Thursday, July 2, 2026

Dear Pastor: Your Flock Needs Hope: A Biblical Appeal to Every Pastor, Priest, Elder, and Teacher of the Gospel

 

Dear Pastor: Your Flock Needs Hope

A Biblical Appeal to Every Pastor, Priest, Elder, and Teacher of the Gospel

Dear Pastor,

This letter is written with respect, gratitude, and appreciation for the difficult work you do.

Week after week, you stand before people carrying burdens they rarely share. You counsel marriages in crisis. You comfort families experiencing loss. You visit hospitals. You conduct funerals. You teach Scripture. You pray with the hurting. You carry responsibilities that most church members never fully see.

Your calling is not easy.

Yet because your calling is so important, it is worth asking a difficult question.

What are your people hearing from the pulpit?

More specifically, what are they feeling when they leave?

Are they leaving with hope?

Are they leaving with encouragement?

Are they leaving with a renewed understanding of God's grace?

Are they leaving with a deeper appreciation for God's love?

Or are they leaving feeling inadequate?

Are they leaving believing they are not praying enough, reading enough, trusting enough, giving enough, serving enough, witnessing enough, or believing enough?

Many faithful Christians have spent decades hearing sermons centered on what they should be doing better. While spiritual growth is certainly part of the Christian life, there is a danger when growth becomes the primary message and grace becomes the supporting message.

The Gospel is not primarily a message about what man must do.

The Gospel is primarily a message about what God has already done.

The Gospel is not primarily a story of human effort.

The Gospel is a story of divine grace.

The Gospel is not ultimately about earning God's favor.

The Gospel is about receiving God's favor through Christ.

This distinction matters because millions of believers are quietly exhausted.

They are trying.

They are serving.

They are giving.

They are praying.

They are struggling.

They are persevering.

Yet many still feel they are falling short.

The irony is that the very people who need encouragement often receive another challenge.

The very people who need hope often receive another reminder of their deficiencies.

The very people who need reassurance often receive another list of things they should be doing better.

Pastor, the Bible repeatedly describes shepherds as caretakers of the flock.

Shepherds guide.

Shepherds protect.

Shepherds encourage.

Shepherds comfort.

Shepherds lead sheep toward green pastures and still waters.

They do not continually remind sheep that they are inadequate sheep.

The purpose of this letter is not to criticize pastors.

The purpose is to remind pastors what Scripture says about their sacred responsibility.

This article will examine ten passages from Scripture that provide a blueprint for pastoral leadership.

These passages reveal a consistent theme.

God's people need truth.

God's people need growth.

God's people need correction.

But God's people also need grace.

They need hope.

They need encouragement.

They need reminders of God's love.

They need reminders that salvation is a gift.

They need reminders that Christ is enough.

And perhaps now more than ever, they need shepherds who help them leave church stronger than when they arrived.

Let us begin where every sermon should begin:

With the heart of God.

Ten Biblical Reminders for Every Pastor

1. Ephesians 2:8–9

Saved by Grace Through Faith

"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith, and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast."

Pastor, this may be the most important reminder in the entire New Testament.

The foundation of Christianity is not effort.

The foundation of Christianity is grace.

People are not saved because they prayed enough, served enough, gave enough, volunteered enough, or performed enough.

They are saved because God extended grace through Jesus Christ.

Every sermon should ultimately point back to this reality.

When believers leave church feeling as though they must somehow earn God's approval, the Gospel has been unintentionally obscured.

Growth is important.

Discipleship is important.

Obedience is important.

But these are responses to grace, not requirements for receiving grace.

Your congregation needs frequent reminders that salvation is a gift.

People who understand grace serve out of gratitude.

People who forget grace serve out of obligation.

One creates joy.

The other creates exhaustion.

Never allow your congregation to forget that Christianity begins and ends with grace.

2. Romans 8:1

No Condemnation in Christ

"Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus."

Pastor, many believers live under a cloud of condemnation.

Not because God placed it there.

Because they placed it there themselves.

Some carry guilt from decades ago.

