“…God understands.” – Pastor Jun Cebanico

[Kindly read my previous two posts to understand the context of this one. Thanks.]

I saw in several posts on Facebook a quote from Pastor Jun Cebanico, Given Grace Cebanico’s father, that says, “We don’t understand but God understands.”

When Pastor Jun Cebanico said this, he probably meant, “We don’t understand why this happened but God does.” And this is so true. We humans have limited vision and knowledge. We experience time in a limited way. But God is not bound by our limitations. He sees all of time as a whole. He knows every consequence and every result of the chain reaction of consequences every single event produces. His wisdom and knowledge takes into account every single event in history. Such things we could not even grasp.

In the book of Habakkuk, Habakkuk asked God why God’s answer to the violence and injustice in Judah was greater violence by the hands of the Babylonians who were sent to invade Judah. God’s answer? “You would not understand even if I told you.”

It’s not that God did not want to explain it. It’s more of that Habakkuk would not even have the capacity to grasp the answer even if God explained it. Why more pain? Why more injustice? It would take a very long explanation here but centuries later, this very event led to the events that would cause the rapid expansion of the gospel in the whole Roman empire, the salvation of the world and the dramatic reduction of violence and injustice in the Empire. But how would Habakkuk understand?

I guess it was like a doctor trying to explain to a 2-year old toddler the intricacies of why he needed to administer the antibiotic shot. Could you imagine this dialogue with me?

“Baby, you have been infected by a strain of Gram positive bacteria that is currently attacking your digestive system. If the infection persists, your system would release so much water through your bowel movement and vomiting that you would soon be dehydrated. Do you follow? What you need is an antibiotic specifically targeting the strain of bacteria that you have. This antibiotic shot I will give you will target the cell wall of the bacteria you are infected with. It will inhibit cell wall development and hence cause the death of the bacteria. You get that so far? However, due to your tendency to vomit, this cannot be administered to you orally. It has to be done intraveinously…yadda…yadda…yadda…”

That toddler will have absolutely no capacity to comprehend that. All he knows is that he will experience tremendous pain but he can only trust that his parents and the doctor know what they are doing.

In the same way, it is infinitely far beyond our remote comprehension as to why such a fate would befall Given Grace. We can only trust that God does what He says He does when He says, “All things work together for the good of those who love Him.”

As to how this work of the Devil can be turned around for the good of Given Grace and her family, I don’t have the slightest idea. In a way, a lot of people have heard the gospel and have put their faith in Christ because of this but I guess this doesn’t even measure up to the whole explanation.

But this is not exactly the point of this post. My point is that what Pastor Jun Cebanico said that “…God understands” goes way beyond “…God understands why.”

You see, He also understands how it feels like to lose an innocent Child to unjust and violent men. He knows what a Father feels to see His Child do nothing but good, healing the sick, bringing good news, raising the dead and then experience betrayal from these very people he helped. When instead of crying, “Thank you, thank you” they shouted “Crucify Him,…crucify Him.”

He saw His Son given the thirty-nine lashes which shredded His back. He saw His Son being made to carry that rough timber of a cross up the rocky mountain path. He saw His Son being spit on and mocked by the very same people He came to save. He saw the the nails driven into His hands and feet, hitting major nerves and resulting to excruciating pain. He saw His Son suffer such violence and heard His Son saying, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”

He witnessed the injustice as His Son took on all our sins and the punishment due our sins. He saw all the disciples but one (John) forsake His Son during His greatest time of need. His heart was torn in piece as He saw His Son, cry “My God, My God, why have You abandoned Me,” as He Himself, had to turn away from His Son because of the sin He bore.

He saw as His Son bore the greatest violence and injustice in all history for the world of sinners He loved. It was in His and His Son’s greatest sacrifice that grace, such as the grace given to Given Grace, was poured over for all mankind, so that by faith in His Son, we would no longer have to suffer the same fate. The greatest suffering and injustice brought about the greatest salvation, the greatest good to all us unworthy sinners who would believe – the forgiveness of all our sins and the crediting to us of all His Son’s righteousness.

