The Comma
This morning on my way into work, I was listening to Christian radio, per usual. The DJ read this article in between songs - reflecting on Easter. I thought it was SO powerful.
You can read it in its entirety here (I pulled an excerpt):
The Comma
written by Jonathan Acuff
I’m talking about the “comma of grace.”
I found it in Luke 22. In that chapter, Jesus is being led away. He is headed to the cross. A million prophecies are coming true and chaos is breaking out a little amongst disciples that up to this point have sworn to serve until death. In the midst of that, he pulls Simon aside because he knows that Simon will soon betray him.
He says to Simon in Luke 22:31-32:
“Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail.”
And then, he drops the 9 words that I can’t write about enough. The 9 words that I often turn to when I’ve failed and messed up again and feel hopelessly undeserving of hope.
Jesus tells Simon:
“And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”
Do you see what Jesus is saying in that first half of the sentence, And when you have turned back? He’s saying:
You are going to fail.
You are going to fall.
You are going to lose it.
You are going to make commitments and break them.
You are not going to always be the man you family needs.
You are going to sin.
But, but, but, you will turn back.
You will come back. You will know redemption. You will know return. You will know a God that not only allows the “comeback” but actually celebrates it.
When I read the phrase “And when you have turned back,” I read a loud, wild picture of what grace really looks like.
And then, if you go too fast, you’ll miss the comma. You’ll miss the gap that sits quietly between the next thought. You’ll miss it because like me, you might misread the second half of that sentence.
Here’s what it says:
“And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”
But here’s how we write it sometimes:
“And when you have turned back, repent for a long time and stay a long way from me until you are clean enough to return to my presence.”
“And when you have turned back, please stay far away from any ministry opportunities. You are too broken to help other people. How can you minister to others when your own life is so messed up?
“And when you have turned back, here are the 57 things you need to do in order to earn back my good favor.”
But Christ doesn’t do that! He drops a comma like a grenade.
He gives us the gift of the comma and then asks us to strengthen our brothers. Not beat ourselves with emotional whips. Or lay in a hole of shame. Or stay to the shadows of church afraid to be seen.
He wants you. In his arms. By his side. Surrendered and free in his presence.
Not because you deserve it or have earned it or are perfect.
Because of Easter.
That’s it.
We all get the comma of grace.
I am SO grateful for that comma of grace. I'm so grateful for Christ's redemptive love for me. I'm ashamed that I don't always offer that same love to others.
Lord as you've given me your grace, also fill me up with it so that I may offer it to others. Amen
This entry was posted on Monday, April 05, 2010
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3 comments:
Jon Acuff is one of my favorites. I follow his blog and I read it every day...without fail. He writes mostly about the humor in Christianity and I love it. I am glad that you posted about him on your site. His book is out and I haven't been able to find a copy locally so I guess I will be ordering it from Amazon.
I hope you all had a great Easter weekend!!
Oh wow. Thank you so much for sharing! I love your Easter photos below. I almost purchased a dress very similar to your daughter's for my daughter! It is so cute!
PS I started a new blog hop that I think might interest you! {grin}
Love-Love this.... What a relief we do not have to be 100% fail-safe.
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