Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Steve McVey Writes

Making Music Together with Christ

Give me any of the great compositions written by Bach and let me sit down to the piano and I can play every note of the piece. Hand me Marriage of Figaro by Mozart and I can play every note on the page. That’s right, I won’t miss a note. When I play the songs for you, there will be only one problem with my effort. I can’t play the notes on the page in the order they are written. In other words, I can only sit down and bang on the piano, hitting every note at practically the same time to ensure that at some point I will have struck every key on the piano keyboard.

Can you envision me doing what I’m describing? Banging on the piano like a small child? What I said initially is true. When I’m finished, I will have played every note written by the composer just not the way he intended. That fact creates a problem. What I would be doing isn’t really making music. I would be making a mockery of the composer’s original intention.

Sometimes we all have a tendency to live our lives that way. The Holy Spirit reveals to us God’s plan for our lives in certain ways and we then set out to make it happen. We think that if we just know the plan God has for us, we can make it play out. However, when we try to do it on our own, instead of making music we create a discordant mess.

Abraham did it when God told him that He was going to give him a son through Sarah. The song didn’t have the tempo Abraham expected. It moved too slowly for him, so he decided to take matters into his own hands by going to Hagar. Nine months later a sour note was born named Ishmael.

God’s people have often found themselves off key when they have tried to live independent of Him. Israel one day determined that they would defeat Jericho on their own terms instead of following the direction of the Composer/Conductor and they soon found themselves singing the discordant dirge of defeat.

The early disciples were told to wait in the upper room until they were endued with power from on high. Instead Peter took the baton and led the whole group in a stanza of “Let’s Elect A New Apostle.” Somebody named Matthias ended up as the new note in the symphony of early church history, but he didn’t really fit the piece. In fact, he played that one measure in church life and then pretty much was never heard from again. In God’s time, Paul became a sustained note He played who harmonized perfectly with His Salvation Sonata.

There’s a lesson we need to learn and then learn again. We can’t make the music. Only God can. He wrote the melody and He alone is the one who can conduct it.

How does this practically apply to your life? It means that it is important to wait on the Lord. Don’t grow impatient because you believe the things God wants for your circumstances aren’t unfolding as fast as you think they should be happening.

God is the composer of your life. He writes the notes and He leads the playing of the composition. When we try to take matters into our own hands, we’re acting like a child banging on the piano. There’s no way we can turn our circumstances into music.

Impatience breeds problems in life. The Bible often encourages patience in our grace walk. The psalmist wrote, “Commit your way to the Lord, Trust also in Him, and He will do it. He will bring forth your righteousness as the light And your judgment as the noonday. Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him” (Psalm 37:5-7) He will do it, the psalmist assures us. We don’t’ have to make anything happen. Our only responsibility is to commit it all to Him and then trust that His timing is perfect.

Isaiah wrote, “Yet those who wait for the Lord will gain new strength” (Isaiah 40:31). The word “gain” denotes the idea of an exchange. As we wait for Him to act, our weakness is yielded into the hands of our Loving Father and His strength rises up in us.

Paul encouraged the church at Rome, “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer” (Romans 12:12). When you have your afflictions sandwiched between joyful hope and faithful prayer, as this verse illustrates, you can be assured that everything is on schedule according to the divine timetable.

Saint Augustine said that patience is the companion of wisdom. Most of us have unwisely created needless frustrations for ourselves by refusing to wait for God’s timing. We later regretted it. The question is, “Did we learn from our mistake?”

If you patiently wait on the Lord, you will discover that His timing and His order will create a melody in your life that you could never create. Don’t make the mistake of thinking you have to make something happen. Just keep your eyes on the Conductor and He will tell you when to hit the notes and which ones to hit. When you follow His direction, you will be amazed at the tune of triumph you will hear coming out of your own life. Anything else is nothing more than the flat notes of a faithless lifestyle. 

