Bits & Pieces (7/2/12)

  • How Would You Like To Wear Your Joy? – ” The everlasting joy of the redeemed is complete. It satisfies every longing, every holy desire. This joy was in the fellowship of the Godhead before the creation of the world. And in the end, it will rest upon us, and make us able to enjoy him with his own joy.”

 

  • The Busy Trap – Written from a decidedly non-Christian perspective (Proverbs for one has a lot to see against this gentleman’s view on idleness) the thesis of this post about why people are choosing busy lives is interesting. (H/T)

 

 

 

  • Calvinism and Enjoyable Christian Experience – “[B]iblical theology that exalts God in His sovereign grace and glory opens the door for man to enter into a quite different order of reality. Here is offered the experience of, and delight in, the rich pleasures of restoration to fellowship with God, transformation into the likeness of Christ, and anticipation of being with Christ where He is in order to see Him in His glory (John 17:24).
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No Greater Debt

Spend some time on an elementary school playground and you will likely hear some intense negotiations happening. Whether it’s for lunch trades or picking dodgeball teams, young children are intent on striking a balance between what they give and what they receive. It doesn’t take them long to recognize a perceived inequity and most of them will do something to correct it if the slight is to their disadvantage.

It’s a mindset that we often carry with us well pass our days on the playground. “You need to get what’s yours” and “don’t let anyone walk all over you” are common refrains. However, the Christian is called to have a different stance. “Turn the other cheek” and “if someone forces you to go with them one mile go with them two” are to be part of our parlance (See Mt. 5:38-42). Keeping accounts balanced looks much different for us – for the greatest inequity has already been wiped clean; the depth of our debt towards Christ has been settled. We therefore have no need to keep score with others; the one who knows and appreciates true forgiveness of our eternal errors, sees no reason to keep a balance with anyone else.

This is why Scripture reminds us that we are to forgive others in the same manner that Christ forgave us (Col. 3:13; Eph. 4:32). A child of God knows that not only has their greatest debt been erased, but that God has adopted us into His own family. He didn’t just forgive us; He made us His own.

So we are to forgive the debt of others towards us. For there is no greater debt than the one of which we have already been forgiven.

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