『Simply Fellowship — Episode 8: Not by Works』のカバーアート

Simply Fellowship — Episode 8: Not by Works

Simply Fellowship — Episode 8: Not by Works

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

概要

​This is a gentle space. No pressure, no performance. You don't need to have your theology sorted to be here. You don't need to feel worthy, or confident, or certain of your standing before God. ​You're welcome exactly as you are, wherever you are reading this — carrying whatever you carry, however long you've been carrying it. ​If you need to read slowly, or stop and come back — that's completely fine. There's no right way to be here. Just be here. ​Hymn ​We begin with a hymn verse. Read it slowly. You might want to sit with each line before moving on. ​Not the labours of my hands Can fulfil thy law's demands; Could my zeal no respite know, Could my tears for ever flow, All for sin could not atone; Thou must save, and thou alone. ​— Augustus Toplady, Rock of Ages ​Prayer ​Gracious God, ​Thank you that you do not ask us to earn what we could never afford. ​Thank you that the verdict you speak over us in Christ — righteous, beloved, accepted — is not a verdict we worked for, or argued our way to, or deserved by any accumulation of effort or goodness. ​We confess that we still reach for the scorecard sometimes. We still half-believe that we must do something more, be something more, before we are truly welcome. ​Meet us today in the gap between what we have done and what you have done. Let the love of Christ cover it. ​And may we leave this time knowing — not just in our heads, but somewhere deeper — that the gift is already given, and our hands are simply asked to be open. ​Amen. ​Old Testament Anchor ​Before Paul writes his great argument in Romans, a voice from the wilderness of Israel's own history had already heard the same word. ​"Come, everyone who is thirsty, come to the waters; and you who have no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your labour for that which does not satisfy?" ​— Isaiah 55:1–2 (ESV) ​This is the heartbeat underneath the whole gospel. The invitation is to those who have nothing. Not those who have almost enough, or who are nearly ready. Those who have no money. Those who are hungry without the means to feed themselves. ​The question that cuts is this: why do you labour for that which does not satisfy? ​Why do you keep reaching for something that will not hold? Why work for a righteousness that will always fall a little short, that will always leave you wondering if you have quite done enough? ​There is bread here. It costs nothing. That is not a bargain — it is a gift. ​Scripture ​Our reading today is from Romans chapter three, verses twenty-two to twenty-eight, from the Easy English Bible. ​"God makes people right with himself. He does this through faith in Jesus Christ. He does it for everyone who believes. All people have done wrong things and have fallen short of God's glory. God is kind to us. He does not give us what we deserve. He makes us right with himself as a free gift. Jesus Christ set us free from the power of wrong things. God offered Jesus as a gift. Through his blood, Jesus became the way for God to forgive our sins. God did this to show that he is right and fair. In the past, he had been patient and had not punished people for their wrong things. Now he shows that he is right and fair. He is right himself and he makes right any person who has faith in Jesus. So there is nothing for us to be proud of. Faith does not let us be proud. No! We must be right with God because of faith. This is the law of faith. We believe, then, that God makes people right with himself. He does not do this because they obey the law. He does it because they have faith." ​Devotion ​There is a question every human heart has asked, in one form or another, since the very beginning: Am I good enough? ​It shows up in different ways. The rich young man came to Jesus and asked: What good thing must I do to have eternal life? The Philippian jailer, rattled and undone by earthquake and grace, asked Paul and Silas: What must I do to be saved? ​Both questions are really the same question. They are the sound of a soul that believes the door must be earned. ​Paul, in these verses from Romans, is doing something extraordinary. He is not simply answering the question — he is dismantling the premise. ​The question assumes that righteousness is something we produce and present. That it is like currency: we accumulate it through obedience, through religion, through moral effort, through keeping the law. And if we have enough of it, God will count us in. ​Paul says: no. That is not how this works. That has never been how this works. ​All have sinned, and fall short. That is not a verdict delivered with contempt. It is a statement of shared human condition. It is the level ground at the foot of the cross. No one arrives with surplus. No one negotiates from a position of strength. We all come empty-handed. ​And ...
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
まだレビューはありません