9/23/13

Overflow




 Emily Fridenmaker is a regular contributor at 'for we have rebelled.'
 You can find her at A Relentless Embracing of Good.


_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________


We are not saved by works.

Let me say that again.

WE ARE NOT SAVED BY WORKS.

Jesus’ death on the cross and his capture of a sinner’s heart does that.

However, we as Christians are saved TO works.

When we trust in Jesus, when our present and future hope is in Him and all that He is, we get to experience the mercy that gives us not what we deserve (hell), but a relationship with the Creator that extends into eternity. We get to experience His gifts—gifts that we enjoy freely and that are far better than those a good dad would give to his son. We get to experience his love—His relentless, undeserved, perfect, entirely one-way love.

These are wonderful things and they are not meant to terminate on us.

Mercy, gifts, love, time, money...we get to experience these things with open hands.

None of these things belong to us, we don’t deserve any of them…God gives them to us in order that other people might see HOW GREAT HE IS.
We are stagnant consumers, taking what the church has to offer...
If the extent of our involvement in the working kingdom of Christ is saying a half-hearted prayer for someone and throwing a check in the offering plate twice a month, no one is seeing the tangible outworking of the Gospel in our lives. We are stagnant consumers, taking what the church has to offer but not loving it enough to live and speak the Gospel back into it. This can cripple a church. Because after all, the church is a body and we are a part of it. One does not function optimally or efficiently when part of one’s body is refusing to work. Giving of ourselves strengthens the Body as a community of believers that GENUINELY love and care for our brothers and sisters.

And lest we be deceived that works in the Kingdom are only for ‘others,’ let’s remember that reaching out to help is for us too. Giving of our money, our selves, and our time strengthens our faith and our trust in God—it brings about the realization that He will provide for our needs in all situations. It is vital for us to know in our heads and our hearts that nothing that we can do for ourselves, no amount of possessions or time can satisfy our need for a Savior. If this is true, then why do we cling so tightly to them, ignoring God’s commands and his people?

...it brings about the realization that He will provide for our needs in all situations.

When we are satisfied in Christ and totally experience His goodness, how could that goodness not overflow in our lives, reaching those in our communities?

What I don’t want to happen is for someone to read this and think, “Alright, now I just have to go do all these things and help this person and volunteer here and etc. etc. for Jesus!” The conclusion I hope you as a reader will come to is as we press in to Jesus, as He draws nearer to us, our hearts will begin to be broken by that which breaks his. We will love Him more, and in turn love His people more.

Ultimately, the thought I will leave you with is this: HOW can we possibly be saved and transformed by Jesus and the Gospel and not be motivated to follow his commands and love his people—people who are sinners….exactly like us.


James 2:14-17
What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can that faith save him? 
If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, "Go in peace, be warmed and filled," without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that?
So also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.

2 comments:

  1. Yes, so true. It's my daily prayer for my heart to be broken for what breaks His.. Then we can truly be the hands and feet of Jesus.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Excellent stuff here Emily! I feel that our blogs are tapping into the same vein. Christian compassion and service should indeed go well beyond the church walls...however, many are content to live behind the "shop window". The hobgoblin of Christianity is becoming content; becoming stagnant; becoming complacent. When this happens we become utterly useless to the Kingdom. Your blog has a lot of mental jewelry to meditate upon and live out in our daily lives. Thank you!

    ReplyDelete

Have a comment? Post it here!