- Tullian Tchividjian - http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tullian -
Inexhaustible Grace For An Exhausted World
Posted By Tullian Tchividjian On February 8, 2013 @ 9:51 am In Uncategorized | 13 Comments
[1]I’ve never been more excited about a writing project than I am about my forthcoming book One-Way Love: The Power of Inexhaustible Grace for an Exhausted World [2] (David C. Cook, October 2013). It’s a little more than halfway finished. The manuscript should be complete by the end of March. Here’s the intro just to give you a sense of what the book is about:
A few years ago, I read something astonishing. Dr. Richard Leahy, a prominent psychologist and anxiety specialist was quoted as saying, “The average high school kid today has the same level of anxiety as the average psychiatric patient in the early 1950s.” It turns out the problem wasn’t limited to an age group; in 2007 the New York times reported that three in ten American women confess to taking sleeping pills before bed most nights. The numbers are so high and unprecedented that some are calling it an epidemic. This came across my screen about the same time that the news broke about the meteoric rise of Americans claiming no religious affiliation, shooting up from 7% in 1990 to 16% in 2010. When those under the age of 30 were polled, that percentage more than doubled again, to nearly 35%. While the numbers themselves were a bit of a shock, I wish I had been more surprised by the findings. From my vantage point as a pastor, I can tell you, it is truly heartbreaking out there. The good news of God’s inexhaustible grace for an exhausted world has never been more urgent.
What I see more than anything else is an unquestioning embrace of performanicism in all sectors of life. Performancism is the mindset that equates our identity and value directly with our performance and accomplishments. Performancism casts achievements not as something we do or don’t do but as something we are (or aren’t). The colleges those teenagers eventually attend will be more than the place where they are educated – they will be the labels which define their value as a human being, both in the eyes of their peers, their parents and themselves. The money we earn, the car we drive, isn’t merely reflective of our occupation, it is reflective of us, period. How we look, how intelligent we are, and what people think of us is more than descriptive, it is synonymous with our worth. In the performancist world, success equals life, and failure is tantamount to death. This is the reason why people would rather end their lives than confess that they’ve lost their job, or made a bad investment.
This is not to say that accomplishments are somehow bad, or even that they aren’t incredibly important. It is simply to say that there is a difference between taking pride in what we do and worshipping it. When we worship at the altar of performance—and make no mistake, performancism is a form of worship—we spend our lives frantically propping up our image or reputation, trying to do it all, and do it all well, often at a cost to ourselves and those we love. Life becomes a hamster wheel of endless earning and proving and maintenance and management and controlling where all we can see is our own feet. Performancism causes us to live in a constant state of anxiety, fear and resentment, until we end up heavily medicated, in the hospital, or just really, really unhappy.
The Christian church has sadly not proven to be immune to performancism. Far from it, in fact. It often seems that the good news of God’s grace for those who don’t measure up has been tragically hijacked by an oppressive religious moralism that is all about rules, rules, and more rules; doing more, trying harder, getting better, and fixing, fixing, fixing–ourselves, our kids, our spouse, our coworkers, our boss, our friends, our enemies. Christianity is perceived as being a vehicle for good behavior and clean living—and the judgments that result from them—rather than the only recourse for those who have failed over and over and over again. Believe it or not, Christianity is not about good people getting better. If anything, it is good news for bad people coping with their failure to be good. Ask any of the “religious nones” who answered differently in past years, and I guarantee you will hear a story about either spiritual burn-out or heavy-handed condemnation from fellow believers, or both. Author Jerry Bridges puts it perfectly when he writes:
My observation of Christendom is that most of us tend to base our relationship with God on our performance instead of on His grace. If we’ve performed well—whatever ‘well’ is in our opinion—then we expect God to bless us. If we haven’t done so well, our expectations are reduced accordingly. In this sense, we live by works, rather than by grace. We are saved by grace, but we are living by the ‘sweat’ of our own performance. Moreover, we are always challenging ourselves and one another to ‘try harder’. We seem to believe success in the Christian life is basically up to us; our commitment, our discipline, and our zeal, with some help from God along the way. The realization that my daily relationship with God is based on the infinite merit of Christ instead of on my own performance is very freeing and joyous experience. But it is not meant to be a one-time experience; the truth needs to be reaffirmed daily.