Some carry shame from failures they cannot forget.

Some constantly compare themselves to others and feel spiritually inadequate.

Then they arrive at church hoping to hear good news.

The Apostle Paul could not have been clearer.

There is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.

Notice he did not say less condemnation.

He did not say reduced condemnation.

He said no condemnation.

When people leave church feeling condemned week after week, they may be hearing something very different from what Paul intended.

Your responsibility is not merely to identify sin.

It is also to proclaim freedom.

Remind people that God's grace is larger than their failures.

Remind people that forgiveness is real.

Remind people that Christ has already paid the debt.

That message changes lives.

3. Matthew 11:28–30

Come to Me and Rest

"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest."

Jesus knew people were tired.

Physically tired.

Emotionally tired.

Spiritually tired.

Today, many church members arrive carrying enormous burdens.

Financial burdens.

Family burdens.

Health burdens.

Relationship burdens.

Emotional burdens.

The question pastors should ask themselves is simple.

Does my sermon add another burden?

Or does it point people toward rest?

Jesus did not say:

"Come to me, and I will give you another list."

He said:

"I will give you rest."

Certainly, Christians should grow.

Certainly, Christians should mature.

But every sermon should contain a pathway toward peace.

A pathway toward hope.

A pathway toward rest.

People should leave knowing that Christ is not standing over them with a clipboard measuring their shortcomings.

He is extending His hand.

Inviting them to walk beside Him.

That image matters.

4. Psalm 23

The Shepherd Leads to Green Pastures

"The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing."

The imagery of Psalm 23 is powerful.

A shepherd leads.

A shepherd protects.

A shepherd restores.

A shepherd comforts.

A shepherd guides sheep toward nourishment.

Notice what David did not write.

"The Lord is my shepherd, therefore I should feel inadequate."

Instead, he wrote:

"I lack nothing."

Pastor, that statement should influence how shepherds lead today.

God's people need to be reminded what they possess.

They possess forgiveness.

They possess grace.

They possess hope.

They possess purpose.

They possess God's presence.

They possess eternal life.

Too many sermons focus exclusively on deficiencies.

Psalm 23 focuses on provision.

The flock should leave church reminded not only of where they need growth but also of the abundance God has already provided.

5. John 10:10

Life to the Full

"I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full."

Jesus did not come merely to prepare people for heaven.

He came to transform life today.

The Gospel should create joy.

Hope.

Peace.

Confidence.

Purpose.

A healthy church should be one of the most encouraging environments on earth.

People should leave inspired to live.

Inspired to love.

Inspired to serve.

Inspired to forgive.

Inspired to dream.

Inspired to trust God.

When church becomes synonymous with guilt, pressure, obligation, and inadequacy, something has gone wrong.

The Christian life was never intended to be joyless.

The abundant life described by Jesus should be reflected in the tone of our preaching.

People should leave believing life with God is better, richer, fuller, and more meaningful.

That is the Gospel.

6. Hebrews 10:22

Full Assurance of Faith

"Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart and with the full assurance that faith brings."

Notice the phrase "full assurance."

Not uncertainty.

Not anxiety.

Not insecurity.

Assurance.

Many believers spend years wondering whether they are doing enough.

Faith was never intended to be lived in constant fear of inadequacy.

Pastors should help people develop confidence in God's promises.

Confidence in God's character.

Confidence in God's faithfulness.

Confidence in God's love.

People need assurance because life is already filled with uncertainty.

The church should be a place where certainty about God's love is reinforced repeatedly.

7. 1 Thessalonians 5:11

Encourage One Another

"Therefore, encourage one another and build each other up."

Paul could have chosen many commands.

Yet he specifically chose encouragement.

The early church understood something many modern churches have forgotten.

Encouragement is not optional.

It is essential.

People grow when they are encouraged.

Children grow when they are encouraged.

Employees grow when they are encouraged.

Athletes grow when they are encouraged.

Believers grow when they are encouraged.

Every sermon should contain genuine encouragement.

Not flattery.

