Thursday, April 18, 2013

BRENNAN MANNING HAS GONE HOME


Someone said this, and I SO agree..."Every addict I’ve ever known__every person who has crashed and burned and, as a result, come to terms with their own powerlessness__has taught me something about God’s grace that I would’ve never known otherwise."

Brennan Manning is a case-in-point. His alcohol addiction was a life-long struggle. But his understanding of grace came in the midst of that struggle. He authored books like "The Ragamuffin Gospel" and many others that presented the grace of God in ways that are astounding.

He has gone home and into the presence of the One whose grace astounds us all. He was 78 years young.

Here's one article of his that says it all.

"Our culture has made the word grace impossible to understand. We resonate with slogans such as:

“There’s no free lunch.”

“You get what you deserve.”

“You want love? Earn it.”

“You want mercy? Show that you deserve it.

“Do unto others before they do unto you.”

“By all means, give others what they deserve but not one penny more.”

A friend told me she overheard a pastor say to a child, “God loves good little boys.” As I listen to sermons with their pointed emphasis on personal effort–no pain, no gain–I get the impression that a do-it-yourself spirituality is the American fashion.


Though the Scriptures insist on God’s initiative in the work of salvation–that by grace we are saved, that the Tremendous Lover has taken to the chase–our spirituality often starts with self, not God…We sweat through various spiritual exercises as if they were designed to produce a Christian Charles Atlas.


Though lip service is paid to the gospel of grace, many Christians live as if only personal discipline and self-denial will mold the perfect me. The emphasis is on what I do rather than on what God is doing. In this curious process God is a benign old spectator in the bleachers who cheers when I show up for morning quiet time. Our eyes are not on God. At heart we are practicing Pelagians. We believe that we can pull ourselves up by our bootstraps–indeed, we can do it ourselves.

Sooner or later we are confronted with the painful truth of our inadequacy and insufficiency. Our security is shattered and our bootstraps are cut. Once the fervor has passed, weakness and infidelity appear. We discover our inability to add even a single inch to our spiritual stature. Life takes on a joyless, empty quality.


We begin to resemble the leading character in Eugene O’Neill’s play The Great God Brown: “Why am I afraid to dance, I who love music and rhythm and grace and song and laughter? Why am I afraid to live, I who love life and the beauty of flesh and the living colors of the earth and sky and sea? Why am I afraid to love, I who love love?”

Something is radically wrong.

Our huffing and puffing to impress God, our scrambling for brownie points, our thrashing about trying to fix ourselves while hiding our pettiness and wallowing in guilt are nauseating to God and are a flat out denial of the gospel of grace."


Brennan Manning


I could not agree more and "thank you" Brother Manning


Paul B.

Monday, April 15, 2013

DOING THE RIGHT THINGS RIGHT.


People seem hell-bent [literally] on trying religion as their hope. "Doing" the right religious things and doing them "right" is often the measurement of success in our culture of Christianity even when that kind of success is deadly to the soul of man.

 "Doing the right thing right" could even be defined as  keeping the ten commandments, having a quiet time, going to church, or doing what Jesus would do and it would still be deadly. It is the same sin committed by Adam when God told him to NOT eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, and he did anyway. 

Knowing what is "good" and what is "evil" and trying to do the "good" the right way is as bad as doing the "evil." It is that same independent spirit Adam had originally that is found at the heart of rules keeping and being religious, with the same results. Death!

What we discover is that even doing a "right" thing right and trying to please God, is the "wrong" thing because, as already stated, it evidences that we're caught up in that original independent spirit instead of walking in FAITH trusting that He's accomplished it ALL on our behalf and we must remember that.." Whatsoever is not of faith...is sin."

What God is after is relationship and it has nothing to do with following any rules. It is trusting Him explicitly, from start to finish, because it is a grace thing entirely with the very gift of His life as our own. We don't do "good things right to have a good life." He IS our life. 

It is a CHOICE between relationship OR rules/religion, because a real relationship can NEVER be defined or reduced to RULES KEEPING even if they're religious rules. That may be religion but it is not the relationship of grace

But when we choose to rest in who He is and what He is___on our behalf___which is what faith is___we may do right things well, [even wrong things on occasion as well] but the motive will not be to get Him pleased with us, but rather, celebrating who and what He Is to us by grace. That's a real relationship.

Paul B.

Friday, April 05, 2013

GOD'S BEAR-HUG


I absolutely LOVE that verse in Luke 15 where the prodigal son is seen making his way home from the sorry mess he'd made of things. These words describe it.. “And he arose [the prodigal son] and came to his father. But when he was still a great way off, his father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him.” (Lk 15:20)

Notice the father! Can you imagine it? He bear-hugged him.The word "fell" is the Greek word ἐπέπεσεν which means "to embrace or to hug." It goes on to say the father "Kissed" him Now THAT'S what I would call a real bear hug.

Will it surprise you to know that's EXACTLY the same word used in Acts 10:44 where it says, "The Holy Spirit fell [there it is] on all those who heard the word." When His Word is heard in brokenness, remember Peter had just preached a whopper of a sermon and they were really broken up over their condition, there is a real bear hug from the Holy Spirit in the making. That's just what the prodigal got upon his return in brokenness.

[I'm discounting neither the anointing of the Spirit nor the baptism of the Spirit that places us into the Body of Christ when I say this.]

