Monday, December 1, 2025

Draw Near

 “Let us know; let us press on to know the Lord.

His coming is as certain as the dawn;

He will come to us like the rain,

like the spring rains that water the earth.”

—Hosea 6:3 (NASB)


That evening  I didn’t go hunting for this verse in Hosea on my own. A friend brought it up to me not long ago, just in normal conversation, and I went back later and read it for myself. As I did, something on the inside of me burned in a way that’s hard to explain—what the old saints used to call “being quickened in your spirit.” I knew right then the Lord was putting a little check mark next to that verse just for me.


It is only a sentence. 

It carries the power of the Holy Spirit: 


“Let us press on to know the Lord.”


Press on.

Keep moving.

Lean forward.

Don’t let comfort lull you.

Don’t let discouragement freeze you in place.

Don’t let yesterday’s failure convince you that tomorrow is already lost.


Press on.


Hosea spoke these words to a people who had drifted away from God without even realizing how far they had wandered. Their hearts were divided. Their worship had grown thin. Their prayers were a whisper. They still belonged to God… but something precious had faded.


Sound familiar, dear one?


Sometimes the distance between us and the Lord doesn’t come from rebellion. Sometimes it comes from fatigue. Life gets loud. Responsibilities pile high. Wounds accumulate. And little by little, without meaning to, the fire cools.


But Hosea stands on the pages of Scripture like a watchman calling through the night:


“Don’t settle for a far-away God when He longs to be near.

Don’t stay in the shadows when His light is rising over you.

Press on. Chase Him. Seek Him. You’ll find Him.”


And then Hosea gives the most comforting promise:


“His coming is as certain as the dawn.”


Think about that.

Every morning… without fail… light breaks through darkness.

Even on cloudy days.

Even when you can’t see the sun.

Even when the night felt endless.


The dawn always arrives.


So does God.


When you lift your heart toward Him—even with trembling hands and weak prayers—He comes. He draws near. He leans in. Maybe you don’t feel it right away. Maybe it begins as a quiet warmth in the soul. But beloved, His presence moves toward the one who seeks Him. It’s His nature to come.


And then Hosea adds one more picture, soft and beautiful:


“He will come to us like the rain.”


Not like a storm.

Not like a hammer.

Not like condemnation.


Like rain.


Gentle enough to soften hard ground.

Strong enough to awaken buried seeds.

Steady enough to turn a barren field into a garden again.

Maybe that’s what your heart needs today—not a lecture, not a rebuke…

just rain.


Rain that washes off the dust.

Rain that restores tenderness.

Rain that nourishes dry places you haven’t touched in a long time.

Rain that whispers, “I am still here… and I am not finished with you.”


Beloved, Hosea’s invitation is simple, but it reaches down into the secret place of the soul:


Press on.

Return again.

Seek Him again.

Pray again.

Hope again.


You’re not chasing a distant God.

You’re not pursuing a reluctant Father.

You’re running toward the One who is already running toward you.


The God who meets you in the morning.

The God who rains on thirsty hearts.

The God who delights to be found.


He is coming…

as surely as light breaks into darkness…

as surely as rain finds dry ground.


So come, dear one.

Take one small step toward Him.

Lift one honest prayer.

Whisper one simple desire.

Turn your face—just a little—and watch Him meet you in the turning.


He has never ignored a seeking heart.

And He will not ignore yours.


Beloved, if your spirit feels tired…

if your fire has dimmed…

if you feel far from the Lord and don’t know how to find your way back…

come.


If you’ve stopped praying because you felt unworthy…

come.


If your Bible has been closed for too long and you feel ashamed…

come.


If you want Him—but something inside you feels stuck or numb…

come.


Lift your hands.

Lift your eyes.

Lift your desire.


Say with Hosea,

“Lord, I’m pressing on to know You again. Let Your rain fall on me.”


And beloved… He will.

He surely will.


With Love,

Steve Porter

www.morningglorydevo.com

Sunday, November 30, 2025

The Quiet Life

 Steve Porter

“Your Father who sees in secret will Himself reward you openly.”

— Matthew 6:4


Good morning, friends. I’m writing this with a Bible beside me and a few thoughts that have been sitting in my heart for days. Nothing dramatic happened. It was just one of those slow, steady impressions the Lord drops into your spirit when you’re quiet long enough to hear Him.


