Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 26, 2008

My Thanksgiving List

   I am thankful to be home for Thanksgiving. As much as I enjoy traveling and meeting interesting people around the world, there is no place like home. On Thanksgiving Day, our home will be scented with the wonderful fragrances of our Thanksgiving meal and our table will be populated by the most important people in my life. I’ll carve the turkey, blow my calorie count for the day, help scrape the dinner dandruff off the plates into the disposal, and then watch an old classic movie — all in the comfort of my home.

   This Thanksgiving, my family and I will also recount the things for which we’re thankful. I’ve added to my thanksgiving list throughout the year and scribbled notes around the world. Here are just a few of the many things for which I’m thankful this Thanksgiving.

   Family: My travels this year have introduced me to many people who have no family. I have met widows, orphans, and street kids in Mongolia, India, and Nigeria. I have looked into lonely eyes, felt the irregular pulse of despair, and embraced those permanently disfigured by rejection. This Thanksgiving I will remember and pray for Abraham, a teenage boy in Nigeria whose Muslim uncle doused him with gasoline and set him on fire because he chose to follow Christ. And, I will give thanks for my loving family.

   Security: Earlier this year, Pastor Alex and I spoke to over 3,000 believers in Orissa, India after the worst persecution of Christians in Orissa’s troubled history. Believers in Orissa left their homes and ran to the surrounding hills to escape the violence. They drank from streams, cooked their meals at night, and slept under the stars. This Thanksgiving I will remember and pray for all those who did not sleep safely in their own homes. And, I will give thanks that I am able to sleep securely and peacefully in my own home every night.

   Access: My youngest daughter and I walked dusty trails in Tanzania this summer and spoke with those who have little or no access to the gospel. We slept in a tent, sat in the dirt, and made many new friends. This Thanksgiving I will remember and pray for those who heard about Jesus for the first time. And, I will give thanks for the unlimited access to the gospel that we enjoy in America.

   Friends: This year I met the Kurdish people of northern Iraq, a people who refer to themselves as “the orphans of the universe and those who have no friends but the mountains.” I watched children play next to graves, saw a father weep at a grave, and heard thanks expressed that Saddam is in the grave. This Thanksgiving I will remember and pray for the man who watched Saddam’s men push two of his friends out of a helicopter to their deaths. And, I will give thanks for my new friends in Kurdistan.

   Life: This year the people of Kingsland took a bold step on behalf of the unborn by purchasing a building for The Comforter’s Center, the pregnancy help center we support in Kampala, Uganda in cooperation with Life International. Our center is located one block from one of the busiest abortion providers in Kampala. This Thanksgiving I will remember and pray for the young women we met who stopped by the center and chose life instead of abortion. And, I will give thanks that the people of Kingsland made it possible for life to move into a home one block from death in Kampala.

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 25, 2008

Barnabas Winkler

   Barnabas is high on my list of the people I want to meet in heaven. He was a generous man whose real name was Joseph (Acts 5:36-37). But, the apostles called him Barnabas, which means Son of Encouragement. Luke described him as “a good man” (Acts 11:24). We tend to carelessly use words like “good” and “cool” and “awesome.” Luke was a bit more careful. This is the only time in the book of Acts he used the word “good” to describe an individual. So, when he wrote that Barnabas was “a good man,” that really means something! Of all of the people who were caught in the fleeting spotlight of Scripture, Barnabas is the guy who is forever remembered as an encourager and a good man.

   A.C. Winkler is a friend who is now in heaven. I miss him. He was a Son of Encouragement to me and others — a personal Barnabas. A.C. was the kind of guy who would move a mountain of dirt to find an ounce of gold in others. He had a knack for sharing edifying words at just the right moment. His words were always carefully chosen — the kind of words that “give grace to those who hear” (Ephesians 4:29). But, A.C. wasn’t just about grace-filled words; he was a man whose kindness found expression in practical ways. I will always remember A.C. as an encourager and a good man.

   The world needs more people like Barnabas and A.C. Winkler. There are more than enough mean-spirited people around. I am working on being more like Barnabas and A.C. Winkler — like Barnabas Winkler! Here are a few of the things I observed in A.C. Winkler’s life that can help us to be more encouraging of others.

