The Scandal of Grace
Grace is not earned, it is given — and that is exactly what makes it so hard to receive.
Scripture References
This sermon emphasizes that salvation is not earned through good deeds or avoiding wrongdoings, but is a gift of God's grace. Drawing from the parable of the prodigal son, it illustrates that God's love eagerly welcomes us back without conditions or demands, celebrating our return regardless of our past. The central message is that grace is freely given, inviting us to come home to God without needing to first earn our worthiness.
Generated by AI — may not capture every nuance.We like to think we have earned our place at the table. We keep a ledger in our hearts — the good we have done, the wrongs we have avoided — and we assume God reads from the same book. But grace tears the ledger in half. The father in the parable does not wait at the gate with a list of demands for his returning son. He sees him while he is still a long way off, and he runs. He runs, robe gathered in his hands, dignity forgotten, because love does not measure the distance back; it only celebrates the return. That is the scandal of grace: it arrives before we have cleaned ourselves up, before we have rehearsed our apology, before we deserve it. And if you have ever struggled to forgive yourself for something you cannot take back, hear this — the gospel does not ask you to earn your way home. It asks you to come home.
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Grace arrives before we clean ourselves up, before we rehearse our apology, before we deserve it — and that is the whole scandal of it.
Outline
The Ledger We Keep
We instinctively track merit — our good deeds, avoided wrongs — and assume God operates the same way.The Father Who Runs
The father in the parable destroys the ledger. He sees his son while still a long way off and sprints — dignity abandoned, love unleashed.The Scandal Explained
Grace arrives before repentance is complete, before worthiness is proven. That is not sentimentality; it is the gospel's core offense.Receiving What You Cannot Earn
The invitation is not to earn your way home but simply to come home. Self-forgiveness becomes possible when you stop auditing yourself.Application
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Identify one place this week where you are still trying to earn grace rather than receive it.→
Spend five minutes sitting with the image of the father running — let it reframe your picture of God.→
Who in your life needs you to extend grace before they deserve it? What is one concrete step?