Theologian Paul Tillich dubbed such...
Illustration
Theologian Paul Tillich dubbed such extravagance as Mary shows "Holy Waste."
Christians should exercise reasonableness and ethical efficiency when using our physical
resources. Yet, Christian faith must also express itself in an extravagance that seems
wasteful.
A coworker told a young man who considered entering the ministry, "What a waste." The world calls for realism and restraint in religion. What drives faith isn't irrational, but it's far stronger than reason. It's gratitude, the most ethical of all emotions.
Our "wasteful" response to God is because of God's wasteful gift of grace toward us, pressed down, shaken together, and spilling over onto our laps. God seeks the lost, who are as valuable as the one coin in ten, the one sheep in 100, or the one son of two.
God's gracious concern for us results in our life of grateful service that can appear wasteful to those yet untouched by God's costly love.
A coworker told a young man who considered entering the ministry, "What a waste." The world calls for realism and restraint in religion. What drives faith isn't irrational, but it's far stronger than reason. It's gratitude, the most ethical of all emotions.
Our "wasteful" response to God is because of God's wasteful gift of grace toward us, pressed down, shaken together, and spilling over onto our laps. God seeks the lost, who are as valuable as the one coin in ten, the one sheep in 100, or the one son of two.
God's gracious concern for us results in our life of grateful service that can appear wasteful to those yet untouched by God's costly love.
