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Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Brown's Daily Word 1-29-14

    Praise the Lord for this new day.  It is going to be sunny and brilliant.  We will meet for our Wednesday Bible study and fellowship this evening at 6 PM with a special meal.  We will be looking at John 1 and 2.  The choir will practice at 7:30 PM.  Those of you who live in the area please join us this evening at 6 PM.  One of the powerful passages in the New Testament is found in Titus.  This passage is usually read during Christmas eve readings, “For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men.” Titus 2:11

    In his book "Spirit, Word, and Story", Calvin Miller writes, “Grace we define as ‘unmerited favor,’"  John Bunyan wrote, “O Son of God, grace was in all thy tears; grace came bubbling out of thy side with thy blood; grace came forth with every word of thy sweet mouth; grace came out where the whip smote thee, where the thorns pricked thee, where the nails and spear pierced thee.  O blessed Son of God, here is grace indeed!  Unsearchable riches of grace! Unthought-of riches of grace!  Grace to make the angels wonder, grace to make the sinners happy.”

    With his wonderful sanctified imagination, C.S. Lewis wrote about a bus that was leaving hell to take a tour of heaven.  While riding through the streets of gold, one of the guys in the bus sees an old friend walking through the streets of gold, and all of a sudden he jumps up and starts yelling, “It’s not fair, it’s not fair, he was a sinner all his life, it’s not fair.  I want justice, I want justice.”  Then one of the people walking through the streets of gold turned to his neighbor and said, “Poor guy.  He doesn’t know that we’re not here because justice has been imparted to us.  We are here because we have been given grace.” 

    The Good News of Grace is recorded throughout the Bible from Genesis to Revelation.  One of the beautiful stories of Grace is recorded in 2 Samuel 9.  This passage records that after David became king over Israel he asked, “Is there no one still left of the house of Saul to whom I can show God’s kindness?”  David, the man after Gods own heart was demonstrating the counter-culture of the time.  The Ancient Near Eastern culture would dictate that he kill everyone in Saul’s family.  David found out that there is one man, Mephibosheth, Jonathan’s son, was still alive.  He was a man who was crippled in both feet.  “Where is he?”, David asked.

    “He is in Lo Debar.”  In other words Mephibosheth had nothing going for him.  He was in “no man’s land”, but David said to Mephibosheth, “Don’t be afraid for I will surely show you kindness for the sake of your father Jonathan.  I will restore to you all the land that belonged to your grandfather Saul, and you will always eat at my table.”  Notice Mephiboshet’s response.  “What is your servant that you should notice a dead dog like me?”  In other words he was saying, "I am crippled; I don’t belong; I don’t fit with the intelligent, with the good looking, with the beautiful.”  Nonetheless he experienced GRACE, because the king came to tell him, “You sit at the table anyway.” 

    Metaphorically, Lo Debar is not a permanent place.  It is a waiting place.  Remember, the king knows where we  are.  Even Lo Debar is a place of grace.  God is ready to pour grace upon us .  I love the story of Mephiboshet because his story is our  story.  Sin has crippled us and we are lame.  We may be lame in our talk.  That is, we stutter or we have an accent.  We might be lame in our motives,causing us to do the right thing for the wrong reason.  Whatever our "lameness", God our King says to us, “You sit at My table anyway.”  That’s grace.   One day we will sit at the King’s table, and our feet will be crippled no more, because He will make all things new.

 In Jesus our Lord,

  Brown

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