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2001 Spring Meeting - Roy Adams Devotional

April 18 Devotional

Roy Adams

The Motivation of His Grace


"The Motivation of His Grace"-that's the topic the committee assigned me.

As I understand the topic, it basically means to get at the reason(s) behind God's grace. The driving force behind His mercy. In other words, Why did He choose to act in our behalf? Why has He been so kind to us?

About six years ago or so, my son Dwayne was in charge of family worship at our home, and an illustration he used fascinated me. It came from an article in the April 1997 issue of National Geographic magazine, documenting some of the findings of the giant Hubble telescope, launched into space back in 1990.

One of the graphics in the report Dwayne used depicted what astronomers know as the Eagle Nebula [screen]-here it is, named (as you can see) from its shape. It consists of a series of pillar-like formations, as you can also see, composed (according to the report) of dense, cool gas and dust.

Now, what would you guess is the height of the tallest of these? Suppose I say it's 88 million miles? That would be a fairly decent guess, wouldn't you think? But I'd be wrong-it's more than that. Suppose I put the figure of 597 billion in front of the number I just gave, making the distance come to 597 billion, 88 million miles? I can imagine, if I did that, some of you would be inclined to say: Wrong again-that's too much. But then we'd both be wrong-it's a little more than that. According to the National Geographic article, the tallest of these measures three light years in height, which Dwayne calculate to equal 17 trillion, 597 billion, 88 million miles. And my head begins to spin.

Imagine now, Dwayne said-imagine a spacecraft traveling about 20 MPS (which, I understand, is the approximate speed of these things)-imagine a spacecraft traveling at a speed of 20 MPS. In one hour, that craft will have traveled 72,000 miles. At that rate, it would take the craft a total of some 27,900 years to travel from bottom to top.

This means that if that craft had taken off from on one end of the pillar the day Adam was created (and I leave you to put your own figure in there as to how long ago that was-my own assumption is in the illustration)-if that craft had taken off from the bottom end of this pillar the day Adam was created, heading to the top end of the nebula, and traveling at the fantastic speed of 72,000 miles every hour-all through the lifetime of Methuselah, through the time of Abraham, through the hundreds of years of Egyptian captivity, all through the time of the Judges, the Kings, the prophets; through the time of Jesus and the early church; through the Middle Ages and the Reformation; through the time of the Great Disappointment, through the period of the Civil War in America, across two world wars, and down to this morning, April 18, 2002, that spacecraft will have done less than 1/3 the distance.

And remember, we're talking only about one little segment of the universe!

National Geographic, describing a shot to which it gave the intriguing caption: "World Without End," explained that Hubble pointed at one of the (apparently) emptiest parts of the sky, and focused on a region the size of a grain of sand held at arms length. And what it found was what you see coming up now on the screen-layer upon layer upon layer of galaxies, as far as Hubbles' eyes could see!

Moreover, the report said, only a few objects in this picture are individual stars (which appear as spiked points of light). Everything else is a galaxy, each one containing billions of stars. The large white galaxy at the top center is the closest to us-at 4 billion light years away. [Now, a minute ago, remember, we were dealing with 3 light years-which yielded those fantastic numbers. Now we're talking 4 billion (that's billion with a "b")-4 billion light years away.

You think about it for a second, and the mind shuts down in sheer astonishment and wonder.

Brothers and sisters, measured on the scale of the rest of the universe, this planet-our planet-- is less than a speck-it doesn't exist. I laugh inside every time I hear reports that scientists are trying to discover whether there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe and I think, forgive me, how dumb can we be! To even entertain the notion for a split second that in this whole colossal cosmos, intelligent life would be found only on this spec of an outpost. No, you and I can infer from the inspired writings, that there are literally billions and billions and billions of other beings that God has created, scattered throughout the unending vastness of space.

And yet-and yet, God in Jesus Christ has literally emptied heaven for us. And the question is: WHY? What is the MOTIVATION of such awesome grace? What made Him do it?

As I reflected on the question, and knowing that all you bright people were coming from all across North America and from around the world, I felt the temptation to come up with some brilliant answer that would simply blow you away, something you had never thought about before. (Does anything like that exist?) But while these thoughts were fleeting across my mind, I recalled an incident that took place when my family spent some time in the Philippines back in the 1980s.

There in Puting Kahoy where we lived, we had a terrific view of the night sky, especially at the back of our house at the top of the hill. Our children had the opportunity to be wowed each and every evening by God's great cosmic canvas, without the distraction of excessive artificial light.

