By Derek Prince
You're listening to a Derek Prince Legacy Radio podcast.
When grace comes into our lives, it will produce fruit and one vital area will be our lips. What comes out of your mouth? Grace and gratitude are two aspects of the same word, so when you have grace you will be thankful. Grace to our speech is like salt to our food.
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Itās good to be with you again, as I continue to share with you on our special theme summed up in one beautiful word of measureless meaning: Grace.
In my talk yesterday I explained that one main function of Grace is to teach us. Thatās something which many Christians donāt properly understand. Law teaches from without but grace teaches from within. And the teaching of law doesnāt work, not because thereās anything wrong with the law, but because thereās something in us thatās incapable of responding to the law. Thereās a rebel in us that just doesnāt obey what the law says.
But when grace comes, the first thing that grace does is begin to work upon that rebel thatās within and change the nature of that rebel. And then as the rebel is changed and he loses his rebelliousness, grace begins to teach that converted rebel how to live as a true believer. So grace teaches us from within. And grace teaches us one thing, really, that sums up it all, grace teaches godliness. Grace will always make us increasingly godly as it operates in our lives. And anyone who is living a loose, careless, ungodly life is not living in the grace of God.
Well, today Iām going to speak about the first and most characteristic fruit of grace. What grace will produce in our lives as it operates in us and as it teaches us there will be certain specific manifest results. And Iām going to speak about the first one today. Itās very definitely the first definite result of grace.
Iāve pointed out already that when we receive Christ, in Him we receive the grace of God. And that in Him we receive grace for grace. In other words, every grace thatās in Jesus begins to be manifested in us. For every grace in Jesus, thereās a corresponding grace that begins to operate in our lives. One vital area, the primary area that is affected when grace begins to operate in us, is the area of our lips. Itās our speech thatās changed.
I want to go back to the Old Testament to Psalm 45 verse 2 for a prophetic picture of Christ. This is what the Psalmist says. Heās looking forward in the Spirit of God to the coming of the Messiah and to what He will be like, and he sings a beautiful song of praise to him. This is what he says:
āThou art fairer than the sons of men; Grace is poured upon Thy lips; Therefore God has blessed Thee forever.ā (NASB)
Notice, the first most beautiful aspect of the Messiah that the Psalmist sees in Revelation. He sees the grace of God upon this beautiful person. And the first area that strikes him is the lips of Jesus. āGrace is poured upon thy lips...ā Do you remember at one time the man who was sent to arrest Jesus by the religious leaders? They returned without Him and the leaders said, āWhy didnāt you bring Him?ā Their reply was, āNo one ever spoke like this man.ā That was grace poured upon His lips.
And the Psalmist goes on to say after that: āGod has blessed thee forever.ā Itās important to notice that ātherefore.ā Jesus was not blessed because He was a favorite son. Jesus was blessed because He met the conditions to be blessed. And the first condition was, āthe beauty of his lips,ā the grace of his speech. And because of that grace upon his lips, God blessed Him forever. And you see, with the corresponding grace upon our lips, we qualify for the same blessing, because Jesus didnāt get it out of favoritism. He got it out of qualifying for it. And when we qualify we receive the same blessing.
This brings out a connection which is basic and fundamental between two phrases, to have grace and to be thankful. And I want to bring it out by quoting one verse in Hebrews chapter 12, verse 28. Iām going to quote this verse from two different versions. The first one is the King James and the second is the New American Standard, and I want you to notice a significant, apparent difference. First of all in the King James Version of Hebrews 12:28:
āWherefore we receiving a kingdom which cannot be moved, let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear.ā (KJV)
Notice, again, grace produces godliness. Thereās no other way to see it but that. But notice the phrase, ālet us have grace, whereby we may serve God.ā Now Iāll give you the same verse in the New American Standard version:
āTherefore since we receive a kingdom which cannot be shaken, let us show gratitude, by which we many offer to God an acceptable service with reverence and awe.ā (NASB)
You see the difference? The King James says, ālet us have graceā; the New American Standard says, ālet us show gratitude.ā You say, āWhatās wrong with the translators? Why couldnāt they agree?ā Well they did agree. They just took different aspects of the same word. In the Greek language at the time of Paul to have grace meant to say thank you. It was the standard phrase for being thankful. So what Iām trying to bring out is, that you cannot have grace without being thankful. An unthankful person is out of the grace of God.
I have studied to some extent a number of languages. I started with Latin and then Greek, and Iāve also learned a number of modern languages. Thereās a whole group of languages called the āromance languagesā which come out of Latin and if you know any of them, I think if you check in your mind, youāll find that in every one of them the word for āthank youā is directly related for the word for āgrace.ā For instance in French, āthanks be to Godā is grace a Dieu. āGraceā is thanks. In Italian if you want to say āthank youā you say grazie. In Spanish, which I never can pronounce, you say, gracias. I canāt say that but you know what I am trying to say.
Anyhow, what I am trying to bring out is, the word for āthanksā is the word for āgrace.ā So going back to our verse, Hebrews 12:28, the King James translates it, what I would say, literally: āLet us have grace.ā The New American Standard and most of the other modern versions say, āLet us show gratitude.ā But the point Iām trying to bring out is, and itās very, very important, you cannot have grace without gratitude. The words are tied together.
So the first manifestation of grace is being grateful. When we are not any longer truly thankful, we are out of grace.
I want to follow on just little further with this theme of how the grace of God will affect our speech. I want to read in Colossians chapter 3, verses 15 and 16:
āAnd let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in one body; and be thankful. [Notice thatās a commandment. āBe thankful.ā Ā The next verse goes on:] Let the word of Christ richly dwell within you, with all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with thankfulness in your hearts to God.ā (NASB)
But again, the King James translation says, ā...singing with grace in your heart.ā The same word. What a truth is brought out there. That if youāre in the grace of God, you will be thankful. Itās a necessary result of the grace of God. It cannot be otherwise.
I pointed out yesterday that the grace of God teaches us. Paul takes this a step further today. He points out that when weāre in the grace of God we can teach others. So he says, āLet the word of Christ richly dwell within you, with all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with thankfulness in your hearts to God.ā A person in the grace of God will be thankful, heāll be full of praise, heāll want to sing, heāll give vocal expression to whatās in his heart, and heāll have something to pass on to his fellow believers. Heāll be able to teach and admonish his fellow believers out of the grace of God thatās operating in his heart and expressing itself primarily through thankfulness.
And then letās look at one more statement about grace thatās made by Paul in Colossians. Grace in our speech, he says is like salt in our food. Colossians 4:6:
āLet your speech always be with grace, seasoned, as it were, with salt, so that you may know how you should respond to each person.ā (NASB)
Whatās the function of salt when we add it to our food? Itās to make it flavorful. Itās to make it attractive. Itās to bring out the various flavors in that food that we want to savor to the full. And grace has the same function in relationship to our speech. Itās like salt sprinkled on our lips. It brings out the flavor. It brings out the attractiveness. It makes our words attractive. It creates appetite in those who hear. They want more.
So as you go into this New Year, let me give you this piece of advice - practice being thankful. Let the grace of God be poured upon your lips. Donāt be a grumbler. Donāt be a complainer. Donāt be always emphasizing the negative. Donāt be critical and unthankful. Let the grace of God make you thankful, fill your lips with praise and enable you to admonish and teach your fellow believers.
Our time is up for today. Iāll be back with you again tomorrow at this time sharing another aspect of Godās amazing grace.
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