Common Grace & Uncommon WorkMuestra
Let’s face it: The brand of Christianity isn’t so hot right now. By and large, non-Christians perceive us as judgmental and unloving, increasingly retreating into subcultural enclaves to sit on Facebook to rage about “the culture” rather than engage it.
Here’s something you can do today to help solve this problem: Celebrate the good in a non-Christian’s work. More than that, tell them how you see God working through them to do good in the world.
That’s what we’ve seen throughout this plan on common grace! God gives good gifts of provision and vocational skill to “the righteous and the unrighteous” (see Matthew 5:45). He works in this world through believers and non-believers alike as we see in Romans 13:1-6.
And so, while we will not agree with everything non-Christians do in their work, we are free to call out what they do for the common good via God’s common grace as nothing less than God’s work in the world. And that can have a profound impact on the lost, as my friend Mike Kelsey has learned.
Mike shared with me on my podcast, Mere Christians, that he was having lunch with a non-Christian friend who is a talented poet. Mike told his friend, “Hey, man, I know you don't even know what you believe, but you're doing God's work. God is using you in the ways that you craft words and write poetry and write books…you're blessing people through your gifts.”
When I asked Mike how his friend reacted, he said, “He was stunned that I would say that.” This guy assumed he was just “a salvation project” for Mike. But by taking the time to see his friend and call out the God-given goodness in his work, Mike gave his friend a new and far more winsome picture of what it means to be a Christian.
Throughout this plan, we’ve looked at responses to common grace that lead to uncommon work. Here are all five:
- Common grace leaves us dumbstruck at the goodness of God.
- Common grace leads us to be good to our enemies.
- Common grace frees us to learn from and work with Christians and non-Christians alike.
- Common grace forces us to decouple our success from our faithfulness.
- Common grace allows us to celebrate the lost and change their perception of Christianity.
Regarding that fifth response, let me encourage you to do what Mike Kelsey did today. Find a non-Christian whom God is using to deliver his good gifts to the world. Encourage them to that end, and watch what God can do with your response to his common grace!
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We talk a lot in our churches about “saving grace” but very little about God’s “common grace.” But as you’ll see in this 5-day series, the doctrine of common grace is supremely relevant to the work you do Monday through Friday!
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