Wednesday, January 15, 2014

How Sweet the Sound

And He said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12:9)

God's grace is sufficient; it's enough for you and me.
What is it enough for?
For whatever you need it to be! Do you need grace to deal with emotions that are erratic, children who are exhausting, a spouse who is unpredictable, a boss who is grouchy?

What about grace for your fears for the future or worries for today? There is plenty to cover every need. 
There is not one area of our lives -- past, present and future -- where God's grace is not sufficient for us.
Sufficient means enough, or, as the Merrriam-Webster Dictionary says: "occurring in such quantity, quality or scope as to fully meet demands, needs or expectations."
God's grace can provide a life where your needs and expectations are fully met every time. That's the kind of grace I want to learn how to access!
The key is that God's power (His grace working on our behalf) is activated through our weakness. Uh-oh. Weaknesses are something we humans don't like to own up to. We like to hide our weaknesses, cover them up, refuse to admit them. That comes naturally to us, but that will frustrate the grace of God on our behalf. Instead, we not only need to admit our weaknesses, we can revel in surrendering areas we have been trying to control. (Did we really think we were in control anyway?) We give up. We say we can't do it, we can't fix it, and we are desperate for help. We reach out to the Creator as a little child in need, trusting that He is there to help us, trusting that He does not find fault with us when we ask Him to pour out grace on us.
We become God-needy instead of self-sufficient.
How many times a day should we look for God's help? As many times as we want grace to cover our lives. If we only want grace in the really tough places, if we only want our needs and expectations fully met at those crises, then only look to God at those times. But if you want a constant flow of God's grace for every moment of your life, then develop a continous looking to Him for His help, His wisdom, His nearness, His friendship.
His strength will be made perfect in your weakness, in your inability or unwillingness to handle life on your own. It is not irresponsible, it is the smartest thing you can do.
God's grace -- how sweet the sound!

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Full and Great

The Lord is gracious and full of compassion,
Slow to anger and great in mercy.
The Lord is good to all,
And His tender mercies are over all His works. (Psalm 145:8-9, NKJV)

When I first got serious about meditating the word of God (see my previous post), this is the portion of Scripture that first came to my thoughts. 

  • The Lord is gracious -- When I think of someone who is gracious, I think of the perfect gentleman or gentlewoman. A gracious person puts you at ease with his manner. This person smiles at you with kindness and benevolence as though you were the only person in the world. Your comfort and needs being met are that person's top priority. What a picture of our God!
  • The Lord is ... full of compassion -- Picture a container filled with water -- there is no room for anything else! Fullness speaks of every available area of space being taken up. It also speaks of the possibility of spilling out, of overflow at the slightest bump. What is our Lord filled with? Compassion. That characteristic speaks of His oneness with our suffering and his yearning to see us relieved of the pain we live in. Certainly it was this compassion that ultimately sent Jesus to the cross to die for us and give us new life. This is the emotion that God has toward us -- in such a degree that He is filled to the brim with compassion to us and ready to overflow at the slightest provocation.
  • Slow to anger and great in mercy -- Like a lumbering giant, God's anger is extremely slow to ignite. However, his mercy springs into action at the drop of a hat. What makes God great? What is He known for? His mercy, not his anger. He is defined by his mercy, his love, his forgiveness. He longs to show mercy. He would much prefer to be merciful than to be angry towards anything that He has made. It delights Him to be merciful.
  • The Lord is good to all -- The Lord's goodness can't be reserved for only those who deserve it. No, His goodness is to ALL. His goodness has no boundaries and is like the ocean depths, that can't be fathomed. There is so much goodness available to each and every person, with none of God's limitless resources being exhausted.
  • His tender mercies are over all His works -- God tenderly cares for all that He has made. He is not negligent about any of His creation, from the most minute particle to his crowning creation, mankind. I love the word "tender" in this passage. As if His mercies were not enough, there is also protective and affectionate tenderness toward us, like a mother toward her child. How can we doubt the love and care of such a God?