You see, for every suffering person, for every person suffering injustice, for every parent who has to suffer the loss of a child, God understands. He more than understands why. He and His Son experienced it.

P.S. As I was writing this another pastor from Nueva Ecija, Pastor Jun Marquez, wrote me that his 10-year old son, Josh Marquez, also suffered injustice and death as he was hit by a car as he was buying food after the Sunday service. I hope we could all join in and pray for them as well. Thank you.

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Related posts:
Given Grace has been given grace: A Tribute
Given Grace – When God Doesn’t Make Sense

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Given Grace – When God Doesn’t Make Sense

Last night I wrote a blog post in tribute to Given Grace Cebanico and I hadn’t realized the impact that it would make and, morse so, how many people would be reading it.  In the first two hours after it was posted, more than 500 people read the article and now just a few hours, over 1,700 and growing. [If you came to this blogpost directly, kindly read my previous post first entitled Given Grace has been given grace: A Tribute. Thank you.]

I really don’t know Given Grace personally.  I only read about her.  Her home church is in Rizal but upon looking at her Facebook wall posts and those of her friends, it seems that she had been also visiting our Victory Los Banos church (she had a wall post that says, “Unreached doesn’t mean unreachable”, which was the tagline of our previous Sunday series, CROSSing CULTURES).

I have received a lot of comments and messages of thanks here and on Facebook because the blog post helped comfort them. One in particular was from a close family friend of theirs and co-worker of her father, Pastor Jun Cebanico, in the ministry.  I am glad that this message has reached her family and friends and I do hope that the blogpost helped bring comfort to them.

I also received messages from a lot of Christians who were wrestling with God and were trying to make sense of it all – of why such a young and sweet girl, a follower of Christ, the daughter of a pastor, a child of God, would suffer such atrocities in the hands of evil men.

I don’t have the answers. No one has; only God.  However, for those seeking comfort and understanding because of what happened, and even for those who are going through similar situations where it seems like God doesn’t make sense, I’m posting here for download three of the messages I delivered a few months back from a series called WHEN GOD DOESN’T MAKE SENSE.  Below is the bumper video.

This message series does not provide the answers why, but it does reveal Who God is during times when things don’t seem to make sense, especially when the innocent suffer and when evil and injustice abound.  It also shows us how God wants us to respond in times like these.

There were also those who wanted a deeper understanding of the grace of God that we have been given and which Given Grace had been named after.  I’m also making available a message I delivered more than a month ago entitled GRACE AND LOVE which talks about that which a lot of people, even Christians, take for granted in their everyday lives.  I hope this message inspires you and transforms you just as it has inspired and transformed me and hundreds of people who have heard it.  I believe this is the message behind Given Grace’s name.

I hope both of these sets of messages help bring comfort, encouragement and hope for all of you.

Again, let’s continue to pray for Given Grace’s family, friends and loved ones. Don’t worry about Given Grace.  With the instant that she came into the presence of God, everything that has happened to her, the trauma, the pain, the fear, have all been wiped away.  Such a a torrent of eternal love and peace fills her now, such a spectacle of God’s beauty and majesty fills her eyes that right now to her there are no more tears, no more pain, no more fears, no more shame.

Download links:
WHEN GOD DOESN’T MAKE SENSE
Part 1 – When I Don’t Understand
Part 2 – When It Takes Too Long
Part 3 – When Bad Things Happen

GRACE AND LOVE

May Christ and His peace be with all of you.

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Related posts:
Given Grace has been given grace: A Tribute
“…God understands.” – Pastor Jun Cebanico

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Given Grace has been given grace: A tribute

It was only today that I heard of news of a tragedy that happened in my alma mater, The University of the Philippines Los Banos (UPLB). Given Grace Cebanico, a third year BS Computer Science student, an Evangelical Christian and daughter of a Pastor Jun Cebanico of Binangonan, Rizal, was found dead in a canal with bruises all over her body, her hands tied, tape covering her mouth and a bullet shot in her head. The initial investigation of the police reveals that she may have been raped before being executed.

Family, friends, the UPLB community and alumni clamor for justice to be given to Given Grace. All over Facebook you see pictures of a black ribbon with the words “Justice for Given” written on it.

