This is my life verse and a great reminder of TRUTH to start the first day of the New Year with! How wonderful is it to know that as believers, we can purpose to live every day of 2024 with the awareness that we belong to God – and are made new in Christ! The baggage of the past is gone … and while we may not know what 2024 holds – God does and He has given us everything we need to live a godly life regardless of what each day brings. His mercies will be new every morning … His grace will be all-sufficient … we will see that His power is made perfect in weakness … His love will never fail … His forgiveness is guaranteed … His peace will pass all understanding … His comfort will be present in troubles … when we listen we will hear His “still-small-voice”, and when we look – we will see His finger-prints … when we commit our words and thoughts to Him – He will make them pleasing and acceptable to Him – and He will use them and us as salt and light in this unsavory and dark world. May 2024 be a year blessed with an awareness of Him and of the New Creations we are in Him!
“For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul?” Mark 8:36
Have you ever known someone that was never satisfied? You know, the person who seems to have everything going for them but they’re just never content. Their lack of satisfaction or contentment motivates them to grasp at the next best thing “the world” offers with the thought or the hope that “it” will make them happier. A better car… a bigger house… a better relationship…a better job… more money… more status… more accolades… more happiness… you get the picture. The list is endless and exhausting, and according to today’s verse – it can be dangerous.
Don’t get me wrong, none of these things in themselves are bad – but the danger comes when our motive is based on what the world offers or says is best rather than on the reality of what God has given us. For God has graciously gifted us with “life to the full”(John 3:16 and 10:10). This gift includes the Kingdom of Heaven and an eternity in paradise with Him! There is nothing better or anything in the world that can make our joy and contentment fuller than this.
And so, since we have been justified by his grace, we become heirs with the confident expectation of eternal life.”
Titus 3:7
Because Jesus made us right with God – who saved us by His grace – we have become co-heirs with Christ (Romans 8:17). Because of this, our hope is secure in the eternal life God promised through our faith in Jesus Christ.
We were all once enemies of God. We disobeyed His commands, ignored His wisdom, and hated one another. We were hopeless without God and hopeless of ever being saved. But God did not let us stay there. –
LGG Team Member / Enduring Hope w3d4
An Amazing Love and Confident Expectations
In the Enduring Hope journal the LGG Team of writers share devotions for each day’s Scripture references. They are all wonderful but some stand out to me more than others. Today’s was one of those. I share it in part here that those who read this blog might not miss the hope that comes from these words that so beautifully describe the love of our God and Savior.
“We were all once enemies of God. We disobeyed His commands, ignored His wisdom, and hated one another. We were hopeless without God and hopeless of ever being saved. But God did not let us stay there.
Our God is kind. He is loving. He is merciful. He poured out His kindness, love, and mercy on us when we were still His enemies. Instead of letting us remain in darkness. He rescued us and gave us new life.”
The writer goes on to explain, “We’ve done nothing to deserve the kindness of God, nor could we possibly have made restitution for our sins on our own. We sinned against God, but His mercy was poured out on us; He held nothing back. He has fully and completely justified us.” She explains, “This means we are fully pardoned from sin, fully free of the punishment of death.” Oh what beautiful love this is!
“He has welcomed us as heirs, as recipients of all the promises of God. We have a confident expectation of eternal life.”
LGG Team Member / Enduring Hope
Perhaps the best part of the author’s words is her commentary on our justification and eternal inheritance. Remember it’s an inheritance that would have never been ours apart from the grace and love of God, and the complete surrender of His “only begotten son”, as John described Him (John 3:16). She puts to rest every consideration we may have ever given to how Christ, the only son and rightful, sole heir feels about sharing the inheritance with us, who were enemies of His Father. With the reminder of Christ’s own words that He has gone to prepare a place for us in heaven, she writes, “He has welcomed us as heirs, as recipients of all the promises of God. We have a confident expectation of eternal life.”
Response to God’s Word
Father, thank You for the confidence that is ours through Christ Jesus and for the eternal life He secured for us on the cross. + We are forever in His debt and Yours, for He surrendered His life for mine and You accepted it as payment in-full for my sin debt! Mercy and grace flow into hope and we are forever changed – from hopelessly lost to eternally secure in Christ! I praise You God, my God – from Whom all blessings flow! – In Jesus’ name – Amen!
Today’s Scripture: Luke 7:18-50; SOAP / Luke 7:47-50
Therefore I tell you, her sins, which were many, are forgiven, thus she loved much; but the one who is forgiven little loves little.” 48 Then Jesus said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.” 49 But those who were at the table with him began to say among themselves, “Who is this, who even forgives sins?” 50 He said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you; go in peace.”