Friday, September 25, 2020

Father's Love


 

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Steve McVey Writes:

We are Not in Kansas Any More

 In The Wizard of Oz, when Dorothy and Toto were lifted from their home in Kansas by a tornado and carried to the land of Oz, it was a whole new world there. Until then everything had existed in a land of black and white, but when Dorothy opened the door on this new dimension of living, suddenly for the first time she saw that she had found a home rich with beautiful colors.

As she entered into her new life in that wonderful place over the rainbow, she soon discovered that many things were different than they had been in her old life. Standing in awe of the beauty that was revealed to her, she rightly concluded, "I don't think we're in Kansas anymore."

This is the experience of every person to whom God graciously reveals the reality of our true identity in Christ and what it means to walk in grace. Many have lived for years in a world of empty routine, marked by drab, colorless religious activity that holds no real beauty. We were sincere as we went about the business of doing our daily chores for God. Deep within, however, there was a gnawing hunger, a desire for something more. Many of us wondered at times if what we were experiencing was all there is to the Christian life. Surely there must be more “somewhere.”

When Joshua prepared the people of Israel to cross the Jordan River to go into the promise land, he cautioned them to carefully follow The Ark of the Covenant, the visible sign of God’s presence with them. He made clear to them that the reason they needed to follow God was, “you have not passed this way before.” In Canaan there would be so much to learn. Everything there would be new. The culture, the food, the language and many other things would be new when they arrived there.

It’s the same way for us when God delivers us from the wilderness of self-imposed religious-rules-keeping and brings us into the land of grace. We find ourselves in a new world where old terminology doesn’t fit. Old methods of living are obsolete. Even the vulgar language of guilt, shame, self-effort and personal determination are replaced with the mother tongue of life that effortlessly flows from our King. We learn to relax in a world where we don’t live in tension about being judged for missteps but instead gain the freedom to live boldly knowing that our faith will be affirmed even when we think we have failed.

We couldn't have imagined what a grace walk would look like. It is better than anything a person could ever conceive. In the land of grace, it is necessary to renew our minds to a new way of life. It takes time to see by experience that the old ways of living don't fit in this new world. Grace isn't simply a truth we add to our lifestyles. God's grace expressed through the indwelling Christ becomes our life. He doesn't simply make the landscape of life more beautiful. He is the very air we breathe. "In Him we live and move and exist" (Acts 17:28).

Entering into an understanding of this kind of world brings about a transformation in the way we think. We will find that the way we see all of life is changed as our minds are renewed by the grace of God. The old assumptions about life that Dorothy held in Kansas had to be scrapped when she arrived in her home over the rainbow. As you move deeper into the land of grace, you will discover that you too will begin to interpret life through a new paradigm. Your adjustment to living in the land of grace will be rewarding if you are willing to have old beliefs removed and replaced by new ones which are appropriate for the new world in which you now live.

The Bible says, "Be not conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind (Romans 12:2). The old world is a world of dead morality where everything is black and white. The only thing that matters there is doing your chores and doing them well. Life revolves around laws of cause and effect. To be transformed means to step across the forms set by the world of morality and be renewed in our minds to the reality of our God’s eternal, unchanging, never-diminishing, outrageous love!

In the new world of grace, the only cause for blessings is the goodness of God. He wants to renew your mind to this new way of life. It is a life where He blesses you, not because of how good you are, but because of how good He is. Purpose at this moment to stop viewing life through the lens of your old life. Be transformed by the renewing of your mind. You aren't in Kansas anymore. You are in the land of grace -- a place where God is anxious to show you all the beauty He has prepared for you. Don't try to apply the principles of life you knew before in this new place. They don't fit. Just trust Him. He has the days ahead already planned for you. It isn't your responsibility to navigate your way through life. Just walk with Him. Follow the grace-bricked road and enjoy the journey. 

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

What we need


 

Who have we come to worship

 An element of worship we treasure at Grace Fellowship Church is the Call to Worship. This is the element at the beginning of the service that is essentially a declaration that we are now beginning something special, something different from everything else we will experience through the week. As we explicitly call people to worship, we implicitly call them from other activities, other concerns, other responsibilities. Sometimes these calls to worship are spoken by the pastor and sometimes, as below, they are responsive. Here’s one from a recent service that I particularly enjoyed.


