Grace Walk consists of a great team of people who work together to spread the message of our God's grace all over the world. In the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Argentina, El Salvador, Pakistan and Australia we are blessed to have National Coordinators and team members who share the message with great passion. We also have healthy working relationships with friends of our ministry in many other countries around the world.
After a few of our Grace Walk team leaders taught the message of grace in Bogota, Colombia this past week, a friend asked me if I would reaffirm to the dear people in Colombia what we are and aren't saying in our teachings. It's so important to us to be clear in how we share this wonderful message of Divine unconditional love and grace.
In a nutshell, we teach the finished work of Jesus Christ for all humanity. We believe that our Triune God chose, before the foundation of the world, to create mankind for the very purpose of sharing in His life and love. That's why you and I exist - to participate in the circle of intimate love and life that has been and will forever be known among the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Early Church Fathers called this relationship perichoresis, a word that refers to, "the mutual inter-penetration and indwelling within the threefold nature of the Trinity." In other words, "a dance of intimate union." We were made to participate in that Divine Dance.
When Adam sinned in the Garden of Eden, he took us all down with him. Just as mankind's biological roots are found in Adam, so were our spiritual roots. When he became a sinner, we became a sinner. (See Romans 5:12) However, Adam's fall didn't surprise our God. In fact, He had already solved the problem of sin before it reared its ugly head. (See Revelation 13:8; 1 Peter 1:18-20; Titus 1:2)
The Incarnation wasn't an afterthought on God's part. The eternal plan had always been for God to become man and as the God-Man to bring God and man into union through our adoption in Jesus Christ. (See Ephesians 1:5; 1 Timothy 2:5) The word, "incarnation" refers to the vicarious life, death, burial and resurrection of Jesus on behalf of all humanity. In other words, He didn't simply live and die for us as our substitute. While He did that, He also lived and died as us. His obedience to the Father is our obedience. His death was our death. His resurrection and ascension is is our resurrection and ascension.
When Jesus cried, "It is finished!" from the cross, we believe that is exactly what He meant. Having died for all mankind, He has finished the necessary work to complete the reason for His coming in flesh. He came to take away the sin of the world (see John 1:29) and He succeeded. It is finished! He came to bring forgiveness. When Jesus was dying, He prayed for those who crucified Him to be forgiven by the Father. (See Luke 23:34) Notice that He prayed that prayer apart from those who crucified Him personally asking to be forgiven. He sought forgiveness on their behalf while they saw Him as an enemy? Yes! Was Jesus successful? Yes! It is finished! What He did for them, He did for us all.The sins of all humanity have been forgiven.
"God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing their trespasses to
them. . ." (See 2 Corinthians 5:19) The sins of the world have been dealt with by the finished work of Jesus. God has reconciled the world to Himself. He does not count our sins against us. Because of Jesus, it is finished!
It may be hard for some to accept that all are forgiven even before they ask but to think that we must do something to finish the work of Jesus Christ is an insult to Him and His work. To proclaim the gospel is to announce the finished work of Christ. God has committed to us this message of reconciliation. (See 2 Corinthians 5:19). We joyfully share this truth and challenge people to believe it! (See 2 Corinthians 5:20). In Jesus, the Father has reconciled us to Himself. It really is finished! The appeal of the gospel isn't to trust God to do something for us, but to receive and believe what He has already done.
Here's an example: God has given us all His love. Correct? Are you loved by Him whether you receive it or not? Of course you are. You may choose to live your lifestyle outside the experience of His love, but the absolute truth is that He loves you whether you receive it or not. That is an eternal truth. His love for you is factual whether or not you know it to be your actual experience.
The same can be said of all that has been given to us in Jesus Christ. What He did on the cross was for all of us and the benefits of the cross are real whether or not they are realized by a person. If any benefit of the cross (like forgiveness) is true regardless of whether or not we accept it, then every benefit of the cross is true for us. We can't piecemeal the work of the cross and argue that one benefit of the work of Christ is true whether or not we believe but other benefits are only true if we believe. It really is finished and what God has done, He has done whether we believe it or not. Just as Adam took us all down, Jesus Christ has brought us all up.
What has He done for us?
He has forgiven us. (See Ephesians 1:7) We aren't forgiven because of what we do - say "a sinner's prayer," be confirmed, take our first communion, join a local church, or anything else. Forgiveness comes from the cross. It was finished there. We don't finish it now by something we do.
