I can't say enough about how influential this book has been in my daily walk! I've owned it for years, but just picked it up when my pastor specifically recommended it for me. The message overall is simple (God's love shown to me in the gospel through Jesus' birth/life/death/resurrection/ascension is all I need both in my relationship with him and with others) and yet forgotten and neglected in my moment-by-moment decisions leading to guilt, fear, anxiety, and more. The author skillfully uses scripture, quotes from many church fathers and her own counseling experience to gently but firmly re-present the gospel. This overwhelmed, challenged and comforted me, and the Holy Spirit is using it to transform my view of my identity (an adopted, not a foster, child), free me from guilt and shame and enable me to share this with my girls as I parent.
I took copious notes in my personal journal, but these are some things I specifically want to remember and document.
Chapter 1 Remembering His Love
p. 24 "If we're not completely convinced that his love is ours right now--fully and unalterably ours--we'll always hide in the shadows, focusing on our performance, fearing his wrath. ... Our faith will become all about us, our performance, and how we think we're doing, and our transformation will be hindered. What must we remember? Simply that God loves us so much that he crushed his Son so that we might be his and that this love isn't based on our worthiness or performance."
Chapter 2 Identity Amnesia
p. 40 "He does transform our outer, more noticeable behavior (where we usually focus), but this transformation has its genesis in the renovation of the hidden inner person. ... We won't have the faith to continue to say, 'Yes, Lord,' unless we're resting securely in the eternal yes he has spoken over us."
Chapter 3 The Identity Gift
p. 51 "No only have you been given an identity that you weren't born with or that you didn't ear the right to use, but you're invited to empty the checking account and use all the benefits this identity brings!"
p. 58 "The truth that many of us have lost and desperately need to find is that Christianity isn't essentially a program to help moral people be better. No, it's a relationship based on the premise that we aren't good now and will never be good enough in this life. We need someone to be good in our place, to suffer what we deserve to suffer, and to live the righteous life we should have lived."
Chapter 4 The Verdict
p. 71 "The Father poured out all his wrath on his Son. There is no more left for you or me. He won't condemn you now because condemning the innocent is an abomination to him, and that's what he says you are: innocent. ... I'm encouraging you now to fully embrace your sinfulness for one simple reason: so that you can fully embrace this great exchange, our 'justification.'"
p. 75 "I have to remind myself over and over that his righteousness is now mine and that the way my heart harasses me is ore a function of my pride and self-sufficiency than a sincere desire for godliness. If godliness before him is what I was really after, then one look at the cross and empty tomb would suffice. But I can see that I'm frequently more concerned about whether I approve of myself than the fact that he approves of me. I sinfully long to be able to look at my life and feel good about my personal accomplishments--See what a good mother I am!--and it's that desire that spawns crushing guilt. The only way to silence my heart and find solace is to continually remind myself of my new identity in Christ and to be satisfied with that alone. ...
When I come to him in meekness and dependence, I'll learn the difference between proud self-condemnation (which is all about me) and humble conviction of sin (which is all about him, his grace, and his law). ...
We have to remember that God isn't like us. He doesn't love us because we're lovable; no, his love is predicated solely upon his gracious choice. Remember his love came to us when we were his enemies. Why would he leave us now that we're his beloved children?"
Chapter 5 Your Inheritance
p. 82 "Have you ever wondered what makes the good news (or gospel), good news?... It is the 'good news of happiness' because through it you are bound once and for all time to the One who inclined your heart to desire happiness in the first place. He made you desire him, and he has answered your desire."
Chapter 6 Look and Live
p. 101 "What is this 'blamelessness' that God loves to bless [2 Chron. 16:9]? Is it a perfect record of disciplined righteousness? No. It's simple reliance on him and a turning away from all other sources of support (see 2 Chron. 16:7-9). It's believing that the righteousness of God requires has to be pursued by faith and not by our own efforts (Rom 9:32)."
Chapter 7 Be Who You Are
p. 109 "... you r growth in holiness is firmly bound to your appreciation of the gospel and God's love, for it is only an appreciation of his love that can motivate genuine obedience. Outward obedience can be and frequently is generated by other motives, such as a fear of failure or desire for approval, but this kind of obedience (which isn't obedience at all) only results in pride, despair, or self-indulgence and, because it is done out of love for self, more sin."
p. 117 "He has done everything that needs to be done to secure our relationship to himself. But that's not all he's done. He has also already prepared good works for us to do, to 'walk in.' ... we can be courageous in our faith-we can boldly pursue godly living because he has made us able to do so."
