Understanding Grace - Charles Swindoll
Understanding Grace
by Charles R. Swindoll
John 1:14
What exactly is grace? And is it limited to Jesus' life and ministry?
You may be surprised to know that Jesus never used the word itself. He
just taught it and, equally important, He lived it. Furthermore, the
Bible never gives us a one-statement definition, though grace appears
throughout its pages . . . not only the word itself but numerous demonstrations
of it. Understanding what grace means requires our going back to an old
Hebrew term that meant "to bend, to stoop." By and by, it came to
include the idea of "condescending favor."
If you have traveled
to London, you have perhaps seen royalty. If so, you may have noticed
sophistication, aloofness, distance. On occasion, royalty in England
will make the news because someone in the ranks of nobility will stop,
kneel down, and touch or bless a commoner. That is grace. There is
nothing in the commoner that deserves being noticed or touched or
blessed by the royal family. But because of grace in the heart of the
queen, there is the desire at that moment to pause, to stoop, to touch,
even to bless.
The late pastor and Bible scholar Donald
Barnhouse perhaps said it best: "Love that goes upward is worship; love
that goes outward is affection; love that stoops is grace."
To
show grace is to extend favor or kindness to one who doesn't deserve it
and can never earn it. Receiving God's acceptance by grace always stands
in sharp contrast to earning it on the basis of works. Every time the
thought of grace appears, there is the idea of its being undeserved. In
no way is the recipient getting what he or she deserves. Favor is being
extended simply out of the goodness of the heart of the giver.
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