Leader: Who have we come to worship?

All: The great and mighty God, whose name is the LORD of hosts, great in counsel and mighty in deed, whose eyes are open to all the ways of the children of man, rewarding each one according to his ways and according to the fruit of his deeds. (Jeremiah 32:18-19)

Leader: Why should we worship Him?

All: Our Lord and God is worthy, to receive glory and honour and power, for He created all things, and by His will they existed and were created. (Revelation 4:11)

Leader: Shouldn’t we be afraid to approach such a great God?

All: The tax collectors and sinners all drew near to hear Jesus. (Luke 15:1)

Leader: So we may come before Him with confidence?

All: There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. (Romans 8:1)

Leader: What shall we say to our great Redeemer and Saviour?

All: Worthy is the Lamb who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing! (Revelation 5:12)


No hands but HIS ever holds the shears

Suffering is never pleasant. We never welcome trials as we do joys, for suffering always brings sorrow, it always brings pain. Sometimes a loved one is taken from us and we experience the aching grief of absence. Sometimes we suffer the loss of money, property, or position and we mourn what has been torn from us. Sometimes we are tried by sickness or unremitting pain and we lament the pleasures we can no longer enjoy. No matter how suffering comes and no matter the form it takes, it is always painful. And it is in our pain we need to remember the words of Jesus who said, “I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. … Every branch that bears fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful” (John 15:1–2).

God is a gardener and we are branches under his care. He looks after us with all the attentiveness of a gardener who longs to see his vine bear fruit. He tends us, he nourishes us, and when necessary he prunes us. And though we do not welcome those times when pains cut deep into our souls, we have this confidence: No hand but his ever holds the shears. If it is our loving gardener who does the pruning, we can be sure there are never any unwise or careless cuts. Though we may not know why this branch has had to be trimmed or that one removed, we do know the one who wields the blade. We know his faultless wisdom, his perfect vision, his steady hand. We know he makes no mistakes.

There is still more comfort to be found. Jesus says the Father trims every branch that bears fruit. Suffering, then, is not a sign of God’s disapproval but his approval, for it is the branches that are already bearing that he carefully cuts. Barren branches are chopped off and thrown into the fire, but the lush and living ones are trimmed so they will be more fruitful still. In fact, to escape all pruning is no sign of God’s favor, for a branch must be tended, it must at times be trimmed, if it is to continue to bear. A wise gardener will sometimes have to make deep cuts, shearing off branch after branch, bud after bud. But what may look senseless to the untrained eye will soon lead to fruit of a richer, fuller flavor.

The gardener never stops caring for his vine, and God never stops caring for his children. His disposition toward us is always mercy and love. There is often more of his blessing in things we regard as evil than things we regard as good. Pain may be better for us than pleasure. Loss may enrich us more than gain. Sorrow may equip us more fully than joy. The vine must be pruned if it is to bear fruit that is abundant and sweet.

There are times when it is easy see the goodness of God in our circumstances, but there are also times when we can barely see it at all. It is then that we need faith that is truly Christian—faith to believe in goodness we cannot yet see. And there must always be goodness in our circumstances, for God does not send us two classes of providence, one good and one bad. No, everything works for good for those who are loved by God and called according to his purpose. Through the eyes of faith we see that our suffering is God’s goodness in seed form. It takes time for the seed to mature and to grow and to bud and to bear fruit. Many of the good things in our lives come first as pain, first as suffering, first as disappointment, but afterward they bloom into the rich fruits of righteousness—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness…

Vines must be pruned if they are to bear fruit; Christians must experience trials if we are to grow in grace. Trials will come, and we must do more than passively endure them. We must submit to them and even embrace them as the will of the Father. We must determine we will emerge from them as better Christians, to have gained more of the mind of Christ, to have grown in love for God and our fellow man. For we know that just as pruning causes the vine to be more abundant, the cutting away of earthly pleasures and illicit joys causes us to bear the good and sweet fruits of righteousness and peace. We know that the only sorrow capable of truly harming us is the sorrow that does us no good.

