Anyone who’s grown up in church has heard the catch-phrase:
Mercy is not getting
what you do deserve.
Grace is getting what
you don’t deserve.
Getting what we don’t deserve.
Heaven. Favor with God. A hope not just for this life, but
for the life to come.
But again, those are things we’ve heard before. What does it
actually mean?
The Greek word for grace, charis, is related to the word for joy, chara. In fact, charis
sometimes gets translated as joy, rather than grace.
Is it possible, then, that when we talk about God’s grace,
we could just as easily say delight or joy?
Our God delights in us, His creation and His children. Our
God showers us with joy.
And when the night is darkest, or the long-awaited answer to
a prayer lingers still longer, could it be that “My grace is sufficient for you”
really means, “My joy in you, the delight I take in this journey you’re on,
will be enough to carry you even when it seems there is no answer for the
hardship in your life”?
I personally am amazed that anything about me, or my life,
could bring God joy or delight. Yet His word says,
The Lord your God in your midst,
The Mighty One, will save;
He will rejoice over you with gladness,
He will quiet you with His love,
He will rejoice over you with singing. (Zephaniah 3:17, NKJV)
The Mighty One, will save;
He will rejoice over you with gladness,
He will quiet you with His love,
He will rejoice over you with singing. (Zephaniah 3:17, NKJV)
This—from the One who made me. The One who
loved me so much He provided the perfect sacrifice for my sins, from His own
blood. Who welcomes me as His, regardless of the family I was born into or the
mess I perpetuated as part of that. Regardless of the mess I continue to
make of my life, when I carry on as if I don’t really need Him.
So, it might seem just another churchy buzzword, but there
is no other word for it. Grace. The
reason we have strength to keep going each day. The basis for any forgiveness
we offer others. The sure knowledge that when we’ve exhausted our purpose and
journey here, what awaits us is so far beyond what we can imagine. We don’t
deserve it. We can’t earn it. Our flaws and failures can’t diminish it, because
it existed before any of us, with full knowledge of what we would be and do.
All we can do, then, is surrender and glory in it.
12 Then
Moses said to the Lord, “See, You say to me, ‘Bring up this people.’ But You
have not let me know whom You will send with me. Yet You have said, ‘I know you
by name, and you have also found grace in My sight.’ 13 Now
therefore, I pray, if I have found grace in Your sight, show me now Your way,
that I may know You and that I may find grace in Your sight. And consider that
this nation is Your people.”
14 And
He said, “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.”
15 Then
he said to Him, “If Your Presence does not go with us, do not bring us
up from here. 16 For how then will it be known that Your people
and I have found grace in Your sight, except You go with us? So we shall be
separate, Your people and I, from all the people who are upon the face
of the earth.”
17 So
the Lord said to Moses, “I will also do this thing that you have spoken; for
you have found grace in My sight, and I know you by name.” (Exodus 33)
...through whom also we have access by
faith into this grace in which we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of
God. (Romans 5:2, all NKJV)
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