Friday, April 27, 2012

“I stole it, fair and square.”

Over on Kirby's blog, I suggested a motto for life's winners, “I stole it, fair and square.” I even went so far as to suggest that this might be a way we can think about own salvation, a notion that Brother John objected to: How can we steal a gift? It is a fair question.

We play by multiple sets of rules. Our most fundamental moral choice is not whether or not to follow the law, but rather, which law to follow. Will we follow God's law, or man's law? Will we follow the rule of our community, or will it take a second place to our rule of self-interest and pride?

Life's winners are often perceived by life's losers as having cheated, whereas they perceive themselves as victors by merit. One set of laws broken, another upheld. The motto captures this tension, “fair and square” by my laws, but “stolen” by yours, but also, It's mine, and I'm not giving it back.

So it is with our salvation. Under the old covenant, our obligation was to follow God's law, a law we've often subordinated to our own law of self-interest and pride. The old covenant offered ways to repair the relationship broken by our rebellion: repentance, sacrifice. Yet if we're honest with ourselves, we know that our rebellions are many, and our efforts at repair are selective, few, and perfunctory. So the old covenant condemns us, and if we seek salvation in it, we deceive ourselves. It is not by our merit that we receive salvation, but only by Jesus's free gift. In receiving his gift and making it ours, we break the old rules by which we are condemned, and hold onto the new rules by which we are saved.

Salvation is mine, and I'm not giving it back. I stole it, fair and square.

Peace

3 comments:

sally said...

I like this.

My husband uses this motto, in the same tongue-in-cheek sense, when talking about illegal immigration issues-- "How dare the Mexicans sneak into California? We stole it from them fair and square!"

But I like your application of it to salvation. It makes sense to me.

stu said...

sally,

Thank you.

jh said...

well this proposal requires a bit of lengthy reflection not willing to enter into the ways and means of god's will for man but i have gone so far as to suggest to my ever scrupulous and skeptical mind

that if salvation sat there in a store front window asking to be taken asking with every offer desired everything the heart desires everything the mind yearns to graps right there all i'd have to do is either break the window or slink into the store cloaked with a shadow and lift it to myself and run like a madman i'd probably do it i'd steal grace if i was convinced that what i was stealing was the real deal

otherwise
i think waiting for grace with my effort on the prayerful opening of my heart to the promise thereby offered i will do that
just wait and be open to god's will
and maybe water a dry plant

waiting on the morning of surprise

amen

jh