(Inspired by J.R. Miller’s Practical Religion)


Sunday, September 20, 2020

He Loves Me


 

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Heaven


 

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Steve McVey Writes:

 Love Changes Everything

Jackie is a young woman who lived in the inner city projects for many years. She had lived a hard life as a drug addict who sometimes sold her body to men to sustain her habit. Some might have blamed it on her upbringing, which had been anything but normal. From the time she was a child, the men in her life had abused and exploited her. Now, as an adult, she trusted no man. None. She was callused. Her language was unusually foul for a woman and she despised men.

A Christian man was visiting in her community when one day he met Jackie, smiled and said hello. Jackie rudely frowned at Don and immediately turned away. The next day Don returned to her community and again smiled and said hello. Again she turned away. However, Don was persistent. Day after day he came to visit her neighbors and each day he smiled and spoke to Jackie.

After a while, she actually began to think that maybe - just maybe, this guy was sincerely nice. Then the thought would rush into her mind, "But why would he have any interest in me? What does he want?" However, despite her skepticism and suspicions about his kindness, she began to respond to him a little more each day, until finally she was having conversations with Don.

As weeks turned into months, Jackie began to realize something. Don was interested in her as a lady. Not in an inappropriate way either. He seemed to genuinely care for her in the way that a man loves a woman with a purity that she had only dreamed about until now. Could it be that what she was feeling might be true? Did he really love her, as it seemed?

As the thought of being the recipient of this wonderful man’s love took root in her mind, Jackie began to change. First, she found that she didn’t want to use foul language when she talked to him anymore. She began to anticipate his visits each day and would get dressed up, put on her makeup and even wear perfume. She wanted to be pleasing to him. He had never criticized her looks or behavior. To the contrary, from the beginning Don had accepted her just like she was. That itself motivated her to want to change.

As Don shared his love with Jackie day after day, she bloomed. Little by little, her life was transformed from a hardened, drug-addicted prostitute into a real lady. The change didn’t happen because Don pointed out all her faults because he didn’t. She wasn’t transformed into a lady because it was what she thought she ought to do. His love motivated her to want to become the lady she was created to be. He didn’t lay religious rules on her; he just loved her and his relationship to her caused the change in her to become a natural result.

Have you realized the transforming power that comes through knowing that Jesus Christ loves you exactly where you are at this moment? Your religious upbringing may cause a haunting voice to criticize you, causing you to feel a shameful need to do better first, but don’t confuse that for the voice of Christ. He never criticizes, never tells you that youhave to change to be loved and completely accepted by Him. He loves you right where you are, no matter what you’re doing or not doing. It’s amazing. Even at times you don’t love yourself, He does.

This issue is one of the biggest differences between authentic Christianity and the legalistic counterfeit that often calls itself by the same name. New Testament Christianity is as immersed in grace as a fish living in the ocean. Where there is no loving grace present, there is no authentic expression of Christianity. God is love and Jesus has come to make that love known to us. He loves you at every moment, in every situation you find yourself.

The pseudo-Christianity of the modern world focuses primarily on a need to change ourselves to position ourselves into a better standing with God. This unloving brand of legalism will not help you because it is not biblical Christianity. It is a poser, a counterfeit, and an imposter. It can never empower anybody to change because its core value isn’t the love of God revealed in Jesus. At its core is the demand for an improved religious performance.

Even if you could change the way you behave, it would have absolutely no effect on how God feels about you. His love isn’t provoked by our actions but by the miraculous agape that flows out of Him completely independent of our actions or attitudes. Rules may tell you to change to gain God’s love but grace tells you that you are loved right now and couldn’t be loved any more.

Legalism changes nothing for the better. The love of God truly changes everything. If you hunger to see growth in your personal grace walk, abandon every religious thought. Embrace the biblical truth of Divine Love in order to experience the transformation you long to know.

