Saturday, April 07, 2007

Careless

What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? Romans 6:1

Does grace lead to moral laxity? Is it a bit like telling students at the beginning of the year that they will all pass with a straight-A? I’ve always sympathized with what Flannery O’Connor said about one of her characters in the novel A Good Man Is Hard to Find: “The old woman would have been a good woman if only someone had held a gun to her head every day of her life.” Take away the threat, and we grow careless.

Knowing that grace trumps every sin (see Romans 5:20-21), would any of us deny that sometimes we’ve taken advantage of grace, sinned with the thought of repenting of it afterward, because there is always grace? Yet Paul’s response to this possibility is indignant, almost horrified: “By no means!” What a ghastly thought!
Why is Paul so indignant? Because grace initiates a “relocation program.” In receiving grace, we receive a new identity, become citizens of another kingdom, are placed in a new family. We are saved to live a new life.

“Can . . . Christians live as though they were still in their sins?” asks commentator John Stott. “Well, yes, I suppose they could,” he says, “at least for a little while. . . . But let them remember who they are. Let them recall . . . [the meaning] of their new life of union in Christ.”
Grace has given us a new identity. How can we do anything other than live accordingly?

PRAYER
Dear Lord, may we die daily to sin and be alive to you. Help us not to take your grace for granted, but to remember who we are—and how much you’ve given for us. Amen.

1 comment:

Shannon said...

Amen to that!

God's grace is nothing to take lightly and I confess that I have had those very same thoughts before in my Christian walk. I have realized what a disgrace, offense, and sin it is against Jesus.

I pray that all of our hearts are opened to the costly grace that has been bestowed upon us through Jesus Christ.