Lent Day 27
Sheer and Shocking Grace
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In his letter to the Galatians, St. Paul tells the community
his own story and how he came to Christian faith. It didn’t happen through
study or through someone else's tutoring. It came as a sheer and shocking grace
to the most unlikely of people.
“You heard of my former way of life in Judaism,” he
says with almost comical laconicism. Paul’s conversion story must have been
well-known at the time. “How I persecuted the church of God beyond measure and
tried to destroy it.”
Let those words sink in. Paul wasn’t just opposed to
Christianity; he didn’t simply argue against it or ignore it. He actively,
brutally, and violently persecuted it.
The Acts of the Apostles speaks of Paul “breathing
murderous threats” and seeking to bring Christians back in chains. He was, in a
word, about as far from Christian faith as you could get. He was spiritually
dead.
Yet Christ brought him back to life: “When God, who
from my mother’s womb had set me apart and called me through his grace, was
pleased to reveal his Son to me…” (Galatians 1:15).
God fashioned Paul’s Christian faith from nothing, and
here’s the application for all of us: don’t give up hope, even when you are in
desperate straits. Don’t surrender, even when things seem utterly void of
meaning and hope.
You may be on your last legs; you may have nothing
left in the tank; you may be moving in the wrong direction.
But don’t give up! God’s grace can bring you back and renew
your life again.
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