"For the grace of God has appeared," writes the apostle Paul in the third chapter of his letter to Titus, "bringing salvation to all people" (Titus 2:11). What is Paul saying? Simply, that as we remember the second Sunday of Advent, we can come to understand more fully that in Jesus, God in the flesh (as we observed last week (John 1:14)), we see, in flesh and blood, concrete and visible expression of God's grace, physical manifestation and display of his truest posture toward us. In Jesus we see the fullest possible picture of God's benevolence, his intentions to grant us favor and compassion. Jesus' appearance tells us that, above all, God is gracious and loves us, and he provides us with a way to know him, fully and intimately. Jesus is the grace of God.
We grant each other grace every day, as we should. Yet it is God's grace that enables us to see and do much more, to see and understand that amidst the frequent senselessness of reality and confusing vagaries of the world in which we live, there is hope, a hope that reality is more than what we see--but which frames and orders what we do. Jesus' appearance tells us that whatever else we may think about God, what we ought to think most about him is this: God is loving, God is gracious, and God is for us, for us today, for us tomorrow, for us forever. All we need do is accept his invitation, his invitation of his son Jesus, to us. God's extended the invitation; now he's waiting for us to reply.
What else do we really need to do?
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