Luke 7:47-50 NET
The Whole Picture
The Alabaster Jar
Have you ever come in on the end of movie and wondered what in the world was going on, or what those closing words meant? It’s like starting a book at the ending paragraph and reading “… and they lived happily ever after”, which leaves you wondering who “they” were and what led up to the “happily ever after.” Today’s focus passage, like much of Scripture, is the happily ever after but the story starts in verse thirty-six, where a Pharisee invited Jesus to have dinner with him. The story isn’t so much that Jesus went – but what happened at the dinner. A woman, described only as a sinner, learns that Jesus is going to have dinner at the Pharisees house and she decides not only to go but to take with her a costly jar of “perfumed oil”, which she uses – along with her tears and hair – to anoint the feet of Jesus.
Then when a woman of that town, who was a sinner, learned that Jesus was dining at the Pharisee’s house, she brought an alabaster jar of perfumed oil. 38 As she stood behind him at his feet, weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears. She wiped them with her hair, kissed them, and anointed them with the perfumed oil.
Luke 7:37-38
She’s a Sinner
It’s a beautiful picture and event that Jesus turns into a teachable moment for the Pharisee and for all who were listening then or reading it now. Luke writes that when the Pharisee saw what the woman did, “He said to himself, ‘If this man were a prophet, he would know who and what kind of woman this is who is touching him, that she is a sinner.‘” Jesus responds to Simon’s thought with a lesson on cancelled debts between two debtors, one who owed much and one who owed little. His point being, that when both debts were freely forgiven, the one whose debt was greater would have more “love” for the creditor. This story is followed by a more pointed lesson, as Jesus uses a comparison of how they had each treated Jesus from the time He entered Simon’s house.
Simon
Simon recognized Jesus as a teacher and nothing more. Unlike, Simon Peter, who compared or saw himself in the light of Jesus’ righteousness – Simon, the Pharisee, compares himself to the sinner and sees himself as righteous and worthy of Jesus’ being in his home – but the woman as unworthy to even touch Jesus. When he does compare himself with Jesus, it is to acknowledge that he could see the woman for who she was but Jesus couldn’t.
He gave Jesus no water for His feet
He gave Jesus no kiss of greeting
He did not anoint Jesus’ head with oil
The woman/Sinner
She knew about Jesus but didn’t let her sin hold her back from Him. She went to where He was. She saw Jesus for who He was and she treated Him as such. Her love bearing witness to her faith and the forgiveness she had known.
She wet Jesus’ feet with her tears and wiped them with her tears
She did not stop kissing Jesus’ feet
She anointed Jesus’ feet with perfumed oil
The Meaning
Jesus, then sums up the lesson and the comparison with the revelation that even though the woman’s sins were many – she was completely forgiven; and her love, poured out in tears and oil and the use of her hair, showed her understanding of this. However, while Jesus’ illustration pointed out the Pharisee, who was a strict and religious follower of the law, had sinned less, didn’t understand the depth and debt of his few sins, and placed no value on the forgiveness of the debt or the forgiver.
As the end of our focus passage reveals, those at the table did not truly understand who Jesus was, as they questioned his authority to forgive sins. You may remember this question being asked before in Luke 5:20-21, but it is a vital question we should all ask at some time:
Who do I believe Jesus is?
AND – Do I believe He can forgive sins, be they ‘big’ or ‘little’, many or few?
Don’t miss that the woman understood exactly who Jesus was and it showed, but it wasn’t the evidence of her love that saved her, rather it was the evidence of her faith – as Jesus tells her, “Your faith has saved you, go in peace.”
Some Applications / Turning facts into action (or knowledge into wisdom)
The Apostle Paul says that we are to be honest in our evaluation of ourselves, measuring ourselves by the faith that we have been given – Romans 12:3-5.
In other words we are to see (judge/measure) ourselves in the light of Jesus not the light of others – Romans 12:1-2.
Seeing our sins, seeking, and finding forgiveness should promote, provoke, and reveal evidence of our love and appreciation for Jesus and what He has done for us
Response to God’s Word
Father, how deep Your love is for us, so vast beyond all measure – that You should forgive one, let alone the multitude of our sins. YET! in love, in kindness, compassion, abundant grace, and mercies that are NEW EVERY MORNING, You have forgiven much – and I am forever grateful! Thank You Father for the reminder to not judge others by their sins and to not think I am better or more righteous than another. May my love bear witness of who You are to me and what You have done for me – and may I respond to You accordingly!
Vital and Revealing Questions
Who do you say Jesus is?
Do you believe he can forgive your sins – big or little, many or few?
