Three stories that illustrate the crisis of grace today.
I was visiting a Texas megachurch that was baptizing 200 people one
Sunday morning. A few of the candidates for baptism were interviewed by
the pastor on stage, and the script went like this: after the
candidate's testimony of new life in Christ, the pastor asked if the
candidate believed that baptism saves us. The prompted answer was, of
course, no. Then he asked the candidate what does save us, and this time
the prompted answer was our faith in Jesus as God incarnate and/or our
trust in his sufficient death on the cross. The answers were formally
correct, but "faith," it seems, had become a new work. We weren't so
much saved by Christ as by our mental assent to a few theological propositions.
I was at another church where the message was grounded in those
astounding and miraculous verses that culminate in "I have been
crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives
in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son
of God, who loved me and gave himself for me" (Gal. 2:20, ESV). Things
were going well until we got to the end, when the preacher said, "Have
you experienced grace?" His tone, and the background music that
swelled as he prayed, suggested we were not saved by faith in what
Christ accomplished but by a certain type of religious feeling we might
have.
Third: I was speaking with a professor at a Christian university, and
we were talking about the relationship of grace and good works. At one
point he said, "We are saved by grace, yes, but after that, the
Christian life is mostly about our effort to live a Christlike life."
I pick these three anecdotes for three reasons: First, they are typical
of messages I hear in my travels as CT's editor. Second, these were
taught by pastors and teachers of the faith, who one would hope would
have a deeper appreciation of grace. And third, they represent what have
become the three main alternatives for the simple biblical message of
salvation by grace through faith.
It is understandable why we're tempted to shift the message of grace to
a form of works. The radical grace outlined in Romans and Galatians
seems too good to be true. It's hard to fathom that while we were
sinners Christ died for us (Rom. 5:8), or that, before we had done
anything, God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself (2 Cor.
5:19). Before we had created the doctrine of salvation to believe in.
Before we had enjoyed any religious experience. Before we had reformed
our lives.
Let's be fair. In fact, salvation is a doctrine that we will at some
point believe in as an intellectual proposition. And normally an
encounter with almighty God will result in powerful religious
experiences. And, yes, there is a measure of truth that life in Christ
is a hard and narrow road.
But in the beginning is grace. In the middle is grace. In the end, "all
manner of thing shall be well" (Julian of Norwich) because of grace.
What I'm hearing time and again, in every corner of the church I visit,
is not the soaring message of grace but the dull message of works—that I
have to believe a certain theological construct, or have a certain
feeling, or perspire in effort before I can be assured of God's radical acceptance and my future salvation.
This last month we read another dismal Pew survey about how American
churches left, right, and center alike (except the Assemblies of God and
a few others) are losing members. The reasons for this exodus are many
and complex, but one reason may be that we have forgotten the message
that long ago made our hearts grow strangely warm. There was once
miraculous talk of the impossible possibility that a way had been made
to return to Eden. And the angel standing at the entrance did not demand
intellectual or emotional or moral visas to get in. The only passport
required was one with a full list of all our sins, each stamped over,
blotted out really, with the red ink of grace.
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