Christian Forums

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Growth Grace Beyond Our Need

netchaplain

Member
Grace is the first ray of comfort to the soul; and though it is the subject first known and most cherished, yet its measure, according to God’s revelation of it, is little known. Grace, according to popular teaching, is the undeserved favor of God in saving anyone who believes in the Savior. The soul’s need defines the measure of the grace. If grace did not secure to me justification and everlasting happiness, it would not meet my need. But it is much more. While it has rescued me from everlasting misery, and saved me form all the consequences of my sins, far beyond that, it has placed me in nearness to my Father.

Having sinned, I could not restore myself to the position of innocence that Adam held. I could be a forgiven sinner, forgiven up to the last moment of my life here, and thus be happy in heaven. Escape from judgment, and an assurance of everlasting happiness, is for the most part the idea which the word grace conveys to most Christians. Hence what meets the known need is always presented to the sinner first, though in the mind of the Father there is no break in its blessed endless stream. The great fact is gradually disclosed that not only is the sinner to be forgiven, but that he is to be made meet to be a partaker of the inheritance of the saints in light (Col. 1:12).

If grace were to stop at simply having met the measure of man’s need, God’s share and delight in the saved one would be overlooked. The Father in His love delights that you, once a sinner, on believing on Him, should not only be justified, but fitted to be in His own presence for His own pleasure, which is infinitely greater than your own. The tendency is to regard grace only as it affects the sinner, and to omit the satisfaction it is to the Father to have us as His children with Him; “the excellent, in whom is all My delight” (Psa 16:3).

My Father desires to have me for Himself, to be a companion, the very Bride of the Lord Jesus Christ, and a member of His Body. Hence His grace super-abounds over the sin. If I have lost anything by sin which was a glory to a man, that is not restored to me in grace. Grace gives me something infinitely better; not to suit the man that was, but to suit me as a new creation as brought to the Father. The grace of God does not reinstate me in the paradise lost by sin, but positions me in a much greater one—from the earthly, to the heavenly.

I am forgiven, like the prodigal, for all I have done, but nothing that I have squandered is restored to me. I receive everything new; and I am made, as he was in figure, quite new, and fitted for the immense exaltation to which I am raised by grace. The prodigal was not restored to the land, as a Jew would have expected, but he was received into the father’s house with a favor and distinction never accorded to any one before; and this was all simply of grace. True, he has to be reconciled and kissed before he could be prepared for this immense excess of grace, that is, the measure of grace beyond his need.

Surely Paul was well qualified to tell us that we are made to sit in the heavenlies in Christ, and, seeing that so much grace has been shown us, that in us might be displayed in the coming ages, “the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus” (Eph. 2:7). And thus only we arrive at the measure of the grace of which we are to be the expositors, not only now, but in the ages to come.

- J B Stoney
 
It sounds to me like J B Stoney thinks that God is INFINITE and INFINITELY GOOD! That we are just required to turn from those things that we have put before Him (idols) and look to He who will carry us without effort!

I experience parts of that myself, especially as my broken heart is mended. It's nothing less than life-changing!

O! Bless the Lord.

Matt 13:15 and thereabouts said:
15 For the hearts of this people have grown dull. [Their] ears are hard of hearing, And their eyes they have closed, Lest they should see with [their] eyes and hear with [their] ears, Lest they should understand with [their] hearts and turn, So that I should heal them.' 16 "But blessed [are] your eyes for they see, and your ears for they hear; 17 "for assuredly, I say to you that many prophets and righteous [men] desired to see what you see, and did not see [it], and to hear what you hear, and did not hear [it].

18 "Therefore hear the parable of the sower:
[Mat 13:15-18 NKJV]


Doesn't that just make you wanna go read and hear the Parable of the sower again?

C'mon Bessy! It's time to git me another nugget," says the prospector as he looks to the hills. "I know where my strength comes from..."
 
Last edited:
It sounds to me like J B Stoney thinks that God is INFINITE and INFINITELY GOOD! That we are just require to turn from those things that we have put before Him (idols) and look to He who will carry us without effort!

I experience parts of that myself, especially as my broken heart is mended. It's nothing less than life-changing!
O! Bless the Lord.
Hi SH - I like your point concerning "He will carry us." Regardless of our doings and where we are in our learning paces with Him, He "is able to keep you from falling" (Jude 1:24).

God's work and blessings to and in us are always oriented from His love for us in His Son, allowing us to be unbroken in our relationship with Him, regardless of our evaluation of it all.

God's blessings to your Family Brother!!
 
Back
Top