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The Master Artist
By Brian Anderson
"In order that in the ages to come He might show the surpassing riches of
His grace in kindness toward us in
Christ Jesus. For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not
of yourselves, it is the gift of God;
not as a result of works, that no one should boast. For we are His
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for
good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them."
I've always been fascinated by artists. I can remember as a small child
watching my mother doodle. She has
always had an artistic gift, and could just pick up a pencil and a piece of
paper and draw whatever was in her
mind. In a matter of minutes she would have a beautiful replica of her idea
reproduced onto the paper. When I see
someone do that, it makes me just stand back in amazement, because I could
never do that in a million years! This
last summer our family took a trip to Disneyland, and there were artists
there who would draw your portrait for a
fee. I found myself almost entranced as these artists very ably reproduced
the features of the live face in front of
them onto the canvas as we watched.
As good as these human artists are at their craft, I want you to direct your
gaze to an even greater One. This Artist
is not just good. He's not just great. He's the best there is! He's
perfect! He doesn't just produce a work of art that
closely resembles what He has in mind. He produces a work of art that is
exactly what He has in mind! In fact, no
one else is even in His league. He's far greater than Leonardo Da Vinci,
Michaelangelo, Rembrandt, or Picasso.
This Artist is able to take any piece of canvass and transform it into a
masterpiece. In fact, every work He begins
ends up as a masterpiece. I'm speaking, of course, of God Almighty!
Ephesians 2:10 speaks of God's workmanship -- "For we are His workmanship."
The Greek word for
workmanship is "poiema." We get our word poem from it. It means a work of
art, or an expression of someone's
creativity. I want you to envision God as The Master Artist, and yourself
as His workmanship -- His work of art.
As you do so, I want you to take a look first at the canvass, then the
paint, the brush, the painting, and finally the
art gallery.
1. The Canvass:
The very first thing we notice as we observe this Master Artist is the
canvass He is painting on. It's not new. In
fact it's quite old. Formerly, it had been graced by a lovely portrait, but
a vandal came along with a black magic
marker and scribbled all kinds of profanity on it. Now it just looks like a
bunch of confusing and grotesque black
markings. Whatever original beauty there may have been in the portrait has
been effaced forever. It is fit now
only for the garbage heap. It has become useless; absolutely good for
nothing but burning. But this is exactly the
kind of material the Master Painter delights to use. You see, He delights
in finding old, used, ugly canvasses and
transforming them into objects of exquisite beauty!
Now my friend, allow me to ask you a question. What does that old, defaced,
blackened canvass represent? What
is the raw material that this Master Artist begins with in producing a
masterpiece? The answer may be startling to
you. This ugly, grotesque-looking canvass represents you and me. Our text
says, "for by grace YOU have been
saved... for WE are His workmanship..." The YOU and WE of verses 8 and 10,
are the same YOU of verse 1 and
WE of verse 3. Ephesians 2:1 tells us "And YOU were dead in your trespasses
and sins..." Ephesians 2:3 declares
"Among them WE too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging
the desires of the flesh and of the mind,
and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest." Man was
originally created in the image and likeness of
God, but that image has been marred and defaced because of our sin. Instead
of being alive to God as Adam was
originally in the Garden of Eden, we are born dead in sins. Instead of
walking in fellowship with God as Adam
did in the garden in the cool of the day, we walked according to the prince
of the power of the air, the devil
himself! Instead of our desires being to please and glorify God, to our
shame we lived in the lusts of our flesh and
our mind. Instead of being children of God as Adam was, enjoying His favor,
we are sons of disobedience and
objects of His holy anger. We are sinners, lost, undone, under God's
righteous condemnation and wrath. Unless a
remedy is found for our helpless and hopeless condition, we will perish
eternally in hell. That's how far we have
fallen from what we were created to be! The original portrait has been
permanently scarred beyond all description.
2. The Paint:
What is the only thing that can cover over that ugly, hideous canvass? Only
the Master Artist's paint will do the
job. Unless paint is applied to the canvass, it will forever remain the
same - an object of deformity and ugliness.
