(Painting by Yongsung Kim)
Hello, Readers.
Have I told you how much I appreciate your readership here at The Beggar’s Bakery? I do – so much.
Last month, I wrote my first ever college-level paper for seminary school. I had just completed Course I and was challenged to write about what I had gleaned from the program material so far. Early on, I mentioned that I might be sharing parts of my seminary journey here on this blog, so here is essay #1.
It’s a pretty wordy piece, but kind of sums up some of the ways that the Gospel of Grace and the Christocentric have impacted me. I hope it speaks to you in some way – that you will know how absolutely in LOVE with you Jesus is.
God bless us, every one.
The Simple Gospel – Glorious, Oily Grace
By: Jana Greene
I knew I was signing on for an adventure when I enrolled in Global Grace Seminary.
I gratefully had no idea what the scope of that spiritual foray would entail. My inner dying fundamentalist would never have allowed me to go this deep.
I became fascinated with the Gospel of Grace exactly one year ago, although in hindsight, I can clearly see that Abba was preparing my heart in prior years to receive it. I attended the Open Table Conference in Atlanta in April, and was introduced to the teachings of doctors Steve McVey, C. Baxter Krueger, and Wm. Paul Young. Having soaked up the experience of accepting radical grace for what it already is, I was gleefully done for. No turning back. I wanted to soak up more.
Soaking up means giving up on a lifetime of sticky theology.
I began Global Grace Seminary right around the start of the New Year. Now, as I complete the first course, my spirit looks forward to sharing what I’m learning with the whole, hurting world.
I cannot adequately purvey the difference between my pre-seminary vs. current seminary understanding of the Gospel without going back many years. Indoctrination starts early, when the heart and mind are malleable – the gospel of an angry god, being one of the stickiest points.
In my childhood, I was exposed to Southern Baptist culture. I loved the rich and velvety red pew cushions and stained glass windows. It is where I learned that God was to be loved and feared, but not necessarily in that order.
As a child, the message was clear:
God creates. He destroys.
God is counting on you to make the mark. If you’re not striving hard enough, you aren’t upholding your end of the deal.
God giveith, and God taketh away, often with wrath and cruelty.
Oh how sweet the realization is that Papa God is a good Father.
Francois du Toit said it beautifully: “If one could only make a quality decision to change one’s life, then the law would be the savoir of man.” – Francois du Toit
Praise God that the law is dead!
By the time I began Course I, I started experiencing all of the terms that I sometimes made fun of the hipster culture for using:
Wrecked.
De-fragmented
Disenfranchised from church as we largely know it.
Throughout the modules of the program, I find myself undone – which is exactly where I need to be.
Andre Rabe presented the Mystery of union with God by suggesting that We the People were actually created to be loved by God. The mess of mankind has died, and infinitely greater than our sin is Papa’s love for us.
The mess of mankind still sees Jesus through the stained glass windows. The mess believes He sits on the blood-red pews with us on Sunday mornings, and then goes His own way by the time His congregants are lining up at the K & W Cafeteria on Sundays at noon.
When the world thinks about of the image of Christ, they might see Him in their mind’s eye sitting on a rock, looking wistfully into the atmosphere. His portraits hung in your Sunday school and vacation bible school rooms. Dirty blonde hair, blue eyes. Perfectly serene expression. Sandaled feet and in robe and sash. I remember him that way, too. He is lovely and pure and holy, but He doesn’t appear to be radical or particularly passionate. It is a portrait of a Christ made in our image.
By the time I was half-way through Course I, I fell in love with Jesus all over again, because Holy Spirit has revealed the mind-blowing, soul-edifying truth about Jesus, and in the process, turned everything upside down much like the money-changing tables in the Temple. This message of a grace-based gospel is Anything but boring or staid.
As I continued throughout the course, learning has been easier than un-learning. I have a lot to unlearn.
The Old Testament, coming from the perspective of the Jewish people bound by law, taught that laws were in place to get you a little bit holy, but never holy enough (much like the majority of current day Christians, truth be told.) The New Testament is a literal New Covenant, one in which all are welcome in the Kingdom regardless of un-attainable laws or heritage. All books of the Bible are inspired by God, but I am not certain all are literal. Scripture is taken out of context so often that people have no IDEA what the original Greek and Hebrew texts say. I have enjoyed studying the context of so many familiar scriptures.
The revelation that everything in the Bible is written for us, but not necessarily to us, was a completely new concept, and made understanding the practicality of scripture come alive for me. The Word is not a tome of pages, but a person. The Word is Jesus Himself.
