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THE LETTERS TO TITUS AND PHILEMON by Francis Dixon
Study 5 THE WONDROUS GRACE OF GOD
This classic passage gives us the clearest statement of the grace of God in the New Testament. What is the grace of God? It has been defined as ‘the favour of God shown to the undeserving.’ The late Dr W. H. Griffith Thomas pointed out that grace may be viewed from three standpoints: What grace is in God, what grace is in Christ, and what grace is in the believer. 'Grace in God is God’s mercy pitying, God's wisdom planning, God’s power preparing and God’s love providing. God’s grace thus stretches from Eden to Calvary. Grace in Christ is saving grace suggested by Jesus, sanctifying grace suggested by Christ, sovereign grace implied by Lord, and satisfying grace by the little word 1. WHAT GRACE BROUGHT What did grace bring? Grace brought salvation (verse 11). Notice that only the grace of God brings salvation; the law did not do it, science does not do it, psychology cannot do it, humanism will not do it and philosophy is unable to do it. None of these can save, but the grace of God evolved a method of saving men and women – look up Ephesians 2:8-10. Notice three things about the salvation that grace has brought:-
2. WHAT GRACE TAUGHT Notice verse 12, ‘It teaches us…’ which means that grace trains us or disciplines us. Many people think that salvation means having our sins forgiven and receiving a new life, but it is much more than this. The grace that saves us goes on to sanctify us in two ways:-
How do you fit in to this picture? Now the Apostle tells us:- 3. WHAT GRACE WROUGHT We have this in verse 13. The fact that the grace of God has brought salvation means that we have a ‘blessed hope’. What is the Christian’s ‘blessed hope’? It is the personal return of Jesus Christ. The word ‘hope’ does not imply uncertainty; it means ‘a confident expectation’. The hope of Christ’s coming is blessed indeed. Think of the One who is coming and see how He is described in verse 13, and think how He is coming – first to rapture the Church into His presence – look up John 14:3; 1 Corinthians 15:51-52; 1 Thessalonians 4:16-17, and then to reign in great glory – look up Revelation 1:7, and compare Matthew 25:31; 2 Thessalonians 1:7 and 9. We as Christians are to live looking up! Do we live like this? Where do we look? – at the world, its upsets, unrest and sins, or are we looking for Him? Compare Luke 21:28. Now notice:- 4. WHAT GRACE SOUGHT What did God’s grace seek? What was the great objective of the Incarnation? The answer is in verse 14: ‘to purify for himself a people’. It means a ‘different’ people, a people ‘of His very own’. This is marvellous – that the Lord should seek us because He wanted us for Himself! This is why Jesus died: First, ‘to redeem us from all wickedness’, and then, ‘to purify for himself a people…eager to do what is good.’ Here, then, we have a description of the kind of people that grace seeks:-
In case we have emphasised grace to the exclusion of works, Paul’s paragraph closes on the note of good works. We do not work in order to be saved, but when we are saved, then we work with great eagerness for the glory of God. |