This AM I sat in the little garden in front of our house reading. A bright red bird darted through the air near me to eagerly splash in the little bird bath. We haven't had rain for over a month now so things are starting to dry up. He, apparently, needed to cool off- he splashed and chirped joyfully as I sat quietly watching. A few moments later, he was gone ready to face the dryness of the Malagasy day.
I turned in my Bible to I Timothy 1. A verse leaped off the page at me, "The grace of our Lord was poured out on me abundantly, along with the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus." Paul is talking about his conversion experience. A few verses later he says that he was the worst of sinners. Then just to make sure everyone is clear he states it again. He was a blasphemer and a persecutor of Christians. How does the worst sinner of his day become an apostle, missionary, church planter, and author of 13 books in the New Testament? One day on the road to Damascus he had an encounter with God's mercy.
What did God's mercy look like practically speaking? He bathed with abundant grace, abundant faith, and abundant love. When a sinner, which according to Romans includes everyone born on planet earth, has their first encounter with Christ three glorious divine virtues are lavished on us. Grace speaks of God's strength to accomplish God's plan for our lives. Love speaks of God's kindness and limitless and tender compassion exhibited in the sacrificial death of His Son. Faith speaks of an inner lift of expectation and anticipation that life has much greater significance than the daily grind of routine and human monotony.
I thought back to my own conversion experience. I remember praying with my mom to invite Christ to enter my life, forgive my sins, transform my heart, and give me the assurance of eternal salvation. While my experience wasn't nearly as dramatic externally as Paul's, I believe it was just as glorious internally. At that moment, grace, love, and faith were poured out on me abundantly. I remember getting up from the bed where I had been kneeling with tears pouring down my face as joy and hope swept over me like nothing I had ever experienced.
It was from the inside out, something that lasted and produced a radical shift in how I saw my life. I had a new love for my brother, my parents, and the precious people of Kenya. I felt alive both physically and spiritually. My heart felt clean and free. God's presence was very near. I had a desire to talk and sing to Jesus almost immediately. I was alive by the mercy of God through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.
I was a dangerous person to the Kingdom of Darkness. It may seem ridiculous to you, but I can remember just a few months later witnessing to a professed British atheist in our driveway. At 6 years old it was hard for him to argue with me. Why? I was just so full of grace, love and faith.
So if these 3 components are the basis of a genuine salvation experience, then it only makes sense that these will be the three primary areas that our enemy, the devil, will attempt to erode at all possible costs.
He assaults the grace on our life by luring us to attempt life in our own strength and human striving. We base decisions on our own logic and emotions. We do it our own way. Soon grace is a distant memory. We are striving, and there is nothing quite so draining in life as striving in your own efforts. Our walk with Jesus becomes a heavy burden, a ball-and-chain to pull around. How so? Simply because we are carrying the weight of our salvation instead of allowing Christ to do so.
The enemy also assaults the love of God deposited in our lives by tempting us to pursue our own selfish interests. The world begins to revolve around "me". We no longer pursue His will and His purpose. We pursue our goals, our ambitions, our selfish desires. We turn deaf ears to the needs of others around us or worse we meet other peoples needs in order to personally profit from their need. Even though its prevalent and acceptable in the 21st century, it will still destroy God's glorious deposit in our lives- every time!
Finally, I believe he undermines our faith. He diverts our focus from God to our troubles and problems. Instead of seeing God's capacity to remove every mountain, we focus on our mountains capacity to swallow us alive. Faith quickly diminishes. As faith diminishes God seems distant and almost impotent. Worse we focus on people around us allowing our hearts to become drunk on their failures, duplicity, and hypocrisy. Soon God's greatness is a distant thought as we become consumed with offense.
End result? Christianity becomes a dry, empty, lifeless experience full of religious activities and professions that lack any kind of authentic expression. It's rote and ritual. It's draining and life-sucking. We feel dead and dry. We teeter on the verge of total hypocrisy. Why? Religion always kills the internal life of the Spirit.
So what's the remedy?
I think it's the joy of a bath. The dynamic Christians that I personally know and whose lives I have studied all possess one consistent principle: they take spiritual baths frequently and intentionally. They asked for a fresh out-pouring of grace, love, and faith over their lives and hearts. They cooperate with God's deposit of mercy. They defend their hearts against hell's schemes. They repent where they have strayed. They get back to the basics: love, grace and faith.