Observe as the Master Artist takes His brush, dips it into the white paint,
and begins by completely painting over
that blackened, defaced picture. He completely covers over the old canvass,
until there's not a trace of color left.
In fact, when He's done with His white paint, you'd never know that the
canvass once bore such an ugly
impression. It's almost as though that old portrait had never existed! The
old, ugly image has been completely
blotted out. But that's just the beginning. When the white paint dries, He
begins to apply the different colored
paints to the canvass at just the right places, and shades, and intensities.
Soon that old canvass begins to sparkle
with life, and a lovely new portrait begins to take shape before your very
eyes.
The paint represents the grace of God. When God determines to save a
sinner, He begins with the white paint of
His pardoning grace. He blots out our sins so that it is as if they never
existed. We are clean, white, and pure in
His eyes. But that's only the beginning! He goes on to apply the various
colors of His grace to our lives. He
applies His regenerating grace, changing our old hearts which were
indifferent and hardened to God and
transforming them so that they love Him above all things. He also bestows
His sanctifying grace, purging our lives
of sin and conforming us to the likeness of Jesus Christ Himself. Then
there is the preserving grace of God,
keeping us in His love so that we never totally or finally fall away from
Him. There is also His empowering grace,
enabling us to do His will and proclaim His truth. Additionally He gives
sustaining grace, bearing us up so that we
don't give up when heavy trials and sorrows come our way. We also receive
His comforting grace, wiping away
our tears when tragedy strikes. Furthermore, we experience His reviving
grace, refreshing and kindling again
fresh love and zeal in our hearts for Christ. All of these aspects of God's
grace come to us as so many colors of
paint from the Master Artist's brush.
An important question needs to be addressed at this point, however -- what
is grace? Well, according to Ephesians
2:8, it is what God applies to our lives in order to save us. "For BY GRACE
you have been saved through faith."
According to Ephesians 1:6 it is that which He bestows upon us. "To the
praise of the glory of HIS GRACE, which
He freely bestowed on us in the Beloved." According to Ephesians 1:7-8 it
is what He lavishes upon us. "In Him
we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses,
according to the riches of HIS GRACE,
which He lavished upon us." The grace of God is the basis of our salvation.
It is His undeserved and unearned
favor to hell-deserving sinners. If grace is the basis of our salvation,
and if grace is unearned and undeserved, then
it's obvious that our salvation could never be obtained as a result of our
good deeds. And that's exactly what we
read in Romans 11:6 "But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of
works, otherwise grace is no longer
grace." Grace and works are like oil and water -- they can't be mixed
together. Grace is God's free favor. Works
are our efforts. The Biblical teaching is that salvation comes not from
human effort, but from God's free favor.
God had an important reason in mind when He designed our salvation to be
based upon His grace. He didn't want
anyone to be able to boast in themselves. Ephesians 2:8-9 state, "For by
grace you have been saved through faith;
and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not as a result of works
that no one should boast." Grace glorifies
God; works glorify man. God hates boasting, because it comes from a heart
of pride, and God is opposed to the
proud. He doesn't want us taking credit for what He has done. Thus, He has
designed salvation in such a way that
we can never steal the glory. If our salvation is by His grace and not by
our works, then we have nothing we can
boast about. We didn't do anything. He did it all! At this point you
might be thinking, "But what about my faith?
Maybe I can't boast about anything else, but surely I can take a little
credit for the faith that I have in Jesus Christ!"
Well, in order to examine this issue, we need to take a good look at the
paintbrush.
3. The Brush:
In order for the Master Artist to apply the paint to the canvass, He needs a
special tool. We call it a paintbrush.