And I agree. I hope and pray that the criminals who did this to her would be caught and brought to justice. Such things should never be allowed to go unpunished.

My heart goes out to her family and friends. Though I don’t know them personally, I grieve with them. I pray that they may be comforted and strengthened in this trying time.

I’ve seen a lot of blog posts already on news and opinions about what happened. I’m not blogging about this to jump on the bandwagon. Neither am I taking advantage of the tragedy to write about something that some would probably like to read about.

My personal interests are these: firstly, though I don’t know her personally, she is a sister in Christ. Secondly, she is a fellow pastor’s daughter. I’ve got two daughters of my own and I just don’t know how I would personally react if such a thing happens to either of them. Thirdly, a lot of questions have arisen why such a thing would happen and I would like to somehow help bring comfort to her family and friends whom she has left behind.

And lastly, her name, Given Grace. There is surely a reason why her parents gave her such a name. They have a message in that name. God has a message in that name. And by writing about it, I hope to give tribute to her, to her parents and, most of all to the Lord Who gave her and all of us grace.

I will not even try to explain why such a thing happened. There are some things we will never ever know in this world. One thing I know, God is NOT the Author of such things. Why He would allow such a thing to happen? Pastor Jun Cebanico, Given Grace’s father, says, “we don’t understand, but God understands.”

I admire the faith of Pastor Jun Cebanico and his trust in God. He knows it is okay to grieve. He grieves but not like one who grieves without hope because he knows that his daughter has merely fallen asleep and will rise again when the Lord Jesus returns. He knows that her spirit is with the Lord.

“Brothers, we do not want you to be ignorant about those who fall asleep, or to grieve like the rest of men, who have no hope. We believe that Jesus died and rose again and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him.”
1 Thessalonians 4:13-14

Why does he believe this? Because just like her name says, Given Grace had been given grace. And more than receiving JUSTICE, Given Grace has been JUSTIFIED by God’s grace because she put her faith in Christ Jesus.

“This righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. There is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus.”
Romans 3:22-24

‘Justified’ means “just as if we have never sinned”. It means: “to be declared righteous even when we are not, even when we were helpless sinners”. It comes not by our own efforts but Christ gives it freely by His grace to those who put their faith in Him alone, just as Given Grace had done.

This could be God’s intended message of her life. This is probably the message her parents wanted to send when they named her Given Grace. This IS the message of Jesus Christ when He too innocently suffered on the cross for us so that He may give us grace, the forgiveness of all our sins, the crediting to us of His righteousness that we don’t deserve.

At one time we too were foolish, disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all kinds of passions and pleasures. We lived in malice and envy, being hated and hating one another.
But when the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, he saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy. He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that, having been justified by his grace, we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life.”
Titus 3:3-5

You see, physical death and suffering is not the greatest tragedy of all. Eternal death is. However, by the grace of God through her faith in Christ, Given Grace has been spared eternal death and has been given the gift of eternal life. Her death is a tragedy but it does not end in tragedy. This is why the Apostle Paul says:

“I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.”
Romans 8:18

“Where, O death, is your victory?
Where, O death, is your sting?”
1 Corinthians 15:55

I believe that this is why her father can go through this and mourn and still have faith. I believe that it is because he knows that though Given Grace is no longer with her earthly father, she is already safe in the arms of her Heavenly Father – with no more tears, no more pain, no more fears, no more shame.

And though she is no longer with us, the message of Given Grace’s life rings through her death. It is a clarion call to everyone who now is familiar with her name:

“You too have been GIVEN GRACE by God through the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. All you have to do to receive that precious given grace is to put your faith in Christ alone because He already paid the ultimate cost for you.” 

(Addendum: I just saw this song and video made as a tribute to Given Grace.  It was composed and made by a friend, Juni Frio.  It has a message similar to my post above. I hope it touches you just as it has touched me).

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Related posts:
Given Grace – When God Doesn’t Make Sense
“…God understands.” – Pastor Jun Cebanico

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Unamazed by grace?