Do you know how much He loves you? It is humanly illogical that He should love us so much, but He does. Stop trying to change yourself. That’s an empty religious act. You don’t have to do that. Just receive His love and He will change you. Until then, enjoy Him. You’ll be amazed at the power to change you’ll discover rising up in you as you simply accept His love.

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Define Yourself


 

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Steve McVey Writes: Can we trust our hearts

 A young student once approached Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and said, “I would like to write a concerto. Can you help me?"

"You're too young," Mozart told him, "wait a few years."

"But is it not true that you were composing music when you were just seven or eight?" the student persisted.

"Yes," answered Mozart, "but I didn't have to ask anybody how."

People often recognize what is within their heart at an early age. It takes a jaded adult perspective to strip a child of the simple faith to believe that he can be an astronaut or inventor or even President. Children have no trouble trusting that their heart will tell them the truth. Maybe that is part of the reason why Jesus said we must become like a little child to live in God's kingdom.

To recognize what is in your own heart is a major step in fulfilling the plan your Father has for your life. Once a person has the capacity to know what is in his heart and, along with that knowledge, possesses a childlike faith to trust His heart, his realm of possibilities multiply exponentially. Your dreams and core desires aren't silly. They never were. They have been divinely placed within you. They aren't coincidental, but have been joined together by Divine Design.

To live from the heart is to reconnect with your core desires that have been divinely deposited within you. In rediscovering your heart you’re likely to learn that your gifts and abilities align perfectly with those desires. After all, a loving God who has a master plan for your life has created you.

Living from the heart is different than living from the head. Our minds rationalize, scrutinize and analyze to determine whether or not our dreams are possible. The mind considers the external factors related to the situation and decides whether or not to pursue the course based on what it perceives to be the probability of a successful outcome. The heart knows no such boundaries, but challenges us to reach beyond natural limitations as if there were no limits to what might be done.

To successfully integrate your faith into your daily lifestyle, it is necessary to learn to trust your heart again, as you did when you were a child. Your mind certainly isn't an enemy of your heart, but in a world where we have been programmed to believe that reason alone reigns, it is important to once again lay hold of the dreams of your heart and realize that you can trust what you discover there.

How do you recognize the calling of your heart? The answer is closely related to understanding what moves you, what matters most to you. Do you want to rediscover your heart? You can find it by identifying the things you value most in life. Your heart isn't interested in becoming rich, but in becoming real - to live from your authentic self. It is what matters most, not what pays most that captures the heart.

One highly successful man said to me, "I can make money, but what I really want is to make a difference." That man was speaking from his heart. The well-known statement about having climbed the ladder to the top only to discover it was against the wrong wall describes an all too common situation for many people. We know instinctively that we were created for a higher calling in the workplace than simply to gain prestige, power and possessions. Blaise Pascal said in the seventeenth century, "the heart has reasons of which reason knows nothing."

Many with a church background grew up being bombarded with the Old Testament teaching that, “the heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked” (Jeremiah 17:9). Because they have locked in on that single verse to the exclusion of others, they have come to doubt their own heart, believing it to be untrustworthy. While it is true that apart from God’s transforming grace, man’s heart is deceitful and wicked, you don’t live at that place. You have been embraced by the grace of God and have been transformed.

God promised in another place, “I will give you a new heart with new and right desires, and I will put a new spirit in you. I will take out your stony heart of sin and give you a new, obedient heart” (Ezekiel 36:36, NLT). As a child of God, that is where you live. Your heart’s desire is to be obedient to God and to glorify Him. Why else would you be reading a book like this? Trust your heart. God has transformed it by His grace.

You can trust your heart because it belongs to Jesus Christ. You have become a partaker of the divine nature. (See 2 Peter 1:4) His life is your life. Learning to trust your heart will progress in direct proportion to choosing to believe that truth.

If Christ is your life (and He is), then you can live boldly and confidently, knowing that the One who has begun a good work in you will finish what He has started. (See Philippians 1:6) Your role is to trust your heart, knowing that Christ indwells it. His role is to see to it that the mission to which you have been appointed is discovered and fulfilled.