B = Be a good finder. A.C. looked for the good in others — and always found it. I sometimes wondered if he had X-Ray vision because he could see things in others that I could not see. But, he didn’t. He just chose to look for the good.

A = Affirm the best in others. A.C. always had something good to say. The writer of Proverbs said, “A word aptly spoken is like apples of gold in settings of silver” (Prov. 25:11). Someone complained, “When I did good I heard it never, but when I did bad I heard it ever.” Affirm someone today by giving them an apple of gold.

R = Rejoice with those who rejoice. A.C. was a cheerleader. He noticed and celebrated my accomplishments, however small. When he added his joy to mine, the world just seemed like a better place.

N = Notice the little things. It’s easy to overlook things in other people’s lives, especially the little things. A.C. was observant. He understood that little things matter to others. So, slow down and take the time to notice the little things that make a big difference in other people’s lives.

A = Assist others in need. Whether I needed help handing out notes at a meeting or promoting an idea among leaders, A.C. took the initiative to help. He always smiled when he helped. He made me smile, too.

B = Build others up. As I searched the mental transcripts of all my meetings with A.C., I found no evidence that he ever talked bad about another person. Instead, he built others up just as he did me. He was consistent.

A = Acknowledge the contributions of others. A.C. found great joy in acknowledging the contributions of others. He was rarely in the spotlight because he always stood behind it, directing its illuminating beam to others.

S = Show love in practical ways. Because A.C. took an interest in me, he noticed and took inventory of my needs. And then, at the right moment, he would bless me with some practical act of kindness. “Take your wife out to eat with this…,” or “I knew you’d like this…” or “I thought you would enjoy this….”

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 25, 2008

4. The Call from Within

The Bible teaches that there is a commanding call to evangelism that originates from above (read The Call from Above), a distressing call that originates from below (read The Call from Below), and an urgent call that originates from without (read The Call from Without).

There is a fourth call to evangelism — the call that comes from within. If we fail to hear and heed this call, all of the other calls will also go unanswered. This is the call that ultimately stirs us to action. Isaiah heard this call in the year of King Uzziah’s death when he heard the voice of the Lord, saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” (Isaiah 6:8).

Centuries after Isaiah heard the voice of the Lord, another young man heard God’s voice. It was the 18th century, a period when churches had become indifferent to the spiritual needs of the world. During this time there lived a young English pastor who served as a part-time teacher and shoemaker. This young man was under the conviction that the Great Commission was directed to every believer and still operative. Many of his contemporaries felt otherwise.

At a ministers’ meeting in 1786, this young man asked “whether the command given to teach all nations was not obligatory on all [believers], to the end of the world.” Upon hearing this, an older pastor named Ryland is reported to have said, “Sit down, young man. You are a miserable enthusiast to ask such a question. When God wants to convert the world, He can do it without your help.”

But, this young man dared to swim against the tide of apathy in his day because he had heard the voice of the Lord reverberating in his heart, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Like Isaiah, this young man dared to heed this divine call from within and answered affirmatively, “Here am I. Send me!” As a result, this young man named William Carey unwittingly launched the modern missionary movement in 1792 and became known as the father of modern missions.

Can you hear God’s voice reverberating within the chambers of your heart, asking “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” If not, turn down the volume, tune in to God, and make yourself available to beg others on behalf of Christ, “be reconciled to God” (2 Cor. 5:20).

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 24, 2008

3. The Call from Without

The Bible teaches that there is a commanding call to evangelism that originates from above (read The Call from Above) and a distressing call that originates from below (read The Call from Below). However, there is yet a third call to evangelism that we cannot escape — the call that comes from without.

Luke’s account of Paul’s second missionary journey starts in Acts 15:36. Immediately prior to the start of this second journey, Paul and Barnabas had a disagreement regarding whether or not to allow John Mark to join their team. Paul did not want John Mark on the team because he had deserted them in Pamphylia on the previous journey. Barnabas, the encourager, wanted to give John Mark a second chance. Since Paul and Barnabas could not agree about what to do with John Mark, they agreed to go their separate ways. Barnabas took John Mark with him on another journey and Paul chose a new traveling companion named Silas to accompany him on his second missionary journey.

