The Nature of Grace
| Grace is God acting freely, according to His own nature as Love; with no promises or obligations to fulfil; and acting of course, righteously--in view of the Cross. | |
| Grace, therefore, is uncaused in the recipient: its cause lies wholly in the GIVER, in GOD. | |
| Grace, also is sovereign.� Not having debts to pay, or fulfilled conditions on man's part to wait for, it can act toward whom, and how, it pleases.� It can, and does often, place the worst deservers in the highest favors.� | |
| Grace cannot act where there is either desert or ability: Grace does not help-- it is absolute, it does all. | |
| There being no cause in the creature why Grace should be shown, the creature must be brought off from trying to give cause to God for His Grace. | |
| The discovery by the creature that he is truly the object of Divine grace, works the utmost humility: for the receiver of grace is brought to know his own absolute unworthiness, and his complete inability to attain worthiness: yet he finds himself blessed,-- on another principle, outside of himself! | |
| Therefore, flesh has no place in the plan of Grace.� This is the great reason why Grace is hated by the proud, natural [often religious] mind of man.� But for this very reason, the true believer rejoices!� For he knows the "in him, that is, in his flesh, is no good thing"; and yet he finds God glad to bless him, just as he is! |
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The Place of Man under Grace
| He has been accepted in Christ, who is his standing! | |
| He is not "on probation." | |
| As to his life past, it does not exist before God: he died at the Cross, and Christ is his life. | |
| Grace, once bestowed, is not withdrawn: for God knew all the human exigencies beforehand: His action was independent of them, not dependent upon them. | |
| The failure of devotion does not cause the withdrawal of bestowed grace (as it would under law).� For example: the man in I Corinthians 5:1-5; and also those in chapter 11:30-32, who did not "judge" themselves, and so were "judged by the Lord,--that they might not be condemned with the world"! |
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The Proper Attitude of Man under Grace
| To believe, and to consent to be loved while unworthy, is the great secret. | |
| To refuse to make "resolutions" and "vows"; for that is to trust in the flesh. | |
| To expect to be blessed, though realizing more and more lack of worth. | |
| To testify to God's goodness, at all times. | |
| To be certain of God's future favor; yet to be ever more tender in conscience toward Him. | |
| To rely on God's chastening hand as a mark of His kindness. | |
| A man under grace, if like Paul, has no burdens regarding himself; but many about others. |
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Things Which Gracious Souls Discover
| To "hope to be better" is to fail to see yourself in Christ only. | |
| To be disappointed with yourself, is to have believed in yourself. | |
| To be discouraged is unbelief,--as to God's purpose and plan of blessing for you. | |
| To be proud, is to be blind!� For we have no standing before God, in ourselves. | |
| The lack of Divine blessing, therefore, comes from unbelief, and not from failure of devotion. | |
| Real devotion to God arises, not from man's will to show it; but from the discovery that blessing has been received from God while we were yet unworthy and undevoted. | |
| To preach devotion first, and blessing second, is to reverse God's order, and preach law, not grace.� The Law made man's blessing depend on devotion; Grace confers undeserved, unconditional blessing: our devotion may follow, but does not always do so,--in proper measure. |