Not avoidance of truth.

Encouragement.

The Apostle Paul believed building people up was a fundamental responsibility of Christian leadership.

Pastors should, too.

8. Galatians 5:1

Freedom in Christ

"It is for freedom that Christ has set us free."

Many believers live as though Christianity is bondage.

More rules.

More obligations.

More requirements.

More pressure.

Paul says exactly the opposite.

Christ came to bring freedom.

Freedom from condemnation.

Freedom from guilt.

Freedom from legalism.

Freedom from trying to earn God's approval.

Pastor, if people leave church feeling trapped under impossible expectations, they are not experiencing the freedom Paul described.

Your sermons should help people walk in freedom.

Not fear.

Freedom creates joyful obedience.

Fear creates reluctant obedience.

The difference matters.

9. 1 Peter 5:2–3

Shepherd the Flock

"Be shepherds of God's flock that is under your care."

Peter's words are directed specifically toward leaders.

A shepherd's responsibility is care.

Not control.

Care.

People should feel cared for.

Known.

Valued.

Protected.

Loved.

The congregation is not an audience.

They are a flock entrusted to your care.

A shepherd who constantly criticizes sheep eventually wounds them.

A shepherd who encourages sheep helps them flourish.

Pastors should ask themselves regularly:

Am I feeding the flock?

Or am I frustrating the flock?

The answer may determine the spiritual health of the entire congregation.

10. John 3:16–17

Saved, Not Condemned

"For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him."

Pastor, perhaps no passage captures the heart of the Gospel more clearly.

Jesus came to save.

Jesus came to redeem.

Jesus came to restore.

Jesus came to reconcile.

Jesus did not come to condemn.

Certainly, He addressed sin.

Certainly, He called people to repentance.

But His mission was salvation.

When people consistently leave church feeling condemned rather than saved, something is missing.

The Gospel should always point people toward hope.

Toward redemption.

Toward grace.

Toward the incredible love of God.

Never forget why Jesus came.

And never allow your congregation to forget it either.

Pastor, Leave Them With Hope

As we bring this letter to a close, I want to return to a simple but important question.

What do your people feel when they leave church?

Not what did they learned.

Not what notes did they take.

Not what verses did they underline.

What do they feel?

Do they feel loved?

Do they feel encouraged?

Do they feel strengthened?

Do they feel hopeful?

Do they feel closer to God?

Do they feel grateful for His grace?

Or do they leave feeling that once again they have fallen short?

Pastor, your words matter more than you may ever know.

For thirty minutes, forty minutes, or an hour each week, you have a unique opportunity to shape how people see God, how people see themselves, and how people experience the Gospel.

That is a tremendous responsibility.

For some in your congregation, your sermon may be the only spiritual input they receive all week.

For some, it may be the one hour they have been looking forward to because life has been difficult.

For some, it may be the final thread of hope they are desperately trying to hold onto.

Never underestimate the power of your words.

The world already tells people they are not enough.

Social media tells them they are not successful enough.

Advertising tells them they are not attractive enough.

Employers tell them they are not productive enough.

Neighbors tell them they are not wealthy enough.

The culture tells them they are not important enough.

People hear messages of inadequacy every day.

The church should be different.

The church should be the place where people hear the truth about God's love.

The church should be the place where weary souls find rest.

The church should be the place where broken hearts find healing.

The church should be the place where sinners find grace.

The church should be the place where ordinary people discover that they matter deeply to God.

This does not mean abandoning truth.

This does not mean ignoring sin.

This does not mean eliminating repentance.

This does not mean avoiding difficult conversations.

Jesus never ignored sin.

Paul never ignored sin.

Peter never ignored sin.

But neither did they make condemnation the center of their message.

The center of their message was redemption.

The center of their message was grace.

The center of their message was hope.

The center of their message was Christ.

Somewhere along the way, many churches have unintentionally created a culture of perpetual striving.

People are always trying harder.

Always doing more.

Always chasing another spiritual benchmark.

Always wondering if they measure up.

Always wondering if God is disappointed.

