Greetings,
Week 15 of the lockdown đ.
As of this writing, Saturday afternoon, there are still no cases pf COVID-19 in both Dixon and Sheridan, including staff for at least 3 weeks. Praise God!
There are rumors of IDOC opening up the facilities to volunteers per the e-mail from the Sheridan Chaplain. Praise God! No dates, but plans are being made. Two requirements are all volunteers will have to have a current TB test and an updated counter id picture. Iâm looking forward to returning, but have hesitations. Though COVID appears to be und control in both Dixon and Sheridan there are risks, but the risk is everywhere. However, I do covet prayers for peace and an increasing faith and trust in Godâs protection. Another area of prayer is I will be able to adapt SOCPM to any volunteer changes. Class size is a concern with SOCPM having so many students. Iâm somewhat set on class content for the first weeks and the next curriculum. But want Godâs confirmation. Finally, I think to return to the classroom and pick-up as if nothing has helped is impartial. It is a different world today than when we last met on March 13. Pray for wisdom and God-glorifying discussion in tasing about COVID-19 and racism. Racism is a fragile topic and requires godly wisdom in the discussion we are certain to have. Please pray that I will be able to glorify God and not speak any words of decisiveness.
The class size of returning students may not be as cumbersome as I expect. Especially current students keep paroling. Two more paroled this past week Chad and Anthony. Chad was a student since May 2019 in both Malachi Dads and Discipleship. He was quiet most of the time but seemed sincere in his seeking to grow as a dad and a Christian. Anthony was a Malachi Dad since September 2019. He signed up for Discipleship in October 2019, but only attended two weeks. One other parolee, also an Anthony was a Malachi Dad for several weeks but dropped before earring a certificate. Please be certain to include Chad, Anthony P., and Anthony R. in your prayers.
For reasons unknown to me there was no message this week, but the desire to provide the students some teaching. I sent an article from Got Questions, âWhat Does it Mean to be Saved by Grace?â As I explained in my short intro to the students. I donât want want to just assume all of them know what it means to be saved by grace, despite them having heard the Gospel numerous time if not weekly. I take Scripture like 2 Timothy 2:15 and James 3:1 as we should all Scripture seriously. I shudder at the thought of one of my students who professed Christ to be one of the many spoken of in Matthew 7:21-23.
I appreciate your prayers and support even more so as the possible day of returning to the prions draws near
Blessing to you and your loved ones, stay safe and be intentional in being drawn nearer to our great Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
To Him be the glory in ALL things and to Him alone!
Scott Kalas
Soldiers of Christ Prison Ministries
Weekly Message
Hey guys, Sorry, but my church did not have a teaching Wednesday night. But I wanted to still share something with you and perhaps you have a sound Biblical answer to the question below, but I never want to fall short of thinking on anything as vital as where you will spend eternity (Matthew 7:21-23). If you have a sound Biblical answer, praise God. Perhaps youâre Biblically sound but could use some help in explaining âWhat it means to be saved?â to others. If so I pray this will put you on more confident footing when God uses you to answer the question when asked.
Question: "What does it mean to be saved by grace?"
The concept of grace as found in the Bible is multifaceted, but it can be summed up in the definition âundeserved favor.â The Bible says that we are saved by grace. The grace of God is expressed by Godâs forgiveness of our sins, and His blessings to us include peace and fulfillment in this life and, in the life to come, unencumbered fellowship with Him for all eternity. Just as the song âAmazing Graceâ has gained almost universal acceptance, it is difficult to find any religious expression with roots in Christianity that does not extoll the virtues of grace. No one with even minimal exposure to Christianity would be so crass as to claim that he has lived a life of such sterling character that God owes him eternal life. The vast majority will admit that they have shortcomings and are in need of Godâs grace in some form.
However, there is much misunderstanding about being saved by grace. A great many who call themselves Christians assume that the grace of God has established a system whereby the sinner can mitigate his deserved punishment by his own efforts. For some this may be a formal system of sacraments that infuse the soul with the grace of God. For others the system is less formal but still includes various religious activities, such as church attendance, baptism, contributing to the offering, and doing good deeds. While most agree that ânobodyâs perfect,â many say that God in His âgraceâ will overlook our sins if He sees that we have made a genuine effort to do the right thing, mend our ways, and avail ourselves of the help He offers through the churchâif He sees that the trajectory of our lives is headed in the right direction, then in His âgraceâ He will forgive our sins and grant us eternal life. In this view of âgrace,â the sinner does not earn eternal life in an absolute sense, but his penitent response and genuine effort does trigger a gracious response from the Father. This belief, although widespread, contradicts the true meaning of grace (âunmerited favorâ).
