I am a blues guitar player and a follower of Jesus. This blog is about music, especially Blues, theology, humor, culture and anything else that rolls through my brain. "The sky is crying, look at the tears roll down the street"
Friday, April 19, 2013
One-Way Love
The
message of God’s one-way love for sinners naturally meets resistance
from law-locked hearts. It produces objections in those who are wired
for earning and deserving, which is all of us. Sometimes these
objections are rationalized forms of the emotional offense taken by
creatures addicted to their own sense of control. When our sense of
pride is attacked, it defends. Sometimes these objections are
projections of fear about what “might” happen if people actually
believed the message. Sometimes the objections to grace are simply
honest rejoinders to a word that can be very hard to swallow. Two of the
most frequent objections I encounter—and I encounter them a lot—are
that grace makes people lazy, and grace gives people license to indulge
their self-absorption, rather than serve their neighbor. If it is true
that Jesus paid it all, that “it is finished”, that my value, worth,
security, freedom, justification, and so on is forever fixed, then why
do anything? Doesn’t grace undercut ambition? Doesn’t the gospel weaken
effort? If we are truly let off the hook, what is to stop us from ending
up like George Costanza in the “Summer of George” episode of the sitcom
Seinfeld, who receives an unexpected severance package and vows to take
full advantage of his freedom only to sit around in sweatpants,
watching TV, reading comic books, and eating “a big hunk of cheese like
it’s an apple”? Or, as Billy Corgan (lead singer of Smashing Pumpkins)
once said, “If practice makes perfect and no one’s perfect, then why
practice?” Understandable question. (Tullian Tchividjian)
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