Always wondering if they are enough.

Pastor, perhaps one of the greatest gifts you can give your congregation is the freedom to stop striving long enough to remember what Christ has already accomplished.

Remind them they are loved.

Remind them they are forgiven.

Remind them they are accepted.

Remind them they are seen.

Remind them they are valued.

Remind them they are not forgotten.

Remind them they are not walking alone.

Remind them that God's grace is bigger than their failures.

Remind them that God's mercy is new every morning.

Remind them that Christ's sacrifice was sufficient.

Remind them that salvation is a gift.

Remind them that God's love is not based upon performance.

Most importantly, remind them that while they will continue to grow throughout their lives, their worth was settled long ago at the cross.

When people understand that truth, something remarkable happens.

Growth no longer comes from fear.

Growth comes from gratitude.

Obedience no longer comes from guilt.

Obedience comes from love.

Service no longer comes from obligation.

Service comes from joy.

Faith no longer feels like a burden.

Faith becomes a privilege.

That is the Gospel.

That is the message people are longing to hear.

That is the message many pastors themselves need to hear.

The next time you stand before your congregation, challenge them.

Teach them.

Guide them.

Correct them when necessary.

Call them higher.

But before they leave, make sure they hear something else.

Make sure they hear what heaven has been declaring all along.

That they are loved.

That they are forgiven.

That they are redeemed.

That they are children of God.

That grace is sufficient.

That Christ is enough.

And because Christ is enough, they can walk out of those church doors with confidence, hope, peace, and joy.

Pastor, leave them with hope.

The world will give them plenty of reasons to be discouraged.

You have been called to remind them of the Good News.

And the Good News has always been better than they imagined.

Scriptural Foundation Summary

1.     Ephesians 2:8–9 — Grace, not works.

2.     Romans 8:1 — No condemnation.

3.     Matthew 11:28–30 — Rest for the weary.

4.     Psalm 23 — The shepherd restores.

5.     John 10:10 — Life to the full.

6.     Hebrews 10:22 — Full assurance of faith.

7.     1 Thessalonians 5:11 — Encourage and build up.

8.     Galatians 5:1 — Freedom in Christ.

9.     1 Peter 5:2–3 — Shepherd the flock with care.

10.                        John 3:16–17 — Saved, not condemned.

Together, these passages present a consistent biblical picture: shepherds are called to teach truth, encourage growth, proclaim grace, strengthen faith, and leave God's people with hope.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

When Will We Ever Be Enough? The Endless Sermon of Spiritual Inadequacy

 


When Will We Ever Be Enough?

The Endless Sermon of Spiritual Inadequacy

By Bill Conley

For more than sixty years, I have sat in church pews. I have attended churches of different sizes, different styles, and different denominations. For the past forty years, much of that time has been spent in non-denominational churches. I have listened to hundreds, perhaps thousands, of sermons.

Over those decades, I began noticing a pattern.

At first, it was subtle. Then it became impossible to ignore.

Week after week, month after month, year after year, I heard essentially the same message dressed up in different clothing.

You need more faith.

You need to trust God more.

You need to pray more.

You need to read your Bible more.

You need to serve more.

You need to give more.

You need to sacrifice more.

You need to witness more.

You need to commit more.

You need to surrender more.

You need to become more.

And hidden beneath all of those messages was a far more powerful message that often went unspoken:

You are not enough.

No matter how much you have grown, it is not enough.

No matter how much you have sacrificed, it is not enough.

No matter how much you have given, it is not enough.

No matter how much faith you have developed, it is not enough.

No matter how much you have changed your life, it is not enough.

The target continually moves.

The finish line continually shifts.

The believer is left chasing a spiritual standard that often feels impossible to reach.

Eventually, I found myself asking a simple question.

When do we get to be enough?

When does the average Christian get to sit in a church service and hear a pastor say:

"You are loved."

"You are accepted."

"You are forgiven."

"You are enough."

"God is not disappointed in you."

"God is not waiting for you to become someone else before He loves you."

"God's grace is sufficient."

