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The Supernatural Power Of Grace
When we talk of biblical grace, we need to remember it is a gift of God
- it has purpose and is powerful. We can’t stir it up or make it happen; it is
God initiated.
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God is working His influence into our lives, not through control but through loving relationship. There is no doubt about it, He is at work in us all the time. Grace is an inward working that transforms us into the fullness of Christ. Outwardly grace brings forth His image to make Him known through our lives.
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In the hands of an unscrupulous master, this can be scary, and deadly. God, on the other hand, is faithful, kind, and perfect in love, wholly trustworthy. He doesn’t force His will on us; He draws us near, by grace, into greater revelations of His love. Charis has different applications within different contexts; for us, the context is one of God’s love and kindness.
Written
By Destiny Image
Grace — what an interesting term. The Church has been wrestling with it for
ages.
What is grace?
As I have contemplated and wrestled with
that question for nearly four decades, I have come to realize it is so much
more than we make it to be; and at the same time, it is everything we have made
it to be and yet simpler and more relational.
The idea that grace is defined primarily as
“God’s unmerited favor” doesn’t capture how it empowers dramatic transformation
and releases so much power in and through the life of a child of God.
Let’s take a moment and look at this word
that is so important to our faith.
In the Greek language, the word grace is charis;
from which charisma is derived.
Charis is a secular Greek
word that the apostles chose to use for a spiritual purpose.
Generally, it means a kindness given, favor
bestowed, a gift.
It is a term often used for when someone of
greater stature is generous toward a lesser by offering them a kindness, a gift
of favor.
Charis most often was
used for artistic or poetic purpose.
For instance, when we see a bride in her
dress we might say, “You look radiant,”
or, “She carries such grace.”
We are being poetic; we are making an
aesthetic statement.
However, charis also had a lesser
used ethical meaning as well.
If we were left with no more understanding
than this, it would seem an odd word to explain God’s grace.
However, there was more to this word as it
began to be used in a different context; one of power.
It may be added that in later Greek ‘charis’
also had the sense of force or power.
It could be a spell, or demonic force,
affecting human life with supernatural influences.
In Euripides, it was a power from the
underworld that could convey the virtues of a dead hero to his living family or
followers.
This sense, too, though set in a new
context, was used in the New Testament: grace became the power of God to enable
Christians to live the new life in Christ. (Grace; The International Standard Bible
Encyclopedia, Vol. 2, 548.)
Looking at the two expressions of grace
mentioned — “saving grace” and “empowering grace” and only these two
expressions — it is important to understand that the apostles were looking for
language to communicate something beyond prior human experience.
When you are speaking of the Maker of all
things, words are naturally limited in capturing fully who He is or what He is
doing.
Finding the right words can be challenging
at the least and often not perfect.
They were choosing the best words available
to help people understand how the Spirit engages humans at salvation and the
power given moment by moment as we walk out the personal process of
transformation.
It is not something simply given at the
moment of salvation, it is to be lived from moment by moment, throughout our
lives.
There are many Scriptures that support the
thought that the power of God is what sustains us, keeps us, and empowers us to
be exactly what He created us to be — sons and daughters who overcome darkness
and shine with His light.
Perhaps Second
Corinthians 12:9 is the best-known verse, “But
he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in
weakness’” (2
Corinthians 12:9).
We can see in this verse that there is an
ongoing relationship between God’s grace and our capacity to live a
Spirit-empowered life.
There are many other verses in Scripture to
support this understanding of grace. The following are just a few:
“He gives power to the faint, and to him who has no
might he increases strength” (Isaiah 40:29).
“I can do all things through him who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:13).
“For I, the Lord your God, hold your right hand; it is
I who say to you, ‘Fear not, I am the one who helps you’” (Isaiah 41:13).
“… but with the temptation he will also provide the way
of escape, that you may be able to endure it” (1 Corinthians 10:13).
The idea is this, we are not just saved by
grace — we are sustained, empowered, and live by grace. This is a strong biblical
theme.
The Lord is intimately connected with His
children.
However, He doesn’t control us.
We can choose to sustain ourselves through
our own power, this is essentially what happened in the Garden of Eden, which
led to the sin nature.
Or we can choose to live a surrendered,
life-giving relationship through Christ, actively receiving grace throughout
our day-to-day living.
Every day, in all circumstances, we can
still choose which tree we will eat from.
If we eat from the
Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, we are choosing to say, “I got this, God… no need to help.”
If we eat from the
Bread of Life, The Tree of Life, we are choosing to say, “With Your grace, God, I receive Your help.”
His power allows us to live and walk
through the circumstances of life in victory.
As noted previously, our English word
charisma comes from the Greek word root charis.
According to the Oxford Dictionary, charisma
means, “to possess compelling attractiveness or charm that can inspire devotion
in others. A divinely conferred power or talent.”
It is to possess the gift or talent to
influence people; it is “power to influence.” It is not passive, it is active.
When we talk of biblical grace, we need to
remember it is a gift of God, it has purpose and is powerful.
We can’t stir it up or make it happen; it
is God initiated.
God is working His influence into our
lives, not through control but through loving relationship.
There is no doubt about it, He is at work
in us all the time.
Grace is an inward working that transforms
us into the fullness of Christ. Outwardly grace brings forth His image to make
Him known through our lives.
In the hands of an unscrupulous master,
this can be scary, and deadly.
Think of men like Jim Jones, founder of the
Peoples Temple cult that climaxed with mass suicides in Jonestown, Guyana.
Or David Koresh and the Branch Davidians.
Or a more familiar name today, David Miscavige the leader of Scientology.
All these men had or have charisma,
the power to influence, to charm and cast a spell on people to follow their
sinister agenda and belief systems.
God, on the other hand, is faithful, kind,
and perfect in love, wholly trustworthy. He doesn’t force His will on us; He
draws us near, by grace, into greater revelations of His love.
Seeing grace as power to influence would
have been part of how those living in the first-century Greco-Roman world would
have applied charis.
It would be part of the secularization of charis.
An almost divine power to influence people.
Peter, John, and Paul understood this
application and used it to describe God’s working in people to bring them into
the saving work of Jesus on the Cross.
In summary, the writers of the New
Testament were looking for words to describe and instruct this new revelation
in Jesus.
They naturally, just as we would today,
would have sought after language that common people would understand to help
them take hold of the gift of life provided through Christ Jesus.
In our modern English, it doesn’t quite
translate the same, but it is no less valuable.
Charis has different applications within different contexts; for us, the context is one of God’s love and kindness.
Phil Urena
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https://www.destinyimage.com/blog/2020/08/17/the-supernatural-power-of-grace
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