Don't Waste Grace By Jeremy Anderson (2 Corinthians 6:1-13)
Paul’s appeal to the Corinthians frames the present moment as the fulfillment of Isaiah’s promise: a favorable time, a day of salvation that demands immediate response. The letter urges urgent gospel ministry because the window for reconciliation may not remain open, and believers must seize today rather than presume on tomorrow. The ministry of reconciliation centers on the person and work of Christ—his perfect life, sacrificial death, and exclusive claim as the name by which salvation comes—and invites both the lost to repent and the faithful to live consistent with that gospel. Ministry must avoid becoming a stumbling block. Paul insists on a life that puts no obstacle in another’s path to grace, modeling endurance, compassion, courage, and consistency. The apostle contrasts surface reputation with substantive character, listing trials endured and sacrifices accepted as evidence that the gospel demands costly faithfulness, not convenience. The language of servants (diakonos and doulos) highlights both belonging to Christ and active service in his mission, showing that identity and work cannot be separated. Paul presses for open relationships inside the church: hearts wide and invitations extended. The cultural reality of rising loneliness frames this appeal as urgent and practical. The gospel not only reconciles to God but forms a family that counters isolation. Practical disciplines follow: cultivate awareness of personal and communal loneliness, make oneself available beyond convenient scheduling, and let affections change so compassion prompts action. The call ends with a warning against wasted grace—an appeal to use present mercy to save, sanctify, and send rather than defer or squander the opportunity. The overall argument moves from theological claim to ethical demand: Christ’s reconciling work creates a present opportunity that requires immediate, reliable, and relational response. The faithful response looks like consistent character under hardship, active invitation into relationships, and concrete habits that widen hearts toward the lost and the lonely. The closing charge presses believers to act now—open doors, extend tables, and live so others meet grace, not obstacles—lest a precious season of mercy pass unused. Key Takeaways 1. Seize today’s window of salvation Paul insists that the present moment fulfills Isaiah’s “day of salvation” and that opportunity carries urgency. Delay treats divine mercy as if it were guaranteed tomorrow, but Scripture and circumstance demand immediate faith and proclamation. Choosing urgency honors the briefness of the opportunity and the costliness of the gospel call. [01:19] 2. Don’t become a stumbling block Ministry should remove barriers, not create them; actions and character must aid others toward faith. Integrity under hardship, compassion toward sinners, and refusal to compromise moral witness prevent people from rejecting Christ because of the messenger. This requires self-scrutiny: where do habits, words, or conveniences trip others up? Live so that rejection of the gospel can be traced to its truth, not to personal inconsistency. [08:53] 3. Live as intentionally reliable servants Belonging to Christ and serving his mission demand visible reliability in every situation. The list of trials in Paul’s life functions as evidence of steadfastness—endurance without compromise and compassion without calculation. Reliability builds trust, clears pathways for grace, and models the gospel’s cost. Cultivate character that cannot be credibly accused in a court of moral inconsistency. [13:44] 4. Widen hearts through practical steps Reconciliation requires open relationships: awareness, availability, and affection. First, notice loneliness and personal blind spots. Second, make time and remove excuses so presence and invitation become normal. Third, let affections move—care enough to enter others’ messy lives—and the church will become the antidote to isolation. [24:09] Youtube Chapters [00:00] - Welcome [00:25] - Today: The Day of Salvation [00:53] - The Call to Urgency [01:19] - Don’t Presume on Tomorrow [03:42] - Appeal to the Unreconciled [04:34] - Christ’s Life, Work, and Cross [08:53] - Avoid Being a Stumbling Block [13:44] - Portrait of Faithful Ministry [19:02] - Widen Your Heart: An Invitation [24:09] - Awareness, Availability, Affections [34:49] - Final Plea: Don’t Waste Grace

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