For many churchgoers, especially those who have spent decades faithfully attending services, the constant message of improvement can become exhausting.

Life itself already tells us we are not enough.

Employers tell us we need to do better.

Advertisers tell us we need to look better.

Social media tells us we need to be more successful.

Society tells us we need to achieve more.

Parents tell children to do better.

Schools tell students to do better.

The world constantly whispers that we are falling short.

Must the church join the chorus?

The irony is that Christianity was founded upon one of the most liberating messages ever delivered to humanity.

Grace.

Not perfection.

Not performance.

Not achievement.

Grace.

The central message of the Gospel is not that mankind can earn God's approval through extraordinary effort.

The central message is that mankind could never earn God's approval, which is precisely why grace was necessary.

Yet somewhere along the way, many churches appear to have transformed grace into another performance system.

The language may sound different, but the emotional impact often feels remarkably similar.

Work harder.

Believe harder.

Serve harder.

Give harder.

Try harder.

Be better.

Do more.

The result is that many sincere Christians walk away from church services feeling inspired for a few moments, but burdened for the rest of the week.

They leave believing that God is perpetually dissatisfied with them.

They leave believing they are underperforming spiritually.

They leave believing they are falling short.

They leave believing they should somehow be more than they are.

This article is not an argument against spiritual growth.

Growth is good.

Learning is good.

Serving is good.

Generosity is good.

Faith is good.

The question is whether pastors have unintentionally created a culture where believers never arrive at a place of peace.

A culture where people are constantly reminded of their deficiencies but rarely reminded of their worth.

A culture where striving has replaced resting.

A culture where performance has overshadowed grace.

A culture where many good people quietly wonder if they will ever measure up.

Perhaps it is time to ask a difficult question.

If the Gospel is truly good news, why do so many believers leave church feeling inadequate?

And if salvation is truly by grace, why do so many sermons leave people feeling as though they are still trying to earn what God has already freely given?

Those questions deserve an honest conversation.

When Will We Ever Be Enough?

The Endless Sermon of Spiritual Inadequacy

Part 2: The Heart of the Problem

The issue is not that pastors are evil.

The issue is not that churches are intentionally trying to hurt people.

In fact, most pastors genuinely care about their congregations. Most sincerely want people to grow spiritually, strengthen their faith, improve their marriages, become better parents, and develop a deeper relationship with God.

Their intentions are often noble.

The problem lies in the unintended consequence of the message.

When virtually every sermon focuses on improvement, correction, deficiency, weakness, failure, or spiritual growth, people can begin to internalize a dangerous conclusion:

"I am not enough as I am."

For many believers, this conclusion develops slowly over years and decades.

It becomes part of their spiritual identity.

They begin living with a subtle feeling that God is perpetually disappointed in them.

They may never say it aloud.

They may never consciously think it.

Yet it lingers beneath the surface.

No matter what they accomplish spiritually, there is always another mountain to climb.

Read the Bible more.

Pray more.

Give more.

Serve more.

Volunteer more.

Attend more studies.

Bring more people to church.

Trust God more.

Have more faith.

Share your testimony more.

Sacrifice more.

The list never ends.

For some people, church begins to resemble a spiritual treadmill.

You are constantly moving, constantly sweating, constantly striving, but never arriving.

No matter how far you run, the scenery never changes.

You remain in the same place emotionally.

Still trying.

Still striving.

Still wondering if God is pleased with you.

Still wondering if you measure up.

The tragic reality is that many Christians who have faithfully attended church for thirty, forty, or fifty years carry an enormous burden of spiritual inadequacy.

They have raised families.

They have served their communities.

They have donated generously.

They have volunteered countless hours.

They have remained faithful through hardship.

Yet many still feel they are somehow falling short.

How did that happen?

Part of the answer lies in the way many sermons are constructed.

A common sermon formula looks something like this:

First, identify a problem.

Second, show how people are failing.

Third, provide a challenge to improve.

Fourth, send everyone home with action items.

Repeat next week.

Then repeat again.