I started noticing how the smallest acts of love seem to stay with people more than we realize. Not the big, impressive gestures—just the ordinary things. A kind word. A little patience. A moment of listening. Things like that.


Maybe it stood out to me because life feels loud right now. The world rewards whatever gets attention, and people get caught up in being seen. But when I look at Jesus, He didn’t operate that way. Most of His ministry took place in quiet moments. One person at a time. One conversation. One touch. Nothing rushed. Nothing forced.


And honestly, that speaks to me. Because some of you have been worn down by the sharpness of this world. Maybe you’ve been criticized more than encouraged. Maybe you’re tired from holding everything together. Maybe you’ve been through a season where the smallest things felt heavy. You’re not alone in that.


The Lord reminded me that gentle people often carry the most healing. They aren’t loud. They don’t draw attention to themselves. They show up in ways that seem small but end up meaning a lot.


They’re the ones who:

notice when someone is struggling

take time they don’t really have

offer help without making it a big deal

speak softly when everyone else is tense


Most of their kindness happens when nobody is watching. And that’s probably why it feels so genuine.


I’ll admit, I’ve missed chances years ago to do the same. I can look back and see moments where I could’ve chosen calm over irritation or encouragement over silence. But the Lord doesn’t hold that over us. He gives us another chance today.

You’d be surprised how much one simple sentence can help somebody.
And we honestly can’t tell what people are hiding behind that polite smile.

Some people are holding on by a single trembling thread…
and the smallest act of love, almost nothing to us, becomes the one thing that steadies their whole world.

The older I get, the more I believe the quiet things matter most. The hidden sacrifices. The prayers nobody hears. The little choices that reveal who we’re becoming. Heaven sees all of it.

Some of you feel like your life isn’t making much of a difference, but maybe God is using the things you think are “small” to do work you can’t see yet. Sitting with someone during a hard time. Forgiving someone who hurt you. Being patient. Showing understanding. These things look ordinary, but the Lord treasures them.

So today, don’t feel pressure to be anything loud or impressive. Just be willing. Be available. Be kind. Let Jesus work through the calmer, gentler parts of your heart.

Those are the things that leave marks. Real ones. Eternal ones.

“If you pour yourself out for the hungry… your light will rise in the darkness.”
— Isaiah 58:10

With Love,
Steve Porter
www.bio.site/findrefuge

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Charlie Brown

 And now… the rest of the story.

Tonight, families across America will gather around the television. They’ll watch a bald kid try to kick a football. They’ll watch a beagle dance on a dog house. They’ll watch Charlie Brown get a rock instead of candy.

They’ll laugh.

They won’t know they’re watching a man’s autobiography.

When Charles Schulz was a little boy, the other children called him “Sparky.”

It wasn’t a term of affection.

Sparky was the name of a horse in the comic strip Barney Google. A dumb horse. A joke horse.

They were calling him an animal.

And young Sparky Schulz never shook that name. Couldn’t. It followed him like a curse.

He failed every single subject in eighth grade.

Not one or two.

Every. Single. Subject.

In high school, he flunked physics so spectacularly that his teacher gave him a flat zero. The worst physics student in school history.

Latin. Failed.

Algebra. Failed.

English. Failed.

The pattern was set early.

But the grades weren’t even the worst part.

Paul Harvey told this story on the radio, and when he got to this line, you could hear something crack in his voice:

“Sparky wasn’t actually disliked by the other youngsters. No one cared enough about him to dislike him.”

Read that again.

He wasn’t hated. He was nothing.

If a classmate said hello to him outside of school, Sparky was astonished. It never happened. He never once asked a girl out in high school.

Not because he got rejected.

Because he was too afraid to try.

He made the golf team his senior year.

Lost the only important match.

There was a consolation match.

He lost that too.

Through all of it—the failing grades, the invisible existence, the losses stacked like unpaid bills—one thing kept Sparky alive.

His drawings.

He was proud of them. Worked on them constantly. Believed he had something.

His senior year, he submitted cartoons to the school yearbook.

Rejected.

The one thing he thought he was good at. The one ember he’d been guarding against the wind.

They said no.

After graduation, Sparky had one dream left.

Walt Disney.

He wrote to Disney Studios. Gathered his best work. The letter came back requesting samples: draw a Disney character repairing a clock by shoveling springs and gears back inside.