This seems to me to be part of the ministry of the Holy Spirit as He makes God's love real to us relationally and it seems to happen__ with some regularity__ when we've really messed up. I think that's extra special in that it characterizes the kind of love our Heavenly Father delights in bestowing on us as His kids. ESPECIALLY when we come clean about messing up. He doesn't love us MORE when we DON'T mess up and He doesn't love us LESS when we DON'T come clean about it. But I do think we are able to RECEIVE AND EXPERIENCE His love more when we learn our mess ups are a heavenly hug and a Kingly kiss "moment in the making." Maybe we haven't learned this because we've lost sight on His love being lavished on us ON THE BASIS OF THE CROSS instead of our success or achievements. We tend to think He keeps His distance when we've not done well. Not true!

You see, God's love is not cold and distant at all, especially when we foul things up, But it is a close and passionate experience when we don't think of His love in cold doctrinal terms. I believe we're to see the Father's agape love as an embracing and enfolding of us with a purposeful and passionate flinging of His arms around us, when we need it the most. The thing to remember is...This is not a momentary emotion with Him, but it is the constant expression of His divine nature and character through the Holy Spirit. HE IS LOVE. All this because the Cross HAS ENABLED HIM TO BE JUST in the doing of it. [Romans 3:26] That is INCREDIBLE.

So the next time things are rough or the bitter taste of defeat is in your mouth, just let God be who He really is to you. Let Him bear hug and kiss you as you readily admit exactly where you are  [It's called confession.] because He doesn't love you any less because of failure or love you any more because of faithfulness. He just loves you. That's who He is.

Paul B.

Monday, April 01, 2013

THE MESSAGE WITH THE AROMA OF LIFE


Mary and I just sailed the Aegean sea this past week. It was rough on occasion and totally delightful on occasion depending on the condition of the sea. I noticed especially two of many interesting things on board that ship. One was the anchor and the other a life ring to be tossed in any "Man overboard" moment. Different things with different purposes and they worked correctly only when fulfilling their true purpose. Don't ever try to stay safe above water with an anchor tied to you and don't ever try to keep a ship stable in the water with a life ring on a chain. You see what I mean.!

I find it interesting that the true gospel message is often lost and becomes what it really isn't. Good news is what it is, and it is like a life ring to people who are drowning when heard and received. But when the true gospel is lost the message being preached and received will become like an anchor that sinks the person holding on to it. The aroma of Life results from the former but the stench of death from the latter.

How can we know if we've lost the true gospel as our message? it would help to ask certain questions about any message being preached or being heard.

One question is... does the message you're sharing or hearing cause people to fix their eyes exclusively on Christ and what He alone has done? At the risk of sounding simplistic, whatever a person's need in life, our answer always starts with Jesus and His finished work at the Cross.

I was reminded of this as I visited the old ruins of first century Corinth last week. Paul stayed eighteen months there and later wrote a letter to them from Ephesus, a letter we call 1 Corinthians. In it he said he came to them determined to know nothing "except Christ and Him crucified." [1 Corinthians. 2:2]  He had just experienced the philosophy and wisdom of man in Athens and smelled the stench of death permeating the entire place and saw the hopelessness found in any other god or message. His message [the true gospel] revealed Jesus Christ and His Cross and the resurrection and was the power for salvation and life to all who received it.

Any other message [man's wisdom] would only be a powerless substitute, a flesh fling, and a wasted moment in time. That's because only Jesus is the supreme manifestation of the character and purpose of God. Any message that diminishes Jesus actually insults the Spirit of grace. Jesus is without peer and nothing compares to Him. He has become for us wisdom from God and Paul would boast (preach) of nothing less. (1 Co 1:30-31)

Another question to ask is...does the message being shared or heard demand an utter faith dependence on Jesus? Jesus said, “apart from me you can do nothing” (Jn 15:5). Granted, the call to follow Christ brings us face to face with the impossible. How do we love as He loves us when people act the way they act? How do we forgive as we've been forgiven when people hurt others so deeply? How do we remain pure to vows and promises when others flaunt their broken promises and words?

Let me put your mind at ease immediately: I guarantee that in our own strength and effort we can't. But when we CHOOSE to TRUST His life in us, the power flows and we will see the impossible accomplished. But all, including each of us, will know whereof the power.

Sadly, much is being done apart from His life and Spirit in us and most of it is OTHER STUFF__ like church attendance or bible reading or conference attending__ which can be used to measure our success as Christians. And, because we’re so busy doing OTHER STUFF [all good things perhaps] we’re worn out and miss real opportunities to do the greater works such as unconditional love, acceptance, and forgiveness, all of which have the aroma of the Christ-life about them. The true gospel will always inspire us to risk relationships with the outcasts, wounded people, hated people, in His name, but the false message will only promote activity in the name of religion.

Finally, ask the question...Does the message I'm sharing or hearing release peace and joy as it's fruit? It's interesting to me that Paul began every one of his letters with this: "Grace and peace to you from God the Father." It is ONLY a revelation of God's favor that brings true peace. If the message you're sharing or hearing doesn’t reveal Jesus and the gift of His righteousness, then you will never experience the peace and joy that comes with it. It really is all about Jesus. He took our sin and gave us His righteousness (2 Co 5:21). This is what the gospel reveals – a righteousness from God that is received by faith from first to last (Rm 1:17). When you know that God sees and counts you as righteous as Jesus, you will be empowered to reign in life (Rm 5:17).

So the real key is actually knowing His righteousness has become ours: Are we resting in His or are we trying to impress Him with ours? A false message will seek to manufacture righteousness through works and holy living. it will prescribe a course of action for us to take and it will instantly fail the above three tests. It will burden us with loads we cannot carry and expectations we cannot live up to. Before you know it, we will be as stressed and as joyless as Martha. There will be the stench of Athens [death] about us instead of the aroma of life. [Christ]

The gospel really is the message with the aroma of life.