Living in Gratitude: Embracing Christ's Example and Mission

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Thomas Merton, an American monk who lived in the early 21st century, said this, to be grateful is to recognize the love of God in everything that he has given us, and he has given us everything. Every breath we draw is a gift of his love, and every moment of existence is a grace from God. [00:01:37] (19 seconds)


Jesus showed us how to live the fully righteous life. And we talked about righteousness before, and it's right relationship with God, and it's right relationship with the people around us, living that righteous life. And Jesus showed us how to do this. He modeled for us a life of full dependence on the Father rather than being served. He modeled a life that refused to pay back evil for evil, refused to pay back bad for bad, sin for sin, instead responded with good and love and grace. [00:03:17] (34 seconds)


and that's a really hard thing to do right too much truth not not so good too much grace we need we need that balance of grace and truth and jesus showed us how to do that and and we we strive for that and we get it better sometimes than others jesus showed us a life of prioritizing merciful engagement over and above ritual and tradition and we could go on and on about what jesus showed us and how he lived his life but i want to point out today that the truest measure of the christian life the truest measure of a sincere authentic christian is not how well we look the part because we can be really good at looking the part it's not how well we look the part but it's it's how to what extent we take to heart that simple command to live as jesus lived the authentification of christianity Christian way of life is radically different than the world around us, radically different than the culture we live in, even sometimes the church culture that we have become accustomed to. [00:04:05] (67 seconds)


You know, in Gethsemane, you might remember the prayer. Jesus is praying before his crucifixion, and he asked God, Lord, if there's any other way, let's go that way. But in the end, not my will, Lord, but yours. Now, let's be honest. This is a hard one. This idea of surrendering ourselves to the Lord doesn't automatically lead us to be thankful, necessarily, does it? It seems hard, and we wonder why sometimes we need to do that. I mean, surrendering our life means... It means that we have to give up personal comforts sometime for others' goods, the good of others. It means sometimes we have to surrender even our rights for the sake of the gospel. [00:05:53] (45 seconds)


But when we learn to surrender, we learn to trust. And that kind of surrender is the truest form of worship. In Romans, Paul says this, sacrifice yourselves or give yourselves as a living offering to the Lord. God doesn't need just an hour or two from us on Sunday, as if we made some heroic sacrifice. We should gather on Sunday. It's good to fellowship. We need it. But he actually wants our whole lives, not just that hour or two that we give today. Because surrendered lives, change the world. [00:08:41] (37 seconds)


Romans 6 .4 says that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father that we may have new life. That we may have new life. When we put our hope and trust in Jesus Christ, our sins are forgiven. And we begin this journey with Jesus Christ, a journey with a new identity. We're new people. We're different kinds of people. We're new creations living with new purpose and new hope and filled with new joy and new peace. It's newness in all the different ways and all the different aspects of our lives. And like I said last week, that's really good news, isn't it? The old is gone. The new has come. Exactly right. Absolutely. Thank you, Shan. [00:09:47] (51 seconds)


Hospitality is not about the perfect home or the perfect meal. It's about creating a space and a place where you can be yourself. And I want to encourage you to do that. A place where people are safe to be themselves. A place of grace. And when we create those spaces, people can feel genuinely welcomed and accepted, no strings attached. And we're offering something rare and precious in this world when we do that. Because everywhere you go, somebody wants something from you, right? [00:21:52] (29 seconds)


I hope that we will all begin to look at this world and see the opportunities for hospitality when ordinary moments become holy ground. Not fancy. In fact, it should not be fancy. Relieve yourselves from the pressure to be fancy and perfect. Not fancy, but it's real. It's real life, and that's exactly what makes it powerful in your life. In people's lives. John Piper writes that don't ever underestimate the power of your living room as a launching pad for new life and hope and ministry and mission. And I would add to that, living rooms are great, probably the best place, but it could also be a gym. It could be a break room at work. It could be wherever you find yourself going, wherever you find yourself interacting with people. [00:23:20] (55 seconds)


True hospitality isn't performance. It's presence. Showing up. Being available. Because Jesus showed us how to live. And for that, I'm thankful. Jesus asks us to surrender ourselves and trust in him. And promising that he will never leave us. And for that, I am thankful. In Jesus, we have forgiveness and new life. And for that, I am thankful. And Jesus, our Lord, has sent us out with a purpose and a mission. And for that, I am thankful. The mission we can carry out because God is faithful, because Jesus is Lord, and because the Holy Spirit is faithful. And the Holy Spirit is with us. So in thankful response for all that he has done, we practice hospitality. [00:24:42] (56 seconds)


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