Grace
Grace names the unearned giving by which life, forgiveness, and continuation within Covenant are granted prior to and apart from merit, effort, or control.
How This Term Is Used Here
Grace is not understood as a reward for faithfulness, a mechanism that cancels consequence, or a substance dispensed in response to proper belief. In this context, grace names what is given before improvement, before repair, and before certainty. Grace makes continuation possible where trespass has occurred and where faithful conduct has not been sustained. It does not override responsibility, but it precedes and carries it.
Relation to Other Terms
- Faith lives by trusting what Grace gives rather than securing outcomes by effort or control.
- Covenant is sustained by Grace, including after trespass or failure of faithful conduct.
- Charitability becomes possible where Grace frees action from repayment or retaliation.
- Formation unfolds over time where Grace allows continuation without anxiety or self-justification.
- The Cross reveals Grace as given and unexhausted under harm and trespass.
Scriptural Grounding
This usage follows the New Testament witness that what is given by God is not conditioned on merit or achievement. Paul states this most plainly:
By grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God. (Ephesians 2:8)
Grace here names gift rather than transaction, and giving rather than exchange.
Common Misuses
- Grace is not permission to harm or trespass.
- Grace does not eliminate responsibility or the claims of the neighbor.
- Grace is not earned, triggered, or secured by faith or conduct.
- Grace does not guarantee outcomes or exemption from consequence.