Bye Bye Bye

“The ceiling,” she said to me. Once I heard the teenager at church say this, I was confused. What about the ceiling? “What?” I asked. She replied, “You asked me, ‘what’s up?’ The ceiling is what’s up.” She got me. She was not the first.
I’m not in the habit of reviewing the forms my greetings and goodbyes take, but this gave me pause. I, like many humans, have become so accustomed to my normal greeting form that I forgot what, “What’s up?” even meant.
Did this happen with Paul as well? There is no question that the Apostle who was inspired to write the majority of our New Testament had a form of “goodbye” he preferred. Take a look at this sampling of his parting words in many of his letters:
Philippians 4:23 – “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit. Amen.”
1 Corinthians 16:23-24 – “The grace of the Lord Jesus be with you. My love to all of you in Christ Jesus. Amen.”
Galatians 6:18 – “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, brothers and sisters. Amen.”
Colossians 4:18b – “Grace be with you.”
1 Thessalonians 5:28 – “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you.”
2 Thessalonians 3:18 - “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.”
1 Timothy 6:21b – “Grace be with you all.”
2 Timothy 4:22 – “The Lord be with your spirit. Grace be with you all.”
Titus 3:15 – “Grace be with you all.”
Philemon 25 – “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.”
Sense a pattern? Although this was Paul’s favorite way to signal that he was done writing to individuals (Timothy, Titus, Philemon) or congregations (the church in Galatia, Colossae, Thessalonica, Corinth, Philippi), there is no way Paul forgot the meaning of “the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ” and how desperately he wants it to “be with us all.”
As a former persecutor-turned-Apostle (see Acts 9), Paul knew the importance of the grace of Christ. He had the blood of Christian martyrs on his own hands (see Acts 8:1). Christ himself appeared to Paul, wrenching him out of a lifestyle of murderous, blind hatred and throwing him into the light of gracious forgiveness (Acts 9:5-18). Paul never forgot how Jesus saved his soul from the condemnation he deserved for his prejudice, violence, and pride. Therefore, I believe it’s safe to say that no matter how often Paul bade “The grace of Jesus Christ” to someone, it never lost its meaning in his mind. He always prayed this prayer sincerely.
How about you? Have you fallen to the temptation to let church words remain church words? Lord knows I have. I find that the times I’m most likely to empty words like “grace” of their meaning are when I’m forgetting how badly I need them. I forget that I, like Paul, was lost without Christ. I was on a sure road to condemnation. Christ intervened. Why? Because “grace.” Because of a merciful favor, a decision to love the unlovable, an unconditional promise made to an unworthy sinner, Jesus intervened and gave me salvation.
He has done the exact same thing for you. Whether your sins look more like Paul’s, just like mine, or are quite different, Jesus’ grace is the same for Paul, you, and me. He loves you without considering your worthiness. He intervenes in your life through his gospel, teaching you and reminding you of that love. There is not a day in your life when you don’t need the grace of Christ. There is not a day in your life when Christ does not display this grace toward you fully and freely.
So I now wish you with full sincerity: Dear reader, the grace of Jesus Christ be with you always!
Pastor Mike Cherney