When you have learned to trust your heart, you will find that you become emboldened to experience the next characteristic of one who successfully integrates faith into the marketplace. You will be ready to live with gusto, drawing others to yourself by your enthusiasm.

If Christ is your life (and He is), then you can live boldly and confidently, knowing that the One who has begun a good work in you will finish what He has started. (See Philippians 1:6) Your role is to trust your heart, knowing that Christ indwells it. Step out in faith knowing that His role is to see to it that the mission to which you have been appointed is discovered and fulfilled.

Monday, September 7, 2020

Pastoral Prayer of Spurgeon

Our Father, blessed be Thy name forever and ever. Oh, that we praised Thee more! We must confess we never bless Thee as we ought, and our life is far too full of murmuring, or at the best too full of self-seeking, for even in prayer we may do this; and there is too little of lauding and adoring, and praising, and magnifying, and singing the high praises of Jehovah.

O God, wilt Thou teach us to begin the music of heaven! Grant us grace to have many rehearsals of the eternal Hallelujah. ‘Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me bless His holy name.’ Grant us grace that we may not bring Thee blessings merely because Thou dost feed us, and clothe us, and because we receive so many mercies at Thy hand, but may we learn to praise Thee even when Thou dost put us under the rod, and when the heart is heavy, and when mercies seem but scant. Oh, that when the flocks are cut off from the stall, and there is no harvest, we may nevertheless rejoice in God.

O Lord, teach us this very morning the art of praise. Let our soul take fire, and like a censer full of frankincense, may our whole nature send forth a delicious perfume of praiseful gratitude unto the ever blessed One, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Thursday, September 3, 2020

America's President

 

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How to Share With Just Friends

How to share with just friends.

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Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Silly Game of Shame: Steve McVey Writes:

 Shame may well be the most destructive force that works against many people. It is a weapon intended by our Adversary to paralyze us with fear and insecurity. Nothing more effectively stops us dead in our tracks and brings all progress in our grace walk to a screeching halt.

Shame sneers at us with its sharp point gouging the raw nerves of our insecurities, challenging us, “Who do you think you are? Look at yourself! How could God possibly be pleased with somebody like you?” When we don’t know the truth, our immediate response is to lower our heads, look away from our Father’s loving gaze and then go into hiding.

When Adam and Eve sinned in the Garden of Eden, things changed for them. The Bible says, “But the Lord God called to the man, "Where are you?" He answered, "I heard you in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid” (Genesis 3:9-10). Fear stemming from shame was the immediate result of Adam’s sin and has been the lingering problem for humanity ever since then.

Adam hid because he was naked. Imagine that. From the moment Adam and Eve were created, they’d never been anything but naked and it didn’t matter to them at all because it didn’t matter to God. Now, after eating from the forbidden tree, embarrassment and shame enters the human story. Adam and Eve imagined that God wouldn’t be accepting of them the way they were anymore.

God hadn’t changed at all. He still came for His walk as He had done every day, but Adam and Eve had changed completely. Sin had perverted their perception of God’s character so that they now imagined Him as One who would be angry and punitive toward them.

Remember this important truth: Adam’s sin did not change God; it only changed Adam. The same is true about your own life. There is nothing you have done or could ever do that would change how God feels toward you. God is love and your sin cannot negate that fact. Until you realize that God isn’t upset with you, angry with you, disappointed in you or has distanced Himself from you, peace will elude you. Freedom comes in knowing that God doesn’t run away because we’ve sinned.

God didn’t run from Adam because of his sin but instead came to Adam, seeking Him in His sin. Fail to understand that and you’ll find yourself thinking like Adam, imagining a god who retreats from your sins rather than approaching you in your sins to make things right for you. The religious world may tell you that God will remove Himself from your sin, but Adam’s situation shows differently. Your Father rushes to you in your sin to rescue you from it. That’s the very reason for the incarnation of Jesus Christ!

How did God promise to make things right for Adam and Eve? In Genesis 3:15, He spoke to the Serpent: “From now on, you and the woman will be enemies, and your offspring and her offspring will be enemies. He will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.” The offspring He speaks about who will crush the head of the serpent is Jesus. This is the first reference to the coming of Christ to deal with sin to be found in Scripture. Satan would hurt Jesus at the cross, but Jesus would destroy his power. (A wound to the head is fatal.)

