Grace – What is it?
All through the Bible we read about grace – God’s
grace! It sounds good, but what is grace? In this world we are used to being rewarded
for good work and being penalized for failures.
So, grace is a difficult concept for us to begin to understand. When it comes to salvation, we sometimes
wonder, what proof is there that we have it?
Can we ever do enough? Are we
good enough? Scripture says that none of
us can ever do enough! Earn Salvation on
our own! So, God in His love for us gives
us grace. When God sent His Son to earth
to be crucified, He paid all the debts we will ever owe by making the only
sacrifice we will ever need!
Scripture says that grace Is a gift. A free gift of eternal
life from God to us. We can’t earn it!
We don’t have to pay it back. We can’t reconcile it. But we can accept it. Believe that it is true. Grace is a gift God
gives to us through Christ. A gift that
changes us as well as gives us eternal life. And when we receive this grace, we can pass it
along to others. We can grace others with forgiveness and kindness and mercy. And we can share God’s amazing gift of grace with
them. We can pass this grace along
because grace is the Voice that calls us to change and then gives us the power
to change.
Scripture says: “For by grace are you saved through faith,
and that not of yourselves, it is a gift from God, not of works lest any person
should boast.” (Ephesians 2:8-9) This
passage tells us that we are saved by God’s gift of grace, but our small part
is to accept that grace. Our part is faith. Belief. Scripture says: “Without
faith it is impossible to please God.” (Hebrews
11:6)
We are changed when we believe in Christ! When we believe we receive His Spirit coming
into us and being a part of us and guiding us. We can open ourselves all the
way to the Holy Spirit’s calling in our lives, or we can keep something back
for ourselves. It’s our call. Scripture
says: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that
whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.” (John
3:16) We do not receive eternal life because of our good works. But after we believe in Christ as Savior, the
grace we receive changes us (if we allow it) and causes us to start walking in
good works.
The life of the apostle Paul illustrates how the power of
grace can change a person so completely.
Paul was a different person before he met Christ. Paul’s name when he was born was “Saul”. But
after Saul became a Christian, he changed his name to “Paul” to show that he
was a new person in Christ. Back when he
was “Saul” he was a highly educated Jewish person who hated Jesus and hated
Christians.
Saul was a wealthy well-educated Pharisee. (Acts 23:6) He studied
in the best schools under the cream of the cream. – the most prestigious religious
educators and Pharisees. He had developed his own interpretations of the
Scriptures, and he thought he knew it all.
He was stubborn and allowed his legalistic and incorrect doctrine to
separate him from God’s grace. Knowledge
of God kept him from knowing God. Are we
ever a bit like Saul? Do we ever think
we are too modern and intelligent to believe God’s Word or accept His
unconditional grace?
Saul was with the religious
group that stoned the first Christian martyr, Steven, to death! (Acts 8:1) Then
later Saul, who was always eager to stamp out Christianity, was traveling to
the town of Damascus to find and arrest all the Christians living there. The Jewish
high priest in Jerusalem had written arrest warrants for followers of Jesus who
were living in Damascus. Saul took those
arrest warrants and was on his way to Damascus to arrest Christians. He was anxious
to drag those Christians off to prison and then execution.
But God had other plans for Saul. Scripture says that while Saul and his men
were on the road to Damascus, suddenly a light shone around him from
heaven. Saul fell to the ground and he
heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” Saul, shaking and stunned answered, “Who are
You, Lord?” And the Lord answered, “I am
Jesus, whom you are persecuting. It is
hard for you to kick against the goads.” (Acts 9:3-9)
Blinded by the light and laying on the ground shaking, Saul
asked: “Lord, what do You want me to do?”
And the Lord answered him, “Arise and go into the city, and you will be
told what you must do.” The men with
Saul were speechless as they too heard the Voice and saw the light. When Saul,
still trembling, got up from the ground, he couldn’t see. His eyes were blinded. The men led him by the hand and brought him
to Damascus. And he was three days
without sight, and Saul neither ate or drank.
(Acts 9:3-9)
This experience may not have seemed like grace, but Saul desperately
wanted to follow Jesus now that he realized that Jesus was more than a man. The Holy Spirit spoke to Ananias, a follower
of Christ, and told Ananias to go to Damascus and pray with Saul and show him
God’s grace. So, Ananias obeyed God and hurried
to Saul’s bedside. Ananias then lay
hands on Saul and prayed for him that he might receive Christ. Saul was hungry for grace and anxious to
receive the Holy Spirit in his life. When
Ananias prayed for Saul, he was filled with the Holy Spirit and his eyesight
was restored and the Scripture says: “Immediately he (Paul) preached the Christ
in the synagogues, that He is the Son of God.” (Acts 9:20)
After accepting God’s grace and letting it change him, Saul
changed his name to Paul and started preaching and writing about God’s
grace. Paul was a new person in Christ! He spent the rest of his life as a missionary
to the Gentiles and spreading the good news of Christ in Greece and Turkey and
Rome. His passion was to share the good news of God’s grace that Christ saves
and changes our lives He was the one
who said: ” For me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.” (Philippians 1:21) Yes,
Paul was martyred for his faith. He paid the price as he picked up his cross
and followed Christ. During his missionary
journeys he was shipwrecked, whipped and left for dead, persecuted by his fellow
Jewish Pharisees and imprisoned in Rome. He suffered for the faith.
We are blessed to be able to read some of Paul’s sermons and
writings in the New Testament. Like a flame catching fire, Christianity spread
across Europe and all around the world!
But it all started when Paul, bubbling over with God’s Holy Spirit
grace, spread the gospel to the Ephesians and the Colossians, the Philippians
and the Romans. The Corinthians and the
Galatians and the Thessalonians and also to his fellow Jewish brothers.
The changing power of grace is illustrated in the life of
the apostle Paul, who was once the Christian hater – turned-Christ lover. He could have resisted God’s grace. Or only carved out a small space for God in
his life and kept the rest for himself.
But Paul went all the way! Are you
listening for God’s still small Voice in your life? Are you sharing God’s grace to those around
you? Has God’s grace changed you? Are you going all the way?
Many of the truths from this blog were taken from Max Lucado’s
book, “Grace, More than we Deserve, Greater than we Imagine”
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