He has justified us by His blood. (See Romans 5:9) It isn't what we do that brings justification, but what He has already done.
He has reconciled us to Himself. (See 2 Corinthians 5:19) God was in Christ "reconciling the world to Himself" when He died on the cross. Did He succeed or fail in His work? Did He really finish it? Or did He simply start the process and it's up to people to finish it by their own personal decision? Jesus said, "It is finished." He didn't say, "It's your move now."
He has made us righteous. Romans 5:19 says, "For as through the one man's disobedience (that man was Adam) the many (How many? All!) were made sinners,
even so through the obedience of the One (Jesus) the many (The same "many?" Of course!) will be made
righteous."
Did Adam's disobedience affect everybody but the obedience of Jesus affected only those who allow it to affect them? Not according to this verse. It is finished!
He has given us His life. Romans 5:18 says, "So then as through one transgression there resulted condemnation to all
men, even so through one act of righteousness there resulted
justification of life to all men." Adams' transgression brought condemnation (by sin, not God) to all men. What result did one act of righteousness bring? The justification of life! To whom? To all men!
You may be thinking by this point, "Yes, but there are other verses in the Bible that plainly teach that we are forgiven when we receive it! One verse teaches we are justified by faith! Another verse tells us to challenge people to "be reconciled to God!" Another says we must believe to be righteous! Other verses say we are dead in our sin until we believe!
Those statements are true. There certainly is a tension in the Scripture about these issues, but the question presents itself, "Are we to disregard and reject those verses that plainly teach about the effect of Jesus' work on all humanity? Was Paul wrong when he wrote that God was in Christ "reconciling the world to Himself." Should he have written that "God was making it possible for people to be reconciled?"
Do we accept Romans 5:19 when it says that in Adam all were made sinners but reject the last part of that same verse when it says that in Christ all are made righteous?
Since the Bible is true in totality, must there not be a way that verses like these that seem to contradict may be reconciled together? Yes, there is. The answer is in recognizing and affirming that all the Bible is reliable and trustworthy. The Scripture isn't a buffet where we can pick and choose what we want to believe and what we will reject.
It's true that in Adam all were made sinners. It's also true that in Christ all were made righteous. It's true that forgiveness has been given to all mankind because of the work of Jesus Christ. It's also true that we must receive that forgiveness.
Eternal truth is real, whether we believe it or not. On the other hand, in order for us to benefit from the eternal truth of all that Jesus Christ has done for us, to us and in us, we must believe it. The writer of Hebrews wrote, "For indeed we (believers) have had good news preached to us, just as they (unbelievers) also; but
the word they (unbelievers) heard did not profit them, because it was not united by
faith in those who heard" (Hebrews 4:2).
Do you see the point in this verse? It's the same truth that is shared with those who believe and those who don't believe. It is truth before we even believe it. Our belief doesn't make the message of the gospel true. The truth is the truth whether we believe it or not. It is an objective reality. It is factual. It is eternal. It is real! Faith has nothing to do with whether it is true or not. It is true.
However -- in order for a person to "profit" (benefit) from the truth, they must believe it. We are all loved by God but unless we believe it, we will live as if we are unloved. We will spend our lives trying to find a love that, in reality, we already have. All mankind is forgiven. We have been reconciled to God. We have been justified. Christ has given Himself to us. It is finished! These things are true!
When we teach this objective aspect of the work of Christ, we aren't suggesting that it isn't necessary to believe and receive it. To the contrary, the only way anybody will benefit from the finished work of Christ is to believe it, but our unbelief doesn't nullify the reality of what He has done. Objective truth is grounded in an "object." It's real. It's something concrete.
For that truth to become subjective, we must subject ourselves to it by believing and receiving it. Otherwise, that which is factual won't become actual to us. Although it is real, it won't be personally realized. While it remains an eternal truth, we won't know it as an experiential truth.
Because we teach the eternal truth that "It is finished!" and affirm that in Christ it all has already been done for all humanity, does that mean we don't believe or teach that every person needs to receive and believe? No!
Here's what we are teaching: There's nothing left for God to do for anybody because it has all been done in Jesus Christ. People simply need to believe the good news, personally receive it and be transformed by it.
To seek to avoid confusion among some, here's what we are NOT teaching:
Everybody is going to heaven.
There is no such thing as hell.
How people behave doesn't matter.