What Bridges describes is nothing less than the human compulsion for taking the reigns of our lives and our salvation back from God, the only One remotely qualified for the job. “Works righteousness” is the word that the Protestant Reformation used, and it has plagued the church–and the world—since the Garden of Eden. It might not be too much of an overstatement to say that if Jesus came to proclaim good news to the poor, release to the captives, freedom for the oppressed, sight to the blind, then Christianity has come to stand for, and in practice perpetuate, the exact opposite of what its founder intended (Luke 4:18-19).
I’ve been in the church long enough to listen for certain things when Christians talk about grace. I listen for “buts and brakes.” Christians often speak about grace with a thousand qualifications. Our greatest concern, it seems, is that people will take advantage of grace and use it as a justification to live licentiously. Sadly, while attacks on morality typically come from outside the church, attacks on grace typically come from inside the church. The reason is because somewhere along the way we’ve come to believe that this whole enterprise is about behavioral modification and grace just doesn’t possess the teeth to scare us into changing, so we end up hearing more about what grace isn’t than we do about what grace is. The fact is that “Yes grace, but…” originated with the Devil in the Garden of Eden. Therefore, the biggest lie Satan wants the church to believe is that grace is dangerous and therefore needs to be kept in check. And sadly, the church has believed this lie all too well.
It is a terrible irony that the very pack of people that God has unconditionally saved and continues to sustain by his free grace are the very ones who push back most violently against it. Far too many professing Christians sound like ungrateful children who can’t stop biting the very hand that feeds them. It amazes me that you will hear great concern from inside the church about “too much grace” but rarely will you ever hear great concern from inside the church about “too many rules.” Why? Because we are by nature glory-hoarding, self-centered control freaks. That’s why.
But it is more than ironic, it is tragic. It is tragic because, just as it always has done, this kind of moralism can be relied upon to create anxiety, resentment, rebellion and exhaustion. It can be counted upon to ensure that the church hemorrhages the precise people that Jesus was most concerned with: sinners. Are you exhausted? Angry? Anxious? Fearful? Guilty? Lonely? In need of some comfort and genuinely good news? In other words, are you at all like me? Then this book is for you. You won’t hear any “buts”, you won’t feel the tapping of the brakes, and you won’t see a list of qualifications. What you’ll encounter is “grace unmeasured, vast and free.” It’ll frighten you and free you at the same time. After all, that’s what grace does.
It is high time for the church to honor its Founder by embracing sola gratia anew, to reignite the beacon of hope for the hopeless and point all of us bedraggled performancists back to the freedom and rest of the Cross. To leave our “if’s” “and’s” or “but’s” behind and get back to proclaiming the only message that matters—and the only message we have—the Word about God’s one-way love for sinners. It is time for us to abandon once and for all our play-it-safe religion, and, as Robert Farrar Capon so memorably put it, to get drunk on grace. Two hundred-proof, unflinching grace. It’s shocking and scary, unnatural and undomesticated…but it is also the only thing that can set us free and light the church, and the world, on fire.
Article printed from Tullian Tchividjian: http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tullian
URL to article: http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tullian/2013/02/08/inexhaustible-grace-for-an-exhausted-world/
URLs in this post:
[1] Image: http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tullian/files/2013/02/51jCh2JdGxL._SL500_AA300_.jpg
[2] One-Way Love: The Power of Inexhaustible Grace for an Exhausted World: http://www.amazon.com/One-Way-Love-Inexhaustible-Exhausted/dp/0781406900/ref=sr_1_24?ie=UTF8&qid=1360268312&sr=8-24&keywords=tullian+tchividjian
[3] : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfLTaiGCvI8
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13 Comments To "Inexhaustible Grace For An Exhausted World"
#1 Comment By Paul ST Jean On February 8, 2013 @ 11:13 am
Excellant post Pastor;
Thank God we don’t need to depend on our own efforts as far as our salvation is concerned. Michael Horton said: “The form of Christ’s words and actions at the last supper clearly indicate that this new covenant is a last will and testament,
It is not conditioned on our perforamance. “do this and you will live”. rather, it is an announcement that someone else has performed everything and now gives us the inheritance as a gift: This is my body… this is my blood of the new covenant shed for many.” Heb 9:16-17 Rom 4:5
#2 Comment By Irvin On February 8, 2013 @ 11:16 am
The very same Grace that everyone is so afraid of (including myself); is the same Grace that saves us.
