Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Gospel of Grace


eDevotion
Encouragement for your daily walk with God

Any gospel message must include grace. It's what makes salvation so amazing. Amazing in many ways, not the least of which is that it is extended to everyone. There are many Scriptures that bear this out. Here are just a couple of them:
1st John 2:2, When he [Jesus] served as a sacrifice for our sins, he solved the sin problem for good—not only ours, but the whole world’s. (The MESSAGE)
1st Timothy 2:6, [Jesus] offered himself in exchange for everyone held captive by sin, to set them all free. Eventually the news is going to get out. (The MESSAGE)
The following is a long quote of Mark Mosley's description of grace. It notes how far God's grace is extended on our behalf:
"Jesus bore the sins of the Assyrians, who gloated over the captives they had skinned alive; the sins of SS troops, machine-gunning women and children running from burning synagogues with clothing ablaze.
Jesus bore the sins of child molesters, making sure their victims never have to testify; the sins of the Pharaohs, sacrificing thousands of laborers' lives, to build themselves deifying tombs.
Jesus was tossed about in these endless storms: enraged fathers beating toddlers to death; pimps seducing runaways into lives of drugs and prostitution; church ladies cannibalizing other church ladies over coffee; Canaanites throwing their children to Moloch, their sun god; impoverished parents in China selling their children into slavery.
Jesus bore the sins of embezzlers; gangsters; bullies; rapists; liars; the indifferent; the sadistic; the self-righteous Bible-believing leaders praying long and loud, while their wives sat in back pews praying that heavy make-up covered their bruises.
It is a scene of unbearable horror and unspeakable madness. He is the accused for us all, bearing the weight of abused children; families destroyed by adultery or apathy; civilizations decaying; wars ravaging victims. Yet, through it all, deep in the terror of hell, He keeps His eyes wide open.
He is not just a bystander caught in the accident; He has come deliberately. He will accept it all, absorbing the full force of this storm of wrath in His body, His mind, His heart, and His soul, until there is nothing left to feel.
Finally, the tumbling will slow a bit; the storm will slacken, and Jesus will lift Himself on His nailed feet to snatch a gasp of air and force His swollen tongue to shout, "It is finished—I've come; I've seen; I've paid for it all."
Then I will add, Jesus extended His grace to me! I am eternally grateful.
Sinners become sons of God, because the Son of God became sin—for us!

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