He poured himself into those drawings. Everything he had.

The reply came.

A form letter.

Disney Studios, it explained politely, only hired the very finest artists—even for routine background work. Based on Sparky’s submissions, they had determined he was not among the very finest.

Paul Harvey paused here in his broadcast.

Then he said something that cuts to the bone:

“I think deep down, Sparky expected to be rejected. He had always been a loser. And this was simply one more loss.”

Here’s where most motivational speakers would pivot to triumph.

But he never gave up!

He showed them all!

I’m not giving you that.

Because the next part of the story isn’t about winning.

It’s about what you do with your wounds.

After Disney rejected him, Sparky did something strange.

He didn’t try to prove them wrong.

He didn’t set out to become what they said he wasn’t.

He wrote his autobiography in cartoons.

He drew himself. The loser. The kid who failed everything. The boy no one cared enough to hate. The young man whose kite would never fly.

He named this character after himself.

Charlie Brown.

You know what Charlie Brown never does?

Win.

His kite crashes. Lucy pulls the football. The Little Red-Haired Girl doesn’t notice him. He gets a rock.

And yet—

Every year, for sixty years, families have gathered to watch.

Not because Charlie Brown succeeds.

Because Charlie Brown keeps showing up.

Here’s the rest of the story that even Paul Harvey didn’t tell.

Charles Schulz was a devoted member of the Church of God in Minneapolis. He taught Sunday school. He read the Bible so constantly his strips are filled with scripture.

When Linus stands in that spotlight and recites Luke 2 in the Christmas special…

“And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night…”

—that wasn’t a writer trying to be “religious.”

That was a believer who knew exactly what message he wanted at the center of his life’s work.

The Peanuts Christmas special almost didn’t happen. Network executives wanted to cut the Linus scene. Too religious. Too preachy.

Schulz refused.

Either the Gospel stays, or there’s no special.

It stayed.

Think about it.

A boy called a horse.

A student who failed everything.

An artist rejected by Disney.

A young man so invisible that no one bothered to dislike him.

That man created the most beloved cartoon characters of the twentieth century.

And at the center of his most famous work—his Christmas special—he planted the Gospel of Luke.

Millions of children have heard Linus recite those words.

“Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy.”

The loser became the messenger.

I don’t know what you’re failing at today.

I don’t know how many rejections you’re carrying.

I don’t know if anyone cares enough about you to even dislike you.

But I know this:

God has a history of using the rejected ones.

Moses had a stutter.

David was the forgotten son.

Peter denied Christ three times.

Paul murdered Christians.

And a boy they called a horse gave us Charlie Brown—a character who loses everything, tries again, and in his most famous moment, stands in bewildered wonder as Linus points him to the manger.

“That’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”

The kite never flew.

But the Gospel did.

This Thanksgiving, when you watch that bald kid fail again, remember:

You’re watching the autobiography of a loser.

A man who was rejected by everyone who mattered.

A believer who put Christ at the center anyway.

And his wounds became a witness to sixty million homes.

Still falling?

Good company, brother.

Get up.

He’s not done with you yet.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Being Grateful

 


Lamentations 3:22

 The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases;

        his mercies never come to an end;

Each day has new mercies  each day can teach us to trust the One who holds our today and tomorrow  

Oh Father, On this day we are grateful to You. Today and each day we seek Your presence. You are the constant in an ever changing world

“We are mature when we define ourselves by what we are for rather than by what we are against. The capacity to praise more than to criticize defines maturity. The crowning glory of maturity and discipleship, as we saw, is the capacity and willingness to bless others, particularly the young. ”

We acknowledge that if we  listed all the things we are thankful for, the list could go on for days. 

Family, friends, love, health, freedom from war and natural disaster, imagination, community, a roof over our heads, hope, opportunity, memories, financial stability, favorite places, travel, being together, 

We confess that we take these things for granted. 

We thank You, God for this moment, today, the here and now,  If we miss being grateful in the here and now, this moment will never come back.

With Your mercies new each day, You empower our eyes to adjust to a different kind of light. As we pay attention to You,.You keep nudging us back to the reality of Your presence, to a deeper faith, hope and love.

Lord, we ask that You continue to protect us with Your grace, Your mercies  

As we become older, grow up, pursue our dreams and goals, As we learn to figure out what our lives will be  

Empower us to trust You and you alone 

You remain the same.