I am learning to shush the voice in my head that fears I’ve abandoned my Old Time Religion in favor of this radical grace, and Jesus will say to me one day: “Sorry, Kiddo. I sure wish you’d have kept striving. If only you’d tried a little harder –you know, spent more time on your ‘devotions,’ memorized scriptures, and shunned those living in obvious rebellion. You were on a roll there for a while, but you really dropped the ball when you went around saying I love the morally bankrupt.”
Only all of that is inconsistent with what I’ve been absorbing in seminary. It’s also inconsistent with what Papa is doing to and through my heart. Because Jesus loves the morally bankrupt, and not one iota less than He loves Billy Graham or Mother Teresa, or any of the hundreds of people I’ve convinced myself are ‘better’ than me and deserve His love more.
The Creator isn’t even ruffled by our unbelief and sin. From the beginning, He had us in mind. To believe it, you have to receive it – experience it. Who wouldn’t want the spiritual wares we are hawking, if they knew the true bounty of unconditional love that the Father wants to lavish them with? If they knew that He puts His love on the line for us full and overflowing, and that His Spirit comes not to smite, but to rest upon us as passionately as a lover and as gentle as the flutter of a butterfly.
But most of the world doesn’t know this Jesus – so irrationally in love with His people. They see God through the lens of millennia of religiosity.
“Christ arrives right on time to make this happen. He didn’t, and doesn’t, wait for us to get ready. He presented himself for this sacrificial death when we were far too weak and rebellious to do anything to get ourselves ready. And even if we hadn’t been so weak, we wouldn’t have known what to do anyway. We can understand someone dying for a person worth dying for, and we can understand how someone good and noble could inspire us to selfless sacrifice. But God put his love on the line for us by offering his Son in sacrificial death while we were of no use whatever to him.” Romans 5:8 (MSG)
One of the first things I learned in seminary is that God is not intimidated by our sin. Dr. McVey helped me explore this idea of the Incarnation as a voluntary deed. I had always assumed that God and Jesus were just doing what they had to do, begrudgingly, and Holy Spirit was left behind to sweep up the mess. How tragic that I’d understood it like that all my 48 years!
What if the Love of God was bigger than the sins of the world? Sin gets so much airtime, and the Christians give it more than anyone else. It almost seems like sin is the main thing we focus on, and what does that prioritization tell the hurting world?
What if we gave Jesus center stage, and His offensive, scandalous, raw grace was truly poured out on His people?
Why are we so stingy with love? Why do we withhold the Gospel from the people who need its radical truth the most? The lavish and abundant Truth; the Truth that is not a concept, but a person.
This grace doctrine…it is scandalous in its oozing of mercy, positively radical in its inclusion. Where has this message of the Good News BEEN all my life!? Studying the Old and New Covenants, so much comes into focus. So many questions answered.
The more I study, the more I become convinced that this sentiment by Dr. Kruger is true:
“The Christian God is interested in relationship with us, and not just relationship, but union, and not just union, but such a union that everything He is and has—all glory and fullness, all joy and beauty and unbridled life—is to be shared with us and to become as much ours as it is His. The plan from the beginning, in the Christian vision, is that God would give Himself to us, and nothing less, so that we could be filled to overflowing with the divine life.”
— C. Baxter Kruger (Jesus and the Undoing of Adam)
We are so afraid that we will lose the moral superiority that took 2,000 + years to hone. Two-thousand years of making rules in this religion to keep out the riif-raff. I grew up so sure I had it all figured out, before I asked God to take me deeper. I was so sure I knew all of the main things. I knew where the right side to stand was on every issue. The “biblical” stand. The 10 Commandment Stand. I expected God to basically confirm that I was right, and conform to my preconceived notions.
Here’s how I previously and unwittingly ‘loved’ people – how I thought it all worked: Jesus wants to love you, but you have to get your act together. You are wrong about your lifestyle / choices / world view, and sorry, but there is not hope for you if you don’t tow the line, Buddy.
Just tow the line.
Much like a game of Red Rover, society requires you to pick a side or be picked by a side, link arms with similarly-minded brethren, and make sure that when the opposing side sends someone to run up against the chain, no one gets through.
Except that when we do that as believers, no one gets through. No one gets to change sides to the team that is destined to win.
Grace gets lost to the object of the game.
Jesus said “Red Rover, Red Rover, let whomsoever come over!” (I am paraphrasing, obviously.)
Throughout the lessons at Global Grace Seminary, Abba wrecked my heart with compassion for the people and groups I previously considered unreachable. I’ve had a ‘soul oil change’ – the material presented in class releasing Heavenly fragrance all day long, staining my Spirit for the One it longs for.
