These are some of the experiences and musings of an artist and disciple...

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Kosovo Reflections Part 4 - The Realization of Grace



When I was a child I liked to play games with my mom.  Sometimes I would hide and wait for her to find me and other times I would ask her if I could be her hand servant for an evening, at her command for whatever she wanted me to do.  I would be put to task vacuuming, wiping down the kitchen floors and other various chores that would take the day’s burden of work from the shoulders of a single mother raising a boy.  I did these things because I loved her, but looking back I see how I was also seeking her favour.  I wanted her to be proud of me and to return the love that I so desperately sought.

It is so easy for us to become subjects to the opinions of other people. Where I sought favour from my mother, I wanted to gain her favour by my actions or words.  Often I would be rewarded, but it was never enough to make me feel better about myself.  Much of my life has played out like this, where I sought the approval of others through my actions and words.  I have even based my involvement in ministry off of this mentality.  However, the truth about myself made itself known to me while I was in Kosovo…

At the beginning of our tour, we headed east from Prishtina into the rolling hills and beautiful countryside.  The roads wound back and forth in the valleys of old, old mountains that had been eroded into nubs.  Forests covered the hills like blankets and fields spread out in the valleys, making it suitable for farmers to claim land for their families.  As we came down the other side of the hill lands, a massive valley opened up before us and in it sat a town with the name Kamenica.

It was approaching evening time in Kamenica when we gathered on a hill overlooking the town.  In the center of the town was a mosque complete with dome and tower.  It stood as the town’s monument for the religious life.  It was the totem for attaining Allah’s mercy and it was as I was looking down on this spectacle that I realized I had more in common with these people than I had first thought…


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If religion is considered as mankind’s various attempts to find God, then the motivator of religion could be said to be mankind’s attempt to find God’s (Gods’) favour.  Let’s look at some examples. 

In animistic folk religions, people revere the spirits (of ancestors or mischief) and make sacrifices to them in order to sway them to act in the people’s favour.  Every natural event is connected with a spirit’s action and therefore a person’s devotion to the spiritual world gives them good fortune in the physical world as the spirits favour them.  Many people of animistic cultures have been known to sing to the spirits as they are working in the fields, so that the spirits would give them good fortune in their harvests.  Others will sacrifice animals or even children to stay the wrath of evil spirits that they believe are responsible for great tragedy. 

There was a similar mindset in the ancient Greco-Roman era.  Polytheism was widely accepted across the Roman Empire and people would make sacrifices of animals in order to attain favour or blessing from whichever god they entreated.  Women would petition Diana (the Roman equivalent of the Greek goddess Artemis) to make them fertile for childbearing or even to protect their child during childbirth.  There were many gods and goddesses (one was created pretty much any time Zeus fancied another woman or goddess and took them by force) for people to desire favour from.

But this thinking also popped up in monotheistic religions as well.  It pops up in the Jewish Law and the Qur’an. The most obvious example to westerners might be the ideal behind most of Catholicism in the way of gaining God’s approval through good works and financial giving.  However, it is certainly not limited to one branch of Christianity.  Many evangelical Protestants places great value in a person’s belief of certain doctrines to truly be right with God.  In this regard it is what “doctrine” a person believes that gains them God’s favour. 

And so this cycle of self-validation takes place, and perpetual entrapment of the heart.  Some laws have been set up to abide by in order to receive favour from God, as if doing good things gains us merit we can use like currency. It seems to be mankind’s natural inclination to seek or buy its own salvation for the afterlife.

But can we buy out God?

At college I learned much about the teachings of the Bible.  I learned about how certain themes continued throughout scripture which “doctrines” could be formed out of.  Many of the Christian “doctrines” surround a well known notion called grace.  I learned all about grace; I read about it in the Scripture and in textbooks; I heard sermons preached on the subject.  I thought I understood what grace was, but I was lying to myself.

