Tag Archives: Grace
Obedience Does Not Merit Grace
We can never obligate God by our obedience or our sacrificial service.
Jerry Bridges, Transforming Grace (Colorado Springs: NavPress, 1991), 64.
Amazing Grace, Amazing Love
Love and Grace Go Hand in Hand
We cannot exercise love unless we are experiencing grace. You cannot truly love others unless you are convinced that God’s love for you is unconditional, based solely on the merit of Christ, not your performance. John said, ‘We love because He first loved us’ (1 John 4.19). Our love, either to God or to others, can only be a response to His love for us.
Jerry Bridges, Transforming Grace (Colorado Springs: NavPress, 1991), 132.
“Preacher, You Don’t Preach the Old Fashioned Gospel!”
At this, the devout Pharisee and the decent moralist are highly offended. Such doctrines being advanced, they think it incumbent upon them to stand up in defence of what they call an holy life: and to support the sinking credit of good works, as having a considerable efficacy in procuring our acceptance with God. This many persons frequently do, much more by talking about their necessity, than by performing them. Now they think it their duty to rail at the preacher as an avowed enemy to holiness; nor will they spare to give him the honourable title of, A friend of publicans and sinners. Now innumerable slanders are cast on the doctrine of grace, as being licentious; and on the ministers of it, as opening the floodgates of all iniquity. For they suppose that every thing bad may be justly expected from those who openly disavow all dependence on their own duties; and whose hope of eternal happiness arises, not from services which they perform, but from grace which the gospel reveals – not from the worth which they possess, but from the work which Christ has wrought. Thus they despise the gospel under the fair pretence of a more than common concern for the interests of holiness.
Preaching Is…
Preaching is the declaration of the grace of God to human need on the authority of the throne of God, and demanding, on the part of those who hear, but they show obedience to the thing declared.
G. Campbell Morgan in Wilbur M. Smith, Peloubet’s Select Notes on the International Bible Lessons for Christian Teaching: 1958 (Boston: W. A. Wilde Co., 1957), 377-78.
Do You Know Christ, or Do You Just Know a Lot about Him?
It is well to be acquainted with all the doctrines and principles of Christianity. It is better to be acquainted with Christ Himself. It is well to be familiar with faith, and grace, and justification, and sanctification. They are all matters pertaining to the King. But it is far better to be familiar with Jesus Himself, to see the King’s own face, and to behold His beauty.
The Law-Driven Sermon
When I hear an essentially law-driven sermon, asking the law to do what only the grace of Jesus Christ can accomplish, I am immediately concerned about the preacher. I wonder about his view of himself, because if you have any self-consciousness about your own weakness and sin, you find little hope and comfort for yourself and your hearers in that kind of sermon.
HT: Reformed Quotes
Doing Great Things, but for Whose Sake?
Self likes to do great things; but grace teaches us to do little things with a great spirit — that is, for the Lord’s sake.
HT: Miscellanies
Were the Whole Realm of Nature Mine…
The whole world is not a theater large enough to display or unfold one half of the unsearchable riches that lie hidden in Christ.“
HT: @NickRoark