And one evening as we got back inside, Dwayne-the same lad I quoted a minute ago (he was probably about 9 at the time)-he suddenly said: "Daddy, will there be stars in heaven?" I heard the question; wished it were never asked; but was nevertheless fixing to let loose some profound theological response, when his little sister, seven year old Kim, came to my rescue. Without even raising her head from her coloring book, and totally oblivious of the profound response about to descend upon her big brother, she calmly answered: "Of course not. There'll be no night there."

"Uhm," I said to Dwayne, "I think your sister's got it." Sometimes the simplest answers are the best.

So the answer I have to the question before us this morning is a simple one. And it comes from the most well-known of all biblical passages, a passage which, however, is the mother of all soteriological pronouncements, the Magna Carta of our salvation: John 3:16.

What this passage says about the MOTIVATION of God's grace is that the impetus, the stimulus, the force behind that grace is LOVE-pure, unadulterated, unconditional love. [And right at this point, to avoid misunderstanding, may I just say that we're not talking here about unconditional acceptance. We're talking unconditional love. It's downright dangerous, in my thinking to confuse the two. And we shouldn't.

When I think of unconditional love, the motive behind God's grace, my mind goes back to one of the most gripping stories in the Old Testament-the story of Absalom. The narrative documents the tense, rocky relationship between the young man and his royal Father David (a tension provoked by Absalom's murder of his own half brother Amnon for sexually violating Absalom's sister Tamar). It's a long story, as you know-taking us through Absalom's self-imposed exile; his return following an ingenuous scheme devised by Joab, the head of his father's army; his temporary reconciliation with his father; and his eventual rebellion.

The Bible describes the young prince as an exceedingly handsome chap. It says in 1 Samuel 14:25 that "in all Israel there was not a man so highly praised for his handsome appearance as Absalom." "From the top of his head," it says, "to the sole of his foot there was no blemish in him." My dear, wouldn't Hollywood like to get hold of a guy like that! The Bible says that when the guy cut his hair (adding, parenthetically, that he cut it from time to time when it got too heavy for him)-it says that when he cut his hair, it would weigh 200 shekels (which I understand was something like 5 lbs).

But in time that handsome head plotted treason against his father's government; and there came the day when a messenger rushed into the throne room of the king with the awful news that the king's own son had launched a coup d'etat.

The account describes how the king, upon receiving the news, hastily abandons the palace and the capital, accompanied by the rest of the royal household, as well as his personal bodyguards and fighting men. The text says that "the whole countryside wept aloud as all the people passed by," heading in the direction of the desert. (15:23). And "David," it says poignantly, "continued up the Mount of Olives, weeping as he went; his head . . . covered [,] . . . barefoot. All the people with him covered their heads too [,] . . . weeping as they went up." He was heart-broken. Absolutely crushed and devastated. And the keenest humiliation came from knowing that the one now hunting him down was not his envious predecessor, but his own child.

But as David's men prepared to engage the forces of Absalom, something exceedingly tender transpires, something that begins to look more and more like grace. Standing beside the gate as the troops marched out, David, in the hearing of the whole army, gave a strange command to the leaders of his forces: (2 Sam. 18:4, 5).

Incredible!

The decisive moment of that bloody day in the forest of Ephraim needed no video to enhance it. Here it is-in 2 Sam 18:9.

Poetic justice, one might say. Here's this rebel against the kingdom of his own father caught up in a tree by his head--that same handsome, Oscar-winning head, graced by the most beautiful dark hair anywhere in Israel-the same head that plotted the bloody rebellion that day, now caught up in a tree; still full of murderous mischief, but powerless to take them anywhere. What irony!

Scrambling frantic to General Joab, the young soldier could hardly get the words out quick enough: "I just saw Absalom hanging in an oak tree,"he says. And Joab was like: "What!"

That's what Joab said when the soldier came to him with the astonishing report that he'd just seen the most wanted man in Israel caught in a tree."

"What!" Joab said. "You saw him? Why didn't you strike him to the ground right there?" Within minutes, Joab had reached the critical spot. Wasting no time, the Bible says "he took three javelins in his hand and plunged them into Absalom's . . . [chest] while [he] was still alive in the . . . tree. And ten of Joab's armor-bearers surrounded" the young prince "and killed him" (18:14, 15). They then dumped his body into a large pit in the forest, and piled a large heap of rocks over it.

