Eyes on the Giver: Walking the Ancient Path by Grace Alone
Ephesians 2:8-10
"For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them."
As I walk through this life along God's path, I walk its true. I walk, in fellowship with God. I walk, with confidence that Jesus Christ is going before me and carrying me. I walk empowered by His Spirit. And I walk, guided by His Word. I pursue this walk. I desire this journey. I gave myself to His wisdom. I want to be on this road.
I did not put my faith in the works of my hands. I did not walk according to human traditions. I did not believe that the dead will enhance my spiritual experiences. I did not revere the architecture or idols made by the hands of men. I did not think that faith is like spell-casting, that spirits can be commanded by my spiritual acumen. I did not try to manufacture spiritual power or favor apart from humble dependence on Christ alone.
No compromise, no idolatry, and no divided allegiance. No tolerance for foreign spirituality. No syncretism. No pursuit of pleasure, power, wealth, and foreign alliances. No trying to have the best of both worlds. No striving after the wind. No no need to hedge my bets with idols. No chasing after forbidden knowledge or occult power like controlling demons.
Instead, it’s been surrender to the One who has all authority, who empowers us by His Spirit to walk humbly with Him, love God wholly, and love others truly.
This is the ancient path (Jeremiah 6:16) the good way where rest is found for your soul.
What fueled this sustained walk?
I prayed for wisdom like Solomon did, humbly asking to discern God’s will (1 Kings 3:9). But unlike him, I didn’t let it devolve into chasing the wind, self-reliant strategies, or the flesh’s endless pursuits. And thank God for that, because I would hate to have ended up like him, concluding that all of it is in vain.
The catalyst, the driving force for my faith, the source of its spiritual energy is not elusive or mysterious. It's anchored in the gospel and the broader New Testament witness that God Himself, through His grace, received by faith, and empowered by the Holy Spirit, creates the way, leads the way, and chooses those who will go along the path.
But sometimes, maybe more often than not, people get out of "the way". Take for instance Solomon, he received wisdom as a gift from God, but he later leaned on his own accumulated knowledge, political alliances, and human desires instead of continual dependence on the Giver. Solomon started with humble faith ("I am but a little child" ), but later his heart turned away (1 Kings 11:4). Solomon had the Spirit’s gifting for wisdom and rule, but he quenched it through compromise. His God-given wisdom became earthly (sourced in human forms) when mixed with his selfish ambition, and foreign influences (false-gods and idols).
James 3:15 calls such wisdom "earthly, natural, demonic"
"This is not the wisdom that comes down from above, but is earthly, unspiritual, demonic."
It breeds disorder, and counterfeit spirituality. And all this stems from one thing, shifting focus from the Giver to the recipient. That’s the pivot point where Solomon’s story turns tragic, and where so many hearts still wander off the path today. What starts as tolerance and pragmatism today, always ends in idolatry and divided loyalty. God-given wisdom becomes corrupted by selfish ambition, sensuality, and foreign influences, until it was no longer "from above."
People will always push back on this when you point out the subtle hypocrisy and idolatry. Mainly because they are desirous of and attracted to those spiritual forces. Solomon concluded much of life was vanity because his spirituality was divorced from wholehearted devotion to the Giver. He leaned on accumulated knowledge, political savvy, and sensual fulfillment instead of continual dependence.
The key safeguard?
Learn from Solomon.
Never shift focus from the Giver to the gift.
Keep asking, seeking, knocking, not for more wisdom to hoard or leverage, but for deeper dependence, clearer sight of Him, and grace to stay humble.
And if you do this:
"He who began the good work will carry it to completion." (Philippians 1:6)
Praise God for that preserving mercy. Amen.