When people aren't accustomed to hearing the objective side (eternal truth) of the cross taught and are only familiar with the subjective side (experiential truth), they sometimes have a knee-jerk reaction to the universality of the work of Jesus - the reality that every person has been affected by His incarnation. They sometimes frantically seek to find a mental folder to file away the teaching that is new to them.
Unfortunately, they often have no file for the objective truths of the gospel so they "misfile" what they hear. The result is that they think we are teaching Universalism or denying the existence of hell or saying that faith in Christ is unnecessary. Nobody who works with Grace Walk is saying these things.
Our goal and earnest effort is to teach both the objective and subjective truths of the gospel. We want people to see that the benefits of the cross are factual even before they become actual. We desire to proclaim what is real even if people don't realize it in their own lives.
Some who hear us teach are set free by the completeness of the message of the gospel. These are the ones who become excited and with enthusiasm join us in sharing the message of grace. I pray these will increase in number and in boldness.
Others who hear us are skeptical. They haven't heard the objective aspects of the cross before and, because it is new to them, they don't know what to think. Sometimes they encounter others who warn them against our teaching, telling them it's error, false doctrine or even heresy. Sometimes they meet people who encourage them forward in their journey. I pray that these will search the Scriptures and trust the Holy Spirit to lead them into all truth.
Still others weigh out what they hear, study the Bible for themselves and come to a different viewpoint than the one we teach. I respect these people for taking the time to seriously consider a different viewpoint from the one they hold and pray for them to be blessed richly as they move ahead in the direction they believe they are being led.
Finally, some will not listen. They believe that the content of their understanding about grace is the right way and they won't consider anything else. They hurl inflammatory accusations like "heretic, false teaching, unorthodox, dangerous, etc." against us. They are afraid. They have vested too much in the house-of-cards theological position they hold and they don't want to see it threatened. These can be very "ungracious" in their "defense of grace." Sadly, they believe they are doing God a service with such attitudes and actions. I pray for these, that the love of the Father will rise up big within them and that they will be overwhelmed by His love. It's interesting how a person's perspective can change when that one thing takes place.
I've written this explanation by request. I know it is lengthy but much is at stake in the culture of the modern church and, for that matter, even within that group that some have called "the grace community." The heart of our Father is always one of reconciliation and loving respect. While we at Grace Walk readily acknowledge that we don't know everything and don't claim to have infallible understanding, we speak and minister from where we believe our God has brought us. We will give our lives to this work.
If you agree with the gospel we proclaim, join us in sharing it. If you aren't sure, join us in exploring it. If you believe we are in serious error, join us in praying the Holy Spirit will lead us into an ever growing understanding of the truth.
We want to be known as a ministry of love for everybody. Where we have failed, forgive us. Where we have succeeded, pray that we may accelerate on that pathway. We will be loving but we won't compromise what we teach. We will be respectful but we will not water down the gospel for the sake of finding common ground. We are flawed, frail and may behave foolishly at times, but our hearts are to put relationships above being right. Listen to us. Pray for us. Then join us in showing others that our unity is grounded in our common union to our Father and nothing else.
Thanks so much for putting all of this together in one single blog. A very helpful resource to point people too. In fact I am keeping a copy of on my hard drive so I can get to it even when I am away from the internet to share with people.
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOU!!
Good idea, Jake! I'm going to do the same!
Delete"Because of Jesus, It is finished." His work in the flesh is ended. Wonderful Steve. May the influence of impact you have grow tremendously for the Gospel' sake. Dave C
ReplyDeleteThanks Steve for making this so clear. I think this is wonderful and I am thrilled to watch people all over the world respond in believing faith, which is the same Greek word.
ReplyDeleteJesus uttered one of the most powerful COMMANDS ever uttered from the cross. He said, "Father forgive them for they know not what they do." Forgive is an Aorist Imperative verb. That means it is completed action, CAN'T be done again, and it also means begin to do something that you are not presently doing. Yes, Christ is actually commanding the Father to begin to do something, forgive. This is ok because they have the same nature and the same mind. Jesus said, "He who sees Me sees the Father," John 10:31.
But here is the good news, the cross is eternal. It applies to all men for all time and was actually carried out in the mind of the Godhead, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit before the foundation of the world.
He became sin, we become His righteousness, 2 Cor. 5:21. His death, the death of the last Adam gives justification of life to ALL men, Romans 5:18.