Despite the change, 

Remind us daily that we are deeply loved by You.

Change will happen tomorrow just as it took place yesterday

And yet, You continue to give us Your peace, hope, and Your love as we place our faith in You  

“God can do anything—far more than you could ever imagine or guess or request in your wildest dreams! He does it NOT by pushing us around but by working WITHIN us, his Spirit deeply and gently within us.

‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭3‬:‭20‬ msg 


Ephesians 3:20

[20] Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, 


Monday, November 24, 2025

Combatting Slander

 Matthew Allen

trust.

When we believe the worst about others, unity collapses. Suspicion replaces fellowship, and relationships weaken. See Proverbs 16:28; Matthew 5:9; Ephesians 4:3.

Slander multiplies conflict.

Careless words ignite quarrels. One harmful statement leads to another until the original issue is buried under drama. See Proverbs 26:20–21; James 3:5–6; Proverbs 15:1.

Slander harms the innocent.

People become targets of accusations they never deserved. The innocent are left defending themselves against lies or twisted truths. See Exodus 23:1; Psalm 35:11; Proverbs 14:5.

Slander offends God.

God takes this sin seriously because it attacks someone made in His image. He warns that He will judge those who harm others through their words. See Psalm 101:5; Leviticus 19:16; Matthew 12:36–37.

How We Combat It

Slow down. Proverbs 18:13 warns against answering before listening. Don’t assume. Don’t react. Don’t repeat what you haven’t confirmed.

Ask questions, not conclusions. “Did this happen?” is wiser than, “I can’t believe they did that.”

Refuse to repeat accusations. If the story does not help, heal, or protect someone, let it die with you.

Protect reputations. Love “believes all things” (1 Corinthians 13:7). Give others the benefit of the doubt, not the benefit of suspicion.

Go directly to the person. Jesus tells us to handle concerns privately first (Matthew 18:15). Most slander would vanish overnight if we obeyed this.

Correct slander gently. When someone tries to speak harmfully, say, “Let’s check the facts,” or “Have you talked to them?” This stops the spread.

Pray for restraint. Psalm 141:3 says, “Lord, set a guard over my mouth.” A guarded tongue honors God.

And I must say this plainly:

There is no excuse for slander, not even when someone claims to be “standing up for the truth.” Scripture never permits us to harm a brother’s name in the name of zeal. And there is no excuse for avoiding direct communication with the person you disagree with. Most slander happens because someone will not take the time to talk. It is easier to assume, easier to accuse, and easier to speak about someone than to talk to them. But that’s not love. 

Love must rule our words, and love “does no wrong to a neighbor” (Romans 13:10). That means we refuse to harm someone’s reputation, even when we disagree with them (Ephesians 4:29). It means we are willing to speak directly and honestly with a brother or sister instead of talking around them or about them (Matthew 18:15; Proverbs 27:5–6). When we fail to communicate or when we justify harmful speech, the problem is rarely conviction; it is often laziness, impatience, or pride (Proverbs 18:13). 

It is easier to assume the worst than to ask a question (Proverbs 18:17). It is easier to repeat a story than to seek clarity (Proverbs 15:28). It is easier to vent frustration than to practice restraint (James 1:19-20). None of that reflects the character of Christ. He calls us to something better: to guard each other’s names, to seek understanding, and to let our words reflect the love we claim to believe (John 13:34–35; Colossians 4:6).

And it’s not just about people:

Slander often targets congregations, too. Entire churches can be labeled, judged, or dismissed based on rumors, assumptions, or half-truths. One careless accusation can damage a congregation’s reputation in the community or among sister churches. Paul warned against this kind of broad, destructive speech when he told the Corinthians to “speak the same thing” and avoid divisions built on hearsay (1 Corinthians 1:10-11). A congregation is a body of believers trying to serve Christ. To slander a church is to wound many brothers and sisters at once. The same commands that guard our speech toward individuals also apply here: speak truthfully (Ephesians 4:25), pursue peace (Romans 14:19), and refuse to repeat anything that harms the unity of God’s people (Psalm 133:1).