What a paintbrush is to a canvass, faith is to our soul. Faith is that
instrument by which God's grace is brought
into contact with our life. Notice that Ephesians 2:8 declares, "For by
grace you have been saved THROUGH
FAITH." We are not saved BY faith; we are saved THROUGH faith. Faith is
the channel, the medium, the
instrument of salvation. A man is not saved by belief alone. He is saved
by belief plus trust. In the 19th century, a
world-famous acrobat named Blondin stunned his audiences with his many
death-defying stunts. Among others,
Blondin would cross the Niagara Falls on a tightrope 1,100 feet long and 160
feet above the water. One of his
amazing feats included carrying a man across the Niagara Falls on his back
on the tightrope. After successfully
accomplishing this stunt, Blondin shouted to a man in the crowd below, "Do
you believe I could do that with you
on my back?" The man replied, "Of course. I just saw you do it!" Blondin
replied, "Wonderful! Hop on and we'll
go across together!" At that, the man in the crowd, replied, "Not on your
life!" This unnamed man in the crowd is
like too many professing Christians today. They have mental belief in Jesus
Christ, but they have never dared to
venture everything upon Him to be saved by Him. There can be no saving
faith without trust.
Now, let's get back to our question. Can we boast of our faith? After all,
it is my faith! God does not believe for
me. If that is so, shouldn't we be able to take the credit, at least for
our faith? The answer is an unequivocal NO!
The reason is that faith comes to us as God's gift. Look at our text in
Ephesians 2:8 again. "For by grace you have
been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of
God." There you have it! Faith is the gift of
God! If someone gives you a new watch as a Christmas present, you don't go
around boasting about the fact that
you did something great to get it! You didn't do anything great to get it!
It was given to you! You only received
it!
I realize that you still may not be convinced that faith really is a gift of
God. Much of the Christian church in
America today teaches that faith comes not from God, but from ourselves.
They believe that it is our contribution
to salvation. God does 99%, but my faith is the 1% that I contribute
towards my salvation. This implies that God
is doing everything in His power to save everyone, but unless a person adds
his/her faith of their own free will,
God's hands are tied! Is that true? Not if faith comes to us as God's
gift. But does it? Well, let's examine some
other texts in the New Testament to see.
2 Peter 1:1 "Simon Peter, a bond-servant and apostle of Jesus Christ, to
those who have received a faith of the
same kind as ours, by the righteousness of our God and Savior, Jesus
Christ." Here we are told that faith is
something that is received by us, not something that we contribute of
ourselves.
Philippians 1:29 "For to you it has been granted for Christ's sake, not only
to believe in Him, but also to suffer for
His sake." We are specifically told here that believing in Jesus is
something that is GRANTED to us. A grant is a
gift. If you receive a grant from a university, you are receiving a gift of
a scholarship. Thus, if it is granted us to
believe in Jesus, it is a gift of God.
Ephesians 6:23 "Peace be to the brethren, and love with faith, from God the
Father and the Lord Jesus Christ." In
this passage we are told that peace, love and faith come from God the Father
and Jesus Christ our Lord, NOT from
ourselves.
Acts 18:27 "And when he wanted to go across to Achaia, the brethren
encouraged him and wrote to the disciples
to welcome him; and when he had arrived, he helped greatly those who had
believed through grace." Believing in
Christ comes through His grace, not our own efforts.
John 6:65 "And He was saying, "For this reason I have said to you, that no
one can come to Me, unless it has been
granted him from the Father." What does it mean to come to Jesus? Jesus
explains what it means in John 6:35
where He says "I am the bread of life; he who comes to Me shall not hunger,
and he who believes in Me shall never
thirst." Quite clearly here Jesus explains that to come to Him means to
believe in Him. But equally as clearly in
verse 65 He declares that this coming to Him can only happen if it has been
granted from the Father. Thus, saving
faith in Jesus Christ occurs only in those to whom this special gift is given.
You may be wondering, "In what sense is my faith a gift from God?" Your
faith in Christ is the gift of God in the
sense that your faith is the free, spontaneous and inevitable result of
God's work in your heart. We call this work
regeneration or being born again. As soon as God sovereignly gives
spiritual life to a spiritually dead man, that
man believes on Christ. Christ becomes irresistible to Him! He has no
desire to run from Christ any longer. The
Holy Spirit has shown Him the wretchedness and filth of his sin, and the
loveliness and goodness of Christ to die
for sinners like him. Just as the prodigal son returned home to his
father's loving embrace, so too does the
regenerated sinner run into the loving arms of Jesus Christ by faith. If
God had not taken the first step, and
regenerated us, we would never have believed in Christ at all! Our hearts
were set upon sin, not upon trusting
Christ. But now, having been freed from the slavery of sin, we find that it
is natural for us to turn in faith to Christ
as our Savior. By giving us a new heart, He has given us the gift (the
ability) to believe savingly on Jesus Christ.
