restoring our biblical and constitutional foundations

                

What’s the Favorite Book You’ve Written?

 David Alan Black 

During the Montreal conference a young man asked me what I thought was my favorite of all the books I've written. I replied that I thought the question was a bit unfair -- akin to asking, "Which of your grandchildren do you love the most?" I confess to taking pleasure in each of my books, just as I love each of my grandchildren equally. I hope others have enjoyed my writings -- and not just those who were forced to read them as required textbooks! Still, the question is a fair one. Without a doubt, I believe my most important book is one that only tangentially deals with Greek. It's a book that recounts the quiet shift that happened in my heart many years ago now -- a shift from law to grace, to freedom over fear, from orthodoxy to orthopraxy (without ever sacrificing my orthodoxy), from, if you will, Paul to Jesus and the Gospels. Like an earthquake destabilizing old power structures, the life of Christ crept into my consciousness. What I had to learn was that God delights in taking messes and making them into masterpieces. He began to open my eyes and allow me to see what He sees when He looks at me -- a man forgiven and loved, God's own dwelling place, a man destined to use his whole being (including his body) as an instrument to do what is right for the glory of God alone. It seems too incredible to believe, right? But that's why euangelion means Good News. Because of our union with this Lion-Lamb, we have a new identity, a new destiny, and a new purpose in life. It all comes down to the question, "Am I following Jesus with no strings attached?" Dallas Willard put it this way in his book The Great Omission:

The greatest issue facing the world today, with all its heartbreaking needs, is whether those who, by profession or culture, are identified as "Christian" will become disciples -- students, apprentices, practitioners -- of Jesus Christ, steadily learning from him how to live the life of the Kingdom of the Heavens into every corner of human existence.

As I peer into the past, I see now why God led me to write The Jesus Paradigm. He delights in taking damaged goods and making them into trophies of grace. And I pray that this book of mine will impact other damaged people the way it impacted my own life when I wrote it. I was no longer merely a consumer of Christianity. I realized that if I've received mercy, I needed to dispense it. Whether you are a plumber or a pastor, your calling (and mine) is a sacred vocation. God wants us to be like His Son -- motivated by His glory to worship Him as we go about doing our daily work, whatever that is. Even if we're not in what we would consider the "ideal" job, we can still do our best for His glory. Jesus fulfilled His God-given assignment with maximum effort. He gave 200 percent. His one goal was to do the Father's will by serving others.

My friend, pause for a moment and contemplate the words of Jim Elliott: "Wherever you are, be all there, and live to the hilt whatever you are convinced is the will of God for your life." And remember, as we do this -- as we follow the Jesus paradigm -- He is cheering us on.

August 8, 2016

David Alan Black is the editor of www.daveblackonline.com.

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