It must be believed. The judgement is that some would not believe, John 3:17-18. It is for all men, but they must believe and receive what has already been given to them to benefit from the gift already given. Is hell real, yes. But know this, those in Hell have been fully give the full gift of all that Christ is and they are fully loved and forgiven by God and have rejected it choosing Hell over eternity with Christ. Just don't understand how people could reject this gift but some do.
Steve you are a blessing to my life, thanks for kindling this fire of God's total Grace in my heart. It will never go out.
If people could travel with me around the world and see people respond to the message of the Gospel, what God has already done for them on the cross, they would be overcome also. People readily receive the Good News of the cross, the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ.
Thanks again my brother.
Steve,
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for working hard to explain your teaching!! I hope you know I am with you as far as the efficacy of what our Lord accomplished through his incarnation, ministry, crucifixion, resurrection and ascension. From His side He has done it all! And now we are asked, even expected, to respond by receiving and believing. These responses add nothing to what He has done, but they do change our lives forever. We have an incomprehensible treasure laid aside for us. Isn't it a tragedy that so many do not simply receive it!?
I love you Brother and pray that your health rebounds soon!
I want to say thank you to Steve McVey. Thank you for being my friend. Many people can say that. I want to say thank you helping kindle this fire in my soul of God’s radical Grace toward me and all men, and allowing me to work with Grace Walk sharing it all over the world.
ReplyDeleteThank you for putting into words what I believe. I am also thankful to the Godhead, God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit for pouring out His unmerited favor on man at the cross. I am thankful for Him becoming sin so that I could become the righteousness of God in Him. I am thankful for this all being done from eternity past in the mind of God and it was finished from eternity past at the cross. I am tempted to say more but this is enough for now.
you say what I understand...deeply
ReplyDeleteI tell people (believers and unbelievers)when Jesus said "It is Finished" that's what He meant. All of redemption was finished at the cross.
I listened to the book of Hebrews on cd for about six months several years ago and I believe that's THE gospel in the New Testament. Chapter 4 speaks of entering His rest. We don't wait till "heaven" to do that, it's in the here and now. His "rest" is believing what He did on the cross and learning to live in His love...
What is your belief concerning the wrath of God and those cast into the lake of fire in Revelations 20?
ReplyDeleteRon, I discussed that at length in a series you can find at this link: http://gracewalkresources.com/item-group.asp?pgpID=62 I think your question will be fully answered in Sessions 4 and 5
ReplyDeleteI understand what you are saying, but I still don't understand about heaven and hell. If it is finished alld sins are forgiven and Jesus did it all and nothing more for us to do, do all people then go to heaven?
ReplyDeleteDr McVey,
ReplyDeleteI am trying to understand what you are saying. If it is finished completely and all has been done, and I know you said you do not preach all are going to heaven. When people ask what do you say? It is kind of confusing to me.
Thank you,
Deanna
When people ask what, Deanna? While it is finished, we must receive the gift. If you deposit a great sum of money in my bank account but I don't believe or receive it, it does me no good. You have finished your "good work"and the benefit for me is there, but I must accept it. There's nothing left for you do do. It's simply now up to me to respond.
ReplyDeleteWhat people do not understand is that even though the work is a finished work you still must accept it. Romans chapter 5 clearly reveals that through Adam the entire human race was separated from God by his actions in the Garden. Everyone born into this earth is born into Adam. God the Father made it so any man born into Adam can become a new creation by trusting on Jesus death, burial and resurrection. Romans 10:9-13 tells us how this is accomplished. What mankind needs to understand is that God as already reconciled the world to himself through Christ. If anyone beleives this and accepts that his son Jesus was who he did this through, then they are no longer in Adam but in Christ.
ReplyDeleteThe world totally thinks and sad to say much of the church think they must work for this through their own efforts and are missing the boat so to speak. God in his great love for us already made a pathway for all mankind to be assured of eternal salvation and to let him live through us through Jesus Christ. I fully am convinced that when Jesus was talking about the Broad path to destruction and the narrow path to life he was saying, be advised, many will come telling you there are many ways to me, but they are all born out of self effort. The narrow path is simple, Its simply trusting in the finished work of Christ.
Sad part is, many will continue to rely on false Gods, religion and so called different paths to be saved. There is only one, its Jesus and its free.
Kevin
very thorough and yet concise ... thank you!