4. The Painting:
We come now finally to observe the actual painting take shape. As the
Master Artist applies the right colors to the
right places on the canvass, the portrait becomes increasingly beautiful.
We now begin to see the symmetry, form
and shape of the portrait. It becomes a thing of real beauty before our
very eyes, delightful to behold.
The beauty of the painting represents the Christian's life of good works.
As God begins to work by His grace in our
lives, and we begin to respond to Him in obedience, love, compassion,
kindness, and humility, our lives begin to be
a thing of real beauty, delightful to behold. But make careful note -- this
Artist is not in a hurry. When God
undertakes to make us into masterpieces of His grace, He takes His sweet
time in doing it. We might wish that He
would hurry the process along, but He knows exactly what He is doing.
Slowly but surely we see the fruit of the
Holy Spirit produced in our lives. Regrettably, we don't see perfection
immediately. We see a little red here, a
little green there. We will not see the perfection in our lives that we so
long for until we see Him face to face.
If this beautiful painting represents the beauty of a Christian's life of
good works, then we need to understand
something about them. What does the Bible teach about good works? Well, it
teaches us that we are not saved by
them, but we are saved for them. Notice our text in Ephesians 2:10 "For we
are His workmanship, created in
Christ Jesus FOR good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should
walk in them." They are not the
root, but are the necessary fruit of our salvation. We are saved through
faith alone, but the faith that saves is never
alone. We are not saved through faith PLUS works, but we are saved through
a faith THAT works. We don't work
to get saved, but we work because we ARE saved. No one more wholeheartedly
repudiated good works as the
ground of salvation than the Apostle Paul, but neither did anyone more
strongly insist on good works as the fruit of
salvation than the same apostle! Therefore, good works are important! In
some Christian circles, "good works"
are almost dirty words. These believers want to protect the truth that
salvation is by grace apart from works so
much that when they hear others speaking of the importance of good works in
the life of a Christian, they see it as
tantamount to legalism and works-righteousness. But the Bible doesn't read
like that! Allow me to give you a
quick sampling of the Biblical teaching on good works.
Matthew 5:16: "Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may
see your good works, and glorify your
Father who is in heaven." Evidently it is Christ's desire that we produce
good works.
Colossians 1:10 "so that you may walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, to
please Him in all respects, bearing fruit
in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God." We learn here
that we please God by our good
works.
2 Timothy 3:16-17: "All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for
teaching, for reproof, for correction, for
training in righteousness; that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for
every good work." The very purpose
the Scriptures were given was to equip us to perform good works!
Titus 2:14: "who gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from every
lawless deed and purify for Himself a
people for His own possession, zealous for good deeds." Christ died to save
a people out of the world who would
be zealous for good deeds.
Titus 3:8: "This is a trustworthy statement; and concerning these things I
want you to speak confidently, so that
those who have believed God may be careful to engage in good deeds. These
things are good and profitable for
men." Here we learn that we must be careful to engage in good deeds.
Hebrews 10:24: "and let us consider how to stimulate one another to love
and good deeds." In this text we see
that we are to give careful thought as to how we can motivate others to good
deeds.
Just as the sun was created to shine, the rose to give forth a delightful
fragrance, and the bird to fly, so the
Christian was created in Christ Jesus to abound in good works. Good works
are the proof that we possess
salvation!
Notice in our text that these good works were "prepared beforehand that we
should walk in them." God has a
blueprint for every life. Before our conversion He mapped out our spiritual
career for us. We don't have to work
out a plan for our lives. We are to just accept His plan which He drew up
for us. We don't even have to prepare
these good works. We are just to walk in them when He shows them to us!
Oh, if we would just remember this,
how freeing it would be for our lives! God came to the prophet Jeremiah and
said, "Before I formed you in the
womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I have
appointed you a prophet to the nations." It
was true in Jeremiah's life that before he was even born God had already
decided what good works he would be
involved in. It is also true for you!
