"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God ...." (Ephesians 2:8 NIV)
Grace. If you carry away only one thing from these devotionals, my prayer is that it will be a mind-transforming, behavior-altering understanding of God's infinite, indestructible, and immovable grace.
Not just a quick, yet correct sound-bite explanation - like the "unmerited favor of God" - but the deep, ancient meaning of grace that stretches across the depth and breadth and width and height of God's character.
This is on my mind because these devotionals present some high standards for Christian discipleship. My hope is to press us both - myself as well as you - toward an honest assessment of our faith, a deeper commitment to our beliefs, and most importantly a sacrificial, wholly-abandoned love for our Lord.
The standard is high; in fact, it's impossibly high. That's why we need God's grace. I can't, but God can. "Such confidence as this is ours through Christ before God. Not that we are competent in ourselves to claim anything for ourselves, but our competence comes from God." (2 Corinthians 3:4-5 NIV)
Although I strive for these standards in my own life, I often fail, but that doesn't mean I should lower the standard or hide behind denial of failure, or that I should settle for a mediocre, warmed-over faith walk. It means I look to the things above, striving to become the man God wants me to be, and getting out of the way so the Holy Spirit can do the work of transformation in my life. Whether I succeed or fail, I fall upon the grace of God. I remain immersed in his grace, knowing I cannot be holy, but the spirit of God within me and the blood of Jesus Christ allow me to connect with a holy God.
If we don't understand God's grace, we stand in danger of growing weary in our walk with God, descending into a quiet resignation that the abundant life is just a notion that describes our "Sweet By and By" future in heaven.
Or, when we fail to embrace God's grace, we're in danger of slipping into legalism, believing we can somehow reach God's holy standard through our own efforts. In effect, we're saying we can achieve godliness without God's power! We behave as if we become one of God's children by the things we do or the things we don't do and not from the extraordinary Grace of God. (2 Corinthians 3:4-6 NIV)