I once heard someone refer to grace and mercy as two sides of the same coin.  They said that mercy is “not receiving that which we deserve” (wrath and punishment) while grace is “receiving that which we do not deserve” (blessing and favour).  Though I feel that this is a utterly simplified version of what mercy and grace really are, the meaning of grace is undeniable throughout the New Testament.  Grace is in essence “unmerited favour”.  Unmerited meaning that it cannot be earned; it must be given freely without payment or debt.  The notion suggests to us that something has been afforded to us that we could not afford on our own.

When pastors and biblical scholars think of the word grace, one person comes into mind (besides God).  The Apostle Paul’s writings were heavily laden with the subject of grace.  For Paul it was essential for the believer to know that their received salvation through grace alone and not by merit or good deeds.  In Romans 3:24 we find Paul explicitly saying that mankind is justified only through grace.  Ephesians 2:8 repeats that those who have faith are saved by grace, which is the “gift of God”.  This teaching of salvation through grace is littered throughout scripture.  It’s as if the writers wanted to make sure that the most blockheaded of people would understand the relationship between salvation and grace.

This is what I knew to be true…

…but something was missing for so long.  I hadn’t identified it until that moment overlooking that town which sprawled across the valley like a vast river of white and orange.  Something was missing.  Something that left me alone with my attempts to be a good person.  Something that left me grappling with my sinfulness and imperfection.  Something that left me constantly falling short in life.

For so long I had understood grace, accepted grace as the process through which I was saved…but I had not extended grace to myself.

Like the people of Kamenica, I had an established book of divine morality which I had tried to abide by and which I constantly failed to abide by.  Like those people, I sought out to gain favour with God through good deeds and when I failed to stop sinning, I would punish myself.  For years upon years I had lived in a personal prison of spiritual self-mutilation, trying to burn the sin from myself by my own strength.

And it was on that hill, as the sun set just above the surrounding peaks, that I finally forgave myself.  I finally chose to see myself in the same light that God saw me.  I finally extended the same grace I had extended to others, the grace that God extended to me when I first believed, to my own aching heart.

Tears were born as all the texts, sermons and knowledge of what grace is were fulfilled by the presence of grace itself.


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Accepting that we are broken and sinful people is hard for most people to accept.  Everyone thinks that they are “okay” people, somewhere on the good side of the figurative good/evil line.  Even if we have accepted our sinfulness, we can still seek to control our sin.  We strive for holiness and purity above everything else and find ourselves coveting the word “godly” as an adjective to be used before our names. 

But by chasing after these “good” things, we are missing the big picture.  Pursuit of godliness is like the pursuit of a rainbow.  It is like trying to pin down moonlight or to catch a whisper in a jar.  Godliness is not something that we can work for or attain.  We will always be disappointed in ourselves if we have made that the goal of our ambitions.  Those who believe that they have achieved godliness are lying to themselves, because godliness is something cultivated in us by God.  It is a part of grace.

Instead, we must chase after God!  When we chase after God, we realise that the object of our pursuits is what makes us godly.  It is what changes us and conquers the sin in us.  Attempts to change ourselves and to stop sinning are useless.  Sin is inextricably graphed to us as we are now.  What's more is that when you are against the dark, all you can focus on is the dark.  But when you are for the light, the dark will naturally fade away.  That is the power of divine grace!

And by accepting grace, we can then share that grace with ourselves, to let it transform who we are.  When we have forgiven ourselves, how much easier will it be to forgive others?

Imagine a world where grace reigned?  Where grace rained down from the sky and was felt by every person.  What would the world be like then?  When no wrong was the seed for bitterness and revenge?  When our shortcomings were overcome by forgiveness and encouragement?

It is no wonder that John Newton (a slave trader in the 18th century) wrote the words:

Amazing grace! (how sweet the sound)
That sav'd a wretch like me!
I once was lost, but now am found,
Was blind, but now I see.

'Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,
And grace my fears reliev'd;
How precious did that grace appear
The hour I first believ'd!

Thro' many dangers, toils, and snares,
I have already come;
'Tis grace hath brought me safe thus far,
And grace will lead me home.

~John Newton 1779