And now for the crux of the story. A messenger, later that day, fresh from the battlefront, rushes in to the king at his secure hideaway with a report on the battle. I go now to the poignant exchange:

2 Samuel 18:31-33.*** Two thousand years ago, the One whom some of His contemporaries called "Jesus, son of David" traversed the same grounds as did his ancient human father. And from the Mount of Olives, days before His death, as He looked down upon a city filled with Absaloms, His heart broke: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem," I put words in His mouth, "if you only knew! If you only knew!" [See Matt. 23:37; Luke 19:41-44]. Days later he hung dying upon the cross. But it was not Roman nails that killed Him. It was us! It was we who murdered Him. And yet He loves us still.

In Jesus we see the embodiment of unconditional love. Which is not as easy a concept to understand, as many mistakenly think.

I was watching America's Most Wanted recently. And as this pregnant woman and her male co-worker are closing up at the end of the day, a man (who perhaps had been hiding in some washroom on the premises) emerges from the darkness and confronts them, the security cameras at the bar recording the whole scene on tape. The two workers do as they're told. They surrender all the cash they had in the register, and the pregnant woman, her hands shaking with fear-- a gun at her head, struggles to remember the combination of the safe. Finally she manages to open it. The guy empties the contents into his bag and orders the two people to lie flat on the floor. He makes to leave, then turns back. He stands over the pregnant, cowering woman and pumps three bullets into her brain, killing her. How do you respond to such human vermin? If that pregnant woman was your wife, gentlemen, and you were shown a video of the horrible and degrading way she met her end, how do you love the creature responsible for it?

In Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Grand Inquisitor, the agnostic Ivan (one of the Karamazov brothers) is posing difficult situations to confound his religious sibling. He tells the story of atrocities committed by soldiers of a certain country there in Central Europe-soldiers who "burn villages, [who] murder, [and who] outrage women and children." "They nail their prisoners by the ears to the fences," he said, "leave them so till morning, and in the morning they hang them. . . ." They toss babies up in the air, he said, and catch them on the points of their bayonets before their mother's eyes." Then Ivan proceeded to mention what he considered the ultimate atrocity. He says: "These . . . [soldiers] took pleasure in torturing children . . . . Imagine a trembling mother with her baby in her arms, a circle of invading . . . [soldiers] around her. They've planned a diversion; they pet the baby, laugh to make it laugh. They succeed; the baby laughs. At that moment, a . . . [soldier] points a pistol four inches from the baby's face. The baby laughs with glee, holds out its little hands to the pistol, and . . . [the soldier, at that very moment] pulls the trigger in the baby's face and blows out its brains."

Has anyone in this room arrived at the state of holiness where they find it easy to love such beasts in human skin? But what my Bible tells me, and the point of John's great "whosoever," is that there is Somebody in the universe who actually loves the vilest, the wickedest, the most contemptuous human being on the face of the planet, and who would give His life all over again for them alone. Brothers and sisters, you may understand such motivation, you may understand such love, but I confess it blows me away.

But that's the MOTIVATION of God's grace: sheer, unadulterated, unconditional love. Love that reaches out to you-that reaches out to me-no matter who we are, no matter where we are, no matter what we are. However degraded. The Hound of Heaven is on our trail, and will never give up the chase until there's utterly no hope left. God looks past the externals, and sees some spark that He can nurture into life, some little flame He can rekindle.

I thought of this the other day as I reflected again on George Orwell's renowned political satire, Nineteen Eighty Four, with its uncannily prophetic commentary on many of the issues and atrocities of our times.

Winston and Julia, two of the characters Orwell created, live in Oceania, whose government, otherwise known as "the Party," ruthlessly puts down all opposition, creating a completely manipulated and brutalized society.

Winston and Julia are rebels-secret rebels, against "the Party." They're also lovers-married for all intents and purposes, we might say, given the inhuman circumstances under which they are forced to exist. In a cloak-and-dagger meeting, they appear before rebel leader O'Brien, a bulky man who, with brutal candor, leads them through a frightening oath of loyalty that sought to match atrocity with atrocity:

-Are you prepared, he asked them, to give your lives? They answered, YES.

- To commit murder? YES.

-To commit acts of sabotage that may cause the death of hundreds of innocent people? YES.

-To betray your country to foreign powers? YES.

-To cheat, to forge, to blackmail, to corrupt the minds of children, . . . to do anything which is likely to cause demoralization and weaken the power of the Party?

Yes.

-Are you prepared to lose your identity and live out the rest of your lives as a waiter or a dock-worker? YES.

-Are you prepared to commit suicide, if and when we order you to do so? YES.

Then O'Brien came to the final question:

-Are you prepared, the two of you, to separate and never see one another again?