ReplyDeleteGeoffrey
First of all I want to say I like your post and I agree with it. I have one question that confuses me still, as a believer in the finished work of Christ. He saved all of humanity? Yes. How then does one who is saved, accept Salvation? On the other hand, how then does one saved, reject and end up in Hell?
ReplyDeleteSteve, you did a wonderful job explaining this amazing Gospel.
ReplyDeletethanks for this! i had to share this. and one thing i thought of while reading this receiving and believing if you think about it takes no work its more like a reaction to a gift or a truth so that's just something to think about as the Lord shares the Gospel to the world through us.
ReplyDeleteBethany - here's an example: If you give me platter of delicious pastries that you baked for me, they're mine whether I eat them or not. But if I don't eat them, the are of no value or benefit to me at all. I'll completely miss the blessing of your gift. Suppose I were starving and it were nutritious food you gave to me. If I didn't eat the food, I would still starve even though it was mine because I didn't receive the gift.
ReplyDeleteIn coming to Christ receiving the Salvation In Finished Work we're called to deny ourselves, take up our cross and follow Christ. Believing faith in Christ is continuous ongoing.
ReplyDeleteI believe in a solid response to the love and forgiveness of God. Jesus carries us some until we learn to come to Him broken trusting forgiven abiding in our Lord and better growing coming to know Who He is and who we are in the leverage that glory far outweighs the suffering in this life in breakthroughs God puts into our path as wells of Adullum the cave where David won his mighty men over. When we confirm that the work of Calvery is a Finished Works we can love God by our lives serving others in happiness like Christ had in this as He lived to die in offering of Eternal Spirit. And leaving going into forgiveness all the time we go on to maturity!
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSteve, I really understand all you wrote about in this blog. And if I didn't believe that "it is finished" it is still true whether i believe it or not. Since I was introduced to you by my friend in 2008 i have personally experienced His great love for me. My whole perspective of His love for me has made a paridign shift. Thank you so very much.
ReplyDeleteGrace - although we've not met in person, you've been one of the people who have encouraged me through the past years. I've "watched" you wrestle with questions, come to see the answers through the Spirit and Scriptures and be totally changed by His love and grace. I'm so glad you've been blessed but know this - you have been a blessing too.
ReplyDeleteI would like to apologize to all of you and especially Dr. McVey as long as if I have done any mistake expressing my honest and emotional comment about this splendid Entrance, probably, I’ve been misunderstood as I expressed myself freely in a community I have not been introduced to letting me be led by my strong attraction to Grace Walk. But that’s not the matter. The matter is that If so, there have been no intention to interpretate or round off any message that was rounded perfect by itself in Dr.McVey teaching. Of course, “It’s a finished work”. And there is nothing to complain or to add up to.
ReplyDeleteHi Steve, I find that typically the people that are so focused on "human response" end up holding onto their "human response"... relying on it rather than who they are holding onto and over time it becomes a work. I love that picture Thomas Torrance gives in "The Mediation of Christ" where he describes teaching his young daughter to walk. He observed that as she grasped his hand, she wasn't relying on her tiny little fist grasping his big hand but that her feeble grasp of him was in itself within his firm grasp of her. I've been reading lately about the human body and involuntary reflexes that we are all born with. I agree with your friend Baxter Kruger that if you get to the center of every human you find the same thing, belief, faith... in something. I think faith/belief begins as an involuntary reflex... If you touch the palm of an infant it will grab and hold, involuntarily... in other words it's a design feature not something we can take credit for. I think that in "response" to hearing the true gospel, our hearts grab ahold. I think this could be a picture of what Jesus meant about becoming as little children. Lucy Maud Montgomery's wonderful character in her series "Anne of Green Gables", Anne Shirley, observes the change that occurred in her when she realized it wasn't what the world holds for us but rather what we bring to it. To me, this is the heart of the matter. We get to participate in the ongoing "coming" of Jesus. The kingdom of God bursting forth through us in our day to day lives. This is what we bring to the world, Jesus in us. That is the good news of the Gospel... and when people hear it they will let go of their trust in their own grasp of Jesus and rely and rest in his grasp and movement in and through them. I think that's the way we're meant to go through this life. I so appreciate your ministry, I once was blind, now I see... even if it's through a glass darkly.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI like and more importantly love that our grasp of Jesus' s hand is kept strong in His tough grip of us that no one can puck us away or out of it! Great point James!
DeleteExcellent insight and profoundly explained, James. Thanks for your contribution!
ReplyDelete