[Download the mp3-format audio recording of the message by clicking on this.  It will open up another tab or window for the download site.  Please DO NOT right-click and save-as because this would save the download page instead of the mp3 file.]

God’s Love. God’s Grace.

God’s love is the motivation of why He does things.  God’s grace is His expression of His love.

They are different from each other and yet it is so difficult to separate the two.

God’s love and grace are His provisions that meet our every need – spiritual, physical, emotional, social, and so on.  They are life-changing, life-transforming, mind-blowing.

But why do we see so little change in a lot of Christians and yet they always talk about God’s love and grace?  The reason is because God’s love and grace have become cliches, ordinary, everyday, mundane terms – things we take for granted because we believe we know about them already.  This is most true for people who have been Christians for a long time already.

However, if a person claims to understand God’s grace and His love and you don’t see any change or transformation in his or her life, it just means that that person doesn’t truly comprehend God’s love and grace.  It is also possible that the person doesn’t recognize that a gift has been given to him or her and that that person is still trying to work hard for something that has already been given for free.

Basically ‘grace’ simply means ‘gift’, that is, something that is given to you for free.  It is free for you but it cost the person who gave you the gift.  However, not all gifts are truly life-transforming.  There are three factors that determine the impact of a gift.  They are:

1.  Indispensability – how important is the need that the gift meets. Can a person do without it or is truly essential?

2.  Immensity – how big is the provision. It may be free but is it big enough to meet that need?

3.  Cost – a gift is free but it costs the giver.  Did the gift cost the giver nothing or very little or was the gift given sacrificially?

It is when we really consider these that we are impacted by the gift.

Join us as we look at the indispensability, the immensity and the cost of God’s grace and love and see how this brings transformation in your lives.  This message is equally important to the seasoned believer, the new Christian and to the casual and the serious seekers alike.

The message was taken from the second week of ALL IN Series of Victory Calamba entitled Grace and Love.  The approach taken here is very different from the approach taken by the different Victory churches in their ALL IN Series so I believe you would greatly benefit from this message even if you have already listened to the ALL IN Series.  It won’t be redundant.

Download, listen and be transformed by the love and grace of God.

[Download the mp3-format audio recording by clicking on this.  It will open up another tab or window for the download site.  Please DO NOT right-click and save-as because this would save the download page instead of the mp3 file.]

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The Great Passion (abridged version)

“Then Jesus came to them and said, ‘All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.’ ”
Matthew 28:18-20

Most, if not all, Christians know the preceding verses as The Great Commission. It is the charge given by Christ to all His disciples to make disciples of all people of all the different people groups.

At first, it is a great joy for new Christians to take part in this. But sadly a lot of Christians lose sight of the love of God, the gospel, of grace and start focusing on “more advanced” teachings, maturity, works, spiritual fruit, commitment, effort.

As a result, for a lot of Christians, they start to see The Great Commission as The Great Obligation because it is indeed a command given by Christ. But for a lot of people The Great Obligation means The Great Chore or The Great Burden which then results in them begrudgingly taking part. All the joy is gone. All there is is burnout.

For others, things turn for the worse. They see a lot of other people caught up in The Great Commission. They see that that is the “in” thing if one is to be considered serious and committed about the “things of God” and they feel the pressure to keep up. The Great Commission sadly becomes The Great Peer Pressure. Their reason mostly for sharing the gospel is so that they would be considered committed, faithful, a leader, mature.

The Great Commission is indeed a command of Jesus but the above examples are what usually happens when people focus too much on the command. They read verses like the one below and immediately their eyes focus on the phrase “I am sending you.”

“Again Jesus said, “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.”
John 20:21

But things will be so much different if we focus on Jesus Christ. Our eyes then shift to see the phrase, “As the Father has sent Me…”

We then see the Father’s and Christ’s love, their extreme sacrifice of love as expressed in grace. We see the Father sending Jesus and Jesus gladly being sent. We see the humbling He went through to save us by dying on the cross for our sins.