Each time he said, “My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.” So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me.
2 Corinthians `12:9
The Grace of God is the expression of His unmerited favor on all who, by faith, believe in the person and work of Jesus Christ. It is, I believe, the catalyst of His mercy, an expression of His love, and His power at work through me.
God’s grace is the expression of His love toward sinners, a demonstration of favor that is not merely adequate, but abundant.
Jen Wilkin, In His Image – p 86
When I was six I chose to ask Jesus to save me … I don’t remember the actual date on the calendar, but I know that it was on a Sunday morning and where I was sitting in the church. I don’t know exactly what was preached but I know that I knew I wanted to be saved from my sins, and I’m pretty sure the song, “Just As I Am” was playing as I moved forward. God was a part of our family and home. Church was a part of our life, Sundays and Wednesdays, choir practices, VBS, and eventually youth group, falling in love and then walking the same aisle as a bride that I had walked at the age of six to be saved. However, it wasn’t until I was about 26 that I heard a message about the Grace of God. Grace that was more than a means to the free gift of salvation but also the means to live in a relationship with God. Somehow I had missed that we are to “grow in grace and truth.” I had been striving from 6 to 26 to be “godly” and to turn away from “ungodliness” – but often failing and then floundering trying to make it up to God and “do better” – or I would run from Him because I knew, or thought I couldn’t do better – and I was tired of trying. The problem was I had been trying in my own strength rather than in the strength of His grace; I didn’t realize that His grace wasn’t just sufficient for salvation but that it was sufficient for life and godliness as well. What an eye-opener and a blessing that forever changed my life and continues to enhance it every day.
Praying for Grace
Are you struggling to say no to ungodliness? Pray for grace to walk in godliness. Do you have a thorn in the flesh as Paul describes in 2 Corinthians 12:1-10? Pray for God to remove it and for the grace to bear it if He doesn’t. Do you know someone who is unsaved? Pray for them to come to a saving knowledge and know the grace of God through faith. My point is this, while we should not be afraid to ask for God’s grace throughout the course of our lives, we must be careful to remember that the grace of God is never deserved, it is not something we can earn by any means. Loving more, serving more, sinning less … nothing we do or do not do makes us more or less worthy of His grace. I remember the first time I really heard 2 Corinthians 12:9 for what it was – the promised strength of God for the weaknesses of my life. But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, … Oh, the freedom I walked in after that day. Not a freedom to do as I pleased but a freedom to live in His strength and not my own.
Grace does not just teach us to renounce ungodliness, it also strengthens us to do so.
In His Image, Jen Wilken – p92
My Prayer Response:
Father, You are full of grace and compassion and You have spilled it out on me. Your gifts of grace are too much for me to truly understand – But I know it is only through Christ that they are mine. I cherish them, cling to them, and seek to use them for Your glory – In the mighty name of Jesus – amen!
Describe a time in your life when you fulfilled the Golden Rule by showing preferential treatment to a difficult person. What was the result? What did you learn about being a follower of Christ?
How should a desire to grow in grace impact our relationship with God positively? How should it impact our relationships with others positively? Give a specific example of each.
Pray
Write a prayer to God thanking Him for the abundant life of grace is yours in Christ. Ask Him to help you be gracious as He is gracious. Ask Him to help you deal generously with others, as one who has been dealt generously with by him. Thank him for making a way through Christ for you to receive grace upon grace.
8 Three different times I begged the Lord to take it away. 9 Each time he said, “My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.” So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me.
2 Corinthians 12:8-9
Have you ever wondered what Paul struggled with? Defined as a “thorn in his flesh”, one that was given purposefully to trouble him, and one meant to keep him from being arrogant. Ouch! Read the verses again, don’t miss how Paul handled the maddening trouble (7). Verse 8 says that on three different occasions he prayed – begging the Lord to take it away from him. Paul was both confident and persistent and yet the answer was continuously ‘no’. Why? Because God knew that the effect of the trouble would cause Paul to see his own weakness and depend on God’s strength. God’s plan was never for Paul, or us for that matter, to think of ourselves as self sufficient but rather to be dependent on God’sall-sufficient grace
Therefore, so that I would not become arrogant, a thorn in the flesh was given to me, a messenger of Satan to trouble me—so that I would not become arrogant.
2 Corinthians `12:7
When we see our own weaknesses and in turn realize the need for and sufficiency of our God, we will understand the futility of bragging about our strengths and instead we will find ourselves seeking God, trusting in Him, and praising Him. As Paul says, we will boast all the more about our weaknesses so that the power of Christ might be seen in us. To this end we should all live – that Christ be glorified in us.