I can promise you this: a 1 Timothy 1:14 experience in your life will change everything! Whether you have never invited Christ into your life or you have fallen prey to the enemy's strategy, heaven has limitless resources to fill your life with God's mercy again. Grace! Love! Faith!
I turned in my Bible to I Timothy 1. A verse leaped off the page at me, "The grace of our Lord was poured out on me abundantly, along with the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus." Paul is talking about his conversion experience. A few verses later he says that he was the worst of sinners. Then just to make sure everyone is clear he states it again. He was a blasphemer and a persecutor of Christians. How does the worst sinner of his day become an apostle, missionary, church planter, and author of 13 books in the New Testament? One day on the road to Damascus he had an encounter with God's mercy.
What did God's mercy look like practically speaking? He bathed with abundant grace, abundant faith, and abundant love. When a sinner, which according to Romans includes everyone born on planet earth, has their first encounter with Christ three glorious divine virtues are lavished on us. Grace speaks of God's strength to accomplish God's plan for our lives. Love speaks of God's kindness and limitless and tender compassion exhibited in the sacrificial death of His Son. Faith speaks of an inner lift of expectation and anticipation that life has much greater significance than the daily grind of routine and human monotony.
I thought back to my own conversion experience. I remember praying with my mom to invite Christ to enter my life, forgive my sins, transform my heart, and give me the assurance of eternal salvation. While my experience wasn't nearly as dramatic externally as Paul's, I believe it was just as glorious internally. At that moment, grace, love, and faith were poured out on me abundantly. I remember getting up from the bed where I had been kneeling with tears pouring down my face as joy and hope swept over me like nothing I had ever experienced.
It was from the inside out, something that lasted and produced a radical shift in how I saw my life. I had a new love for my brother, my parents, and the precious people of Kenya. I felt alive both physically and spiritually. My heart felt clean and free. God's presence was very near. I had a desire to talk and sing to Jesus almost immediately. I was alive by the mercy of God through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.
I was a dangerous person to the Kingdom of Darkness. It may seem ridiculous to you, but I can remember just a few months later witnessing to a professed British atheist in our driveway. At 6 years old it was hard for him to argue with me. Why? I was just so full of grace, love and faith.
So if these 3 components are the basis of a genuine salvation experience, then it only makes sense that these will be the three primary areas that our enemy, the devil, will attempt to erode at all possible costs.
He assaults the grace on our life by luring us to attempt life in our own strength and human striving. We base decisions on our own logic and emotions. We do it our own way. Soon grace is a distant memory. We are striving, and there is nothing quite so draining in life as striving in your own efforts. Our walk with Jesus becomes a heavy burden, a ball-and-chain to pull around. How so? Simply because we are carrying the weight of our salvation instead of allowing Christ to do so.
The enemy also assaults the love of God deposited in our lives by tempting us to pursue our own selfish interests. The world begins to revolve around "me". We no longer pursue His will and His purpose. We pursue our goals, our ambitions, our selfish desires. We turn deaf ears to the needs of others around us or worse we meet other peoples needs in order to personally profit from their need. Even though its prevalent and acceptable in the 21st century, it will still destroy God's glorious deposit in our lives- every time!
Finally, I believe he undermines our faith. He diverts our focus from God to our troubles and problems. Instead of seeing God's capacity to remove every mountain, we focus on our mountains capacity to swallow us alive. Faith quickly diminishes. As faith diminishes God seems distant and almost impotent. Worse we focus on people around us allowing our hearts to become drunk on their failures, duplicity, and hypocrisy. Soon God's greatness is a distant thought as we become consumed with offense.
End result? Christianity becomes a dry, empty, lifeless experience full of religious activities and professions that lack any kind of authentic expression. It's rote and ritual. It's draining and life-sucking. We feel dead and dry. We teeter on the verge of total hypocrisy. Why? Religion always kills the internal life of the Spirit.
So what's the remedy?
I think it's the joy of a bath. The dynamic Christians that I personally know and whose lives I have studied all possess one consistent principle: they take spiritual baths frequently and intentionally. They asked for a fresh out-pouring of grace, love, and faith over their lives and hearts. They cooperate with God's deposit of mercy. They defend their hearts against hell's schemes. They repent where they have strayed. They get back to the basics: love, grace and faith.
I can promise you this: a 1 Timothy 1:14 experience in your life will change everything! Whether you have never invited Christ into your life or you have fallen prey to the enemy's strategy, heaven has limitless resources to fill your life with God's mercy again. Grace! Love! Faith!