Chapter 8 I Will Cleanse You
p. 134 "The gospel declarations the Lord has made are meant to free us from our never-ending craving for more. Because he has made us his own and given us everything in Christ, we don't have to shove others aside, envy them, fight with them, or murder them. We've got something better: a God who delights in drawing near to us, exalting us, and granting us grace (James 4:6-8)"
p. 135 "Our problem is not that we desire happiness. No, our problem is that we continue to foolishly believe that we can attain it apart from him."
p. 136 "Only a deep appreciation of all he has done for us in Christ will motivate us to pursue true happiness, to put off all of our shabby attempts to make our mud pies a little more tasty, and to seek the One who loves us more than we'll every comprehend."
Practical steps to take as you fight by faith for real happiness.
1. Pray that God would reveal your unbelief and idolatry to you.
2. Prayerfully mediate on Scripture and ask God to apply it to you.
3. confess any unbelief or idolatry that you're aware of.
4. Ask God to make himself your chief joy.
5. Think back to the last time you know you sinned and ask yourself: what did I think would make me happier than what I had?
6. Mediate on Gods' goodness to you in the gospel.
7. Invite others to speak into your life and help you see your sin, particularly your unbelief and idolatry.
8. Prayerfully make a plan of how to respond to gospel obligations the next time you're tempted to sin: Remind myself that God is in control and that he is more interested in my holiness than my work for him.
Chapter 9 Walk In Love
p. 142 "...God declares that you are his beloved child. You are very dear to him; he cherishes you. You are his darling, and he will faithfully block every move you try to make away from him."
"Until we really grasp how much he loves us, we'll never be able to imitate him. We won't come near to him if we're afraid of his judgement. We won't repent and keep pursuing godliness if we don't believe that our size doesn't faze his love for us one bit."
"Any obedience that isn't motivated by his great love is nothing more than penance."
p. 151 "What is the most loving thing I can do at this moment?"
Chapter 10 Take Courage; Your Sins Are Forgiven
p. 157 The thesis of the book, "In our desire to live the Christian life, most of us have simply left Jesus behind."
"...every forward step depends upon summing up the main points of the gospel and then living them out in our lives."
p. 158 :Maturity in the Christian life is measured by only one test: how much closer to his character have we become? The result of the Spirit's work is not more and more activity. No, the results of his work are seen in our quality of life; that are 'love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.' It is life like his."
We've God to understand ourselves in the light of our new identity, seeing ourselves as we truly are: sinful and flawed, loved and welcomed.
p. 171 "So now, before you focus on ways you need to change, spend a good long time looking at the gospel. You've got a new identity: you're God's adopted son. You've got a perfect record; you don't have to try to prove anything about yourself or seek to assure yourself any longer. Christ's perfect righteousness is yours. Because of this, you've got never-ending relationship with the Joy of the Whole Earth; this relationship will never end because you've been made a partaker of his life, and you're completely redeemed and reconciled with him. All this has been given to you by faith, which was also given to you."
Chapter 11 Gospel Centered Relationships
p. 175 "The primary relationship every Christian has is with our Father and with his Son. Every other relationship is simply a reflection of this one great love."
p. 176 "He joins us to himself in eternal union, without asking us to lose our individuality. Just as he doesn't' lose his individuality even though he is three persons in unity, so we don't lose ours, through we are spiritually joined to him (1 Cor. 6:17)."
p. 179 "Maturity in Christ does not occur because we attend Bible studies. Maturity in Christ occurs when, by the Spirit and in God's grace, our brothers and sisters take biblical truth and apply it lovingly, patiently, boldly to our hearts."
p. 184 "Because the gospel has defined everything about who we are, we don't have to pretend we're sinless. We don't have to keep up appearances. There's only one reputation that means anything to us now, and it's not ours. I can afford to look like a sinner because I have a Savior who loves sinners."
p. 185 "Real life and real life change are experienced in relationships where we pursue, confess, encourage, confront, and welcome others because we know that our wedding day is approaching and we want the whole family to be ready."
p. 191 "the hope of the gospel is simply this then: that Jesus Christ, the incarnate Son, was born in a lowly manger, lived a perfect life, suffered from the moment of his first breath, was indescribably shamed and cruelly tortured, and then died without the comfort of his Father or the angles on Calvary's cruel tree. After three days in darkness and the tomb he rose again, still in human flesh, and then after forty days he ascended to the Father. Because of this, we have an entirely new identity, not one based on our accomplishments, our self-respect, the accolades of others, our own good works. We are completely and irrevocably justified; we have been entirely forgiven, reconciled, redeemed. We will have eternal life with him, and everything we go through now is in some way tied to these truths."
"We turn from Jesus and forget the gospel when we fail to remember that we've been completely reconciled through the body of his flesh and try to reconcile ourselves to him through our good works."