Let It Be To Me According To Your Word: From One Degree to Another
2 Corinthians 3:17-18
"Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit."
Paul here emphasizes that our transformation into Christ’s likeness isn’t instantaneous or static, it’s a progressive, gradual restoration process. And we are changed step by step, stage by stage, growing in greater measures of His character, holiness, and radiance as we behold His glory.
This beholding isn’t passive; it’s an active, Spirit-empowered fixation on Christ’s glory through prayer, Scripture, worship, and community, leading to that step-by-step kind of metamorphosis. And I'm very thankful for that process because there are times when I feel like I've completely failed to do anything for Christ's sake.
I suppose many of us look into the spiritual mirror and think, "Am I actually changing? Is the Spirit really at work in me?" Probably some days the growth feels invisible, the old patterns are stubborn, and the progress seems painfully slow. That’s why Paul’s wording, "from one degree of glory to another", is such a gift of grace.
In my case, I've had my moments, spiritual moments, and I've had my moments of being easily ignited into provocation. Easily angered and frustrated with needing to be heard. And I was ugly. I hated who I became in my temper. I was ashamed of the things I did and said. And I'd give up in despair. But then one day I began to see The Spirit at work in me. Meditating between my old innerman and the new image of my Lord trying to breakthrough.
This is exactly the battlefield Paul maps out in Romans 7 and Galatians 5. The old self (the flesh, with its passions and provocations) still trying to assert itself, while the new creation in Christ, the Spirit’s workmanship, fights to break through and take full dominion over my soul. Those moments when I was "easily ignited", ugly in my temper, ashamed afterward…that wasn’t the real me anymore. It was the remnants of the old man flaring up.
The very fact that I hated it, grieved over it, and despaired of myself is powerful evidence that the Spirit had already begun His renewing work. Dead people don’t feel shame over sin; only those made alive in Christ do. It's looking to Jesus where you're going to find this help, this glory. The Spirit gently mediating, convicting without condemning, exposing the old patterns not to crush but to draw closer to Christ’s likeness. The old outbursts may still echo sometimes, but they’re losing their grip. Maybe even in the realization that you have this weakness and therefore you can avoid the problem by segregating yourself from the situation.
Hebrews 12:2 calls us to fix our eyes on Him, the author and perfecter of our faith. In that gaze, the Spirit does His gentle, precise work. He exposes the old patterns not to shame us into hiding, but to invite us into deeper dependence, repentance, and transformation.
And Paul immediately grounds this process in the open, honest ministry of the new covenant gospel. He begins in chapter 4:1–2:
"Therefore, since through God’s mercy we have this ministry, we do not lose heart. Rather, we have renounced secret and shameful ways; we do not use deception, nor do we distort the word of God. On the contrary, by setting forth the truth plainly we commend ourselves to everyone’s conscience in the sight of God."
That phrase, "by setting forth the truth plainly" is key. Paul is saying the same Spirit who removes the veil from our hearts (3:16–18) now works through the clear, undistorted, honest proclamation and personal exploration of Scripture. And there’s no manipulation, no veiling, no hiding; no "secret and shameful ways." Instead, the Word is laid bare, just as our faces are unveiled before the Lord.
We have been in the image of God, and one of His characteristics is He is self-determinant. That is, He has His will and the ability to exercise it. He has the power of choice. And God created each of us in this same way, with the power of self-determination. Humanity is uniquely made in the image of God (Genesis 1:26–27), and part of what that imago Dei includes is the capacity for meaningful will, choice, and self-determination. God is the ultimate Self-Determiner. Perfectly free, sovereign, never coerced, always acting in complete harmony with His holy nature. And He stamped something of that glorious attribute onto us. And so, having given us this opportunity to choose, in order for that created self-determination to be valid, God also needed to create a situation into which we make that choice and He would respect it.
If God grants us a real, meaningful capacity for self-determination, a will that genuinely reflects His own freedom, then that gift would be hollow, even illusory, if there were no real alternative to choosing Him. For choice to be authentic, there must be a genuine possibility of saying "no." Love that is coerced or programmed isn’t love at all; obedience that has no option to disobey isn’t true obedience. A will that can only move in one direction isn’t a will in the image of God’s glorious freedom.
A perfect and timely example on this Christmas Eve would be Mary's own choice to obey God's will in the birth of our Lord.
Mary stands as one of the most beautiful illustrations in all of Scripture of God-honoring human self-determination. The angel Gabriel appears with the staggering announcement. She, a young virgin betrothed but not yet married, will conceive and bear the Son of the Most High.
God does not compel her, and He does not override her will. He extends a genuine invitation through His messenger, and He waits for her response. And Mary’s reply is the glad, freely chosen "yes" of a true image-bearer:
"Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word." (Luke 1:38)
Her choice didn’t make her less human or less free. It made her more fully alive, more fully herself, as she stepped into the purpose for which she was created. Mary could have refused. She could have pleaded fear, inadequacy, or the sheer impossibility of it all. Frankly, she could have just not wanted to be bothered. But in beholding the glory of God’s purpose (revealed to her by the angel), she willingly aligns her will with His. Her self-determination is not erased, it is exercised at its highest and holiest level. It's a voluntary, trusting surrender to the will of God.
This is exactly how God always deals with His image-bearers. He invites, He reveals, He woos with truth and grace, and then He honors the choice we make.
In surrendering her will to God’s, Mary was not diminished, she was exalted.
"From now on all generations will call me blessed" (Luke 1:48)
So on this day when we celebrate the birth of the Savior, Mary’s obedient choice reminds us that God still works in the same way. He still unveils His glory in the gospel, speaks His word to our hearts, and waits for our response. He will not force us, because love cannot be coerced. But when, like Mary, we behold His glory and say, "Let it be to me according to Your word," the Spirit begins that glorious transformation. Transforming from one degree of glory to another, until we too bear the image of the heavenly Man.
What a gift, that the God who spoke the universe into being waits patiently for the freely chosen "yes" of His image-bearers. May our hearts echo Mary’s this Christmas.
A Christmas Eve Prayer
Father in heaven,
On this holy night when the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, we behold anew the glory of Your Son, full of grace and truth.
Thank You for creating us in Your image, with hearts capable of real choice, and for respecting that freedom even when we turned away. Thank You for Mary’s glad "yes," which opened the way for the Savior’s birth, and for inviting us to echo her surrender: "Let it be to me according to Your word."
Lord Jesus, unveil our faces once more. Let us gaze upon Your beauty in the manger, on the cross, and at the right hand of the Father. As we behold You, transform us by Your Spirit, from one degree of glory to another, until we bear Your likeness more fully each day.
Quiet the old outbursts, heal the remaining wounds, and renew our wills to delight in Yours. Make us more like You in patience, humility, and love.
We offer You our hearts made new again this Christmas. Come, Lord Jesus, and reign in us forever.
Amen.