A.W. Tozer Chapter Nineteen: The Grace of God
Excerpts
from Chapter 19:
Opening Prayer
“God of all grace, whose thoughts toward us are
ever thoughts of peace and not of evil, give us hearts to believe that we are
accepted in the Beloved; and give us minds to admire that perfection of moral
wisdom which found a way to preserve the integrity of heaven and yet receive us
there. We are astonished and marvel that one so holy and dread should invite us
into Thy banqueting house and cause love to be the banner over us. We can not
express the gratitude we feel, but look Thou on our hearts and read it there.
Amen.”
“Grace is but glory begun, and glory is but grace
perfected.” – Jonathan Edwards.
“As mercy is God’s goodness confronting human misery and
guilt, so grace is His goodness directed toward human debt and demerit. It is
by His grace that God imputes merit where none previously existed and declares
no debt to be where one had been before.”
“The Old Testament is indeed a book of law, but not of law
only. Before the great flood
Noah “found grace in the eyes of the Lord,” and after the
law was given God said to
Moses, “Thou hast found grace in my
sight.””
“We can never know the enormity of our sin, neither is it
necessary that we should. What we can know is that “where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound.””
“Return, O wanderer, now return,
And seek thy Father’s face;
Those new desires which in thee burn
Were kindled by His grace.
Return, O wanderer, now return, And wipe the falling tear:
Thy Father calls, - no longer mourn;
’Tis love invites thee near”
- William Benco Collyer -
What is Grace? By David Reagan.
Grace in mentioned 170 times in the Bible. Consider some of
the ways it can be defined:
1. Grace is God's unmerited favor. That is, grace
is God doing good for us that we do not deserve. In the Bible, grace and mercy
are like two heads of the same coin. Mercy is God withholding judgment or evil
that I deserve; grace is God giving me blessing or good that I do not deserve.
Because of God's mercy, I do not receive the judgment of God against my sins;
because of God's grace, I receive eternal life and a promise of heaven though I
do not deserve them. Both mercy and grace come to me though the Lord Jesus
Christ.
2. Grace can also be defined as God's sufficiency
or God's fullness in the life of the believer. God told Paul, "My grace is
sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness" (2
Corinthians 12:9). That is, the grace of God in Paul enabled him and empowered
him in his weakness. Another verse states, "And God is able to make all
grace abound toward you; that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things,
may abound to every good work" (2 Corinthians 9:8). God's grace working in
us supplies the sufficiency whereby we may abound to every good work. I like to
call grace "God's enoughness." By this I mean that God is enough for
us no matter what the situation we face.
This being the case, you can see that grace is first of all
necessary for salvation. Ephesians 2:8 states, "For by grace are ye saved
through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God." One
aspect of salvation is called justification. That is the act by which we are
declared just (righteous) before God on the basis of the payment Jesus Christ
made for our sin. The Bible clearly teaches that we are justified by the grace
of God (Romans 3:24; Titus 3:7).
But not only are we saved by the grace of God--we also serve
the Lord and live the Christian life by the grace of God. The letters of Paul
always speak of a blessing of grace for the believers (along with peace). Just
for an example, Romans 1:7 states, "Grace to you and peace from God our
Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ." Paul is speaking to believers who are
already saved and on their way to heaven, but he also recognizes that they need
grace for living the Christian life. They need God's strength and sufficiency.
A good verse to help explain this grace by which we live is
1 Corinthians 15:10 where Paul testified, "But by the grace of God I am
what I am: and his grace which was bestowed upon me was not in vain; but I
laboured more abundantly than they all: yet not I, but the grace of God which
was with me." It was God's grace that made him what he was. It was God's
goodness working in him that made him the great servant of God he was.
So, obviously, we also need the grace of God. We need it
first of all for salvation. Without the grace of God, we cannot have eternal
life. However, we also need the grace of God for our daily walk with God. We
are weak and prone to stray. Jesus told us that we can do nothing without Him
(John 15:5). But God provides daily strength through His grace working in us.
We should seek this grace for living from him. Then, we should believe that He
will provide what He has promised and walk with assurance that His grace is
working in us.
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