Love Wellনমুনা
Good News
The father speaks to his oldest son: “My son… you are always with me, and everything I have is yours. But we have to celebrate and be glad, because this brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.”
The father is concerned about one thing above all others.
Life.
Both his sons were the walking dead. Lost, each in his own way.
But one of his boys has confessed, believed, and received his father’s love.
There is an unspoken question left dangling in the air by the father to his oldest son: will you dare to be loved as I long to love you, or will you insist on being loved as you feel you ought to be loved?
What makes the father’s backyard conversation with his legalistic, judgmental son so incredible is how unfair it is.
What makes the father’s sprint down the sidewalk to his wayward, narcissistic son so amazing is how unfair it is.
Grace is unfair.
If you are like me, you tend to hold up a strainer and say,
“I can only receive so much grace at a time.”
When we say this, we, in effect, judge God by telling Him how much love we should or should not receive. Or how much grace others should or should not receive.
I was walking by a store and saw a big sign that said I should stop in because they were offering something for free.
I kept walking.
“Nothing is free,” I told myself.
If it’s too good to be true, it’s too good to be true.
In a consumerist society, this seems to be a pretty good principle to live by.
I wonder, however, if this becomes part of our problem when it comes to interacting with God.
I wonder if the greatest obstacle to redemption is that we just can’t accept a love and a salvation that are free.
It would seem that God has a difficult PR job.
The difficulty is in giving Himself away.
Not because He is mean or unkind … but because He is simply too good.
When we learn to accept grace—unfair, wild, and inequitable as it can seem sometimes—we learn a little something about redemption. God redeems only those who realize that they cannot make it without Him. This breaking news about God’s love and rescue is called “the gospel.” It seems that the gospel is only good news if we are in need of good news.
Scripture
About this Plan
In Love Well, Jamie George confronts the popular heresy that God's children are meant to live a life absent of pain, sorrow, or conflict. On the contrary, Jamie passionately describes brokenness as a divine gift and a necessary God-ordained path to experiencing true joy and genuine redemption.
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