Be sure and check out today’s Love God Greatly Blog Post
THE FOLLOWING ARE EXCERPTS FROM ANN VOSKAMP’S ONE THOUSAND GIFTS
There is a way to live the big of giving thanks in all things. It is this: to give thanks in this one small thing.The moments will add up
If gratitude is an antidote for anxiety… and giving thanks is a real cure for stress— why relegate thanksgiving to a holiday *when giving thanks can revolutionize our whole lives?*
So I just keep doing this, recording the gifts, gather the moments of His grace like manna.
Because joy is always a function of gratitude — and gratitude is always a function of perspective. – And if we are going to change our lives, we’re going to have to change the way we see.
This recording our gratitudes, this looking for blessings everywhere, this counting of gifts — this is what changes what we are looking for. *This is what changes our perspective.*
Thanksgiving is the lens God means for us to see joy all year round.
Because Thanksgiving is more than holiday—
So wherever you are, count your blessings, collect gifts, count it all joy.
Because it’s the brave who focus on all things good and all things beautiful, who give thanks for it & discover joy even in the here and now —- they are the change agents who bring fullest Light to all the world.
YOUR TURN: WHAT GOOD AND BEAUTIFUL THINGS ARE YOU FOCUSING ON TODAY? WHAT JOYS CAN YOU GIVE THANKS FOR AND BRING LIGHT TO THE WORLD AROUND YOU?
For everything that was written in former times was written for our instruction, so that through endurance and through encouragement of the scriptures we may have hope. Now may the God of endurance and comfort give you unity with one another in accordance with Christ Jesus, 6 so that together you may with one voice glorify [praise and worship] the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Romans 15:4-6
I recently purchased a sign for my home with a saying that is now engrained in my mind and is etching it’s way into my heart. “Fall is proof that change is beautiful”. Perhaps you’ve heard it before but it is new to me and I love it. While I am a creature of habit and don’t necessarily go looking for change, it has never really bothered me – with the exception of senseless or absurd change – but that’s a discussion for another day. I think the reason this statement grabbed at my heart and ended up in my shopping cart is because many people in my life either battle change or are weathering the storm of age and change can almost be detrimental to them. Somehow this writes a different story though, maybe not for all change but it is certainly true of the change that comes with fall, especially here in my native West Virginia. God bedazzles the hillsides and the mountaintops year after year with extraordinary colors that are great competition for my beloved green buds of spring or the flower filled yards of summer. I’m not a fan of snow. However, despite the chaos it can cause, I must admit, even it can be beautiful when it is stretched out across the hills and valleys like a down-comforter piled high upon the earth.
As I have contemplated the truth of the statement on my new sign, I began to realize that in actuality it could be said of every season – for to those who adore the snow, or the beautiful colors of spring and summer the meaning would no doubt take on the same wonder it has for me when applied to fall. However, it also strikes me that God’s Word offers the same truthful reality that change is beautiful. After all, was it not His spoken word that brought creation into being?1 The dark sky lit with stars and a captivating full moon, or the blue sky and its dazzling display of fluffy clouds, or the billowing waves of the ocean riding in on the shore. John refers to Christ as being the Word that was with God in the beginning and then later says that same Word became flesh and dwelt with man on the earth – and boy, did that bring some beautiful change and hope to a lost and dying world. Because, as John goes on to write, “we have all received from his fullness one gracious gift after another. For the law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came about through Jesus Christ.”2 That grace and truth changed everything!3 It set the captives free4 and has turned darkness into light,5 and death into life 6– for those who believe.7 Which brings us to our verse for today – and the written Word of God, which Paul says was given for our instruction and our encouragement through the Scriptures to not only help us endure but so that we might have HOPE. For me, the change that comes with the seasons is the constant reminder for believers that God, our God, is radiantly beautiful and this is made clear through His creation8. Likewise, the change that comes through His written Word in us9 changes us from the inside-out10 and by it we grow into radiant lights11, living testimonies12, savory salt13, and beautiful messengers of the good news14 that brings faith, hope, and love to the world.15
For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them.For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse.
For by grace you are saved through faith, and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God;
Ephesians 2:8
Reflection Question(s):
What makes salvation a gift from God?
No gift we could ever receive on this earth will last forever. It will become worn, run out of batteries, break, or be replaced by something new and exciting.
And my God will supply your every need according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus. Philippians 4:19 NET
But he said to me, “My grace is enough for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” So then, I will boast most gladly about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may reside in me. 2 Corinthians 12:9
What Do You Think?
In what ways do we believe the lie that God is not enough?
What is the truth?
Our problem is that we often lack the faith to recognize His sufficiency. –