What happens when one
truth—grace—is given overwhelming emphasis at the expense of other equally
significant truths?
Being sinners, we all need grace. In fact, lots of grace. No
right thinking believer questions the need for grace—before
or after conversion. http://bit.ly/1cpAexj
And
what's positive about a teaching which emphasises grace is that it has welcomed with open arms many sinners into
church. Many deemed and judged as “spiritual misfits” by a legalistic or performance-oriented church would
otherwise be unreached.
More on danger of performance culture: http://bit.ly/1h8Z84f
More on danger of performance culture: http://bit.ly/1h8Z84f
However,
the danger is when the pendulum swings too much to one side—when grace is overemphasised at the expense of other
equally significant truths. http://bit.ly/HPoyY3
Harbouring
an image of God that is agreeable and attractive—that He is always gracious, loving, merciful—has its dangers. http://bit.ly/1fN2LyX
A wrong picture of God
may have deadly consequences. Thinking erroneously that He is always meek and
mild may prove disastrous when we’re confronted by God the judge at the end of our life journey or when Christ returns
(Hebrews 9:27, 1 Peter 4:7, 17).
Rightfully, the pendulum
should swing back and forth. On one side, God’s love and mercy and on the other:
His justice and righteousness.
Right
through the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation, these two contrasting aspects of
God’s character are juxtaposed against one another.
“Righteousness
and justice are the foundation of your throne; love and faithfulness go before
you” (Psalm 89:14).
“The
Lord is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love”
(Psalm 103:8). This truth is reinforced in the Parable of the Prodigal Son. But
He is also a holy God who cannot tolerate sin. And there is a limit to His
tolerance for sin for He is a consuming fire (Hebrews 12:29, 1 Corinthians 10:
6-12). http://bit.ly/1bz3TUf
“For
the law was given through Moses; grace
and truth came through Jesus Christ”
(John 1:17). God requires of us righteous living; we will be judged on the
basis of the truth in His Word. Having His grace on our side does not mean we
can violate the laws He has laid out in the Ten Commandments. http://bit.ly/19wwHWW
Jesus told the woman caught in the act of adultery: “Neither do I condemn you; go and sin no more” (John 8:3-11).
Overemphasis on grace leads to the following assumptions. Do check out for yourselves whether the following premises in red are valid:
- Once we are saved, we will remain saved (OSAS, once saved always saved, eternal security). http://bit.ly/GM5Srz
- All our future sins are forgiven at conversion. http://bit.ly/18wc9Rb
- There is no need to confess sin as we merely need to rest in the imputed righteousness of Christ. http://bit.ly/19yBzuD
- We can afford to banish sin consciousness from our lives as the sin issue is a thing of the past, being settled once and for all when we believed in Jesus. http://bit.ly/GDv4QL
- Repentance is merely changing our way of thinking. http://bit.ly/15qK4KI
By examining the whole Bible, we do not dwell on half-truths or emphasise one truth at the expense of another equally fundamental truth (Acts 20:27). It is wise not to “cherry pick”.
So let us dwell on the whole counsel of God, not half-truths. Because truth has wings.
Love and mercy are important attributes of God. But He is also a God of justice and righteousness.
RELATED POSTS
WILL TRUE GRACE PLEASE STAND UP?
http://bit.ly/19moPr9
Love and mercy are important attributes of God. But He is also a God of justice and righteousness.
RELATED POSTS
WILL TRUE GRACE PLEASE STAND UP?
http://bit.ly/19moPr9
GRACE: CAN WE HAVE TOO
MUCH OF A GOOD THING?
DISAGREEING WITH GRACE
How can we be positive
about disagreement?
http://bit.ly/1dIyfVd
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