Faith in Future Grace: Liberating Love and Sacrifice
Devotional
Day 1: Joy in Suffering Through Future Grace
True Christian love is rooted in faith in future grace, which empowers believers to endure suffering and persecution with joy. This joy is not based on present circumstances but on the assurance of a better and lasting possession in heaven. The early Christians exemplified this by choosing to identify with those in prison, even at the cost of their own possessions and safety. Their joy in the face of suffering was rooted in the knowledge of a better and lasting possession in heaven. This perspective challenges the often materialistic and immediate gratification mindset prevalent among many believers today. [04:49]
Hebrews 10:34-36 (ESV): "For you had compassion on those in prison, and you joyfully accepted the plundering of your property, since you knew that you yourselves had a better possession and an abiding one. Therefore do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. For you have need of endurance, so that when you have done the will of God you may receive what is promised."
Reflection: Think of a current challenge or hardship you are facing. How can you shift your focus from the immediate discomfort to the eternal joy promised by God?
Day 2: Valuing Eternal Rewards Over Temporary Pleasures
The life of Moses exemplifies the choice to value eternal rewards over temporary pleasures. By looking to the reward, Moses embraced reproach for the Messiah as greater riches, teaching us to prioritize long-term spiritual investments over fleeting worldly gains. Moses chose to endure ill-treatment with God's people rather than enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin. His decision was driven by a vision of greater riches in reproach for the Messiah, highlighting the importance of valuing eternal rewards over temporary gains. [08:55]
Hebrews 11:24-26 (ESV): "By faith Moses, when he was grown up, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, choosing rather to be mistreated with the people of God than to enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin. He considered the reproach of Christ greater wealth than the treasures of Egypt, for he was looking to the reward."
Reflection: Identify one area in your life where you are tempted to choose temporary pleasure over eternal reward. What steps can you take today to align your choices with eternal values?
Day 3: Pursuing Joy in God's Promises
Jesus' endurance of the cross for the joy set before Him demonstrates that the pursuit of joy in God's promises is essential for sustaining love and sacrifice. This challenges the notion that seeking joy is sub-moral and affirms its role in motivating Christ-like love. Jesus endured the cross for the joy set before Him, demonstrating that the pursuit of joy in God's promises is not only moral but essential for sustaining love and sacrifice. [12:38]
Hebrews 12:2 (ESV): "Looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God."
Reflection: Reflect on a sacrifice you are currently making or need to make. How can the joy of God's promises sustain you in this sacrifice?
Day 4: Engaging the World with Sacrificial Love
The call to go "outside the camp" and bear reproach, as Jesus did, is a call to engage with the world despite rejection or suffering. This requires a shift from seeking comfort to embracing the mission of love and evangelism, even when it leads to personal sacrifice. Believers are called to step out of their comfort zones and engage with the world, even when it leads to rejection or suffering. This is exemplified in personal experiences of outreach and evangelism, where the response is often mixed but the call to love remains steadfast. [15:20]
Hebrews 13:13-14 (ESV): "Therefore let us go to him outside the camp and bear the reproach he endured. For here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come."
Reflection: Consider a person or group you feel called to reach out to, but have hesitated due to fear of rejection or discomfort. What is one step you can take today to engage with them in love?
Day 5: Seeking the Eternal City
The transient nature of this world should drive believers to seek the eternal city to come. By resting in the promises of God's kingdom, believers are liberated from materialism and empowered to live counter-culturally, pursuing holiness and sacrificial love. The message is a call to shift focus from the transient pleasures of this world to the eternal joy found in God's promises. By doing so, believers are liberated to love sacrificially, live counter-culturally, and pursue holiness with a heart set on the kingdom to come. [18:24]
2 Corinthians 4:17-18 (ESV): "For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal."
Reflection: What is one material possession or worldly pursuit you find yourself clinging to? How can you begin to let go of it and focus on the eternal city to come?