“…Christ Jesus:
Who, being in very nature God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross!”
Philippians 2:5-8

If we truly understand the grace and the love of God, then The Great Commission ceases to be The Great Obligation, The Great Chore, The Great Peer Pressure but instead becomes The Great Passion. We cease to respond out of compulsion and obligation to the command. We cease to compare ourselves with others in regards to this. Instead it becomes our heart’s desire, our passion, because it becomes an expression of love to the One Who loved us by giving His life for us.

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Related posts:
The Great Passion (full version)
Sinful Obedience?
Living up to personal convictions 

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The Great Passion (full version)

[This essay is relatively long and more personal compared to my other posts. To read the less personal and abridged (shortened) version, click here. I do hope if you have the time, you would read the full version here because it is so personal to me and you might be able to relate to it more. Thank you.]

“Then Jesus came to them and said, ‘All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.’ ”
Matthew 28:18-20

Most, if not all, Christians know the preceding verses as The Great Commission. It is the charge given by Christ to all His disciples to make disciples of all people of all the different people groups.

Almost three decades ago, when I first heard the gospel when I was in grade school, it didn’t really make an impression on me. For me and my cousins, it was just one of the commands that we were expected to obey because we were Christians. My cousins and I would ride our bikes and visit the kids in the squatters’ area and we would share the gospel to them. The gospel that I heard then was accurate but somehow during that time, I failed to comprehend the immensity of His grace and love for me. Sharing the gospel and missions, then, was just something that good Christian kids do. To be really honest, it was more like a chore to me.

Later on, I started living my own life again where God and Jesus was just a category in my life. During my college days, God caught up with me again and I finally put my faith in Christ alone. It was the most joyous moment in my life. This was when I started having the desire to share the gospel to other people. And later on I did. I was able to share the gospel to a few of my friends and they put their trust in Christ.

However, something happened to me that I guess happens to a lot of Christians. I started believing that the gospel was only for those who didn’t know Christ yet. I started focusing on maturity, growth and character. For me, the gospel was something I had to “master” because I had to share it to others as well. The gospel just became a category in my Christian walk. And with this, The Great Commission again became an obligation, a chore. And chores are stuff that I didn’t like to do. Yes, I admit it. I sort of started “hating” sharing the gospel. I don’t know if many people will admit it but I guess there are many who share the same sentiment.

Something even worse happened. You see, everyone around me was into The Great Commission. I strongly believed I had to too. It was the “in” thing for those who were committed and supposedly mature. So aside from being The Great Obligation and The Great Chore, it became The Great Peer Pressure to me. It’s not that I had zero love for the lost as my motive but the pure motives became adulterated with the much greater motive of keeping up with others in church. I’m sure a lot of other people right now are in the same situation and don’t even realize it.

For years, it has been a struggle trying to keep my motives pure. I talked about the right motives, preached about the right motives, taught about the right motives. But all the while, I was also preaching to myself. I was well aware of what was lacking in me and I was sure determined to try with all my heart to love the lost. But truth be told, a lot of times, motives were often mixed. I couldn’t muster enough goodness and love to have only the right motives.

But thank God something happened to me. I underwent a gospel revolution. God brought me back face-to-face with what Christ did for me. And this is what this whole blog is all about: my journey rediscovering the grace of God, the gospel, Jesus Christ and discovering more of His grace. I discovered that the gospel is central to my everyday Christian life. [Please read all my other posts if you want to understand what I'm talking about.]

This gospel revolution gave me a new insight into The Great Commission. I used to read verses like the one below and just skimmed over it. When we read the verse below, what usually captures our attention is the command, “…I am sending you.”

“Again Jesus said, “Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.”
John 20:21

But gradually by God’s grace, I’ve started to see it in a new light. What strikes me now is the phrase, “As the Father has sent me,…”. As the Father sent Jesus? How did the Father send Jesus? Why did the Father send Jesus?

This started me thinking about the eternal love of God, our sinfulness, His wrath that we deserve but which He was unwilling to lash out on us, the solution to satisfy His love and His justice – Jesus Christ.