And again.

And again.

Year after year.

The challenge is that there is very little room in this formula for celebration.

Very little room for affirmation.

Very little room for simply acknowledging that many people in the congregation are doing remarkably well despite difficult circumstances.

Consider the average church attendee.

Many are working full time.

Many are raising children.

Many are caring for aging parents.

Many are battling health issues.

Many are struggling financially.

Many are carrying emotional wounds nobody knows about.

Many are simply trying to survive another week.

Then Sunday arrives.

They walk into the church hoping for encouragement.

Hoping for peace.

Hoping for hope.

Hoping to be reminded that God loves them.

Instead, they are often handed another list of things they should be doing better.

Another reminder of where they fall short.

Another challenge to increase their effort.

Another reason to feel inadequate.

Eventually, some people become exhausted.

Not physically.

Spiritually.

Emotionally.

Mentally.

The constant message that improvement is required can create a subtle form of spiritual anxiety.

People begin measuring themselves against impossible standards.

They compare their prayer life to others.

Their Bible knowledge is shared with others.

Their faith in others.

Their service to others.

They're giving to others.

Their commitment to others.

Comparison becomes the measuring stick.

And comparison almost always produces discouragement.

There is another problem that rarely gets discussed.

The human brain naturally remembers criticism more strongly than praise.

Psychologists call this negativity bias.

A congregation may hear a pastor say ten positive things.

But if he spends twenty minutes talking about what people are not doing correctly, that is often what they remember.

That becomes the emotional takeaway.

The result is a church culture where people begin seeing themselves primarily through the lens of deficiency.

Not enough faith.

Not enough prayer.

Not enough trust.

Not enough commitment.

Not enough sacrifice.

Not enough obedience.

Not enough.

Not enough.

Not enough.

Yet when many people read the Gospels, they encounter a very different Jesus.

Jesus certainly challenged people.

He called people to repentance.

He called people to growth.

But He also comforted.

He healed.

He encouraged.

He restored.

He forgave.

He welcomed.

He lifted burdens.

People who encountered Jesus often left feeling lighter, not heavier.

Freer, not more trapped.

Hopeful, not condemned.

That distinction matters.

A great church should inspire growth without creating shame.

A great pastor should encourage transformation without fostering inadequacy.

A great sermon should challenge while simultaneously reminding people of their value.

People need to know they can improve.

But they also need to know they are loved right now.

Not someday.

Not after they become better.

Not after they become more spiritual.

Not after they finally get everything together.

Right now.

As they are.

With all their flaws.

With all their imperfections.

With all their struggles.

Perhaps the most overlooked truth in modern Christianity is this:

Growth and acceptance are not opposites.

A person can strive to become better while simultaneously believing they are already loved.

A person can seek growth while knowing they are already accepted.

A person can improve without believing they are broken.

A person can mature spiritually without believing they are inadequate.

That distinction changes everything.

Because when people believe they are fundamentally loved, growth becomes joyful.

When people believe they are fundamentally inadequate, growth becomes exhausting.

One leads to freedom.

The other leads to perpetual striving.

And after decades of listening to sermons, I cannot help but wonder how many Christians are desperately waiting to hear a message that sounds something like this:

Take a breath.

Rest.

God loves you.

You do not have to earn His affection.

You do not have to prove your worth.

You do not have to perform for His approval.

You are already loved.

You are already accepted.

You are already covered by grace.

And while there is always room to grow, your value was never dependent upon your performance in the first place.

Perhaps the Church Needs to Hear This Too

After a lifetime of sitting in church pews, listening to sermons, attending Bible studies, serving, giving, volunteering, praying, and trying to live a faithful life, I find myself returning to one simple question:

When will we ever be enough?

Not perfect.

Not sinless.

Not spiritually complete.

Simply enough.

For many Christians, the answer never seems to come.

Instead, another Sunday arrives.

Another sermon begins.

Another challenge is presented.

Another area of weakness is identified.

Another opportunity for improvement is highlighted.

Another reminder that we should be doing more.