As Paul and Silas traveled, the Holy Spirit shut doors along the way and redirected them to Troas, a city on the extreme western shores of Asia Minor. While there, something significant happened (Acts 16:9): “And a vision appeared to Paul in the night: a certain man of Macedonia was standing and appealing to him, and saying, ‘Come over to Macedonia and help us.’ And when he had seen the vision, immediately we sought to go into Macedonia, concluding that God had called us to preach the gospel to them.”

This is the call to evangelism that comes from without — an urgent call from lost humanity, pleading with us to come and help. This was a significant call for Paul because Macedonia was on the continent of Europe and represented the place where the gospel had not yet been preached. And, the man in the vision represented and spoke for all who had not yet heard the gospel.

Like the Macedonian man, there are billions of people in the world today who are urgently crying out for help, asking for someone to show them the way out of darkness into the light and out of condemnation into forgiveness. People everywhere are looking for answers to life’s deepest questions. If you will listen, you’ll hear the cry of the Macedonians in your world, pleading for help.

Are you sensitive to the cries of those who are still waiting to hear the good news? Ask God to help you to tune out distractions so that you can hear the cries for help from others, cries woven into daily conversations with words that signal confusion, hurt, despair, and lostness. And when you hear these cries, do what Paul and Silas did, share the good news of Jesus Christ.

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 23, 2008

2. The Call from Below

The Bible teaches that there is a call to evangelism that originates from above and is directed at every Christ-follower (read The Call from Above). And, according to Luke 16:19-31, there also is a call to evangelism that originates from below. Jesus told a parable about a certain unnamed rich man and certain poor man named Lazarus. Lazarus was a sick man whose body was covered with sores. He was so poor that he longed to be fed with the crumbs that fell from the rich man’s table.

One day Lazarus died and was carried away by the angels to Abraham’s bosom. The rich man also died, but he went to hell. While in hell the rich man saw Lazarus being comforted in the bosom of Abraham, far away across a chasm. The rich man then cried to Abraham, asking that he send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water to cool his parched tongue and thus relieve a little of the agony he was experiencing in hell’s flames. But, his request was denied.

The rich man then made another request: “Then I beg you, Father, that you send him to my father’s house — for I have five brothers — that he may warn them, lest they also come to this place of torment” (Luke 16:27-28). This request was also denied.

This parable paints an awful picture of the terrible reality of hell. I am convinced that if we could intrude upon the fiery depths of hell with a listening device we would hear a distinct call to evangelism, pleading with us  — “Go and tell my brothers…”. I also am convinced that if you and I could hear the cries of those in hell we would hear familiar voices calling us to go and tell. Perhaps we would hear the voice of a family member or friend or neighbor calling us to evangelism — urgently pleading with us to warn others lest they also go to that awful place of torment. These are unpleasant thoughts, but the fact of the matter is that if each of us took the time to listen we would hear a cry from below calling us to evangelism.

William Booth, the founder of the Salvation Army, said the following in a speech he made to the first class of graduates after they had completed two years of intensive study and training…

“Young men, I’m sorry that is has been necessary to keep you here for two years before we could send you into the world to preach the gospel. What would have been better is if you could have had five minutes in hell! That would have been all the preparation you would need in your zeal to reach the lost.”

Booth was right. Many will never see heaven because we have never seen hell. Many will never hear and respond to the voice of God because you and I have not heard and responded to the cries from hell. As Christ-followers, we cannot escape the call to tell others the good news. If we look up to the heights of heaven, we will hear a commanding call to evangelism. And, if we look below to the depths of hell, we will hear a distressing call pleading with us to go and warn others lest they go to that place of torment. Are you listening?

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 22, 2008

1. The Call from Above

When it comes to evangelism, Christ-followers have a two-fold responsibility — to show Christ (incarnation) and to share Christ (proclamation). Both are essential. Like two wings on an airplane, we need both incarnation (our ways) and proclamation (our words) in order to get our witness off the ground. Every Christ-follower is called to be an evangelist and a missionary. We cannot escape this call.

According to the Bible, evangelism begins with a call from above. God Himself calls, commands, and commissions us to evangelize our world. Evangelism begins with a call from above because that is where evangelism began — in the heart of God. He sent His Son into the world (John 3:16) to seek and to save what was lost (Luke 19:10).