A Higher Calling

While we live in a time where people thrive on outrage, Christians must choose a better way. The church should be the safest place in the world for a person’s good name. Slander tears down, but the gospel builds up. Let’s use our words to heal, protect, and restore, and guard the unity Christ died to create.

https://open.substack.com/pub/fromfeartofaith/p/the-quiet-poison-of-slander?r=43vew&utm_medium=ios


Sunday, November 23, 2025

Gratitude

 Biblically, thanksgiving is understood as an offering or a confession. Confession, especially in the Old Testament context, is not just about telling someone your sin. Rather, it is a proclamation or an agreement that something is true. 

For instance, when confessing a sin (e.g. James 5:16), we are agreeing with God on what sin is. We are proclaiming His holiness and our sin, and that we need the blood of Christ to make us right with Him. If we confess with our mouth that Jesus is Lord (Romans 10:9), we are agreeing with God that He is Lord over all, and proclaiming that we submit to Him as Lord over all. 

In the same way, when we give thanks to God, we are proclaiming that He is good and has done good things for us. We are agreeing with Him that we depend on Him, and that He has been kind to us in ways we could never deserve or earn. 

Gratitude is a repeated command (44 times!) in Scripture:

Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good, for his steadfast love endures forever. (Psalm 136:1)

And a lifestyle of thankfulness to God, along with joy and unceasing prayer, is the will of God for all of us! 

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18)

Is it any surprise, then, that scientists and doctors continue to discover new health benefits to living a life full of thanksgiving, such as emotional health, better sleep, reducing depression and anxiety, and heart health? Seems as though Paul was onto something, probably because he got his information from the One who created us Himself. 

Gratitude is a vital part of our health as leaders in our respective homes, communities, ministries, and churches. It presents us with an opportunity not only to acknowledge our dependency on God, but to experience His work in our lives more fully! The more we exercise our “gratitude muscles,” the more we train ourselves to recognize His provision and deliverance for us in real time. 

True thanksgiving, however, is more than just saying “thank you” because it’s what we ought to do to be polite. True thanksgiving flows out of a deep, profound experience of the goodness and love of God. When we turn to Him and really look at Him, loving and enjoying Him, the most natural response will be worship and thanksgiving! 

Gratitude also strengthens our connection to our community. Whenever we express thanks to someone, we are simultaneously recognizing our need and desire for their help, and that their kindness means a lot to us. This increases trust in one another, and helps us to grow in character qualities like humility, joy, and kindness ourselves. 

It’s easy for us to forget gratitude, often out of laziness, self-reliance, or busyness. We rush through our days thinking little about how much we really depend on God and other people, or about how much kindness and grace we really receive on a daily basis. 

How then can we grow in gratitude?

A Design for Thankfulness

As we’ve been discussing recently here on Healthy Leaders, this is a great opportunity to practice simple design!

We already have a clearly defined goal: to grow in gratitude. Now let’s put together a few simple, Four-Dynamic ways we can do this (with help from our handy Dynamics of Transformation Chart).



Saturday, November 22, 2025

Life Reviews reveal grace


Living with an eternal perspective 


https://open.substack.com/pub/randykay/p/living-with-an-eternal-perspective?r=43vew&utm_medium=ios


 The Life Review That Changed Everything

When I returned from Heaven, I could remember each moment of my life review, except the times I had failed God. When I asked why, the Holy Spirit answered, “I have removed them as far as the East is from the West.”

East and West never meet. That’s how far God has removed our sins—not just forgiven, but erased from His memory of us.

Even more astonishing, those life reviews didn’t condemn me. They revealed grace. Where I saw weakness, God showed redemption. Where I remembered shame, Heaven revealed love.

In speaking with others who’ve experienced similar life reviews, I’ve seen the same pattern: God shows our lives not to condemn but to reveal the redemption of Christ woven through every moment. Heaven’s reviews aren’t “gotcha” moments, they’re revelations of grace, demonstrations of how Jesus covered every failure and turned every weakness into glory.

This stands in sharp contrast to the legalism many encounter, where failure becomes shame and sin becomes a weapon. Heaven’s message is different: not condemnation, but redemption.

The question that haunted me upon my return was this: If Heaven operates on grace, why do so many of our churches operate on legalism?

The Deception of Legalism

Legalism is grace’s ancient enemy. It disguises itself as maturity, as “preaching hard truths,” or “not compromising.” But legalism isn’t strength—it’s rebellion against God’s plan of salvation.