This example may help illustrate the above view of grace: a teenager works hard all summer to save money to buy a car. He works a regular job and does yard work and odd jobs on the side. He saves his money and does not spend it frivolously. Nevertheless, at the end of the summer, he simply does not have enough money to buy a car that will meet his needs. His father, seeing his diligence and frugality, graciously steps in and not only makes up the difference but also adds more money to the car fund so that his son can buy a car that is better than he thought he could ever afford. The sonâs best effort was not good enough, but the fatherâs grace makes up the difference. No one would claim that the father was obligated to make up the difference, so, when he does, it is an act of grace. If the son had been fired from his job for showing up late, had lazed around at the pool every day instead of working, or had spent what money he had on fast food and video games, then the father would not have stepped in to make up the difference. It would be incorrect to say that the son âearnedâ the car, for he did not, but his effort did trigger a gracious response from his father.
According to the Bible, is this really grace? The answer is NO! Grace is undeserved favor; it is Godâs blessing on the unworthy. In the example above, the father bestowed his favor because he felt his sonâs efforts should be rewardedâthe fatherâs gift was based on a genuine effort by the son and was therefore not true grace. Jesus illustrated true grace with the story of a father who received his runaway son with celebratory joyâa totally unworthy individual who brought nothing to his father except dishonor and shame was lavished with undeserved blessings (Luke 15:11â24).
We are saved by grace, not by a mixture of Godâs grace and our meritorious works. According to Scripture, we can do nothing to earn salvation, nor are our best efforts good enough to elicit a gracious response from God so that He will make up the difference. All of our righteous deeds are as filthy rags (Isaiah 64:6). Even considering our best efforts, we have fallen short of Godâs standard of righteousness (Romans 3:23), and we deserve death (Romans 6:23). We are not commanded to âdo our bestâ for God but to love Him perfectly and completely (Matthew 22:37). We fail in that. The command is not to âtryâ to love our neighbors but to actually succeed in loving our neighbors as we love ourselves (Matthew 22:39). In spite of our âbest efforts,â we failâand who can honestly claim they gave it their âbest effortâ anyway?
People will often try to comfort those who realize their shortcomings by saying something like, âDonât be afraidâGod knows your heart,â as if that should be a comfort. If God knows our hearts, we are doomed indeedâthere is no place left to hide! Our only hope is to place our faith in Jesus Christ who lived a perfect life, died on the cross to pay for our sins, and rose again. Our sin is imputed to Him, and His righteousness is imputed to us when we trust Him (2 Corinthians 5:21). We are justified not by our works (Romans 3:20) but by Jesusâ resurrection (Romans 4:25). Faith itself is not a âgood workâ that causes God to take notice of us. Faith is repenting of our sin, admitting that we are hopelessly and helplessly lost and unable to do anything to gain Godâs favor, then simply accepting the salvation that He offers freely.
We are saved by grace; the work is Godâs, not ours. âNow to the one who works, wages are not credited as a gift but as an obligation. However, to the one who does not work but trusts God who justifies the ungodly, their faith is credited as righteousnessâ (Romans 4:4â5). Here we see two great truths. First, God justifies the ungodlyânot people who have done their best and somehow elicited a gracious response from God. God justifies those who do not deserve it. Second, God justifies people who receive salvation by faithânot people who give it their best effort. If they are justified in any part based on what they do, they are receiving wages, not a gift. If grace is based on works to any degree, then it is not grace (Romans 11:6).
We are saved by grace from beginning to end. Once a person has come to faith in Christ, he will undoubtedly realize that the only reason he was able to have faith is that God was drawing him even before he knew it (see John 6:44). Left to himself, the sinner would have continued to rebel and flee from God. Even before we believe, the very desire to come to God is Godâs grace at work to save us. âSalvation belongs to the LORDâ (Psalm 3:8, ESV; cf. Revelation 7:10).
Salvation by grace means that, from first to last, it is undeserved. Jesus is the Author and Finisher of our faith (Hebrews 12:2). Grace is not God doing 95 or even 99.9 percent, with us making up the difference. Grace is God doing 100 percent and our humble acceptance of it, recognizing that we are unworthy and have nothing to contribute.
Discipleship
Dixon Correctional Center
Class canceled until further notice
Sheridan Correctional Center Afternoon
Class canceled until further notice
Sheridan Correctional Center Evening
Class canceled until further notice
Christian Living
Dixon Correctional Center
Class canceled until further notice
Sheridan Correctional Center Early
Class canceled until further notice
Sheridan Correctional Center Late
Class canceled until further notice
SOCPM Alumni
Anthony P.
Soldiers of Christ
Sheridan: 09/2019 thru 03/2020
Paroled 06/23/2020
Anthony R.
Soldiers of Christ
Sheridan: 05/2019 thru 06/2019
Paroled 06/26/2020
Chad
Soldiers of Christ
Sheridan: 05/2019 thru 03/2020
Paroled 06/26/2020
Wesley Ministries
Illinois River Correctional Center
Bible Study canceled until further notice