Facing Grace

Today I met grace–again. Why is grace said to be amazing? I think maybe, because its power has nothing to do with me (or any human). Looking into the face of grace is not like looking into a mirror; it’s like looking into the eyes of the one who has always known you, and always loved you, and who knows you to be the most completely fulfilling person whom they have ever met. Grace is not just “like” that, grace IS that. Grace is God seeing us as He created us to be, not because He is delusional, but because we ARE as He sees us. We are (I am) God’s perfect intentions fulfilled. Yes, fulfilled.

It seems every day I live, I am more aware of the emptiness that is my effort, my ability, my character, my will. And the emptiness hurts–until I look grace in the face.

I write this today, because I struggle daily. The world pulls on our thoughts, will, and emotions–points out where we lack, where we fall short, and then either points to a “solution,” or the utter lack thereof. If we then spend our time seeking solutions for these “lacks,” we are frustrated in our efforts. Bunny trails–all of it. Just nonsense designed to pull our focus from grace.

Grace, the Spirit of Grace, Who is with us and in us, will not force Himself into our thoughts or heart. A gentle man, He waits, ready, eager and focused to confirm, reaffirm, and demonstrate God’s unconditional love and favor toward us. The Spirit of Grace perfectly anticipated and foreknew all–all events, all thoughts, all actions–and planned for perfect triumph.

So then, there is no failure or lack for those who are in Christ.

Romans 8:1-2 (NLT)
So now there is no condemnation for those who belong to Christ Jesus. 2 And because you belong to him, the power of the life-giving Spirit has freed you from the power of sin that leads to death.

There’s no final judgment which declares and stamps the end result is indeed “failure.” No, there is no final decree of failure nor judgment for me, or for you, because we are in Him, and He is in us. Our end is His end: the triumph of a Grace born of perfect love.

So day by day, He bids us to cast off the world’s limitations and go before His Grace BOLDLY.

Hebrews 4:14-16 (NKJ)
Seeing then that we have a great High Priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession. 15 For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin. 16 Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.

It takes a little courage–a bit of chutzpah–to confidently, boldly throw aside our self-doubt and glide right into the presence of His Grace. What do I need today? Just Him. What about the lack, the pain, the failure? That’s what Grace is for. Grace fills, supports, makes complete. Grace transforms all in the throne room, until there is no lack, no failure, no absence of peace.

NEXT BLOG: How do we enter the throne room?
Tell us how YOU enter the throne room (or God’s presence). How do you obtain grace and mercy in a time of need? How about every day? Share your thoughts! 

A Rocky Road to Grace

It’s been 16 months of living since that last post, and I have to report that grace-change came quickly and wonderfully.

But may I tell you first, how I came to the epiphany of grace and gratitude? It was a conversation with a co-worker. It’s one of those conversations you wish you didn’t have to have. There had been months of tension at work for all of us. Staff changes and a couple of crises had left us somewhat broken as a team. I had managed to establish or maintain a positive connection with every team member except one. She was the newest staff member, and events had conspired against our work-relationship to the point that I was at wits end as to how we might begin to establish some trust. So one evening, just before I left for Christmas vacation, and with only the two of us left in the office, I started a conversation. I remarked that I’d noticed a certain tension, and a lack of ease between us, and how it saddened me, because I like her, and I’d like to see more ease in our work relationship. I asked her to tell me how I might have been contributing to this tension. She asked if I really wanted her to be honest, and I said I did. Essentially, she felt that I had bitten her head off a couple of times, and she was not comfortable opening up to me.

I was stunned. Me? The peacemaker, the team-builder, the one who sees the best in people and finds a way to encourage and support everyone? Grumpy, grumbling, and sharp? Yep, and my young adult son–for one–would agree with her. In moments of feeling overwhelmed or exhausted, my negative attitude was driving people away. Nevermind the other ninety-five percent of the time. It just takes one or two good snaps to make smart people back off.

My co-worker was seeing what I thought I’d managed to keep under wraps. I was not happy. I was struggling at work, and struggling at home. I wasn’t happy with me.

Why? I was too busy trying to be perfect, and perhaps most importantly, to have perfection in my life. Perfection meant that I was safe. If perfect, that part of my life would not go awry, because there was nowhere for trouble to land. Nothing on which it could hitch. I would love to know where I got that deviant idea. I might trace it back to my infancy as a first-born (many of us are rule-followers and perfectionists by nature), but I believe the tendency went into over-drive at the passing of my husband, Steven. The worst happened. It must be my fault, my failing.

So my co-worker and I wrapped up our conversation with my apology, and my request that she let me know, in any manner she wanted to express herself, if and when I barked, snapped, or otherwise behaved badly. I made this my lesson, and didn’t focus on the fact that it takes two to make a dynamic. I would change my outlook, and therefore my behavior.

During the Christmas holiday with family, I rediscovered grace and gratefulness. I would celebrate my life as is: what it had been, and what it was. No more filtering and editing to present what I thought people would accept, and what I wanted to remember. Warts and all, I was happier. I finally began to see a future, because I was no longer requiring that I be perfect in order to have happiness. God loved me completely just the way I was. He cheered me on, supported me, LOVED me, laughed with me, cried with me, accepted me. When I returned to work in January, I was refreshed, and walked with a new bounce.

Now more than a year later, I am living the fruits of that grace-filled moment. This Christmas, my co-worker mentioned “that” conversation, and how things had changed so dramatically for the better since then. Indeed, not only is my relationship with the co-worker miles upon miles better, my relationship with all of my co-workers and my job itself, is nothing short of miraculous. Is it perfect? No, but that’s not the goal. Is it positive and supportive of growth? Yes!

Grateful for my job, grateful for breath, grateful for challenges, grateful for today.

Counting it all Joy

Counting it all joy
Originally written January 7, 2013

This year is going to be the year I let grace wash over my life and soak every part of it. I’ve been grumpy, low on energy, short on patience, and quick to anger. And this didn’t happen overnight. Sure, lack of sleep and other physical conditions could be contributing to the aforementioned maladies, but life has a way of wearing us down. In an effort to manage said life and its challenges, it’s easy to lean on the tangibles: effort, skill, training, personality, money, relationships, and discipline–not to mention the go-to stress-relievers of food, drink (coffee is my drink of choice) and fun.

While most of those go-tos have value, none of them generate real peace, joy, contentment, or life purpose. None of them in themselves produce lasting, reliable success. In fact, the harder I pedal, the tired-er I gets, and still I gets no closer to my desired destination. And maybe that’s the key. If a satisfying life really could be found in achievements, then effort and other tangibles would be the ticket! But we crave more than external success, and require more than external validation.

My first line of offense this year is to exercise the force of gratitude. It’s not just a matter of keeping a positive attitude. It’s acknowledging God’s grace, His hand, the little things and the big things that make our life a story of His love.

Thank you Lord! Thank you for all of it.
CMarie

Ephesians 2:4-8
But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by grace you have been saved. And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace, expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus.
8 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God.