When we insist that people must earn their way to God, we deny the finished work of the cross. When Jesus said “It is finished,” He meant it. The debt was paid, the chasm bridged, salvation accomplished—not by our hands but by His.

Legalism whispers, “Yes, Jesus died for you, but…” That “but” undoes the Gospel.

The False Authority of Harsh Teachers

Many churches reward harshness. The pastor who pounds the pulpit and catalogues sins is often deemed “biblical,” while the one who emphasizes love is seen as soft. Yet Jesus reserved His harshest words for the religious elite—the Pharisees—because they piled burdens on others while missing the heart of God.

To the woman caught in adultery, to tax collectors, to sinners drowning in shame—Jesus offered grace. Not approval of sin, but unearned love that transforms from within.

God is holy and just, yes, but His holiness and justice are revealed through grace, not against it.

What Legalism Really Does

From Heaven’s perspective, I saw what legalism accomplishes on earth:

It makes salvation about us instead of Christ. When we add conditions to grace, we make ourselves co-saviors with Jesus. This is both theologically heretical and spiritually disastrous.

It produces either pride or despair—self-righteousness or hopelessness. Those who think they’re “measuring up” become self-righteous Pharisees. Those who know they’re failing become hopeless and distant from God. Neither response leads to genuine transformation.

It misrepresents God’s character, painting Him as a scorekeeper instead of a Father. 

It prevents the very transformation it claims to produce. Paul asked the Galatians, “After beginning by means of the Spirit, are you now trying to finish by means of the flesh?” (Galatians 3:3). We cannot produce spiritual fruit through human effort and religious rules. Transformation comes through grace, received and believed.

Grace Is Not Permission to Sin—It’s Power Over Sin

I anticipate the objection from sincere Christians and legalists alike: “But Randy, if we emphasize grace this strongly, won’t people use it as license to sin? Don’t we need to teach people to avoid sin and live God-honoring lives? Aren’t you removing the motivation for Christians to pursue holiness?”

I understand this concern. It comes from a genuine love for God’s holiness and a desire to see believers live righteously. But here’s what I must tell you: this objection reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of both grace’s power and God’s design for transformation.

Paul himself anticipated this exact question: “Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means! We are those who have died to sin; how can we live in it any longer?” (Romans 6:1-2). Notice Paul doesn’t say, “Well, let me add some rules to make sure you don’t abuse grace.” He says the very nature of what grace does to us makes continued sinning incompatible with our new identity.

Let me be absolutely clear: I am not removing the call to holy living. I am relocating its source.

The Fatal Flaw of Legalistic Motivation

Legalism believes that fear, shame, and threats are necessary to keep Christians from sin. It operates on this premise: “If we don’t keep people afraid of judgment, if we don’t constantly remind them of their failures, if we don’t maintain harsh standards and harsh teachers, they’ll fall into licentiousness.”

But here’s what I witnessed in Heaven and what Scripture confirms: this approach doesn’t work. It never has.

The Pharisees had the most rigorous system of rules and accountability in human history. They were meticulous about external compliance. And Jesus called them “whitewashed tombs”—clean on the outside, dead on the inside. Their legalism didn’t produce holiness; it produced hypocrisy.

Why? Because you cannot produce spiritual fruit through fleshly means. You cannot guilt someone into godliness. You cannot shame someone into sanctification. You cannot threaten someone into transformation.

Paul asked the Galatians, “After beginning by means of the Spirit, are you now trying to finish by means of the flesh?” (Galatians 3:3). The Christian life doesn’t begin with grace and then switch to human effort. It begins with grace and continues with grace, empowered by the Holy Spirit from start to finish.

What Truly Motivates Holiness

What drives believers to live righteously is not fear—it’s love. Gratitude. The indwelling Holy Spirit.

When I stood in Heaven and felt the fullness of God’s love, I didn’t feel complacent. I felt compelled to honor the One who loved me so completely.

“God’s kindness is intended to lead you to repentance” (Romans 2:4). Grace precedes obedience—it doesn’t replace it.

Consider the woman caught in adultery. The legalists wanted to stone her—to use fear and punishment to motivate righteousness. Jesus offered grace: “Neither do I condemn you.” But notice, He didn’t stop there. He added, “Go now and leave your life of sin” (John 8:11). The grace came first, creating the motivation and power for the obedience that followed.

Grace Produces What Legalism Cannot

Here’s the truth that transformed my understanding: Genuine grace produces genuine holiness in ways legalism never could.

