I’ve said before, and I’ll continue to reiterate it, that God’s Word really is his matchless Word of grace. The story which the Scriptures tell is one of redemption, deliverance, and forgiveness: it’s the story of God’s Son, the embodiment of the Father’s mercy. It’s the account of the Lord’s “doings in grace with this world of ours,” which has “brought back something like sunshine” into this dark and dreary life we live. God has sovereignly woven his grace into mankind’s tapestry of time, and there’s no truer depiction of this than the cross of Christ.
The dying thief.
The dying thief.
The dying thief.
I’ve said before, and I’ll continue to reiterate it, that God’s Word really is his matchless Word of grace. The story which the Scriptures tell is one of redemption, deliverance, and forgiveness: it’s the story of God’s Son, the embodiment of the Father’s mercy. It’s the account of the Lord’s “doings in grace with this world of ours,” which has “brought back something like sunshine” into this dark and dreary life we live. God has sovereignly woven his grace into mankind’s tapestry of time, and there’s no truer depiction of this than the cross of Christ.
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