[Sitting at the second tee of our little golf course across the street from our house. Beautiful day for March 9. Typical northern Illinois 35mph wind.]
I swear I wasn’t eavesdropping on the conversation. The Starbucks has a long bench seat along the windows with small table aligned and a chair across from the seat. I took a seat with my Doppio Espresso with s dusting of cinnamon, plugged my air pods into my ears, and proceeded to listen to an engineering software press conference.
That over, I paused in quiet to compose my thoughts before writing. A young man and then an older man sat at the table beside mine. During that moment of quiet (for me), I clearly heard the young man talk about a church he was thinking of attending.
They told me that grace is for sinners, and laws are for Christians.
I am still shaken by that statement.
So, according to that unknown church, Christians are not sinners?
And, Christians are under the Law?
What version of the New Testament are they reading? Have they ever sat and read the Letter to the Romans straight through? Several times successively?
All are sinners. Some have grace and are forgiven. Forgiven doesn’t mean never going to sin again. It just means the past is forgiven. Speaking from personal experience, I need that forgiveness probably more than once daily!
And what about the Letter to the Galatians where Paul clearly (OK, clearly for Paul) discusses freedom from the Law for Jesus Followers.
I think I could write a book fleshing out these thoughts. I’m beyond disturbed.
In fact, I’ve completed writing what will soon be a series of videos on my YouTube channel guiding people through the spiritual development process Paul outlines in Romans. The final third of the letter discusses how we live under grace. But he doesn’t tell us that we’ll never sin again. Or that we will be living under the Law. He disposed of that idea early in the letter.
Living under grace is liberating. Never cynical. Never tyrannical. Always helpful. Joyful.

