Since my early twenties, I’ve taken
a great interest in grace. Once an elder in a church, that I was talking with
about interviewing for their open ministry position, asked me, “What is your
preaching like?” I didn’t hesitate in
giving him an answer. I said, “I’m
grace-oriented and cross centered.” Of
course that really doesn’t say much about the content of my preaching, but it
does establish something of a direction.
Shortly after I moved to Iowa, I
got acquainted with Monroe and Julia Hawley, from Milwaukee. They’ve spent fifty plus years with the same
congregation in Milawukee. Monroe serves
on the board at the Wisconsin Christian Youth Camp, which in turn hosts the
annual Mid-West Preacher’s Workshop.
Monroe called me to ask me if I would make a presentation at the
workshop. After I got into the study, I
wondered whether we were really going to be friends out not, because he saddled
me with a highly controversial topic.
Over the years I’ve presented at
the retreat on several occasion – the last one being in 2009 (if memory serves
me correctly). It didn’t take me long
to realize that Monroe chose me to be one of his resource persons when he
wanted to take on some pretty difficult issues.
I’m not sure why I was chosen to do this, but I always agreed to take it
on. In all fairness to Monroe, if he
ever put himself on the program, he would be willing to take on hot topics
himself. As a result, a friendship
developed between Monroe and Julia, Ann and me.
One day I told Monroe that I had
just completed a 13 week sermon series on grace. Monroe said, “We don’t have very many
published materials on that subject written by people in our fellowship. Why don’t
you turn it into a book?” I
started on the project right away and in a little more than a year, I had a
book manuscript ready.
The Gospel Advocate expressed an interest in publishing it. If you’ve never written a book, you can’t
begin to know how mentally taxing it is to get one ready for publication. All the time you’re writing, you’re facing
deadlines, so it requires more discipline than I normally have. Eventually I submitted the manuscript, and I
think I was surprised when a representative of the Gospel Advocate called to say that he was shipping me ten
books. At first I will a little miffed
because I was being sent ten books I hadn’t ordered, and I wasn’t sure I could
pay for them. Gradually it began to dawn
on me that he was sending me ten copies of my book, and I would not be paying
for them. That was heady stuff.
The book probably sold better than
any book I’ve written, but in all honesty, John Grisham doesn’t have to worry
about me taking away from the sales of his books.
The Gospel Advocate chose to title the book, How Do I Know I’m Saved? The
book is a response to the insecurity that Christian sometimes feel about their
salvation. I’ve been concerned because
many precious brothers and sisters come to the end of life worrying about
whether they have done enough to be saved.
The premise of the book is that salvation is not a reward for perfect
performance, but a gift that God bestows on those who are believe that Jesus
died on the cross for them, who trust the atoning sacrifice of Jesus, and who
determine in their hearts to walk in the light.
According to 1 John 1:7, those who walk in the light are kept clean by
the blood of Jesus.
Once a one lady on her death bed who
said to me, “I want to go to heaven, but I’m not sure I’ve done enough.” I said, “You haven’t done enough, but you’re
going to heaven because you’re God’s child and Jesus died on the cross for you.” At that point she asked me to sing, “How
Great Thou Art.” I gave the greatest
vocal performance of my life in that hospital room. When I finished she laid her head back on the
pillow and went to sleep. She left this
life a few days later, and I’m confident she went to be with the Lord.
The day the books came, there was
ice on the parking lot, and the postman left the books at the dentist’s office
next door to our building. I walked
across the icy parking lot, and picked up the books. I don’t remember my feet ever touching the
pavement on the way back to the church building.
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