2026-07-13

The Price, The Pardon, and The Posture: Ephesians 1:7

The Price, The Pardon, and The Posture

Scripture: Ephesians 1:7 (NIV)
"In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God's grace."


1. The Price

In ancient Rome, redemption meant paying a ransom to free a slave. Paul uses that image here—but with a staggering twist. Our ransom wasn't silver or gold. It was blood. The very life of the sinless Son of God.

Why such a brutal price? Because our debt wasn't small. Every sin—every harsh word, secret thought, and selfish act—carried a death sentence. Justice demanded payment. But grace provided the payment in Christ. The penalty was not erased—it was transferred. Jesus took your bullet so you could go free.


2. The Pardon

Notice the result: forgiveness. Not "maybe" or "someday," but a completed transaction. Your past, present, and future sins are fully cancelled. Not because you cleaned up your life, but because He bled.

And look at the scale: "the riches of God's grace." Not a trickle, but an ocean. God didn't forgive you grudgingly—He poured out His riches to buy you back.

But this raises a dangerous question: If I'm already forgiven, does that give me a license to sin?

Paul answers directly in Romans 6:1-2: "Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means! We are those who have died to sin; how can we live in it any longer?"

Forgiveness does not remove earthly consequences—your legs still break if you jump off a roof. And more importantly, if you truly grasp that your forgiveness cost the blood of God's Son, you don't think "I can sin more"—you think "How could I ever hurt the One who bled for me?" Grace is not a "get out of jail free" card to keep committing crimes. It is a pardon that makes you want to honor the King who freed you.


3. The Posture

Here is the non-negotiable condition: You cannot receive a pardon while denying you committed the crime.

"If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins." (1 John 1:8-9)

To accept grace is to acknowledge—not just that you did "bad things," but that you are bad apart from Him. It is dropping the mask. It is agreeing with God about your sin—calling it what He calls it: rebellion, treason, idolatry.

True acknowledgment is not casual. It is the tax collector in Luke 18:13, who would not even look up, but beat his chest and cried, "God, have mercy on me, a sinner." Jesus said that man went home justified—not the religious one who listed his good deeds.

And when you truly agree with God about your sin, your attitude toward it changes. You stop defending it and start turning from it. That is repentance—not perfection, but a changed direction.


Reflect

  • Are you living as a freed slave or still dragging chains of guilt?

  • Have you treated grace as a cover-up, or as a clean slate given to someone who admits the slate was filthy?

  • If God removed all consequences today, would you still want to please Him—not out of fear, but out of love?


Pray

Father, I cannot repay this price. I confess that I have sinned against You—in thought, word, and deed. I do not make excuses. I open my empty hands and acknowledge my need. Thank You that my redemption does not depend on my performance, but on Jesus' blood. By Your Spirit, turn my heart toward You—not because I fear punishment, but because I love the One who took my place. Help me walk in the freedom You purchased. Amen.


Key Takeaway

Grace is free—but it is never cheap.
It cost everything. It demands acknowledgment.
And it transforms everything in return.


2026-07-12

Give Thanks Forever— 1 Chronicles 16:34, 1 Thessalonians 5:17-18

Give Thanks Forever

Scriptures:

"Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; His love endures forever." — 1 Chronicles 16:34

"Pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." — 1 Thessalonians 5:17-18


The Foundation

These two verses are not separate commands—they are a conversation. 1 Chronicles 16:34 is the anchor—the unchanging truth we stand on. 1 Thessalonians 5:17-18 is the action—the way we live out that truth moment by moment.

The first verse tells us who God is: good and endlessly loving. The second tells us how to respond: stay connected to Him and give thanks, no matter what. When you put them together, you get the secret to unshakable peace: A thankful heart is born from a prayerful life, and a prayerful life is sustained by the certainty that God never changes.


Pray Without Ceasing?

Paul isn't telling you to lock yourself in a closet all day. He is inviting you into a continuous, internal dialogue with God—a running whisper of the soul. While you are working, driving, parenting, or struggling, your spirit can quietly breathe:

"I need You."
"I trust You."
"Thank You."

This is the atmosphere where true thankfulness grows. When you are constantly aware of His presence, you start to see His goodness in the mundane, the messy, and even the painful.


Give Thanks in All Circumstances

Notice Paul carefully says in all circumstances, not for all circumstances. He doesn't expect you to be grateful for trauma, loss, or betrayal. But because of 1 Chronicles 16:34, you can give thanks in them—because right in the middle of your storm:

  • God is still good. His character isn't ruined by your circumstances.

  • His love still endures. It didn't expire when your situation changed.

When you thank Him in the hard place, you aren't pretending it doesn't hurt. You are declaring that His presence is bigger than your pain. You are shifting your focus from the size of your problem to the size of your God.


This Is God's Will for You

Have you ever lain awake wondering, "What is God's will for my life?" Here it is, crystal clear: Stay connected to Me, and keep thanking Me. It's not a complicated formula. It's a posture of the heart. It is the daily, unglamorous, beautiful rhythm of walking through life with One who is endlessly good and endlessly loving.


Putting It Into Practice Today

When you feel...Pray this...Give thanks for this...
Anxious"Lord, I release this to You.""Thank You that You are in control."
Frustrated"Jesus, give me patience.""Thank You that Your love holds me steady."
Lonely"God, I know You see me.""Thank You that You will never leave me."
Joyful"God, all glory to You.""Thank You for this gift of grace."

Prayer

Father, thank You that Your goodness is not a feeling—it is a fact. Thank You that Your love does not rise and fall with my mood or my circumstances; it endures forever. Forgive me for the times I have let my worries silence my gratitude. Today, I choose to pray without ceasing—not with perfect words, but with a heart constantly turned toward You. And in every single thing I face, help me to find a reason to give thanks, because You are with me. This is Your will for me, and I receive it. In Jesus' name, Amen.


Final Challenge:

Set a gentle alarm on your phone for three random times today. When it goes off, pause for just 10 seconds, whisper, "God, I'm talking to You right now," and thank Him for one thing in that exact moment. Let this be the start of your unceasing rhythm of grace. Give thanks forever—because He is good, and His love never ends.

See also: