Some people worry that AI will put an end to writing. Maybe it will—for those who don’t think. Many of us, on the other hand, write to think.
I wrote yesterday to think through the horrible comment by a church leader somewhere up the road from me—Grace is for sinners; Laws are for Christians.
Yes, I am still shocked by that philosophy. One that would be hard to justify biblically. At least, from a New Testament perspective.
I’m still thinking about grace (and I wish the joke from Christmas Vacation would leave my memory). “Grace, she died years ago.”
Sorry for the digression.
There are other people who think that grace is like a vaccination (I guess they aren’t anti-vaxxers). One dose and you’re cured of the disease. Same as education for some.
As Paul guides our spiritual formation process in his Letter to the Romans, he devoted about a third of the text to discussing life after receiving grace. Read those last few chapters as a guide to living with Jesus after receiving your first big dose of grace.
After all, Matthew records Jesus’s teaching as “Change your life’s direction, for God’s Kingdom is right here.” (Usually rendered “Repent! For the Kingdom of God is at hand.”)
I think we forget the “change your life” part. Living under Grace (and not Laws like the Pharisees whom Jesus battled) doesn’t prevent us from ever sinning (we could wish) but it does enable us to live differently. And better.

