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    • Are you all that you were made to be?

      Posted at 7:00 am by sneuhofer, on June 19, 2018

      1 Corinthians 15:10 (NCV) “But God’s grace has made me what I am, and his grace to me was not wasted.”

      As I was reading through 1 Corinthians 15, I thought about Paul’s words “God’s grace has made me what I am.” Isn’t that so true? Every morning we wake up it’s because God has so graciously allowed us another day. I had to go to my Bible dictionary (Nelson’s Compact Bible Dictionary) and look up the word “grace”.

      Grace – Favor or kindness shown without regard to the worth of merit of the one who receives it and in spite of what the person deserves.

      Grace is given to us so freely, not because of who we are or what we’ve done, but because of God’s great love for us. As I read through the Bible, I can look at Paul’s life and see how God’s grace plucked him out of a life of persecuting and basically destroying the Christian church to a life of encouraging and building churches in his known world.

      We might look at Paul and think he certainly didn’t deserve God’s grace; like all, Paul deserved death. (The wages of sin is death. Romans 6:23). But something miraculous happened to Paul on the road to Damascus that changed his life.  He bumped into the risen Lord (Acts 9:3 – 5) and experienced His grace first hand.

      The gift of grace was given to Paul that day and he received it through repentance and faith. God had a purpose for Paul, just like God has a purpose for each and every one of us. After his Damascus road experience, Paul went from persecuting Christians to telling anyone who would listen of Christ’s redeeming love. His life was changed because he allowed God’s grace to wash over him and transform him into what God intended for him to be.

      God’s grace abounds to all of us. Have you received His grace and are you allowing it to transform the way you live?

      Related scripture: Ephesians 1:7 – 8

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      Posted in grace, purpose, reaching people for Jesus | 0 Comments
    • Did you hear that? Someone’s knocking…

      Posted at 7:00 am by sneuhofer, on April 17, 2018

      Psalm 16:5 (NCV) “the Lord is all I need. He takes care of me.”

      A few years back I spent a great deal of time thinking about needs vs. wants. What is it I really need? When I identified something, I’d ask, “do I need this or is it just a want?” Have you ever found yourself wrestling with a question like this? As I pondered the difference, I found myself stopping dead in my tracks after reading Psalm 16, verse 5. My mind went back to the first time I visited the church I currently attend. As a child, I was raised in a Christian home and was in church every time the doors were opened…which usually meant Sunday mornings and evenings, and Wednesday nights. By the time I had reached my teens I stopped going to church on a regular basis and became a “C & E” Christian, attending church on Christmas and Easter ONLY.

      I can remember the day I visited the church as an adult as if it were yesterday. The night before, my Dad called to invite me to the service. I’m not sure how many times they asked me to come and check it out but this time, I felt I just had to be there. At this time in my life I hadn’t been in or near a church since I had gotten married some years earlier. The relationship that I enjoyed with Christ when I was younger had become very distant. Throughout my childhood and into my early teens, I was very diligent about my relationship with Jesus. Reading my Bible and setting aside time to pray was a normal part of my everyday routine. In fact, it was a family thing. My parents, my sister and I would sit around the kitchen table reading and discussing the Bible. I fell out of the routine through my teens, twenties and into my thirties. The influences of the world caught my attention and led me on a path far away from the closeness I felt with Christ.

      By the time I hit my thirties there was a huge God-shaped void in my life. I had tried to fill it with almost EVERYTHING this world had to offer. But I still felt empty, unsatisfied, restless. I knew something was missing. Little did I know it was the gentle knock of Christ calling me to come back to Him. He is what I needed to fill the empty places in my life and make me whole again. That Sunday morning as the worship team sang, I felt a warmth that I hadn’t felt in so long. It was Christ wrapping me in His sweet embrace letting me know He was there and that He loved me even though I had ran so far away from Him. Tears began to flow uncontrollably as I continued to listen to the words of the song coming from the praise band. Breaking down a piece of the wall I had built, I allowed those words to wash over me.

      “How deeply I need you my Lord…Like the morning needs the sun, I need you. Like the desert needs the rain, I need you. Like the ocean needs the streams, I need you.”

      I need Christ PERIOD. He is my friend and confidant. He is the giver of everything good in my life. When I feel I can’t make it another second, He sustains me. When I feel unloved, He loves me with an everlasting love and will not leave me or forsake me.

