Excerpt:
Just because somebody walks into the house of the Lord in sin doesn’t mean they’re going to leave that way. God said He prepared a table for everyone — and no man has the right to decide who’s worthy to sit down.
Let me say this real plain: stop counting people out before God has finished with them. Too many folks — especially in the church — are quick to label, quick to judge, and quick to cast out the very people God is trying to call in. Somewhere along the way, we forgot that the same grace that saved us is the same grace that can save them. When somebody walks into the house of the Lord, maybe they’re not dressed like you, maybe they’re still struggling, maybe their lifestyle doesn’t line up with your standards — but that doesn’t mean they’re not welcome at God’s table. Because guess what? It’s not your table. God said in His Word, “I have prepared a table before you in the presence of your enemies.” He’s the one who sets the table, pours the drink, and breaks the bread — and He decides who gets to sit down, not man. It hurts my heart to see how many people walk into church broken and walk back out even more broken because someone looked at them sideways, whispered about their past, or acted like they didn’t belong. But if the truth be told, every single one of us has walked into God’s presence carrying something — shame, guilt, addiction, pride, unforgiveness — something. But the beauty of grace is this: you don’t leave the same way you came. God’s Word says, “He prepares a table for us.”
That means everyone has a seat — the addict, the liar, the gossip, the one who fell, the one who’s still trying to stand. The same blood that covers the preacher covers the sinner too. That’s why Jesus told the woman at the well, “I will give you water where you will never thirst again.” He didn’t shame her, He didn’t condemn her — He offered her something better. That’s what love looks like. That’s what the church is supposed to be. See, the problem today is that too many people are playing God, trying to decide who’s qualified for His kingdom. But let me remind you — we don’t have that authority. God does.
He knows every heart, every motive, every struggle, and every story. Our job is not to fix people; it’s to lead them to the One who can. When Jesus broke bread with His disciples, He didn’t say, “Only the perfect ones can eat.” He said, “Take, eat — this is My body.” He offered it freely, knowing full well that one of them would betray Him and another would deny Him. Yet He still shared His table with them because He loved them anyway. That’s the kind of compassion God is calling us back to — the kind that sees people not for what they’ve done, but for what they can become through Him.
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