Remembering Grace: The Balance of Past and Progress

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The command here, this is an imperative, is to remember some pretty sad devastating realities about our past life. Remember five things: one, no Christ; two, no belonging to Israel; three, no covenants of promise; four, no hope; five, no God. Remember that. [00:01:37]

The forgetting is intended to help Paul run his race. One thing I do, forgetting what lies behind, I'm straining forward to what lies ahead. I'm pressing on towards the goal for the prize. The picture is I'm running a race. I can see the gold in front of me. [00:05:09]

The point of this memory appears to be to throw into starkest relief the but now. But now in Christ, once you were separated from Christ, without Christ, and all these painful things were true of you: hopelessness, godlessness, promiselessness. But now in Christ Jesus, you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. [00:06:18]

Paul evidently thinks there is a way to remember these painful things that would make you love the blood of Christ more, make you exalt that you were brought near now, may you glad that you're not far off anymore. In other words, this memory is going to magnify grace. [00:07:02]

This forgetting and this remembering are really intended to serve the very same purpose. Here he wants them to see that they've been brought near by the blood of Christ and that this is a glorious work of grace, and they should feel more intense thankfulness for it. [00:08:04]

Jesus said, remember, no one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God. So there's a looking back of a kind that I haven't mentioned, namely, with desire, desire for the old. He also said, remember Lot's wife. [00:08:44]

If you're constantly looking over your shoulder at the sweetness or goodness of what you've left behind, you're not fit for the kingdom. So that's another kind of forgetting that would serve our future, namely, forget the flesh pots of Egypt and look to the promised land. [00:09:20]

The goal of God in heaven is not to constantly bring to our memory things we regret in order to make us miserable with remorse. The goal of God in heaven is to show immeasurable riches of grace in kindness. [00:10:46]

If you were to ask, are we going to remember the sins or the failures of this life, I would answer only to the degree that it magnifies grace and intensifies joy. [00:11:02]

The purpose of this remembering here is really intended to intensify joy in our hope. Maybe God really is a God who likes to rub it in. No, he's not. He's not, and we know he's not because of Ephesians 2:6 and 7. [00:09:44]

God raised us up with Christ, seated us with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, so that in the coming ages, here's the purpose of why God rescued us from all those negative things in our former life, so that in the coming ages, forever and ever, he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace. [00:10:09]

The goal of God in heaven is to show immeasurable riches of grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. The goal of God in heaven is not to constantly bring to our memory things we regret in order to make us miserable with remorse. [00:10:46]

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