And so the cycle continues.

The believer leaves with a notebook full of things to work on and a heart that feels just a little heavier than when they arrived.

What troubles me most is not that churches encourage growth.

Growth is essential.

A healthy marriage grows.

A healthy family grows.

A healthy business grows.

A healthy faith grows.

The issue is not growth.

The issue is the constant implication that where we are right now is somehow unacceptable.

That we are perpetually falling short.

That we are always disappointing God.

That we are always behind.

That we are always lacking.

That we are never quite measuring up.

For many people, church has unintentionally become one more place where they are reminded of their inadequacies.

The world already does that.

Employers do that.

Social media does that.

Television does that.

Advertising does that.

The culture does that every single day.

People are constantly told they need to look better, earn more, achieve more, own more, accomplish more, and become more.

The church was supposed to be different.

The church was supposed to be the place where weary people could come and rest.

The place where broken people could find healing.

The place where discouraged people could find hope.

The place where imperfect people could find acceptance.

The place where ordinary people could be reminded that they are loved.

Not because of what they have done.

Not because of what they have accomplished.

Not because they have finally reached some spiritual benchmark.

But because they are children of God.

Somewhere along the way, many churches have become heavily focused on performance.

The language is spiritual, but the pressure feels remarkably familiar.

Try harder.

Do more.

Give more.

Believe more.

Commit more.

Sacrifice more.

Serve more.

Trust more.

Pray more.

Read more.

The result is that many sincere Christians spend decades chasing a finish line that keeps moving farther away.

No matter how much they grow, there is always another challenge.

No matter how much they give, there is always another appeal.

No matter how much they serve, there is always another opportunity.

No matter how much faith they demonstrate, they are told they need more.

Eventually, some believers begin to wonder whether they will ever arrive.

Whether they will ever hear from the pulpit:

"You are doing better than you think."

"God is pleased with your faithfulness."

"God sees your efforts."

"God knows your struggles."

"God understands your limitations."

"God is proud of the way you continue moving forward."

"You are enough."

Those words are surprisingly rare.

Yet they may be exactly what millions of Christians need to hear.

Many church members are carrying burdens nobody sees.

They are fighting private battles.

They are caring for aging parents.

They are grieving losses.

They are struggling financially.

They are managing health problems.

They are raising children.

They are trying to hold marriages together.

They are doing the best they can.

What if they need encouragement more than correction?

What if they need reassurance more than another challenge?

What if they need hope more than another assignment?

What if they need to hear that God's grace is not merely the starting point of the Christian life but the foundation of it from beginning to end?

The Apostle Paul wrote that we are saved by grace through faith.

Grace is not something we graduate from.

Grace is not something we outgrow.

Grace is not God's temporary solution until we become good enough.

Grace is the entire point.

If salvation ultimately depends on our performance, then none of us have any hope.

If salvation depends upon becoming perfect, none of us will ever arrive.

If salvation depends upon doing enough, the question becomes obvious:

How much is enough?

The beautiful answer of Christianity has always been that Jesus was enough.

Not us.

Him.

His grace.

His sacrifice.

His mercy.

His love.

That truth should bring relief.

It should bring peace.

It should bring rest.

Instead of constantly asking believers to focus on everything they lack, perhaps churches should spend more time reminding people what they already possess.

They possess God's love.

They possess God's forgiveness.

They possess God's grace.

They possess God's acceptance.

They possess immeasurable worth.

They possess value that has nothing to do with performance.

And perhaps the most important message many Christians need to hear today is not that they must do more.

Perhaps it is this:

Keep growing.

Keep learning.

Keep serving.

Keep loving.

But stop believing that God's love for you is waiting on the other side of your improvement.

Stop believing that your worth is tied to your performance.

Stop believing that you must become someone else before you can be accepted.

You are loved today.

You are accepted today.

You are covered by grace today.

And while there will always be room to grow, your value has never depended upon how much you accomplish.

Maybe that is the sermon millions of weary Christians have been waiting to hear.

Maybe it is time for the church to remember it as well.