Abiding, Bible, Growth, Maturity, Measure, Scripture

OUR STATURE

EPHESIANS 4:13

“until we all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to the measure of the stature which belongs to the fullness of Christ.”

I bet a lot of you had a door frame somewhere in your house where your parents recorded yours and your siblings’ (if you had any) heights as you grew. I know some people who actually removed that part of the door frame when they moved to maintain that history. Seeing your gain in height each year was kind of cool. It’s too bad we don’t have the same kind of measuring rod for our spiritual growth. Oh wait, we do!

In today’s verse, Paul gives us that measuring rod. We are measured against the “stature which belongs to the fullness of Christ.” Of course, Paul wasn’t referring to Christ’s physical stature. He was pointing us towards His spiritual maturity, which is perfect. He was telling the Ephesians and is telling us that our goal in our spiritual life is to be more like Jesus. That’s a pretty lofty goal, but we should always aim high.

APPLICATION

This same Greek word for “stature” is used in John 9 when the blind man was healed by Jesus. Remember when the Pharisees questioned his parents about his blindness and how he was healed they told them to ask their son because “he is of age.” That is the same word. Their son was mature. He was a grown man. They were not referring to his spiritual growth. After all, he had just been introduced to Jesus. He knew Jesus was a miracle worker, but he had so much more to learn.

Have you ever thought about all those people whom Jesus healed or raised? We only know of the results surrounding Mary Magdalene and Lazarus. All the others could have been healed miraculously and never grown spiritually. I guess we’ll find out one day in heaven. I want to meet that leper he healed, if he is there. I want to meet the slave of the Centurion who was healed, if they are there. I want to meet that thief on the cross. I know he’ll be there.

The length of our physical life has nothing to do with our spiritual growth. There are a lot of old people who are still on the bottle spiritually, and there are a lot of teenagers who are chewing on solid food and are discipling others. What is your stature in Christ? How do you measure up. If Jesus put you up against the door frame to measure you spiritually, would you have grown since last year?

God, I want to grow and be more like you each and every day.

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Abundance, Bible, Body, Gifts, Grace, Measure, Scripture

A GRANDMA SCOOP

EPHESIANS 4:7

“But to each one of us grace was given according to the measure of Christ’s gift.”

When I was a little boy, I used to love sleepovers at Grandma Carter’s house. She was my mom’s mom. Anyway, she had this big, ole farmhouse about ten or twelve miles from town. Boy, she could cook. I really liked how she would fix our plates for us because a grandma-sized scoop of food was a whole lot more than a mama-sized scoop. She loved to cook for us and loved to watch us eat. We each got a scoop of whatever she was serving, but she didn’t give my sisters as much as she gave me and my brother. I guess she figured we boys needed more sustenance. Man, I wish I had a grandma-sized scoop of one of her desserts right now.

In today’s verse, Paul uses a phrase, “according to the measure of Christ’s gift.” He had just said, “to each one of us grace was given.” So, what is the measuring cup that Christ uses to dispense grace to us? Is it fair that some people seem to get more than others? How does Christ decide who gets how much?

APPLICATION

Have you ever thought about this verse and got a little mad because you felt cheated? We tend to complain about things far too easily. We are not grateful for what Christ has given us. The verse today says grace is given to us according to the measure of Christ’s gift. The Pulpit Commentary says this, “In the Church all do not get alike; grace is not given in equal measures as the manna in the wilderness; Christ, as the great Bestower, measures out his gifts, and each receives according to his measure.”

That’s kind of like my Grandma Carter’s scoops of food. She loved each of us the same, but she measured out her scoops according to the needs of each of us. Look at these verses from Romans 12. “3 For through the grace given to me I say to everyone among you not to think more highly of himself than he ought to think; but to think so as to have sound judgment, as God has allotted to each a measure of faith. 6 However, since we have gifts that differ according to the grace given to us, each of us is to use them properly:”

In other words, if you are a believer in Christ, He has given you a measure of grace and gifts to accompany that. What are you doing with? How are you serving the kingdom with your gift? Don’t sit there and tell me you don’t have a gift. If you are saved, you have a gift. You are part of the body. The body needs you to exercise your gift in order to make the body whole. Will you do that today?

Lord, I thank You for the measure of grace You have bestowed on me.

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