The last command of Jesus was a command to evangelize (read Matt. 28:19-20; Mark 16:15, John 20:21, and Acts 1:8). We are still under obligation to obey this command; it has not been repealed. There are no exemptions to obedience by virtue of our age, gender, rank, race, or riches. Nor can we substitute anything in place of this command. Regardless of whatever else we may do in the church and for the kingdom, these things are to be done in addition to but not in place of evangelism.

John R. Mott, one of the most outstanding Christian leaders of the last century, addressed a group of students in 1901, challenging them to share Christ with others. His words are as relevant today as they were on the day he spoke them.

[We must realize] “not only that all men need Christ, but that we owe Christ to all men. To have a knowledge of Christ is to incur a tremendous responsibility to those that have it not. You and I have received this great heritage not to appropriate it to our own exclusive use, but to pass it on to others. It concerns all men. We are trustees of the gospel, and in no sense sole proprietors. … What a colossal crime against … the human race to withhold this surpassing knowledge!”

[The last command of Christ] “awaits its fulfillment by a generation which shall have the requisite faith and courage and audacity and the purpose of heart to do their duty to the whole world. It would seem to me that every Christian who is a Christian of reality ought to be a missionary Christian … for … ‘If my faith be false, I ought to change it; whereas if it be true, I am bound to propagate it.’ There is no middle ground; either abandon my religion or be a missionary in spirit.”

Mott was right. Think about it. If we were not called to evangelism, then we would not have to concern ourselves with telling others about Jesus; we would not have to make evangelism a personal priority; we would be able to call every missionary home; we could stop the publication and distribution of tracts and evangelism materials; and we would not have to concern ourselves with the spiritual welfare of others. But, that is not the case. There is a divine call to evangelism that comes from above and is directed at every Christ-follower. We are called to go and tell and to tell as we go.

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 20, 2008

Make an Impact

The word “impact” is defined as “the strong effect exerted by one person or thing on another.” We use this word to describe the effect people, organizations, circumstances, or events have on our lives. For example, Paul and Silas made a measurable impact on the city of Thessalonica. Their presence and work there prompted those opposed to the gospel to say, “These men who have upset the world have come here also” (Acts 17:6). Does our presence and influence have any measurable impact on our family, community, and world? What contribution are we making to the growth of God’s kingdom? Here are six things to keep in mind if you want to make an impact.

I = Be intentional. Do the right things and the hard things on purpose. We will never advance the interests of God’s kingdom by doing only what is easy, comfortable, or convenient. A.W. Tozer said that “every advance that we make for God and for His cause must be made at our inconvenience.” We must not leave doing the right things to chance or hope that somehow the hard things will get done. We must roll up our sleeves, act deliberately, and do the right things on purpose.

M = Evaluate your methods and change them if necessary. A method is a vehicle for carrying the message of the gospel. While the message remains the same, the methods used for delivering that message are subject to change. Jesus had one message, but He used a variety of methods to deliver that message. Employ the most effective methods to impact the lives of your family and the world with the gospel of Christ.

P = Set proper priorities. Priorities help us determine where to invest our time, energy, and resources. When Nehemiah arrived in Jerusalem, he went out at night to inspect the condition of the city walls (Nehemiah 2:11-16). During that inspection, Nehemiah established the priorities that would guide the work of rebuilding the walls. His priorities were reflected in a practical plan of action that helped the people to accomplish the enormous task in a record-setting fifty-two days (Nehemiah 6:15).

A = Build accountability into your life. Be willing to answer to others for how you live and labor. Accountability keeps us on task and on track. After committing adultery with Bathsheba, David remained silent about his sin (Psalm 32:3-4) — until Nathan the prophet confronted him. As a result, David confessed his sin to God (Psalm 32:5; Psalm 51). Nathan made a positive impact on David’s life by holding him accountable. Invite others to hold you accountable. Proverbs 27:6 states, “Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but deceitful are the kisses of an enemy.” Give others permission to wound you, if necessary, in order to keep you moving in the right direction.

C = Demonstrate courage. We cannot make an impact if we are afraid to risk or fail. We must not be afraid to try things we’ve never tried before in order to advance God’s purposes. Someone observed, “If we always do what we’ve always done, we’ll always get what we’ve always gotten.” The greatest enemy to progress is contentment with where we are and what we’ve done. If we aspire to make an impact for the cause of Christ, we must maintain Paul’s attitude, “Not that I have already obtained it, or have already become perfect, but, I press on…” (Phil. 3:12). That takes courage!

T = Teamwork is essential. Some things are too big or too hard to do alone. Learn to collaborate with others. The word collaboration is made up of the words co and labor. So, labor or work together with others who are seeking to accomplish similar goals. Collaboration includes coordination and cooperation with others. The thirty-five “one another” passages in the New Testament remind us that we need others and others need us (see my post entitled “Hold the Ropes”).

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 19, 2008

Abundant Grace

I am on the road again this week — not to some far off remote location on the other side of the planet, but to the familiar place my heart calls home. I don’t make this trip as often as I should, but I am always grateful for the loving embraces when I arrive. My journey home takes me past a particular spot that is marked only on the map of my heart, a once brush-covered piece of geography next to what used to be a two-lane county road: the place where I almost lost my life.

The events of that day in 1977 are still embedded on the front pages of my memory. It was a beautiful day as I cruised home from college in my old ‘62 Chevy Malibu. In the distance I noticed a car on the shoulder of the road. As I approached, the driver suddenly veered back onto the road in an attempt to make a U-Turn. The elderly driver did not see me. My foot never made it to the brake pedal and I only had a second to turn the steering wheel one tiny fraction to the left before impact.

The impact was horrific. I hit the steering wheel with my head. My glasses flew off my face and lodged in the shattered windshield. Dazed, I instinctively unbuckled my lap belt and fell out of the car. As I sat in a pool of my own blood a Texas Highway patrolman ran up. “I was following behind you,” he said, “and saw what happened.” He immediately took measures to stop the bleeding. Seconds later a woman came running. “I am a nurse,” she shouted to the patrolman. She had just finished her shift and was on her way home — in the car behind the patrolman! I had seen neither car in my rear-view mirror. Together they cared for me until the ambulance arrived.

When the paramedics wheeled me into the hospital, a woman looked at me and screamed “Oh my God,” and then made the sign of the cross and hurried away. The first thing the emergency room doctor said to me was, “I know a great plastic surgeon.” The nurses were instructed to keep me away from mirrors. I felt encouraged! But, God used stitches and time to heal me. The elderly driver did not suffer a scratch. My car looked like it had been mangled by a dinosaur. It’s a miracle I survived.

I have made many trips home since the accident. Every time I approach that location on McColl Road I shudder. More than once I have pulled over onto the shoulder of the road to reflect on what I experienced there and to thank God for the patrolman and the nurse who cared for me. And then, a few years ago, I saw the unexpected. A church had purchased the land at the exact location where I had my accident and marked the spot with a sign: Future home of Abundant Grace Community Church. I wept. I am the grateful beneficiary of His abundant grace.

I am so thankful that my route home takes me past Abundant Grace Community Church. I have a spot on their parking lot where I stop to reflect on that fateful day in 1977. In my quiet moments there I thank God for all of the journeys I have been able to take because of His abundant grace. I also take a moment to reflect on the day I will take my final journey — the journey to my heavenly home. I know that I’ll arrive there safely because of His amazing and abundant grace.

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 18, 2008

The Dust of Sin

As a follow-up to my post entitled Jesus in Two Words (16 Nov 08), I retrieved the following thoughts from my legal-pad archive. I jotted these thoughts on paper in May 1992. We have a tendency to look at sinful people and “write them off.” I hope these thoughts will provoke you to dip your finger in the fountain of grace and write something redemptive across broken lives.

• • • • •

It was a hot summer afternoon in the middle of bumper to bumper traffic. I was anxious to get home but knew it would be a while as I inched along at a snail’s pace.


My air conditioner was blowing at full speed while the outside temperature worked to frustrate its efforts to offer me any relief. How I wished I had left earlier or taken another route home. My frustration was reaching the boiling point as I baked in the heat in the slow-moving log jamb of automobiles.

That’s when I saw it — an old pick-up truck that hadn’t been washed in at least ten years. It was so covered in dirt that it was impossible to even determine the color of the truck. Even the windows were caked with a film of dust that served as a sort of crude window tint. It was the kind of vehicle on which any all-American teenager would have been tempted to write, “Wash Me.”

