God’s grace is the ultimate testament to the truth that God is in control. Living by grace is our inward recognition of that fact.

God’s grace is the ultimate testament to the truth that God is in control. Living by grace is our inward recognition of that fact.

As a kid I had my choice of maybe 10-12 super-heroes from my comic book collection. My all time favorite was Spider-man followed closely by Thor. Today the movie landscape seems littered with super-heroes, villains and some in between (I’m still not sure if Wolverine or Green Arrow are good or bad) 
In the Bible there were some pretty amazing things done by some folks, like, raising the dead and calling fire down from heaven. But none of those guys did anything by their own power. Moses who parted the Red Sea, was a fugitive from the law. Samson who defeated thousands of his enemies in battle was a long-haired party-boy. Even the Apostle Paul was so unpopular that he was stoned, beaten and whipped more often than applauded. But in the middle of his trials Paul learned something that shed a whole new light on things for all of us in this not so super world. He discovered that the only real super hero was God; and that the way He loved to operate was through our super weakness: not our super strength.
To the Flat broke – Jesus promised His kingdom
To the Meek – Control of the planet
To the orphan – a Father and a family
To the Widow – the best husband in the universe
For lost sheep – a shepherd
For the criminal – Restoration
For the rejected – a Friend even closer than a brother
And for fallen sparrows – a loving creator who never forgets
And all of these things can be summed up in the one super power never once mentioned in films. The power of the grace of God. That one and only super power was released on the day when God was weakest of all – on the cross of Jesus Christ!
For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich. 2 Corinthians 8:9
For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has distributed to each of you. Romans 12:3
Do you battle with fear sometimes? I definitely do! I love God’s promises in
The Lord is my light and my salvation: whom shall I fear? Psalm 27:1
But there are times when I just wish that God would deal with my fear by His grace. But just like Adam and Eve’s failure in the garden we have all been bungling things up when we believe God is going to work things out by grace, without our participation. What we are calling grace; God may call simple laziness. The issue is not God’s lack of grace; but our lack of action. Yes, of course God is sovereign, almighty and all knowing; but for His own purposes He designed us not to be. I often pray for God to remove my fears; but Jesus said, “Do not let your heart be troubled…” In other words He put me in the driver’s seat and contrary to the song it’s me -not Jesus- who has to take the wheel!
Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. Hebrews 11:1 NIV
So when I asked myself, “How did Jesus deal with fear?” I remembered the cross. There in humiliation and pain He endured. His confidence was not based on some heroic stoicism, but in the confidence that despite his abandonment and suffering, there was a joy that lay ahead. At the sixth hour, as His strength reached its end and His vision grew dark but He chose to believe in something He could not see – our salvation and forgiveness. So in those moments when I am afraid, I will remember that He was afraid too. But three days later, on a morning He could not see from the cross, the stone rolled away and He rose and sorrow and mourning flew away!

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