Sermon Summary
In this message, I explore the profound connection between faith in future grace and the liberation of love. The central theme is that true Christian love is born out of a deep trust in God's promises for the future, which empowers believers to live radically and sacrificially in the present. By examining various biblical texts, I illustrate how hope, faith, and confidence in God's future grace enable believers to endure suffering and persecution with joy, as seen in the lives of early Christians and biblical figures like Moses and Jesus.
The journey begins with a reflection on the early Christians who, despite facing severe persecution, chose to identify with those in prison, even at the cost of their own possessions and safety. Their joy in the face of suffering was rooted in the knowledge of a better and lasting possession in heaven. This perspective challenges the often materialistic and immediate gratification mindset prevalent among many believers today.
I also delve into the life of Moses, who chose to endure ill-treatment with God's people rather than enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin. His decision was driven by a vision of greater riches in reproach for the Messiah, highlighting the importance of valuing eternal rewards over temporary gains. Similarly, Jesus endured the cross for the joy set before Him, demonstrating that the pursuit of joy in God's promises is not only moral but essential for sustaining love and sacrifice.
The call to go "outside the camp" and bear reproach, as Jesus did, is a call to step out of comfort zones and engage with the world, even when it leads to rejection or suffering. This is exemplified in personal experiences of outreach and evangelism, where the response is often mixed but the call to love remains steadfast.
Ultimately, the message is a call to shift focus from the transient pleasures of this world to the eternal joy found in God's promises. By doing so, believers are liberated to love sacrificially, live counter-culturally, and pursue holiness with a heart set on the kingdom to come.
Key Takeaways
1. True Christian love is rooted in faith in future grace, which empowers believers to endure suffering and persecution with joy. This joy is not based on present circumstances but on the assurance of a better and lasting possession in heaven. [04:49]
2. The life of Moses exemplifies the choice to value eternal rewards over temporary pleasures. By looking to the reward, Moses embraced reproach for the Messiah as greater riches, teaching us to prioritize long-term spiritual investments over fleeting worldly gains. [08:55]
3. Jesus' endurance of the cross for the joy set before Him demonstrates that the pursuit of joy in God's promises is essential for sustaining love and sacrifice. This challenges the notion that seeking joy is sub-moral and affirms its role in motivating Christ-like love. [12:38]
4. The call to go "outside the camp" and bear reproach, as Jesus did, is a call to engage with the world despite rejection or suffering. This requires a shift from seeking comfort to embracing the mission of love and evangelism, even when it leads to personal sacrifice. [15:20]
5. The transient nature of this world should drive believers to seek the eternal city to come. By resting in the promises of God's kingdom, believers are liberated from materialism and empowered to live counter-culturally, pursuing holiness and sacrificial love. [18:24] ** [18:24]
In Hebrews 10:32-34, what actions did the early Christians take that demonstrated their faith in future grace? How did they respond to persecution? [02:46]
According to Hebrews 11:24-26, what motivated Moses to choose ill-treatment with God's people over the pleasures of sin? What does this reveal about his values? [08:38]
Hebrews 12:1-2 describes Jesus' endurance of the cross. What was the "joy set before him" that enabled Him to endure such suffering? [11:26]
How does the sermon describe the response of American Christians to suffering and persecution compared to the early Christians? [05:11]
---
Interpretation Questions:
What does the sermon suggest about the relationship between faith in future grace and the ability to love sacrificially? How does this faith impact a believer's response to suffering? [06:14]
How does the example of Moses in Hebrews 11:24-26 challenge modern believers to reassess their priorities and values? What does it mean to value eternal rewards over temporary pleasures? [08:55]
In what ways does the sermon suggest that Jesus' endurance of the cross serves as a model for believers today? How does the pursuit of joy in God's promises sustain love and sacrifice? [12:38]
The sermon calls believers to go "outside the camp" and bear reproach. What does this mean in practical terms for engaging with the world today? [15:20]
---
Application Questions:
Reflect on a time when you faced a challenge or persecution for your faith. How did your belief in future grace influence your response? What might you do differently now? [04:49]
