Transformed by Sovereign Grace
Published: Wed, 12/09/15
Contact: josh@joshhhunt.com 575.650.4564
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Transformed by Sovereign GracePerhaps you are not interested in all this. Perhaps you think you will settle for going to church, getting your ticket to Heaven, trying to live a decent life and leaving the John 10.10 living to the super-saints. I have some bad news. If you take this approach, you set yourself on a collision course with the Almighty. Consider these verses:
All who are God’s children are predestined to be conformed to the image of Christ. God will carry His work on to completion. God will get his way. Your arms are too short to box with God. When my children were young, they sometimes did not want to follow my leadership. I knew we needed to take a trip as a family, but they refused to get in the car. What happened? I got them in the car. They got in the car kicking and screaming, but they God in the car. I am the dad, and I will get my way. God is God and He will get His way. He can get you there kicking and screaming, or He can get you there the easy way, with the easy yoke, but either way He can get you there. The hard way involves lots of pruning. It involves lots of discipline. It involves more pain than you want to imagine. The easy way is much more joyful. The easy way requires willing obedience. The easy way is, well, easy. The easy way does require self-discipline. It requires our cooperation with God. It requires us to start our day with our Bible on our lap. It requires that we memorize Scripture so that our minds are transformed. It requires that we confess our sins, one to another. It requires that we serve. It requires that we spend time in worship. Sound like too much trouble? Does obedience sound too hard? Try disobedience. Try inviting the disciplining hand of God. That is the hard life. C. S. Lewis was once interviewed by an American Christian journalist who was writing about well-known characters who had converted to Christianity during adult life. The theme was ‘decision’. He wanted to get Lewis to say how he had ‘made his decision’. Unfortunately for his project, Lewis refused to put it in those terms. He hadn’t ‘made a decision’, he said. God had closed in on him and he couldn’t escape (though at the time he had badly wanted to). The closest he would get to using the language the reporter was interested in was to say, ‘I was decided upon.’ In his autobiography, Surprised by Joy, he describes it in a more evocative phrase: ‘His compulsion is our liberation.’
Tom Wright, John for Everyone, Part 1: Chapters 1-10 (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 2004), 82. |