“…Christ Jesus:
Who, being in very nature God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross!”
Philippians 2:5-8

When I saw Jesus Christ, the Son of God, leaving all His glory and bliss in heaven and humbling Himself to save us, things started to change. When I realized that we didn’t even ask for help, that it was He Who took the initiative, something stirred within me. When I understood that when we were still sinners, Christ was crucified and died for us, it broke my heart. When I am reminded that all of His perfect righteousness was credited to us unworthy and wretched sinners and that the Father adopted us as sons, my heart is filled with so much joy.

When I fix my eyes on His tremendous love for me rather than on my ability to obey His command, my heart is transformed and a love for Him grows. “As the Father sent Jesus”…I can just imagine Jesus volunteering, “Father, send Me! Send Me!” As I focus on this truth, such gratitude fills my heart. I know that I cannot ever repay what He did for me but the joy, the gratitude, the love I have because of His love for me makes me shout, “Lord, command me. Send me. I volunteer! I will gladly do it. I can’t help but talk about Your goodness, Your love, Your mercy, Your grace.”

Yet I know that even with all my own commitment and my own faithfulness, I will not be able to live up to this. It is only by His grace, His faith, His commitment, His Spirit, His power that I will be able to live up to this.

The key is not on focusing on the command. The key is not about us mustering a love for the lost. The focus is on how much God loves us and everyone else. As we focus on His love, we grow in our love for Him and for others.

If we truly understand the grace and the love of God, then The Great Commission ceases to be The Great Obligation, The Great Chore, The Great Peer Pressure but instead becomes The Great Passion. We cease to respond out of compulsion and obligation to the command. We cease to compare ourselves with others in regards to this. Instead it becomes our heart’s desire, our passion, because it becomes an expression of love to the One Who loved us by giving His life for us.

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Related posts:
The Great Passion (abridged version)
Sinful Obedience?
Living up to personal convictions

‘Like’ my page on Facebook to receive updates on future posts.

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Faithful to the faithless

“But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace to me was not without effect. No, I worked harder than all of them—yet not I, but the grace of God that was with me.”
1 Corinthians 15:10

“…if we are faithless,
he will remain faithful,
for he cannot disown himself.”
2 Timothy 2:13

We can be faithful to Him because He is first faithful to us. And He is faithful to us even when we are not faithful to Him.

We can be committed to Him because He is committed to us. And He is committed to us even during the times that we are not that committed to Him.

We cannot give up on Him because He is not giving up on us. And He will continue not giving up on us even when we have given up on Him.

We can love Him because He first loved us. He loved us even when we were still His enemies. He sent His Son to die for us wretched sinners so that we may have eternal life in Him.

This truth makes me love Him even more, makes me desire to be more faithful and committed. Yet even these, truly come from Him alone.

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Related posts:
To the striving, tired, discouraged or condemned Christian
The cure for spiritual burn-out and condemnation
Victory assured!

‘Like’ my page on Facebook to receive updates on future posts.

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To the striving, tired, discouraged or condemned Christian:

“For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will—to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves. In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace that he lavished on us with all wisdom and understanding.”
Ephesians 1:4-8

 “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”
Ephesians 2:8-10

God saved us by His grace, sending His One and only Son to take upon Himself ALL our sins and ALL the wrath that we deserve. More than that, He made us holy, blameless and righteous in His sight. To top it off, He adopted us into His family as His “sons” and made us co-heirs with Christ.

It is by faith in His Son alone that we receive His grace. Nothing we can do can ever make us deserve any of it. It is not our good works that makes us acceptable to Him.  It is by faith in His Grace personified in Jesus Christ.

In Christ, God recreates us for good works. They are the fruit of our salvation.

All Christians know this but a lot feel down, discouraged, unaccepted if we don’t live our lives perfectly.  We know that we are saved by His grace through faith but somehow we tend to believe that how we live our lives and stay in God’s favor is based on our performance.  The moment we “fail” God, the moment we stumble in sin, the moment we fall short of the expectations of others, we somehow believe that we fall out of the grace of God – that we somehow become unacceptable.  We think that God is angry with us; that He is displeased with us.

A lot of people respond to this in two ways. Some try to work harder and perform better to get back to be in the graces and favor of God.  They soon get disappointed as they encounter failure after failure.  These are the people that get burnt-out in their serving God.  The second response is that some people, feeling unworthy, just give up and continue living lives do not reflect the life of Jesus in them.