Consider the material possessions or comforts you hold dear. How might you begin to shift your focus from these transient pleasures to the eternal joy found in God's promises? [18:24]
Moses chose to endure ill-treatment for the sake of greater riches in reproach for the Messiah. What are some "fleeting pleasures" in your life that you might need to let go of to pursue long-term spiritual rewards? [08:55]
Jesus endured the cross for the joy set before Him. What "joy" or promise from God motivates you to endure hardships and continue in love and sacrifice? How can you keep this joy in focus during difficult times? [12:38]
The sermon encourages believers to step out of their comfort zones and engage with the world, even when it leads to rejection or suffering. What is one specific way you can go "outside the camp" this week to share God's love with others? [15:20]
How can you cultivate a mindset that prioritizes the eternal city to come over the transient nature of this world? What practical steps can you take to live counter-culturally and pursue holiness? [18:24]
Reflect on the sermon’s call to break free from materialism. What is one area of your life where you can practice generosity or simplicity to align more closely with the values of God's kingdom? [09:28]
Sermon Clips
Remember the former days when after being enlightened, you endured a great struggle of sufferings. That's what happens when you become a Christian in most places of the world. Being a Christian costs. It costs. I get these stream of emails from auto in Uzbekistan, this documenting month by month the cost for him and all of his converts. [00:52:00]
Persecution came some is just reproach and some is just tribulation but some went to jail. Now what do the people outside jail do when some of them, new converts are in jail and the jails in those days were not like our jails they depended on who brings you food. [01:17:92]
And they did this is not just a command now, this is an actual documentation of the crazy, ridiculous unbelievable Matthew 5:12 response to persecution. Rejoice for your reward is great in heaven, and they joyfully accepted this and here's the ground, knowing that they had for themselves a better possession and a lasting one. [04:54:56]
Moses when he had grown up refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, choosing crazy choice rather to endure ill-treatment with the people of God then to enjoy yes he rejected a kind of joy the passing, passing who wants those who wants fleeting pleasures who wants pleasures that only last 80 years. [07:23:75]
Considering the approach reproach of Egypt greater riches, now that's an amazing statement the reproach themselves are riches than the treasures of is there a reason for all that crazy behavior and affection for he was looking to the reward couldn't be clearer this is this is not rocket science. [07:55:04]
Jesus the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, despising the shame and has set has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. And I've talked to some of you recently about those pronouns there I mean the preposition for the joy. [10:15:60]
Jesus was sustained by the confidence the hope that on the other side of these days, I will rise from the dead I will have a resurrection body that won't be bloody in, in pain anymore I will have all authority in heaven and on earth I will be exalted to my father's right hand. [11:39:27]
So let us go out to him outside the camp bearing his reproach so this is a call to suffer Jesus suffered outside the gate now you join him outside the camp what would that be I wonder the people he was writing to they didn't live in camps they were scattered through the Roman world. [13:32:24]
The stories that came back were mixed right the we knocked my wife and Talitha and I knocked on 16 doors on our block three of them opened to us even though I think some of the others were home nobody likes to go to their door when three people are standing there that look religious. [14:50:56]
For here we don't have a lasting city but we are seeking the city which is to come there it is again so when you contemplate the feeling I don't like reproach I don't like to be made fun of I don't like it when people roll their eyes I don't like it when they call me names. [16:46:56]
The nations are like a drop from a bucket when the judgment arrives on planet earth someday it will make Katrina look like a thimble compared to the Pacific ocean of terror it's not going to last it's coming down every catastrophe is a symbol of what's coming wake up New Orleans. [17:41:20]
What lifestyle or what dynamic of living the Christian life will yield holiness or love radical risk-taking counter-cultural counter-intuitive free sacrificial love that lays down your life on the mission field or in Phillips neighborhood or in Mounds View what is it every one of these Texas said. [19:26:00]