However, what caught my attention was a different message scrawled on the old pick-up truck. There, written on the dusty canvas of the back window, was a sincere and simple message: I love you Grandma and Grandpa. Love Kimberly.

When I read Kimberly’s message I stopped thinking about the traffic and the heat and started thinking about kids. Kids have a remarkable perspective. Leave it to a kid to see the filth on an old pick-up truck as a memo pad on which to scratch an uplifting message with a finger dipped in spit. “Kimberly’s grandparents are fortunate,” I thought to myself.

The Bible speaks of an occasion when some religious leaders brought a woman to Jesus — a woman caught in the very act of adultery (John 8:1-12). These men had somehow lost sight of the human being covered by the accumulation of years of filth and sin. The woman’s life was the kind on which any religious and pious person would have been tempted to scrawl the words, “Stone Me.”

But, Jesus had a different and remarkable perspective. He stooped to write something in the dust and then stood up and reminded the religious leaders that their lives were as covered by the dust of sin as the woman’s life. And then, after the woman’s accusers had all left, Jesus looked at her and wrote a new message across the filth that covered her life: Forgiven.

The woman was fortunate. What the religious leaders saw as grounds for stoning Jesus saw as a canvas on which to write a cleansing message of forgiveness and beginning again.

As we journey down life’s road we will see many lives covered with the dust of sin. In some cases we will not even be able to recognize the human being covered by the accumulation of years of living in filth.

When we encounter such people may we not write them off by scrawling cynical and judgmental messages across their broken lives. Instead, like Jesus and Kimberly, may we write uplifting messages of love, hope, forgiveness, and the joy of beginning again.

Posted by: Omar C. Garcia | November 16, 2008

Jesus in Two Words

Several years ago, I had the good fortune to hear Jim Herrington speak at a men’s breakfast meeting. Now, I don’t normally get excited about men’s breakfast speakers. Honestly, I have found the soggy scrambled eggs on my plate far more interesting than most of the speakers I’ve heard at these early morning bleary-eyed gatherings. But, Jim was different. He immediately commanded my attention when he challenged us to think about two words that describe Jesus — only two words! Fifty words came to mind in an instant. How could I narrow it down to only two? And, out of all of the worthy words at my disposal, what would qualify only two to stand apart from all of the others?

Jim settled the matter by directing us to the first chapter of The Gospel of John. “Out of all of the words John could have chosen to describe Jesus,” Jim said, “he chose only two.” And then he read the fourteenth verse — “And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth.” I stared at the words “grace and truth” in my Bible. John had not only chosen the two words that best describe Jesus, he had put them in the correct sequence — grace and then truth. As Jim helped us to look through these twin lenses, the life of Jesus and the gospels came into sharper focus for me.

The religious leaders of Jesus’ day were undoubtedly full of truth. Their attitudes were so starched in truth that they avoided the wrinkles that result from contact with sinful humanity. Truth kept them a measured and safe distance away from publicans, prostitutes, and the hoi polloi — the masses who were distressed and downcast like sheep without a shepherd. The religious leaders could quote chapter and verse to tell you what you were doing wrong while thanking God that they were not like you (Luke 18:11). Truth never looked so ugly.

Jesus was different from the religious leaders of His day. Because He was full of grace, He stopped at a well to converse with a woman who dragged her sinful past with her every time she went to fetch water. As a result, He had the opportunity to share truth with her (John 4:1-38). Grace ushered Jesus into the home of a tax-collector named Zaccheus and gave Him the opportunity to share truth with this sinful citizen of Jericho (Luke 19:1-10). Grace rescued a woman caught in adultery and consequently made her receptive to truth (John 8:1-11). Grace allowed Jesus to interact with sinful humanity in a way the religious leaders did not understand. Truth transformed that sinful humanity in a way the religious leaders could not comprehend.

Grace and truth must work together if the world is to be open to the gospel of Jesus Christ. So, as you begin each day, determine to be like Jesus — full of grace and truth. Dare to be known as “a friend of tax-gatherers and sinners” (Matthew 11:19). Don’t let truth to keep you isolated in the holy place. Instead, allow grace to take you by the hand and introduce you to hurting people in the market-place. Determine to allow grace to make you receptive to others so that others will be receptive to the truth of the gospel.

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