Grace: MT episode 24

There is one word that appears in the book of Ruth. It is a word that one would not expect in this story. The word is grace, or favor, depending on the translation being read.

As we continued our study of Ruth yesterday, we found that word grace used not one time but three times. For just a few moments today I would like to focus on that word.

Grace defined is unmerited favor. That is a way of saying, unearned gift. You are given something, in this case, by God, and it is not pay back for something you did.

When you work at a job, your wages are not grace. Wages are paid for work rendered. If you do not go to work, you would not receive pay.

As believers, when we read through the Bible, it is very easy to place some of the Bible characters on a pedestal. In a way, they are like superheroes because many of them perform supernatural type activities.

By doing this a hierarchy is created, most often unknowingly. God, Moses, us. God, Noah, us. God, Abraham, us.

Yet Scripture teaches differently. Take Noah.

In the days of Noah, was Noah chosen because, on his own because he had a righteousness that pleased God? Did all the world descend into crazed evil but Noah (and family) were the only ones who did not?

Genesis 6:8 says that Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Noah did nothing to merit this. Noah did nothing to earn God’s grace. It was not payment for something Noah did. Rather, it was God’s gift to Noah.

Noah was just like you and me. Even more, Joshua tells us that Abraham was an idol worshiper when God called him. Abraham definitely received God’s grace.

I take great comfort in this and so should you. Why? God has and does use small, weak and flawed men and women, all through Scripture and did mighty things through them. Those small, weak and flawed men and women did nothing to earn God’s grace or favor.

When we better understand these things, it not only takes the attention off us, but also it brings more attention and praise to our God. And rightfully so.

S.D.G.

A Hero in God’s Hand: MT episode #21

While reading through any Biblical story it is quite easy to place ourselves as the hero. We like the little boy David who killed Goliath. Let me be that little boy who went and found five stones and with no fear, faced the giant.

In the study of the first chapter in Ruth it is so easy to look negatively at Orpah, who after weighing the options, said to herself maybe sticking with Naomi is not in my best interest. The preference is to be Ruth. It takes courage to be Ruth.

Her statement “Where you go, I will go, where you stay, I will stay . . .may nothing but death separate you and me.” That is a movie line. That is a best-selling theme right there. I want to be that.

But in the moment, on my own strength, I fail. I’m not the hero. I am more like faithless Peter than faithful Ruth.

The lesson throughout Scripture is the greatness our sin BUT the greaterness of Jesus. The truth sometimes stings. As much as I want to be Ruth and David, when real life faces me, I am more like Orpah and Peter.

Here lies the beautiful paradox – let me repeat that: this is The Beautiful Paradox. You and I, on our own, are more like the denying Peter. But when, IN CHRIST, we grasp that truth – we become more heroic like Ruth and David.

How? Because our God is a great God. He is a God who in a few weeks took the denying faithless Peter to the proclaiming faithful Peter of Pentecost. He is a God who works in small weak men and women all the time. He is the God that turns small, weak men and women into David and Ruth’s.

We can do great things because our God is great. You and I bring nothing to the table but trouble. When there is submission to that, when there is understanding of what God’s strength can do, is when we begin to be powerful in His hands FOR HIS GLORY.

S.D.G.

Tapestries & Suffering: MT episode #19

Have you ever looked at the other side of something embroidered or a tapestry? I have a little piece here from our home. You can look at one side and see this beautiful image. Yet flip it over, and there is an ugly collection of criss crossed threading that seems to make no sense at all.

You can make out like a little thing here and there but overall, about 95% of it is just a mess.

It is not strange how the two sides can be so different? The back side an utter mess and the visible side, an artful image.

This is a great visual explanation for suffering.

Sunday, we began a study on the book of Ruth and considered those opening sentences in light of the sovereignty of God. God IS good and God IS sovereign AND importantly, for the believer, all things work to the glory of God.

When we are suffering it can appear a lot like this back side. There is just a huge collection of threads in our life that seem to be going nowhere in particular. Things seem to be a mess and disjointed and we can’t find a purpose in any of it.

There is a side that so often we do not see until the work is complete. And it becomes the image that the creator was desiring to make. This is a beautiful thing to consider.

S.D.G.