Scripture still commands holiness—“Be holy, because I am holy” (1 Peter 1:16)—but the power to obey comes from grace, not law. “For the grace of God has appeared... It teaches us to say no to ungodliness” (Titus 2:11–12).

These commands are not suggestions. They are not optional. Christians are called to live lives that honor God, to pursue holiness, to actively resist sin.

But—and this is crucial—the power to obey these commands comes through grace, not law.

Paul writes in Titus 2:11-12: “For the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people. It teaches us to say ‘No’ to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age.”

Did you catch that? Grace teaches us to say no to sin. Grace itself is the educator, the motivator, the transformer. Not fear. Not shame. Grace.

Why This Matters So Desperately

To the sincere Christian who worries that emphasizing grace will lead to license, I say this: Look at the fruit of each approach.

Legalism produces: Fear-based compliance, hidden sin, spiritual exhaustion, judgmentalism, pride in the “strong” and despair in the “weak,” churches full of pretenders, and entire generations walking away from a God they perceive as harsh and impossible to please.

Grace produces: Love-motivated obedience, honest confession and healing, joy in service, humility (because we know we’re saved by grace alone), authentic community where we bear one another’s burdens, and a witness to the world that compels them toward a God who loves unconditionally.

Which fruit looks more like Jesus?

The Test of True Grace

Here’s how you know if someone truly understands grace: they sin less, not more. They pursue holiness with greater passion, not less. But the source of their pursuit has changed entirely.

They’re not running from God’s punishment; they’re running toward God’s presence. They’re not trying to earn what they already possess; they’re responding to what they’ve freely received. They’re not white-knuckling their way through obedience; they’re being transformed by the Holy Spirit’s power.

If someone uses “grace” as an excuse to sin, they haven’t encountered real grace. They’ve encountered a cheap counterfeit. Real grace—the kind that flows from Heaven, the kind I witnessed in my life review—is so overwhelming, so transformative, so precious that the last thing you want to do is cheapen it with casual sin.

Paul put it perfectly: “What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? By no means! We died to sin; how can we live in it any longer?” (Romans 6:1-2). True grace kills our desire for sin, even as it kills sin’s power over us.

The legalist says, “Behave, or God won’t love you.” Grace says, “God loves you, and that love will transform your behavior.”

One produces external compliance at best, internal rebellion at worst. The other produces genuine heart transformation.

I am not calling Christians to lower standards. I’m calling them to a higher power—the power of God’s grace working through the Holy Spirit to accomplish what our willpower never could.

The Myth of “Hyper Grace”

Some accuse grace teachers of “hyper grace.” That term doesn’t exist in Scripture. Paul faced the same charge from legalists who wanted to add rules to faith.

There is no such thing as too much grace. Grace is God’s nature, Christ’s work, and the Spirit’s power. You cannot have an excess of God.

The Rich Young Ruler’s Fatal Error

The legalists who coined “hyper grace” are making the same mistake as the rich young ruler in Mark 10. Remember him? He came to Jesus confident in his personal accountability, his record of obedience. “Teacher, I have kept all these commandments since I was a boy,” he declared.

He thought he was good enough. He believed his personal righteousness, his strict adherence to the law, his accountability to religious standards made him acceptable to God. He had checked all the boxes.

Jesus’s response shattered his self-righteousness: “Why do you call me good? No one is good—except God alone” (Mark 10:18).

This is the heart of the issue. The rich young ruler—and every legalist after him—operates on the premise that human beings can achieve enough goodness, enough accountability, enough righteousness to warrant God’s acceptance. They believe in personal merit as a component of salvation.

But Jesus demolished this foundation. No one is good but God. Not the rich young ruler with his perfect track record. Not the Pharisee with his meticulous rule-keeping. Not the pastor who preaches hard truths. Not you. Not me.

The rich young ruler walked away sad because he couldn’t accept grace. He wanted to earn his salvation. He wanted his goodness to count for something. Sound familiar? This is precisely what the “hyper grace” critics are defending—the right to add human achievement to God’s grace.

False Teachers? Look in the Mirror

When legalists call grace teachers “false teachers,” the irony is staggering. Let’s examine who’s actually teaching falsely:

False doctrine says: You are saved by grace, but maintained by your performance. Biblical doctrine says: “He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion” (Philippians 1:6).