I had to make my own quality decision as I drew closer to the completion of Course I. Either God is a sadist that creates beautiful things so that He can torture them, or He is indeed Love, and there is no room for cruelty in 100-proof Love. To know His true nature is to look to His Son, Jesus – who is most certainly not sitting on a rock somewhere being pensive, but is loving His kids in a way many consider heretical and all consider radical. In Jesus is where I find what God looks like in ‘real time’ – His nature.
It’s really just so simple. It’s so simple, yet 2,000 years of man ‘helping’ theology along have diluted the whole point of the Gospel. Worse, it’s been used to divide us all.
But we are not dependent on the faith of Adam, as Rabe so succinctly said. We have the faith of Christ Himself at our disposal. Choose this day whom you will serve: Adam or Jesus? That’s the mystery of Union with God – he envelops us, fills us, lives in us, loves others through us. The majesty is that no matter which you choose, grace remains available to you all the same.
And, as Dr. Keathley points out, we don’t have to wait to receive our Benefits package. It was pulled out of layaway more than 2000 years ago, and is as available to us through Holy Spirit even today. The Gospel is good news.
Not the good news that comes with a disclaimer at the bottom for full legal disclosure. (Has anyone seen my can of “LAW BE GONE?” I’m sure I left it right here next to my Self Condemnation Deflator.
Global Grace Seminary has challenged me in so many ways. I still struggle with the concept that God is always in a good mood, but I have embraced that He is only good.
If it’s true – this grace-based Gospel – then we can do nothing to mitigate the furious love of our father.
If it’s true that the Kingdom of God is within us, we need to stop looking for him elsewhere.
If it’s true, we need to stop trying to invoke the presence of Holy Spirit in our worship. He is already here.
The neat and tidy Jesus of Vacation Bible School is not gazing out into the atmosphere, but at you. Right now. He is looking upon us adoringly, as if in a mirror. He is here in this messy, screwed-up, fallen, train wreck of a planet because He just cannot get close enough to us!
If it’s true (and my Spirit tells me it IS, it’s gloriously, wonderfully, life-givingly true!) then perhaps we should start spreading this amazing news.
Oddly, if I could describe Course 1 at Global Grace Seminary in one word, I believe it would be “oily.”
I love the anointing with oil. Unlike water blessed by priests that evaporates quickly, oil blessed by Holy Spirit lingers and lingers.
It is messy and difficult to control.
It releases Heavenly fragrance all day long.
If it gets on your clothes, they are stained. It cannot easily be washed out.
If you touch another human being with the same hand that has been anointed, they too carry the softness and scent on their person.
That’s the Gospel proper, as I’ve come to accept it through the Global Grace Seminary.
That’s the Gospel the world needs to hear.
You just wrote a book! Well at least a mini one….
WOW WOW WOW…you’re an incredible writer.
I’ve told you this before & must tell you again.
You do have a way of capturing your audience 😉
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I LOVED reading this! This is what my Jesus looks like. Have a glorious day.
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What a lovely thing to say, Donna! Thank you so much. I’m getting ready to post Part II.
Love to you, my friend!
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My heart just kept getting warmer and warmer as I read this. I could feel Him.
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I could feel my heart getting warmer and warmer as I read this. I could feel Him.
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(((Crissy))))!!! I’m so glad! He loves you more than you can ever imagine, my friend! ❤
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❤ ❤ ❤
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And a glorious day to YOU, too, my friend! 🙂 🙂
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Sorry for my long dissertation… I thought it was only going to you I didn’t realize… Please forgive me!
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No worries at all, Jane! I love your feedback 🙂
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Wow – A few questions came to mind as I was reading this. Perhaps you will enlighten me. 1. Is my repentance for sin part of this grace based teaching? 2. What is your understanding of Christ’s Atonement?
3. Why do you say Holy Spirit rather than the Holy Spirit? Do you see the Holy Spirit as a personal being who is the third person of the godhead? … these are just a few questions I had while reading your work.
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Hi there, Pat. Thank you for your readership!
#1 In grace-based teaching, the work of the cross is finished. That being said, I personally believe that repentance is a part of relationship with Jesus. He cares about sin, but he cares a whole lot more about LOVE. When you are in a relationship with someone you love with all of your heart, you WISH to repent and make amends. #2 My understanding of Christ’s Atonement a subject that I am just only now delving into. Webster says: “the doctrine concerning the reconciliation of God and humankind, especially as accomplished through the life, suffering, and death of Christ.” I personally believe we are ALL atoned, and that the suffering of Christ is a completed work. #3 I say “Holy Spirit” because He is my friend and close confidant. When I refer to my Husband, I don’t refer to him as “The Husband”. Likewise, with my daughters, it’s now “Hey look! It’s The Ashleigh. I don’t refer to God as The God or Jesus as “The Jesus.” Our relationship is just to intimate. Does that make sense? Lol?