Jesus has come and your sin has been remedied. Satan has lost his power over you. The promise of Genesis 3:15 has come to pass!

Sin caused Adam and Eve to become self-conscious and decided they needed to embark on a self-improvement program. Thus came the birth of religion – the attempt to make ourselves more acceptable to God by doing the things we think He would require of us in order for us to be acceptable to Him. The whole thing is ridiculous. God accepts us just like we are. Adam and Eve weren’t hiding from God. They were hiding from some imaginary god they concocted in their newly darkened minds.

They were cringing before somebody that doesn’t even exist. Can you see the foolishness of the whole thing? From that day in the garden until Jesus came, humanity was trapped in shame and embarrassment.

Jesus came to free us from the dark legacy of shame and embarrassment left to us by Adam. Thanks to Him, there is no condemnation toward us – none. You may feel shame at times, but it’s only an illusion. “Even if our hearts condemn us, God is greater than our hearts, and He knows everything” (1John 3:20). This verse reminds us that we sometimes can’t trust our emotions, but we can trust God. He knows that we are totally forgiven. The shame-game is over – finished. It’s a silly game we don’t ever have to play again.

Once and for all, we can stop fearing some scary god-of-our-own-making who looks at us with disappointment or irritation. It’s an infantile fantasy. There is no divine boogey-man under the cosmic bed of your existence that is going to come out and get you.

We’re all naked, but that’s okay with God. He loves you just like you are. You don’t have to change. You don’t have to be afraid. You don’t have to hide. And you certainly don’t have to be ashamed. Your Father loves and adores you just the way you are. So come out, come out, wherever you are. Somebody is waiting to give you a Hug. He longs to laugh with you. He wants you to feel His embrace and revel in His acceptance for all eternity. Leave shame alone. You belong in the conscious awareness of your permanent place in our Father’s embrace. That embrace will transform your life.

Absurd Forgiveness - Steve McVey Writes:

When Adam sinned in the Garden of Eden, he wrongly assumed God would be angry but instead God came looking for Him to take His regular evening walk.

​When Abraham sent his wife, Sarah, into Pharaoh’s tent to protect his own life by allowing her to have sex with another man, God told Pharaoh that he was on dangerous ground and that he’d better get her out of there right now. The next words out of God’s mouth to Abraham were to reassure him of the covenant He had made with him. Not a word about his sin.

​When Elisha was depressed and afraid and angry and prayed to die, God sent an angel to feed him so that he might regain his strength. No shame or blame.

​When Peter denied Jesus, our Lord made sure when he arose to mention Peter by name and said to make sure he knew Jesus was alive. No reference to what Peter had done.

​These were giants in the Bible – giants who made horrific choices. In each instance, the love of God swallows up their sins and foolishness in one great gush of grace. It's absurd. What have you done that causes you to think God may be disappointed or perturbed toward you? Whatever it is, you need to set it aside because that's what He has done. As absurd as it sounds, God isn't interested in what you've done in the past. He lives with you in the now and wants you to live in this moment of grace and accept His forgiveness.

​Jesus showed us our Father’s heart when He had the Father of the prodigal son throw him a party when he returned home without so much as a mention of what the boy had done. That’s your God.

​Refuse to accept His acceptance and you’ll lock yourself inside a prison of your own making. Accept His acceptance and you’ll run in the joyful freedom only known by those who know their sins never appear on God’s radar – never.

​You’ve messed up? Welcome to the world of great children of God. It happened. So put it aside now. Don’t insult the grace of God by insisting on trying to share in dealing with it through your own gnawing guilt and spiritually suicidal self-consciousness. You are forgiven. You are free. You are one with the One who keeps no record of wrongs and promises to never remember them again.

​So dance. Run. Laugh. Play. Celebrate. That’s what the Father, Son and Spirit are doing and He asks you to join in right now.