False doctrine says: Personal accountability is what keeps you saved. Biblical doctrine says: “No one can snatch them out of my hand” (John 10:28).

False doctrine says: We need to balance grace with law. Biblical doctrine says: “For sin shall no longer be your master, because you are not under the law, but under grace” (Romans 6:14).

False doctrine says: Too much emphasis on grace leads to sin. Biblical doctrine says: “Where sin increased, grace increased all the more” (Romans 5:20).

Who is teaching falsely? Those who proclaim the scandalous grace of God as revealed in Scripture, or those who add human conditions to divine salvation?

The legalists who warn against “hyper grace” are the spiritual descendants of the Judaizers Paul confronted—those who said, “Yes, faith in Christ, but also circumcision. But also keeping the law. But also your personal accountability.”

Paul’s response to them was fierce: “As for those agitators, I wish they would go the whole way and emasculate themselves!” (Galatians 5:12). He didn’t mince words because the stakes were eternal. Adding anything to grace isn’t just wrong theology—it’s “a different gospel—which is really no gospel at all” (Galatians 1:6-7).

The “Personal Accountability” Deception

The “hyper grace” critics love to emphasize “personal accountability.” It sounds spiritual. It sounds mature. But here’s what they miss: true accountability in the Christian life flows from grace, not despite it.

When I stood before God in my life review, I wasn’t held “personally accountable” in the way legalists mean. I wasn’t graded on my performance. I was shown how grace had covered every failure, how Christ’s righteousness had been credited to my account, how the Holy Spirit had been working even in my weakest moments.

That experience didn’t make me less accountable—it made me more responsive to God’s love. There’s a profound difference.

Biblical accountability means:

Confessing our sins to one another in loving community (James 5:16)

Bearing one another’s burdens (Galatians 6:2)

Encouraging one another toward love and good deeds (Hebrews 10:24)

Living in the light as He is in the light (1 John 1:7)

The Scandal of Unearned Love

Grace offends our sense of fairness. We want to earn salvation, to contribute something. Grace says, “You bring nothing but your need. God brings everything.”

This is scandalous. It means the murderer on the cross enters Heaven based solely on faith. It means we stand alongside repentant prostitutes and tax collectors in God’s kingdom. It means our decades of church service don’t make us more saved than the person who turns to Christ on their deathbed.

If this offends you, good. It should. It offended the Pharisees too. But this is the Gospel.

Living in Grace

So what does grace-centered Christianity look like in practice?

It calls sin what it is—without condemning the sinner. Jesus was both full of grace and full of truth. We don’t ignore sin, but we point people to the Savior, not to religious performance.

It creates communities of radical acceptance. Our churches should be hospitals for sinners, not museums for saints. The broken should feel more welcome than the “put-together.”

It produces holiness through love, not fear. When we truly grasp God’s love, we want to please Him—not out of obligation, but out of gratitude and relationship.

It silences the harsh voices. We stop celebrating the condemning teacher and start celebrating those who lead people to the throne of grace.

My Message from Heaven

I didn’t return from Heaven to add to people’s burdens. I returned to remove them. The message from the other side is clear: You are loved beyond measure, and that love is not dependent on your performance.

Legalism says, “Try harder.” Grace says, “It is finished.”

Legalism says, “You’re not enough.” Grace says, “Christ is enough.”

Legalism says, “Maybe if you’re good enough.” Grace says, “You are already beloved.”

The harsh pastor who crushes spirits in the name of truth is not operating in God’s power—he’s operating in opposition to it. The legalist who adds conditions to salvation is not being more biblical—he’s being less.

Grace is the scandal at the heart of Christianity. It’s unfair. It’s unearned. It’s unlimited. And it’s the only thing that can truly transform a human heart.

Having stood in Heaven and experienced the fullness of God’s love, I can tell you with certainty: God’s grace is bigger than you imagine, freer than you’ve been taught, and more powerful than any religious system man can construct.

Stop trying to earn what has already been given. Stop praising those who add burdens to the Gospel. Stop operating in legalism when God has offered grace.

The question isn’t whether we’re good enough. The question is whether we’ll accept that in Christ, God has already declared us righteous—not because of who we are, but because of who He is.

That’s grace. That’s the Gospel. And that’s the message Heaven burns in my heart to share.

- Randy Kay


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