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[Monday Morning Podcast, 11/11/24] Come join Joel & his MAD BAD friends as they talk about living the grace life! PTL! (Click “SHOW MORE”)OR
It's another day of grace! We'll be live with Joel & Hal at 10 a.m. EST! PTL!

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#DailyDevotion When You Treat God's Grace Cheaply
#DailyDevotion When You Treat God's Grace Cheaply Amos 3 Listen, people of Israel, to what the LORD says against you, against all the people I brought out of Egypt: 2 “Of all the people on earth I have chosen only you, and so I will punish you for all your wrongs.” Having accosted both Judah and Israel the LORD returns to Israel. Again He reminds them of the special relationship He has with Israel. He had brought them out of Egypt. This is the beginning of the Ten Words (Ten Commandments) in Ex. 20:2. Although Judah may still be addressed here as, “Hey, if you don't pay attention to what I'm going to do to the northern tribes, you're next.” Our translation of verse two is more of an interpretation. The word being translated “chosen” in the Hebrew is Yada which has the meaning of known. Keil and Delitzsch write, “Acknowledgment on the part of God is not merely taking notice, but is energetic, embracing man in his inmost being, embracing and penetrating with divine love; so that "yada not only includes the idea of love and care, as in Hos_13:5, but expresses generally the gracious fellowship of the Lord with Israel,. . .” From this understanding election is understood. K&D also note that this election should not be taken for granted, as the Israelites and the Judites were doing. For it was a national election not an individual one. If we use election as an excuse to sin, can we really claim we have a claim to this? Election is only a doctrine of grace. It is to be used to upbuild, edify, and strengthen the faith in those who have weak faith, but faith nonetheless. It is not a doctrine to make us comfortable in our sins. When we find ourselves in sins, repentance is what is called for. The LORD had called them out of Egypt. He had given them His word, His will for their lives in the Torah aka Law. He had sent the priests and the prophets to them to educate them to what His will for them was and to call them to repentance and greater faith in Him. They were not ignorant. They knew what the LORD wanted of them. Because of their knowledge, great was their sin. To the one much is given, much is expected. 2 Peter tells us the judgment will be far worse for those who had known the path of salvation and rejected it. So the LORD had known the Israelites, intimately, like a husband knows his wife, well better than that. He had made Himself known to them, out of all the families on the earth. Because they have rejected Him and knowledge of Him, He was now going to punish them for all their sins. Do we abuse the grace of God and use it as an excuse to sin? Do we instead of confessing our sin and turning away from them because we are God's people in baptism, just ignore our trampling on the blood of Christ by sinning because we'll just confess it later and think we'll be just fine? May it never be so! May we always hate our sin and our inclination to sin. May we never take it lightly because of the One who we sin against. Most importantly, may we always turn quickly to our Father in heaven, thanking Him for the mercy, grace, love and forgiveness He has shown us in Christ Jesus and then may those same gifts be then manifested in our lives towards all people but especially our fellow Christians. Almighty God and Father, may we never treat Your grace towards us cheaply, but rather hate our sins and evil all the more because of it. Give us Your Holy Spirit so we may trust You and bear the fruits of Your love for us in our daily lives. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. Read the full article
“Cheap grace” was coined by Lutheran minister Dietrich Bonhoeffer in 1937 in Nazi Germany. His fearless opposition to Hitler led to years of imprisonment and death. Cheap grace seeks only gifts, but he knew that life also brings challenges that require real courage and sacrifice.
EZ33: The Cheap Grace Death
We must be much more careful with our language. The authentic Christian life is filled with weakness, yes. Capitulation? No. And sometimes we use the language of weakness... as a penchant for sin. And sometimes we can talk as if it is the height of gospel centrality to talk about all our great sinful weaknesses. As if God our heavenly Father looked at our sin and would sort of tousle our hair and say, 'aw silly kids.' Listen, you might first want to consider the words of Jesus before boasting about a spiritual failure. 'To the one who CONQUERS...' (Revelation, 3:21) So we have an understanding of being a failure, if by that we mean: 'I constantly struggle with temptation, I sin everyday, I'm in need of repentance everyday, I'm not the person I fully want to be, I wrestle with these thoughts.' All of that is fine. But we must have this biblical category that to be a christian who receives the reward is to be one who CONQUERS.
Kevin DeYoung - Can We Be Glorified Without Being Sanctified?

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For they, having rejected and being unable to understand the Ten Commandments, preach much about the grace of Christ, yet they strengthen and comfort only those who remain in their sins, telling them not to fear and be terrified by sins, since they are all removed by Christ. They see and yet they let the people go on in their public sins, without any renewal or reformation of their lives. Thus it becomes quite evident that they truly fail to understand the faith and Christ, and thereby abrogate both when they preach about it.