No! cried Julia. And a moment later Winston spoke up: No! In the midst of overwhelming brutality, here, illustratively, were people who'd managed to retain this one tender thread, this one spark of decency, this one vestige, so to speak, of the divine image. And so it is that when to all appearances human beings appear totally brutalized and corrupted, the Hound of Heaven refuses to give up. As many of us sang during our Spiritual Emphasis Week in this same room a couple of weeks ago:

Down in the human heart,

Crushed by the tempter,

Feelings lie buried that grace will restore. I can fall in love with a Savior like that. Which brings me to the other side of the concept of the Motivation of Grace-that I want to touch on for a second. You see, so far we've been talking motivation in the sense of CAUSE. We've been talking about what's behind God's grace, what propels it, what makes it happen, what makes God act. And we've answered that the motive force is unconditional love, the purest and most precious motive imaginable in the universe. That's what's behind His grace. But there's a sense in which we may speak about the MOTIVATION of God's grace as meaning the INTENTION of God's grace. That is to say: What does God's grace move toward? What's in front of it? What does it intend to accomplish? What does it want to see?

And for me, one of the answers to that question comes in Isa. 53:11: "He shall see of the travail of His Soul and shall be satisfied." This passage tells me that what Jesus is looking forward to that grand moment when millions and untold millions from this minuscule outpost of the universe will gather all around Him in His kingdom, saved by His blood.

Friend, we've been placed here, by His grace, to help make that happen. And we can only help it happen, we can only become effective channels of his unconditional love is we first fall in love with Him. And it occurs to me, brothers and sisters, that that's what it's all about. Millions will be saved in the kingdom of God in spite of our failure to get to them. But other millions will be lost because of our failure to get to them. And the urgency of mission is that we don't know exactly who they are. It's a mystery locked up in the inscrutable wisdom of God. And so we go-in obedience to His command. That's the rationale behind the urgency of mission, motivated by God's redeeming grace.

It is in this mission-- and especially in the One who stands at the head of this mission, that we should find both our value and our identity. Let me stay with this a minute as I come in now for a landing.

It's been correctly said in this room again and again that we who occupy positions of leadership in the church are in particular danger of confusing our value and our essential identity with our position in the church. It is altogether too easy for us to think that our identity lies in the number of prestigious committees we attend, in the title we hold, in the position we occupy.

The other day a colleague came to my office and the conversation, for reasons not entirely remote, drifted to the subject of retirement. And what we both had noticed was that, generally, in the Adventist Church, after the Adventist worker retires, they begin to be forgotten, almost as if they never existed. And why? The reason, if we're brutally honest about it, is that (as a rule) they no longer wield power. They no longer sit on committees deciding the professional fate of their colleagues. Their clout is gone. And we who sit here in this place, give or take 20 years or so from now, and that's precisely where we are. The letter heads are gone. The crowds around us have disappeared.

And we're all heading for deep disappointment, unless we have something to hang on to that transcends the job we do now; that's more important than the power we have now; that supercedes the clout we wield now. Our only lasting anchor is Jesus.

This is what has kept African Americans on solid ground through the unspeakable indignity and humiliation they've suffered in this country. And when you ask the question: What has kept them? What has caused them to stick with Christianity, knowing full well that it was, in fact, professed Christians who had abused them-and notwithstanding emotional calls over the years from people like Elijah Mohammad, Malcolm X, and ------------? Why have they stayed? The answer, I think, comes down to this: It's Jesus. His motives are pure. His love is deep. They can trust Him.

In this sense, the Black Americans experience becomes both a parable and a paradigm for God's Remnant Church as we face the perils of the gathering storm.

As Martin Luther King, Jr., , the quintessential Black American, peered into the threatening future on that final night of his life, he gave cryptic words to his thoughts in front of a congregation gathered under considerable tension in a Baptist church in Memphis, Tennessee:

"I don't know what will happen now," he said. "We've got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn't matter with me now, because I've been to the mountaintop; and I don't mind. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life--longevity has its place. But I'm not concerned about that now; I just want to do God's will. And He's allowed me to go up to the mountain, and I've looked over, and I've seen the promised land. I may not get there with you; but I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people will get to the promised land. And so I'm happy tonight. I'm not worried about anything. I'm not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord."

It's that kind of thickness with Jesus, that kind of hope, that has kept this people. And that's exactly what will keep us all through the encircling gloom Carol sang about at the beginning. For when all else fails us, Jesus never will. And that, precisely, is the message, the burden, of a certain song coming directly from the heart of the Black American community, born out of trial and grace, and made popular by the well-known gospel singer Shirley Caesar:

"Jesus, my Jesus, how I love calling your name.

Jesus, my sweet Jesus, everyday Your name is the same." What assurance! What grace! And what a Savior!

Roy Adams
Spring Council 2002


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