the common refrains once you’re in management is that “this management thing would be a whole lot easier if it wasn’t for the people.” And its true. If everything worked on autopilot, everything would be a lot simpler. It wouldn’t be nearly as entertaining, but it would definitely run smoother.

The same could be said about many people’s walk of faith. “If it wasn’t for Christians, this Christian thing would be a lot easier.” For many people, Christians challenge what they believe to be true about God mostly because regardless of how you slice it, we’re all still sinners. For some reason, its easier to accept our own frailties than those of others, but that’s a tangent for another time. Suffice to say, Christians make us rethink Christianity in a number of ways. We challenge God’s extension of grace to people we deem less-than-worthy. We mock the sincerity of another’s faith because their actions don’t meet our high standards. And for those who have been in the Church for any length of time, you quickly learn that other believers cause you the greatest pain and the deepest grief. God didn’t intend for it be this way, but then again, God didn’t intend for Eve to eat the fruit.

What God did intend was that other Christians would be our primary nourishment for growing in grace. As John Bunyan said, “Christians are like the flowers in a garden, that have each of them the dew of Heaven, which, being shaken with the wind, they let fall at each other’s roots, whereby they are jointly nourished, and become nourishers of each other.” In other words, Christians should encourage our faith, not detract from it.

Maybe its easier to think of fellow believers not as nourishment, but as fertilizers. Even with all the garbage mixed in, they build our strength, solidify our resolve, and cause us to grow in grace.

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Mindful of Heaven

My pastor is fond of sharing a quotation by CS Lewis regarding how some people feel that Christians are so heavenly-minded that they won’t do any Earthly good. CS Lewis retorted that it was only when we are heavenly minded that we do any Earthly good. Thoughts of heaven are like the scoreboard at the football game. It reminds us of our ultimate satisfaction and encourages us to strive for victory. Heaven can seem to have little to do with Earth until we remember that the whole purpose of this life is to prepare us for the next.

Thoughts of heaven serve another purpose too. They remind us of what we are giving up when we walk contrary to what God desires. If every good and perfect gift is from above (see James 1) than everything that we are made for, everything our heart seeks, is to be found in heaven. Poor substitutes are found here on Earth and yet sometimes we settle for the also-runs. Thoughts of heaven remind us of what we are actually giving up in order to take advantage of those temporary pleasures. As Frederick Ward Kates reminds us, “The purpose of religion–at any rate, the Christian religion–is not to get you into heaven, but to get heaven into you.” Our walk of faith is designed so that more and more we seek the same things that God desires so that we are better prepared for the fullness of satisfaction that comes when we finally join Him.

A song that we use to sing as Sunday Schoolers sums it up nicely:

Heaven is a wonderful place
Full of mercy and grace
I want to see my Savior’s face
And heaven is a wonderful place
I want to go there.

Lord, let it be.

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