TLIC DAILY. DAY 257. SEPTEMBER 14: GLORIOUS GRACE.

Ephesians 1:3-6. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places… to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed [graced] us in the Beloved.

In yesterday’s reading we said that we have all of Jesus’ spiritual blessings. Because we are in Christ, we are as blessed as he is. But why? Why is God so good to us? Especially when we don’t deserve it?

Because of his glorious grace.

Grace is everything for the Christian. Without grace there is no gospel. Without grace there is no salvation. Without grace there is no union with Christ. Without grace there is no hope or meaning to life. Without grace God is not glorious.

Grace IS the glory of God. Grace is God’s purpose, his meaning, his uniqueness, his weightiness. Grace is God’s majesty, brilliance, beauty, and splendor. Glorious grace sets God apart from all others. We praise God because of his glorious grace.

But what makes grace so glorious?

Grace is glorious because it’s unnatural. It makes no sense. It’s shocking, extravagant, and even absurd. It is other worldly. It is truly divine.

Grace is glorious because it defines love. Love is only really love when it is lived out sacrificially. When it places another’s needs above its own. Grace is one-way love.

Grace is glorious because it is transformative. It turns us into what we are not. The unrighteous are now righteous. The lost are now found. The slaves are now free. The hate filled now love. The dying now live.

Grace is glorious because it is the catalyst of every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus. Without grace we have nothing. We are nothing. We gain nothing. Ever. But because of grace there is blessing. There is eternal life. There is salvation.

Truly grace is amazing. But as with anything this glorious there are dangers that come with it. Dangers to grace? Yes. Let me show you two dangers to the glory of grace.

First, we can fear the power of something that is this glorious. On Mount Sinai the people were terrified by the glorious presence of God. Moses had to wear a veil when he came off the mountain because the people couldn’t stand to look at his glowing face. Sometimes God’s grace is so glorious that we don’t trust it. So we try to veil it, or limit it. We fear that too much grace will cause us to sin more. But the reality is that only grace can make us holy. Only grace can motivate true righteousness.

Gandalf’s glorious return brings grace to the people of Helm’s Deep.

A second danger that comes with things that are glorious is that we tend to exalt the glorious thing instead of God. This can be true even of grace. Because God’s grace is so glorious we tend to turn it into something that we have to live up to. Another form of law. This happens when we turn grace into a principle to be followed rather than the person of Jesus Christ.

Have you heard Christians say things like, “We should always respond in grace.” Or, “We need to show each other the grace we would want to receive.” Or, “Because God has been gracious to us, we must be gracious to others.” All of this is of true of course. And a “grace principle” is the best of principles. But the irony is that as soon as we judge each other from this “principle of grace,” it immediately ceases to be grace.

“To live is Christ” means that God’s glorious grace is living in us. It is not just an external principle to follow. It is a life to be received. It is everything. Our beginning, middle, and end. Our source and our goal. Our cause and our effect. We have received grace, that we might live from grace, to grace. God’s glorious grace.

You

Are you experiencing God’s glorious grace each day?

You in Christ

Are you relying on grace to make you holy, or something else?

Christ in you

Where might you be able to demonstrate God’s glorious grace today?

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Playlist: Glorious Grace.

Click Here to this playlist on Spotify!

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To see today’s post from the TLIC Family blog –> Click Here

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