5. The Art Gallery:
There's only one last thing I need to show you. It's the art gallery where
the Master Artist hangs His masterpieces.
When He is through with one of His paintings, He very carefully hangs it up
in His gallery in His private mansion,
so that when His friends and relatives drop by they can have the pleasure of
seeing His creativity and skill. They
are constantly amazed when they drop by to see the latest work of art.
Their jaws gape open as they stand in awe
and wonder at His ability! The gallery is full of works that are
breathtakingly beautiful. No one can believe what
treasures have been transformed from such ugly canvasses! Who would have
thought that something so ugly could
be turned into something so lovely?! All of this brings to light the
greatness of the Artist!
The Master Artist's gallery represents the glory of heaven. Notice what our
text says, "in order that in the ages to
come He might show the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us
in Christ Jesus." In the untold
millions of ages running on forever in eternity future, Almighty God will
display to the watching universe what His
grace is able to accomplish. The heavenly throng will be learning forever
the greatness of His grace! Heaven will
be the school. God will be teacher. Grace will be the subject. We will be
the students. The school term will be
eternity!
When the text says, "that He might show", the verb is in the middle voice,
which means that God is doing this for
Himself. God's purpose in salvation reaches beyond us. God's ultimate aim
in all He does is His own glory, and
He will accomplish it as the adoring multitudes look at what He has done in
our lives!
Notice how the text puts it. The Bible doesn't just speak of "His
kindness." It speaks of "His grace in kindness."
But that isn't strong enough, so it says, "the riches of His grace in
kindness." But even that isn't strong enough, so
the Bible speaks of "the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness!"
Throughout eternity we will be put on display
as the masterpieces and monuments of His amazing grace!
NOW WHAT?
The truths laid out in this pamphlet, though interesting, would be of little
help to you unless you understand how to
apply them to your life. The following are a few suggestions to help you do
just that.
1. Allow These Truths To Encourage You:
Perhaps you are looking at yourself today, and you don't like what you see.
Take courage - He's not finished with
you yet! Wait until He adds the blue and the green and you will be amazed.
Sometimes when we look at a
painting that is half way finished, it can be very confusing. We can have
difficulty determining what the painting
is supposed to be of. So too, sometimes our own lives may look a bit
confusing. But wait until He's finished with
you. I guarantee you will be happy with the finished product. Don't give
up! If a canvass was unhappy with the
way it looked, what could it do? Only lie still in the Master Artist's
hands and receive the paint He applies from
His brush. You must do the same! By faith, continually trust Him to work
in you to will and to do of His good
pleasure!
2. Allow These Truths To Comfort You:
Be assured of this -- God's work will be completed. He never gives up on
one of His masterpieces. Every work of
art He begins, He completes! If we were creating a painting, we might quit
because we grow weary, run out of
paint, or get bored with the whole thing. But God is omnipotent and never
gets weary, He has an infinite supply of
grace and will never run out, and is delighted with what He is painting, not
bored in the least! Trust Him! He will
complete the good work He began in you! "He who began a good work in you
will perfect it until the day of Christ
Jesus (Phil. 1:6).
3. Allow These Truths To Excite You:
Remember, your good works have been prepared beforehand! That means that
the Christian life is an exciting
adventure! We never know what good works God has prepared beforehand for
us! We are just going to have to
wait and see! I would never have dreamed that pastoring a church and
teaching God's word was something that He
prepared beforehand for me! I'm naturally a shy and reserved person. In
school I hated public speaking, and
would turn beet red when forced to do it. But when God called me to preach,
He completely changed my desires
and I find that I love doing what He has called me to do! Oh, look forward
with excitement to what God will do in
your life! See yourself as that canvass upon which the Master Artist is
adding fresh color every day!
Some of you who are reading this may be canvasses that the Master
Artist has just pulled out of the
garbage heap. He is just now applying the white paint of His pardoning
grace. You are just starting out on this
Christian life. Others of you are almost nearing completion. In a few more
deft strokes the Master Artist will be
done with your life. You are nearing the end of your earthly life. No
matter how long He has been working on
you, entrust yourself to His skillful hands to make you into that object of
beauty which will bring praise and glory
to Him!
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