Posts in grace
Grace is for all of us
“Grace is for the desperate, the needy, the broken, those who cannot make it on their own.  Grace is for all of us.”- Philip Yancey, The Jesus I Never Knew

I’m reading a book called, The Jesus I Never Knew, by Philip Yancey, and in it, he tells the stories of two famous Russian novelists, Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky.  Yancey explains how these two men helped him better understand what Jesus was saying when he preached the Sermon on the Mount.  I highly recommend Yancey’s book, and encourage anyone to read it for themselves, but I will give you a brief synopsis, because I’m excited to share what I’m learning about Grace and who God is.  This is good stuff!

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A Review of Jen Hatmaker's book, For the Love

Jen Hatmaker’s new book, For the Love: Fighting for Grace in a World of Impossible Standards, releases today!  I’m so excited to finally tell you more about this new book.  I got to read an advance copy months ago, but I’ve kept (mostly) quiet, knowing that wouldn’t be very nice to tell you all about a book that wasn’t available yet.  This is a book that you definitely will want to read.

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God Has Found a Place for Us in His Story
The point is not to find a place for God in our story but to receive the good news that God has found a place for us in His- Michael Horton. 

It’s a shift in thinking that makes all the difference.  Who is the story about?  The gospel, which encompasses the stories of creation, the fall, redemption, and renewal, is God’s story, and we are invited into it.  As Christians, we must approach our life, the world, God, and others through this lens.  When we turn it around, trying to find a place for God in our story, we’re missing the point.  When we make God’s story about us, we have religion.

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faith, graceDawn Klingegospel
How to love- when the feeling isn't there
“But love, in the Christian sense, does not mean an emotion.  It is a state not of the feelings but of the will; the state of the will which we have naturally about ourselves, and must learn to have about other people.” – C.S. Lewis

The quote above is from C.S. Lewis’s book, Mere Christianity. (affiliate link) The command from Jesus to love your neighbor as yourself (Mark 12:31) is clear, leaving no room for argument.  It’s a basic tenant of Christianity.  Even people outside the faith know about this rule…and yes, they’re watching, to see how we do (or do not) follow through on it.   It sounds simple, but what does it really mean to love your neighbor as yourself?

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The Miracle of Jesus's Incarnation and What it Means for Us
“The incarnation brings unceasing hope and an end to our exile, wandering, and despair.  There is great comfort for our souls in the truth that he is just like us.  Here’s why:  the incarnation tells us that even though we sin, we are not alone; even though we’re weak and finite, he knows what weakness and mortality are because he was weak and mortal just like us; and even though we continually fail, he has committed himself to be part of a race of failures- and he has done so forever.”  
-Elyse Fitzpatrick, Found in Him

(This post contains an affiliate link from Amazon, for full disclosure, click here.)

Incarnation means God became a man.  Jesus is both fully God, and fully human.  It’s a concept full of mystery.  What does it mean for us?  

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Why Does Jesus’s Presence With Us Matter?

“No matter how popular we might be, none of us has ever experienced deep unity or authentic union with another.  Since the day that our forefather and mother were exiled in the garden of Eden, we’ve been lost, trying to get back in, trying to find oneness with each other and the Lord." Elyse Fitzpatrick, Found In Him

All of us know what it's like to feel alone, sometimes, even, when we're in a crowd of people we can feel that way.  We long for true unity and union. This is why Jesus’s presence with us matters.  We were made in the image of God.  We were made to live in unity with God and others, but without the love and work of Jesus Christ, his grace, we are lost.

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Grace in Parenting

Sure, we can get outward compliance by shaming our kids, but that is all that it will be.  Shame is not the same as repentance.  It’s grace that brings about a heart change.  I love the practical example, above, from Elyse, which shows what applying grace to our parenting can look ike in daily life.   Here’s another example,

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