      My relationship with Christ continues to grow to this day. Each day I meet Him in the early morning hours. During that time, he fill the “holes” in my life with His love, mercy and grace.

      Do you feel like something is missing in your life? Christ is knocking at the door to your heart. Will you let Him in?

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      Posted in Christ's love, grace, mercy | 0 Comments
    • What are you truly working for?

      Posted at 7:00 am by sneuhofer, on March 5, 2018

      Galatians 2: 19-21 (MSG) “What actually took place is this: I tried keeping rules and working my head off to please God, and it didn’t work. So I quit being a “law man” so that I could be God’s man. Christ’s life showed me how, and enabled me to do it. I identified myself completely with him. Indeed, I have been crucified with Christ. My ego is no longer central. It is no longer important that I appear righteous before you or have your good opinion, and I am no longer driven to impress God. Christ lives in me. The life you see me living is not “mine,” but it is lived by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. I am not going to go back on that. Is it not clear to you that to go back to that old rule-keeping, peer-pleasing religion would be an abandonment of everything personal and free in my relationship with God? I refuse to do that, to repudiate God’s grace. If a living relationship with God could come by rule-keeping, then Christ died unnecessarily.”

      Do you believe you can buy your way into heaven by being good enough, being upright and moral, performing random acts of kindness, or by obeying the law perfectly? Paul clearly indicates this way of thinking would make Christ’s death on the cross unnecessary.

      Christ’s death is so much more than that. Since the fall of man in the garden of Eden, man has had to “pay” a penalty for his disobedience (his sin.) Adam and Eve had to give up the Garden of Eden and the tree of life. Today, if someone commits a crime, justice requires a payment for that crime (a fine, jail time, loss of privilege, etc.) The same was true with the Israelites. Before they could approach God, they had to pay for or “atone” for their sin. Their penalty (sacrifice) cost them something, something they had worked for or something they had grown on their own farm.

      Once a year on the Day of Atonement, the Israelites would go to the Tent of Meeting and offer sacrifices (bulls, goats, doves, grain) for their sin. Blood of a perfect animal had to be shed so the person presenting their sacrifice could be cleanses from sin and have fellowship with God. Have you ever thought about this? How can the sacrifice of an animal make things right with God? Is the blood of an animal enough to pay for everything we’ve done?

      Romans 6:23 (MSG) says that sin brings death. “Work hard for sin your whole life and your pension is death. But God’s gift is real life, eternal life, delivered by Jesus, our Master.” The other part of that verse says that God has given us the gift of eternal life, through His son Jesus Christ.  God loves us so much, that He sent his son to pay the penalty for us once and for all (John 3:16). After Christ’s death on Calvary it was no longer necessary to go to the Temple and offer sacrifices for sin. Jesus was the perfect sacrifice and its only through his shed blood that we can be free from sin’s death grip so we can live with Him eternally. No longer do we have to keep each rule perfectly. There is no way we could do that anyway. God poured out his grace through Christ’s death on the cross and it is sufficient for all of us. When we accept him as our savior, Christ takes up residence and lives in each one of us.  It is only by His grace that the sins of our lives are forgiven and erased… not how many people we’ve helped or how moral a life we’ve lived.

      But wait just a minute…its important to consider a question. After giving our lives to Christ, did we surrender EVERYTHING to him? Think about that question for just a minute.

      EVERYTHING.

      What does that really mean? A quick look at my thesaurus tells me other words for EVERYTHING include: every part of; the entire; the complete; the whole.

      If there are things in our lives that we are trying to control, we need to LET GO and surrender them to Christ. When we become Christ followers, we can no longer call the shots in our own life. We belong to Christ.

      By giving control of my life to the God of the universe – I have to realize that He knows what’s best. After all, He is God. He spoke the entire universe into existence. I think I should be able to trust Him with the details of my life… don’t  you? His word assures me He has a plan for my life and it’s perfect (Jeremiah 29:11).

      So, what about you? Are you just following rules trying to get into God’s perfect heaven, or are you allowing the ever cleansing stream of God’s grace and mercy to prepare you for entry?

      Related scripture: Romans 3:19-24; Ephesians 1:3-14

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      Posted in eternal life, grace, mercy, wages of sin | 0 Comments
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