How Great Is the Good News?

How Great Is the Good News?

 “The Spirit Himself testifies with our spirit that we are children of God.” Romans 8:16

“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” Romans 8:1

“So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand.” Romans 7:21

The middle-aged woman in the front pew leaned forward suddenly, throwing her arms up in the air!

“Thank you!” she cried.

I stopped my lesson on God’s “big story of grace,” looking at her, asking her to say more.

“I just never got that before,” she said. “Wow! This is amazing!!”

I had been teaching about redemption in the jail chapel service. I told the ladies how we are made a new creation in Christ (2 Cor. 5:17) and how God has made us “righteous in Christ” (2 Cor. 5:21).

I had just explained that we do still continue to sin, even after we become Christians. “And sometimes we wonder, ‘Why, if we are ‘new creation in Christ,’ do we still sin? And how does God see us as righteous?’”

I told them about the apostle Paul and how he said that he often does the very thing he hates (Romans 7:21), just as we sometimes lose our temper and yell at someone even when we were just praying that God would help us hold our tongue. The good news is, that we have a way out when we sin. We can ask God for forgiveness, and turn away from our sin (repent). But we have not forfeited our status as his children. Once God’s child, always God’s child. “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”

“Whenever our conscience accuses us, and we feel burdened with guilt, we need to look away from ourselves to Christ crucified. Then again we will have peace. For our acceptance with God depends not on ourselves…but entirely on Christ and what he has done for all on the cross.” (John Stott, Authentic Christianity, p. 211).

It was this assurance, this security, that was such good news to my friend at the jail. She had believed in Christ as Savior once, but she did not understand that her salvation lasted forever. She thought that every time she sinned, she was “out,” kind of like striking out in baseball, except she only got one strike. No wonder she was astonished by this good news!

Her reaction humbled me. I’m afraid I have sometimes taken this good news—the reality that Abba God doesn’t kick me out of the house every time I sin—too much for granted. It truly is astonishing. It’s the kind of kindness that should knock me on my knees to thank God yet again for his goodness and mercy to me. How about you? Do you want to join me in praising God for our assurance in Christ?

A Prayer about the Great Good News of the Gospel

Oh, dear, good Father, we thank you and praise you for your abundant mercy, for your incredible patience with us. We are so glad the Holy Spirit works in our hearts to change us, to make us more like your Son every day. We want to be like him. But we are so glad that when we fail, you forgive us freely. In Jesus’ assuring name we pray, Amen.

Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

A Prayer about Our Comfort in Grief

A Prayer about Our Comfort in Grief

[Hi friends, this prayer is based on Heidelberg Catechism Q. 1]

Dear Lord,

What a true comfort it is that in life and in death, 

in body and in soul, we belong to a faithful Savior, 

not just any savior, but a faithful One, 

who paid for our lives with his precious blood.

[Name your gratitude for how Jesus 

has rescued you from sin and slavery to the evil one].

Thank you for ruling over every detail of our lives, 

even the very hairs on our heads, 

and thank you for working all circumstances 

together for our salvation

[Name some circumstances you’ve seen him work together for salvation].

Thank you that your Spirit 

whispers firm assurances of eternal life 

and makes us “wholeheartedly willing and ready to live for you”.

[Name ways the Spirit has given you hope 

and empowered you to live for Christ].

In Jesus’ freeing name. Amen. 

Read 1 Corinthians 6:19-20; Job 12:10; Acts 17:27-28.

A Prayer about the Church’s Great Calling

A Prayer about the Church’s Great Calling

Compassionate Lord,

I’ll never forget the scene in the waiting room 

before our son’s first brain surgery. 

Because he worked at a church leading worship, 

and because he had friends who were pastors elsewhere, 

he had four pastors visiting with him and praying with him 

before he went back for surgery. 

Another patient’s wife came over and asked 

if one of the pastors would pray for her husband. 

I’ve never forgotten the feeling of a church bearing our burdens 

when we we were “fainthearted” and “weak.”

Today, we pray for all of the lonely souls 

in waiting rooms and living rooms and locker rooms

who do not know the care of a loving church. 

We pray that we, the church, 

would seek out the weak and fainthearted 

and offer to bear their burdens. 

We pray that they would receive our invitation. 

Thank you for calling us to be 

your ambassadors of hope. 

We pray that we would fulfill this profound calling

in the power of the Holy Spirit 

and by the grace of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ. 

Amen.  

Read 1 Thessalonians 5:12-22; Galatians 6:2; 2 Corinthians 5:16-21.

A Prayer about Trusting in God Alone

A Prayer about Trusting in God Alone

Almighty and Merciful God,

Forgive us when we trust in “chariots”—

our own reputation or status, 

the number of followers or likes we have on social media, 

our position in the company or the church, 

the behavior of our kids, 

the kind of car we drive, 

or any other substitute we might trust in 

to gain security and significance. 

Unlike these idols, you answer us in the “day of trouble,” 

while the “chariots” we trust in

sit mute and frowning when we cry out. 

Thank you for the help you send from your sanctuary 

and the support from your holy kingdom.

Thank you for giving us our heart’s desire 

even when we don’t recognize it’s you. 

In the name of your saving Son, Jesus. Amen. 

Read Psalm 20.

A Prayer about Walking in the Spirit

A Prayer about Walking in the Spirit

Holy Spirit,

Help. 

In our sinful nature, 

we all limp along, our natural motion 

twisted by the “desires of the flesh,” 

things like “idolatry…strife…fits of anger…envy…drunkenness….” (Galatians 5:18-21).

Thanks be to God, 

he has not only saved us from our sin 

through Jesus Christ, 

he has sent you, 

his empowering Spirit, 

to work in us, 

to alter our desires, 

to align our heart’s movement with his. 

Not only do you lead us in this new way of walking, 

in “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, 

faithfulness, gentleness, self-control,” 

you actually, to switch up the metaphor, 

grow this fruit in us.

Today, may we run in your joy and hope and energy, 

spilling your juicy fruit everywhere as we go.

Amen.

Read Galatians 5:16-25.