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Giving up 
 

From Lenten to Easter to the Wonders of Worth. By Keith Getty 



Cross700


“It’s almost Easter. What did you give up for Lent this year?”
 
Easter is almost upon us, so it may be a question you have heard in the past several weeks. Most of us know Lenten as the centuries-old Christian practice of fasting or abstaining from some activity or thing for 40 days in an attempt to prepare our hearts leading up to the remembrance and celebration of Christ’s death and resurrection at Easter.
 
So as we near the end of Lenten and our hearts turn towards Easter, it is natural to look back at all we’ve “given up”. But it is more important that we look up and see what has been given up for us.
 
The very question itself—what did you “give up”—reveals a dichotomised issue with which many Christ-followers struggle today: the subtle divide between our own actions affecting our personal significance, and Christ’s finished work establishing this significance. We vacillate between the two mysteries, struggling with the issue of our own self-worth because we still tend to affix it to earthly patterns and possessions that can either be engaged or “given up,” even if only for a brief season. The modern Christian can easily find himself asking, even if only subconsciously, “If I’m more worthy in Christ’s eyes because I gave this up, then what else do I need to give up to finish becoming worthy?”
 
The answer is: nothing.
 
The Easter story pulls back the eternal curtain to reveal the ultimate mission of Christ, who said it best from His own cross: “It is finished.” This means there is nothing for us to give up in order to establish greater worth before God. In Christ and His cross, our worth has already been fully and eternally established. But we tend to forget this most important truth, leaning instead back into our own efforts. Lent and Easter remind us again that our worth has already been firmly established solely in the work of Christ.
 
This is actually the reason we wrote the song, My Worth Is Not In What I Own with our good friend, Graham Kendrick. We set out to express a gospel-centered response to the very struggle of worth and identity that each of us face in the modern age. The season of Lent actually calls attention to this struggle in a unique and useful way. As we consider earthly things from which to abstain for a season, we again face the question of how various “things” in our lives affect our spiritual worth, causing us to face our own struggles with stewardship, accomplishment, age, beauty, image, and idolatry.
 
We expressed these questions in the opening lyrics of this song:
 
My worth is not in what I own
Not in the strength of flesh and bone
But in the costly wounds of love
At the cross
 
My worth is not in skill or name
In win or lose, in pride or shame
But in the blood of Christ that flowed
At the cross

 
But these words are more easily sung than lived. So much of who we are has become wrapped up in individualism, self-entitlement, and narcissism. From whom we marry, to our careers, to what church we attend, to our opinions about church music, every choice we make seems to centre upon ourselves. Just like the “what did you give up” question, we tend to live in a gospel story that pens ourselves as the main characters.
 
When we think like this, it becomes all too easy for the gospel to funnel down into the consumerism in which we tend to live. It is a self-focused existence, not just reflected in the extravagance of our possessions, but also in the condemnation of our hearts. We attempt to bear weights that only God can bear, and then we are surprised when they crush us with anxiety, confusion, and bitterness.
 
But as Lent gives way to Easter, something incredible happens. We are reminded and transformed yet again by the simple truth that we are not made to be the authors of—or even the leading characters in—the story of our own fulfillment. No matter how much we were able to pursue good things or give up bad things, we ultimately needed a Saviour. We still do. We can only find fulfillment for our selves outside of ourselves—in Him. So then, there are two distinct wonders at play here: in ourselves, we have infinite value before God. And yet, in our selves, we are completely unworthy and unable to muster even a fraction of the cost of fulfillment.
 
Easter then reminds us that apart from Christ, we could give up everything and still gain nothing. But in Christ, we are free to give up anything because we have already gained everything, though we deserve nothing. The two wonders have come together like treasures of infinite worth being poured into fragile, earthen jars. We have been free to refrain during Lent, yet the lyrics of this refrain remind us:
 
Two wonders here that I confess
My worth and my unworthiness
My value fixed - my ransom paid
At the cross

 
At the cross, humanity’s longing for redemption has moved past our own efforts to merely refrain from certain things. Instead we can now trust in the One who did not refrain from loving us, even though it cost Him His very life. Easter reminds us of this transition of confidence and belief, calling us again to trust solely and fully in the finished work of Christ, and nothing else. It is no longer about anything we can “give up” for Him, but rather about the One “who loved [us], and gave himself up for [us] (Galatians 2:20 NASB) (emphasis mine).
 

 
Image | Phil Thep | Freely



Keith Getty and his wife, Kristyn, occupy a unique space in the world of music as pre-eminent modern hymn writers and global ambassadors for the genre. Perhaps best-known for the modern hymn, In Christ Alone (written by Keith with Stuart Townend), the Gettys have helped reinvent the traditional hymn form and invigorate the interest in hymns of a whole new generation of people, creating a catalog of songs teaching Christian doctrine and crossing musical genres. 

SingYou can find the lyrics to My Worth Is Not in What I Own as well as free sheet music and mp3 of the song here.

Also, you can purchase the Gettys’ latest album release, Sing! Live from the Getty Music Worship Conference containing this song and other great modern hymns here.


 
Baptist Times, 20/03/2018
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