Grace quotes - Grace defined
- Grace / Mercy / Justice : Justice - When you get what you deserve. Mercy - When you don't get what you deserve. Grace - When you get what you don't deserve.
- Grace is the good pleasure of God that inclines Him to bestow benefits upon the undeserving. It is a self-existent principle inherent in the divine nature and appears to us as a self-caused propensity to pity the wretched, spare the guilty, welcome the outcast, and bring into favor those who were before under just disapprobation. Its use to us sinful men is to save us and make us sit together in heavenly places to demonstrate to the ages the exceeding riches of God’s kindness to us in Christ Jesus. A.W. Tozer
- Grace is the very opposite of merit...Grace is not only undeserved favor, but it is favor shown to the one who has deserved the very opposite. Harry Ironside
- Grace is not simply leniency when we have sinned. Grace is the enabling gift of God not to sin. Grace is power, not just pardon. John Piper
- God's grace is His unmerited favor toward the wicked, unworthy sinners, by which He delivers them from condemnation and death. In a sense, grace is to law what miracles are to nature. It rises above and accomplishes what law cannot John MacArthur
- In efficacious grace we are not merely passive, nor yet does God do some and we do the rest. But God does all, and we do all. God produces all, we act all. For that is what produces, viz. our own acts. God is the only proper author and fountain; we only are the proper actors. We are in different respects, wholly passive and wholly active. Jonathan Edwards
- Grace is but glory begun, and glory is but grace perfected. Jonathan Edwards
- Grace…expresses two complementary thoughts: God’s unmerited favor to us through Christ, and God’s divine assistance to us through the Holy Spirit. Jerry Bridges
- Grace is God’s free and unmerited favor shown to guilty sinners who deserve only judgment. It is the love of God shown to the unlovely. It is God reaching downward to people who are in rebellion against Him. Jerry Bridges
- The first and possibly most fundamental characteristic of divine grace is that it presupposes sin and guilt. Grace has meaning only when men are seen as fallen, unworthy of salvation, and liable to eternal wrath… Grace does not contemplate sinners merely as undeserving but as ill-deserving… It is not simply that we do not deserve grace; we do deserve hell. C. Samuel Storms
- Anything this side of hell is pure grace. Author Unknown
- Grace is God giving us what we do not deserve and mercy is God not giving us what we do deserve. Author Unknown
- The unmerited operation of God in the heart of man, effected through the agency of the Holy Spirit. Berkof
- [Grace is] free sovereign favor to the ill-deserving. B.B. Warfield
- [Grace is] the free and benevolent influence of a Holy God operating sovereignly in the lives of undeserved sinners. Phil Johnson
- Grace is the free, undeserved goodness and favor of God to mankind. Matthew Henry
- The noun (mercy) and its derivatives always deal with what we see of pain, misery, and distress, these results of sin; and grace always with the sin and the guilt itself. The one extends relief, the other pardon; the one cures, heals, helps, the other cleanses and reinstates. With God (grace) is always first and (mercy) is second. R.C.H. Lenski
- The Bible ‘is a religion of grace or it is nothing … no grace, no gospel’ Moffatt
- " 'Grace' is more than mercy and love, it superadds to them. It denotes, not simply love, but the love of a sovereign, transcendently superior, one that may do what he will, that may wholly choose whether he will love or no. There may be love between equals, and an inferior may love a superior; but love in a superior, and so superior as he may do what he will, in such a one love is called grace: and therefore grace is attributed to princes; they are said to be gracious to their subjects, whereas subjects cannot be gracious to princes. Now God, who is an infinite Sovereign, who might have chosen whether ever He would love us or no, for Him to love us, this is grace." Thomas Goodwin