New Year: A Prayer of Faith and Reflection

New Year: A Prayer of Faith and Reflection

We welcome the dawn of a new year. Our hearts turn to reflections on the past and hopes for the future. In the spirit of renewal and resolve, the timeless Puritan prayers compiled by Arthur Bennett in The Valley of Vision can help us keep a Christ-centered perspective as we step into a new year.

We find one prayer in this cherished collection that is especially fitting for this first day of January. It begins:

O Love Beyond Compare,
Thou art good when thou givest,
when thou takest away,
when the sun shines upon me,
when night gathers over me.

This prayer reminds us that the faithfulness of God does not wax and wane with the seasons or circumstances of life. The calendar page turns, but God does not change. Whether we faced joys or trials in the year behind us, the Lord has remained constant. This truth, foundational to the saving work of Jesus, is an anchor to our souls as we face unknowns in a new year.

Reflect on God’s Providence This New Year

Blessings and challenges alike shaped the past year under God’s sovereign hand. The prayer continues:

Thou hast loved me before the foundation of the world,
and in love didst redeem my soul;
Thou dost love me still,
in spite of my hard heart, ingratitude, distrust.

What better foundation for a new year than the assurance that God’s love for His people is eternal? Before time began, He chose us in Christ. He invites us to rest in His providence and to trust His purposes.

A Resolved New Year

It is natural to dwell on the thought of “resolutions” as one stands at the threshold of a new year. Yet, how often do our resolutions center on self-improvement, divorced from repentance? Let us instead resolve to:

Rest in Christ’s Presence

Our prayer remembers Jesus’ steadfastness:

Thy goodness has been with me another year,
leading me through a twisting wilderness,
in retreat helping me to advance,
when beaten back making sure headway.
Thy goodness will be with me in the year ahead;
I hoist sail and draw up anchor,
With thee as the blessed pilot of my future as of my past.

The Christian life does not shield us from trials. Yet, Jesus remains our Lord, Redeemer, and Rock, and the Spirit is our Comforter and Helper. We face the hardships of this year not by relying on our own strength, but by leaning on the sustaining presence of our Savior.

Deepen Our Faith

“Faith,” in the English language, comes from the Latin fide. It is a root we also find in the English word, “confidence.” To have faith in Christ means placing our confidence in Him. May we continue this year to deepen our confidence in His salvation and sanctification of our souls. Our prayer concludes with this:

I bless thee that thou hast veiled my eyes to the waters ahead.
If thou has appointed storms of tribulation,
thou wilt be with me in them;
If I have to pass through tempests of persecution and temptation,
I shall not drown;
If I am to die,
I shall see thy face the sooner;
If a painful end is to be my lot,
grant me grace that my faith fail not;
If I am to be cast aside from the service I love,
I can make no stipulation;
Only glorify thyself in me whenever in comfort or trial,
as a chosen vessel meet always for thy use.

To echo the exhortation of the Apostle Paul: “So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31). Each day of this new year is an opportunity to glorify our Maker. Let us commit as a church body to spur one another on in love and good works (Hebrews 10:24). Let us pray for one another, bear each other’s burdens, and rejoice together in the faithfulness of our Lord.

Happy New Year!

Good Shepherd Bible Church is an Acts 29 church located in Pataskala, OH serving the eastern Columbus area.

We invite you to explore our website to learn more about GSBC, consider connecting at our church, or read about our core beliefs.

Grace In the Messy Church

Grace In the Messy Church

The church is often (and should remain) a messy place, full of broken people navigating the tensions of life and faith. A truth stands at the center of it all that gives purpose, hope, and transformation: the overwhelming grace of God through Jesus Christ. In 2 Corinthians 5:14-15, the Apostle Paul reminds us that Christ’s love compels and controls us, offering a new lens for our lives—a lens obsessed with grace.

For the love of Christ controls us, because we have concluded this: that one has died for all, therefore all have died; and He died for all, that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for Him who for their sake died and was raised.
2 Corinthians 5:14-15

An End to Scorekeeping

Grace is radical. It’s the end of tallying our failures or victories. It’s not about leniency or a second chance to prove ourselves. Grace doesn’t depend on our actions—it flows from the heart of God.

Too often, we think of grace as something we earn or as a safety net when we fail. But true grace is rooted in the Giver, not the receiver. God redeemed us even while our hearts rebelled. That’s the scandal of grace: He gave Himself completely for those who wanted nothing of Him.

As Paul writes, “one has died for all, therefore all have died.” Christ’s death brought an end to our old, sin-burdened lives. When we meet Jesus in His death, we experience resurrection. Christ fully takes away the weight of sin under which we were once dead and buried. Christ’s resurrection invites us to a daily surrender, a repeated recognition of the grace that sustains us.

An End to Purposelessness

When grace grips our hearts, it frees us from a pattern of “do” into a new paradigm of “done.” Paul goes on to say that Christ died “that those who live might no longer live for themselves but for Him who for their sake died and was raised.” This is where grace takes hold of our purpose.

Tim Keller captures this idea beautifully: grace in Christ gives us “a blessedness of self-forgetfulness.”1 In a world obsessed with self—our goals, achievements, and desires—grace pulls us out of ourselves and centers us on Christ. It shows us that our purpose isn’t tied to what we can do for God. Our purpose comes from what He has already done for us.

Living for Christ means freedom from the crushing weight of self-fulfillment. Instead of striving to create meaning in our lives, we rest in His grace. The Christian life is not about what we accomplish, but how He loves, saves, and transforms us.

Grace Changes Everything

Paul points us to the reality that our motivation as believers should be marked by an obsession with God’s love for us. This love, which Christ demonstrates through His sacrifice, changes everything. Grace ends scorekeeping and dissolves purposelessness. We are free to live for the One who died and rose for us.

Grace frees us from the burdens of sin and self, inviting us into a life of joy and worship. This is the heart of the messy church: not perfect people striving for perfection, but broken people captivated by perfect grace. In it, His Spirit helps us die to ourselves and truly live for His glory.

Footnotes

1. Tim Keller, The Freedom of Self Forgetfulness: The Path to True Christian Joy (10Publishing, 2012).

This article is a recap of a sermon preached by Pastor Hunter Sipe at Good Shepherd Bible Church on Sunday, December 29, 2024 entitled Messy Church: Part 1. This sermon begins our short miniseries Messy Church: A Vision for People Who Are Desperate for Grace. This sermon and others are available for listening on the GSBC Sermon Podcast.

Good Shepherd Bible Church is an Acts 29 church located in Pataskala, OH serving the eastern Columbus area.

We invite you to explore our website to learn more about GSBC, consider connecting at our church, or read about our core beliefs.