“But may it never be that I would boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.” (6:14)
A “oneup” is somebody who tries to one-up somebody. It’s a “Price is Right” tactic of bidding one dollar higher than the previous bidder. If you’re in a group telling about the 42inch HDTV you just purchased you can be sure there’ll be someone to top you with their plan to purchase a 60inch HDTV. If you just had two wisdom teeth pulled out then prepare for someone to breakout the story about the time they had all four wisdom teeth pulled. Sometimes it’s a passive aggressive style of boasting. You might mention how rarely you boast only to be met by another’s comment of how they never boast which can turn into a battle of who’s more humble! On and on it goes whether pathetically sad or amazingly funny it’s a desire we fight quite often.
If you were fortunate to be able to attend the Sunday morning service at Monroe Missionary this past weekend you were privileged to hear Mark West tell his testimony of how God used a tragic event in his live to change his life forever. I wouldn’t be doIng Mark’s testimony justice if I attempted to re-tell it in its entirety so I won’t even try but will only mention how Mark told how he was regretfully driving home drunk one night which resulted in an accident that took the life of another driver and how God used that event and the years that followed to lead him into forgiveness and holiness through a relationship with Jesus Christ.
What struck me as Mark re-told this story was the clarity of who was getting the glory. Mark didn’t speak of how difficult he had it in the days that followed. He spoke of anger and feelings of un-forgiveness but it was completely absent of any kind of “look at me and how bad I had it” kind of boasting attitude that we can be prone to falling into when talking about our past. He spoke only of God’s grace and mercy in allowing him to walk away from an accident that he never should’ve walked away from while letting him know he is completely forgiven because of Christ’s work on the cross. There was no reveling in all the times he’d been drunk in the past and what good times he’d had back in the “good ol’ days” but instead he shared heart wrenching genuine repentance about what he had done.
Mark provided a perfect picture of why and how we can boast. If I saw my sin as it really was and the cost of forgiveness that was paid by Christ, I’d be free from prideful boasting self and rejoice only in the boasting of the cross of Christ.