Both groups of people fail to realize the truth in the following verses:

“So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live in him, rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness.”
Colossians 2:6-7

“For in the gospel a righteousness from God is revealed, a righteousness that is by faith from first to last, just as it is written: “The righteous will live by faith.
Romans 1:17

How we continue in our salvation is exactly how we started in it.  God started it, not us.  Therefore it is He who will keep us, not ourselves.  It is by the grace of God through faith in Christ, from first to last.  If it is NOT our performance that made us acceptable, then neither does our performance or LACK OF IT make us unacceptable.  A child’s performance is not the basis of his or her acceptance and membership in that family.  He or she is accepted because he or she is a child of the parents.  In Christ, you are a child of God.

God is NOT angry with you. He does not reject you.  So you can stop trying to earn His favor.  In Christ, you already have it.  If you feel condemned because of lack of performance, look to Christ and see that He has already paid for your acceptance with His own blood.  He only looks at you with love.  He already forgave all of your sins and shortcomings two thousand years ago.  He does not condemn you.

What then about the good works that Christ prepared for us? What then about the spiritual fruit or the Christ-like character that is expected to be seen in the lives of all believers?  Don’t fix your eyes on these things.  Focus your eyes on Christ’s love and live in light of that love.  You would soon see that Christ-like character and good works will shine through your lives as you live in Christ and let Him live His life through you.

“And He said cast your burdens upon Me
Those who are heavily laiden
Come to Me all of you who are tired
Of carrying heavy loads
For the yoke I will give you is easy
And my burden is light
Come to me and I will give you rest”

Lift Up Your Hands by Basil Valdez

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Related posts:
The cure for spiritual burn-out and condemnation
Faithful to the faithless
Victory assured!

Related Podcasts:
ALL OUT Series Week 1: No Striving
ALL OUT Series Week 1: (Delivered in Victory Los Banos) No Striving
ALL OUT Series Week 2: No Chains

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Victory assured!


What would it be like living your life knowing that you could never fail?

“But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Therefore, my dear brothers, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.”
1 Corinthians 15:57-58

If you are in Christ, you are not and never will be a failure! It is because you are united with Christ in His ULTIMATE VICTORY over sin and death, which are the ultimate failures.  And you have the VICTOR living in you.

The result of this grace of God will be standing firm and fully giving ourselves to serving our Father because then, nothing we do will be useless. The favor of the Lord is on the work of our hands.

And even if we fumble in our work, we are never failures because our victory is not based on the results of our efforts. It is firmly established in the finished work of Jesus Christ.

“Hallelujah, You have won the victory
Hallelujah, You have won it all for me
Death could not hold you down
You are the Risen King
Seated in majesty
You are the Risen King” 

The Anthem by Planetshakers
from the All For Love album

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Related posts:
To the striving, tired, discouraged or condemned Christian
The cure for spiritual burn-out and condemnation
Faithful to the faithless

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Difficulty in forgiving?

Holding a GRUDGE, harboring BITTERNESS, having a hard time FORGIVING? Reflect on the following passages:

“…Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners—of whom I am the worst.”
1 Timothy 1:15b

“…Forgive as the Lord forgave you.”
Colossians 3:13b

“It is when we realize that we are no better off than the other person, that we are not more righteous and yet Christ died to forgive us of our sins, that is when find His grace to forgive others.

Popular thought espouses that the key to forgiveness is thinking that we are above the other person and that he/she is so beneath us that we should just forgive him or her. This actually produces arrogance, pride and self-righteousness.

Forgiveness comes by realizing that we are not above him or her but that we are in exactly the same boat, that we ourselves have sinned and are flawed in many ways. We owe God a bigger debt and yet in Christ He forgave us. This grace transforms our hearts so that we are able to forgive.

Forgiving others does not come by focusing on the wrong done to us and then mustering the goodness in our hearts to forgive. We don’t really have it. It comes by focusing on our own debt and God’s love and grace in forgiving us.

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Related posts:
The grace to say ‘No!’

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