Martin Luther
Grace, Pt. 2
Something I would’ve brought up had my ramble on grace been an actual conversation, is that grace doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Much like the DNA and proteins aren’t floating through empty space in a cell (you’re a giant bag of soup!), grace isn’t free of complications when it collides with the harshness and absence of order.
The notion of grace being extended means there  must be an injustice somewhere, and the defining quality of being undeserved begs the question of how much we can milk it out of whoever it is that’s offering grace (as well as how much we are required to give to others when they deserve none).
Now these aren’t real examples that I can draw from the lives of those around me, but I’m certain that all have occurred, and the best working worldview has to be able to address a realistic scenario, or else it runs the risk of being amended or clutched onto despite intellectual dishonesty (though even there I’d interrupt myself and argue against it, but I digress):
A major betrayal among friends occurs. Billy’s reputation is tarnished, despite his attempts to clear his name. Frank slinks his way out and avoids (most) suspicion. The former friends meet up at a large party because they share friends, and Frank extends a superficially warm welcome to Billy, who is still hurting. There’s a large injustice gap, and Frank couldn’t care less about Billy; there will be no apologies nor confessions. How far does Billy go? Miranda finds Joe at her doorstep yet again. Joe can’t stop using, but he won’t stop apologizing either, begging her to forgive him. How many times does she extend grace? When is enough, enough? John passes by a homeless man holding a “will work for food” sign. The man reeks of alcohol, and mumbles about getting his next fix. John has no work to offer, but he does have some money, as well as knowledge about the nearest homeless shelter. What does he do? What ought he do? Give both money and directions? Just one of the two? Give the money without assuming the money will transform into drugs? A man knocks on Jessica’s door and introduces himself as a registered sex offender. The crime was heinous, and the man earnestly repentant. Jessica organizes community gatherings that involve the entire neighborhood. Does she offer an olive branch or smile and triple-bolt the door?
Granted, some of the options are dichotomous, or more extreme, but aren’t extreme cases exactly where grace is found? But how much of it is there? How would one approach the sticky situations, where to give grace is to give away a part of yourself? Can grace be so readily equated with forgiveness, public amicability, or charity towards one who will abuse it? Is the grace of God Himself given as an investment or a case of charity, like Apostle John writes in 1 John 4:8?
I know how I would answer this right now, and remember how I would’ve answered, but I do not know how I should answer, or how I should show grace. Give me more info in these hypothetical cases! The amount of grace is given case by case! There are solid, pragmatic approaches that have been formulated for different fields of interaction; the REACH method of forgiveness by E. Worthington is a pretty cool example. But do we take the bits and pieces that seem most safe to us and the other party, or do we go crazy with grace?
“I forgive/give/extend grace, but will not be a part of any malicious motive/presence/ignorance.”
“I forgive/give/extend grace blindly to all for everything.”
The first seems great in the long run, the second too radical to exist anywhere but in thought. I mean, there’d be serious consequences if we extended trust to all who wronged us as if nothing happened and withheld justice from evildoers. But I think setting limits on grace is a very unchristian thing to do. Limited grace sounds more paradoxical than grace on its own; is it really the only way of existing? If someone insists I must extend them grace (and remain in contact or be amicable despite their malevolence), must I? I probably bit off more than I could chew with this topic...I still think grace permeates every interaction. That when we forgive, give, or extend grace despite thinking we are being destroyed by doing so, we discover there is more to us, more to give. But I’m not a psychologist, sociologist, or theologian with divine understanding of human interactions.
And for a bit of criticism towards everyone (especially myself), I think we are far less grace-giving than we think we are. If grace is unmerited, then giving grace when it’s hard to do so is precisely when it’s grace, and not “just desserts”. The person who hurt you a hundred times and doesn’t look like they’ll slow down soon? Grace. Thinking of leaving behind your colleagues because your enlightened brain has surpassed their babbling? Grace. [I have great respect for those who made some sort of transition and remain as a bridge to better thoughts to their supposed enemies. Some pioneer thinking, some remain as lightposts and helping hands.]
I’m progressively trying to abridge my examples and thinking, because this post has been moored to my editing dock for too long. Thoughts have come and gone without me writing of them because I have to finish this first. I didn’t even touch substitutionary atonement, and competing theology of God’s grace. Maybe next time. Brought to you by procrastination, “Oceans” by Sleeping At Last, and lukewarm Kona coffee from some organic place.