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Thanks for your swift and thoughtful reply. When I fell in love with Jesus [0ver 46 years ago] I never realized how deep and wide and endless was his love for me or that the grace he offered came completely without any strings attached. I am still basking in that love and have grown closer to him as the years have gone by. His command to love others AS HE loved has been a life time quest. My sheep hear my voice and another shepherd they will not follow is a promise I cling to as I journey through this life rubbing shoulders with sheep from other flocks. May we who follow Jesus clearly hear his voice saying this is the way walk ye in it. Have a blessed day dear one.
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And a fine day I wish to you, brethren? Sisters? Sheepren? 😬 I love hearing what you have to say! Blessed day, my sweet friend ❤️
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Does this gospel of grace have its foundation in Universalism? Is Hell eternal separation from God? I enjoyed reading this, but I am not agreeing with Wm Paul Young’s theology presented in the shack.
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Hmmm. That’s a really good question. My belief is that all are accepted into the fold, but I don’t think all will benefit from the sacrifice of Jesus. It’s my understanding that Universalists believe all paths lead to God. I believe Jesus is the Way, Truth and Light. One of the many benefits of accepting His love is everlasting life. That being said, I believe that the Gospel of inclusion means that all are loved by the Father, whether we believe in Him or not. My mantra is thus (courtesy of Rev. Billy Graham): “It’s my job to love people. It’s Holy Spirit’s job to convict.” It makes me sad that so many reject Him. It’s a dang shame because He is LOVE itself. I’m not sure anymore if Hell is separation from God, If it is, plenty of people are living in it right here on earth. Without going into detail about old and new covenant teachings, I do believe all were reconciled. It is finished means it is finished. I try to stay too busy telling people that God loves them to warn them of the supposed wrath of a moody father. I fall in line with much in The Shack, and have met Wm Paul Young and talked to him about several things, but I know a lot of people disagree with the theology. I’m only a first year seminary student, but here’s what I know: God is love. Father, Son and Holy Spirit created us to love and be loved by Him. I guess that’s my two cents on the subject 😉 I admittedly have much to learn! Thank you for taking the time to read the paper – I know it is LONG. I love hearing from readers.
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I’ve been pondering over the same question. I’ve listened to many of Steve McVey’s videos and I’m certain that there are some preconceived notions that are keeping things foggy for me.
I certainly accept the death of Christ being a rescue mission (not a punishment) and He certainly reconciled the WORLD unto Himself, NOT IMPUTING THEIR TRESPASSES UNTO THEM (as Paul writes to the Corinthians).
But, those who, for whatever reason, chose to not believe, what happens to them? I believe that the gospel of grace is correct, but need to evaluate the terminology I’m more “used to” to clear this up for me.
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Hi, Scott. I agree – the terminology needs to be cleared up AND (I, for one) need to figure out and ACCEPT things I know to be true but my lifetime of reliosity keeps negating. The honest answer is I’m not sure what happens to those that choose not to believe. That’s the God’s honest truth. I like how McVey puts it (paraphrase) “Christ’s grace and forgiveness is FOR all, whether they believe it or not, but not all reap the benefit of that grace. I am kind of counting on Papa God being more compassionate than I can fathom, even as I’m learning how good he is. Because I have two children who are my world, and who have turn their backs on the Jesus they were raised to love. As sure as they are that science upsurps everything, I still believe God looks on them with compassion. It’s hard for me to believe that a father created us all just to watch and see which of us is damned to hell. Know what I mean? Thank you so much for your readership, btw.
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God said that the soul that sins will die. We all were dead in sin until we accepted eternal life in Christ. So a soul is either alive in Christ or dead in sin. It is not like a father watching to see who is damned to hell. If a soul is dead how can it abide in the kingdom? Those who are dead in sin, are not in the book of life, and those who are not in the book of life are cast into the lake of fire. Hell and death are cast into the lake of fire. To imply that God is a father who created us and then must pick and choose who gets into heaven is incorrect. We are in Christ, and those who belong to Him have his spirit in us so we can call him Papa. Those who reject him are not heirs to the promises in Christ. We must trust that God is Just, Holy, and Good.
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