#3 Comment By anonymous On February 9, 2013 @ 9:42 am
“This is the reason why people would rather end their lives”
wouldn’t you say love lack is the root.
most people’s love will grow cold Matt 24: 12b
for believers -leaving their first love Rev 2:4b
for unbelievers- may God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, make many more alive together with Christ Eph 2:4-5
There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, 1 John 4:8a
#4 Comment By Paul ST Jean On February 9, 2013 @ 12:02 pm
Pastor
Thesis 26. The law says, “do this,” and it is never done. Grace says, “believe in this,” and everything is already done.
This, Luther maintains in his rather short proof, is simply standard Pauline and Augustinian teaching: “the law works wrath and keeps all men under the curse. Likewise, the second part of the thesis,”Grace says, ‘believe in this,’ and everything is already done,” is straightforward Pauline and Augustinian fare, To extend the analogy of love,grace,instead of demanding love,simply gives it unconditionally. It is simply the “I love you.” Faith jusstifies. Faith is the righteousness God wants and aims to get.Faith is what Adam and Eve lost and faith is restored by grace alone. Luther backs this up by reference to St.Augustine: “And the law(says St. Augustine) commands what faith alone obtains.’For through faith Christ is in us,indeed one with us. Christ has fulfilled all the commands of God,wherefore we also fulfill everything through him since he was made ours through faith.”
Excerpt from “On Being a Theologian of the Cross” by Gerhard Forde
Michael Horton makes a good point in his book “the Gospel Driven Life” about love when he said:You cannot demand love from someone on the street just because the word of God commands “love your neighbor” Or You should love me because it is right thing to do.
#5 Pingback By Another Week Ends: One Way Love, Platonic Tennis, Curmudgeon Law, Downton Anti-Snobbery, Ecumenical Shipwrecks, Dr. Hook, House of Cards and Justified | Mockingbird On February 9, 2013 @ 1:28 pm
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#6 Comment By John Dunn On February 9, 2013 @ 5:53 pm
Performancism is a dead horse for those who are *in Christ* and walk according to His Spirit, for the following reasons:
1) The believer is dead to self, crucified with Christ to the old man. There is no performance to boast about in the old dead self. The only valid self-boast is to count all his former life as loss and worthless rubbish (Phil 3:8). The believer’s new boast is the cross of Christ alone. (Gal 6:14)
2) The believer is vitally united to Christ and his resurrection Life. Christ now powerfully lives in/through the believer by His own Spirit. (Gal 2:20)
3) The believer is dead to the Law and released from it, in Christ. (Rom 7:6)
4) Those who are led by the Spirit are not under the Law. (Gal 5:17)
5) The Law and its demands are not of faith (Gal 3:12). Rather, “The one who does them shall live by them.”
6) The Spirit’s living ethic in the believer is the powerful manifestation of faith and love, not do, do, do according to an abolished Law code.
7) The Spirit’s ministry of Life and Righteousness is antithetical to the Law and its ministry of death and condemnation.(2 Cor 3:6-11)
Performancism only exists where Law is maintained as a continuing standard of righteousness. Performancism is persued by egotistical carnal men who chase the Law, moral code, or some self-made standard as a means to attaining a self-righteous status. Performancism by the Law is nothing less than wearing a covering of self-made fig leaves. Such an Adamic covering is abominable to grace and is antithetical to the liberty that has been purchased for us by Christ’s blood.
