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Opening
Ourselves to Grace:
The Basics of Christian Discipleship
Have you ever fallen in
love? Do you remember what it was like? Your beloved consumed your every waking
thought. You could not wait until you were able to embrace this person and
express your love and devotion. When you were with your beloved, you felt
complete and fully alive. You were more aware of the world around you because
everything reminded you of your beloved. Your love grew when you spent time
with your beloved and shared your life with this person. As time went by, you
sought each day to become more like your beloved. Your love was all-consuming.
It affected every aspect of your life. Your relationship with the beloved
became part of you and formed your identity.
Christian discipleship is a
relationship with Jesus Christ not unlike that which you share with the one
with whom you fell in love. When we accept Jesus' invitation to take up our
cross daily and follow him (see Luke 9:23), we become his friends (see John
15:14-17) and members of his family (Romans 8:15-17; Galatians 4:1-7). This
relationship is a matter of heart and life.
In this paper we will
explore how to live as faithful disciples of Jesus Christ. We will learn about
God's grace, which is the character of the divine-human relationship, and we
will learn the basic practices God has given to draw us to Christ and keep us
with him. These basic practices of Christian faith and life are known in the
Wesleyan tradition as the means of grace.
If love describes the what of
our relationship with Christ, the means of grace are how we live with Christ in the world and
grow in loving and knowing God, our neighbors, and ourselves.
Christian faith is more than
agreeing with a set of doctrines or creeds. It is more than outward appearances,
signs, and symbols. It’s more than saying “I’m a Christian.”
Faith is ultimately about
what is happening on the inside. It is a heart changed by an encounter with the
living God who comes to us in Jesus Christ. The changed heart makes a
difference in the way we live our lives in the world.
This life begins with
forgiveness of our sins. When we acknowledge who we are (sinners in need of
forgiveness), we can begin living into the lives God desires for us as his
beloved children. With forgiveness comes freedom from sin and death so that we
can love God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength and love those whom
God loves; as God loves them, in Christ. All this is God’s gift to the world –
grace.
As we live this life, we
become channels of grace for the world. As we walk with Christ in the world, he
gradually removes the blockages to grace we have built up. As the barriers come
down, his grace can flow through us for the world. Walking with Christ in the
world changes us into the human beings God created us to be. He forms our
character into a reflection of his. The goal of this life is to “have the mind
of Christ” (Philippians 2:5). God does this in us as we “work out our
salvation” (Philippians 2:13).
Let Us Plead for Faith Alone
(Ephesians 2:8-10)
Let us plead for faith alone, Faith
which by our works is shown; God it is who justifies, Only faith the grace
applies. Active faith that lives within, Conquers hell and death and sin,
Hallows whom it first made whole, Forms the Savior in the soul
(Charles Wesley,
1740)
These lines from Charles
Wesley describe the life into which God invites us. Faith is the heart of this
life. This understanding of faith is relational. Faith is how we live with the
God who comes to us in Jesus Christ. Such a faith is belief, trust, and hope in
God – the God who is revealed in the history of the people of
A Prayer of John Wesley:
“O that we may all receive
of Christ’s fullness, grace upon grace; grace to pardon our sins, and subdue
our iniquities; to justify our persons and to sanctify our souls; and to
complete that holy change, that renewal of our hearts, whereby we may be
transformed into that blessed image wherein thou didst create us.”
In this prayer, John Wesley
summarizes the dynamic of grace. It moves in, with, through, and for the world
for healing leading to wholeness; reconciliation leading to genuine trust,
righteousness, and justice. Grace is the love of God, incarnate in Jesus
Christ, and activated in the Holy Spirit, given to draw the world to God. By
grace, God restores individuals and communities to right relationship in order
to heal and form the image of Christ – damaged by sin – into wholeness. This is
salvation. It is both the forgiveness of sin and the healing of broken human
lives into wholeness in the likeness of Christ.
Baptismal Covenant Commendation and
Welcome
Members of the
household of God, I commend these persons
to your love and care. Do all in your power to increase their faith, confirm their hope, and perfect them in love.
The life of grace God gives
is lived with others in God’s household (John 15:16; Ephesians 2:19-22). The
grace God gives is a responsible grace. It is responsible in two ways. First,
as a gift that is offered freely and without price, it must be received and
accepted as a gift. Because the gift is God’s unconditional love and
acceptance, God does not impose the gift on anyone. We are free to respond with
indifference, rejection, or acceptance. Second, if we choose to accept the gift
and enter into God’s way of life in God’s household, with that acceptance comes
accountability.
As members of God’s family,
we must live by God’s household rules (loving God with all our heart, soul,
mind, and strength, loving our neighbor as ourselves, and loving one another as
Christ loves). Therefore, we are responsible for one another “for building up
the body of Christ, until all of us come to the knowledge of the Son of God, to
maturity to the measure of the full stature of Christ” (Ephesians 4:12-13). The
life that God gives cannot be lived alone. It must be lived in a community (the
church) of love and forgiveness in which all are nurtured, challenged, and
accountable for growing in love to become fully the human beings God created
them to be. In other words, grace equips and empowers each person to “do all in
your power to increase their faith, confirm their hope and perfect them in
love.”
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