Those who walk by the Spirit are not under the Law. They are released from all performancism in the flesh. They are released to serve God anew, under the dominion of pure grace alone. And being filled with Christ’s life they do not “perform” or climb ladders. Rather they are united to Him who *is* the Ladder (Gen 28:12). And abiding in Him they bear much heavenly fruit!
#7 Comment By Sandra On February 10, 2013 @ 1:12 pm
What o u ink of this?:
Johnson, talking of the fear of death, said, “Some people are not afraid, because they look upon salvation as the effect of an absolute decree, and think they feel in themselves the marks of sanctification. Others, and those the most rational in my opinion, look upon salvation as conditional; and as they never can be sure they have complied with the conditions, they are afraid.”
I am afraid bc how can u tell i am sanctified?or have true faith?
#8 Comment By Mitchell Hammonds On February 11, 2013 @ 12:08 am
Sandra,
I would answer your question this way: You know you are sanctified/being sanctified because God’s promises in Christ are for you to be so. I understand the fragility of your faith. It doesn’t take much to begin to begin questioning whether it’s actually there and this is true of sanctification as well in my opinion anyway. What I have to continually look to is God’s promises delivered and sealed with the death and resurrection of Christ. It’s all I’ve got.
#9 Comment By Dan Shaw On February 11, 2013 @ 4:04 pm
I was reading this today and wanted to share it with you all.
J C Philpot…
“Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us.” Titus 3:5
To view mercy in its real character, we must go to Calvary. It is not sufficient to contrast the purity of God with the impurity of man. That indeed affords us some view of what mercy must be to reach the depths of the fall–a side face of that precious attribute. But to see its full face shining upon the redeemed, we must go by faith, under the secret teachings and leadings of the Holy Spirit, to see “Immanuel, God with us,” groveling in Gethsemane’s garden. We must view him naked upon the cross, groaning, bleeding, agonizing, dying. We must view Godhead and manhood united together in the Person of a suffering Jesus; and the power of the Godhead bearing up the suffering manhood. We must view that wondrous spectacle of love and blood, and feel our eyes flowing down in streams of sorrow, humility, and contrition at the sight, in order to enter a little into the depths of the tender mercy of God. Nothing but this can really break the sinner’s heart.
Law and terrors do but harden,
All the while they work alone;
But a sense of blood-bought pardon
Soon dissolves a heart of stone.
Law terrors, death and judgment, infinite purity, and eternal vengeance will not soften or break a sinner’s heart. But if he is led to view a suffering Immanuel, and a sweet testimony is raised up in his conscience that those sufferings were for him–this, and this only will break his heart all to pieces. Thus, only by bringing a sweet sense of love and blood into his heart does the blessed Spirit show a sinner some of the depths of the tender mercy of God.
#10 Comment By Dan Shaw On February 11, 2013 @ 4:48 pm
Tullian once wrote an article about focusing on Christ, not on the law and as a result it does free us to live obedient sanctified lives. It frees us from this very same performancism and frees us to look to Christ for the power to live godly. Can anyone please direct me to this article ?
#11 Comment By Dan Shaw On February 12, 2013 @ 10:50 pm
can I link a video here ? I hope so. If not, search ‘Youtube’ Rising Above Nothingness: Looking to the Law or Christ? – Tim Conway
[3]
Love in Christ
#12 Comment By Justin Esposito On February 13, 2013 @ 3:21 pm
AMEN. I just had an hour and a half conversation with a dear friend this morning who described herself as “exhausted.” It is no coincidence that her church (while strong on many doctrinal points) has a major emphasis on the Christian life, life change, obedience, etc.
I preached to her for the whole time, Christ crucified, God adopting her unconditionally, her acceptance in Christ perfect, and her Sabbath rest being in Jesus. I basically commanded her to stop violating the fourth commandment, and to rest on the Sabbath; the everyday, every moment rest of God in Christ. What a cool, refreshing drink this is.
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