My Grace Awakening: Thank You Chuck Swindoll

As many of you already know, I love Chuck Swindoll. Thoughts of him always reignite a passion for the Gospel. His example and leadership have stablized me many times as I stumbled on the evangelical road.
In 1993, living a dichotomist life of bar-hopping, womanizing, and Sunday night church attending (just before Sunday night penny beer at the Dugout!), I caught his radio series every morning on the way to work at the Copy Stop in down town Oklahoma City. Grace Awakening. That was the name of the series God used to ignite my soul. Of course, it was not the program itself, but what Chuck was teaching. Grace. Not sure I had ever understood it before. At least my ears were not attune to it until then. Grace. If what Chuck said was true, I was missing much of the Gospel and the character of God.
What is grace?
It is told that during a meeting on comparative religions in Britain that many scholars gathered together to discuss what, if anything, was unique to Christianity. Many different elements were discussed and debated. Was Christianity unique because of its concept of truth? No, other religions have this. Was it unique because of the doctrine of reconciliation? No, other religions have this. Was it unique in terms of inspiration of a particular book? No, again, other religions have this. It is told that C.S. Lewis entered the room during the debate and asked what the discussion was all about. “We are discussing what makes Christianity unique, if anything.†“That’s easy†Lewis responded, “its grace.â€
What is grace? If it is the primary element that separates Christianity from all other world religions (and I believe that it along with the doctrine of the Trinity is), all Christians should have a deep understanding of it, along with the ability to articulate it in a accurate way. Let’s start with this working definition: “Grace is the gift of God that is not deserved, cannot be earned, and cannot be paid back.â€
The word grace comes from the Greek charis which means “a beneficent disposition to someone†(BDAG). From it comes charisma, the Greek word for “gift.†When we talk about people being “charismatic,†we mean that they are gifted. Theologically, while the term does not occur many times in the Gospels, Paul develops the Christian understanding of grace from his understanding of the acts of God through Christ Jesus. It is a free gift that God offers in exchange for nothing other than a willing hand of reception. Broadly speaking God’s grace is seen in creation (He gave us life for free), in providential provision (He sustains the world for free), and in salvation (He offers to those who have turned against Him reconciliation for free). While other religions may have love, they do not have unconditional grace as the avenue for the expression of that love.
Grace can be thought of as the wings of God’s love.
It is the path that His love walks.
Other religions have this word but none of them define it the way that God demonstrates it. In other religions, in order to acquire the love of God or His favor one may have to do any number of religious deeds and acts of righteousness in order to be deserving. But from the Christian worldview “grace†and “deserving†are antithetical. As Paul says to the Romans: “But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace†(11:6). In other words, “If it [salvation] is a gift, it cannot be paid for by any means, otherwise it is not really a gift, but what is deserved.â€
Let me illustrate. Christmas has just passed. My son Will received a Christmas present from his mother and I. It was a new superhero. What if upon receiving this present, he went upstairs to his room, broke open his piggy bank, and proceeded to pay us for this? You are right. You would say that it was a gift, and you don’t pay for a gift. Well, what if he sorted through the quarters, dimes, and nickels and found a penny. One cent. That is not much. What if he said, just take this one penny for this Superman? We would sit down with him and say “Will, you must understand. Mommy and Daddy gave you that as a gift. If we were to accept any money or payment of any kind, even one cent, it would not be a gift. You don’t have to pay us for this. You don’t have to clean your room for this. You don’t have to eat all your dinner for this. And if you fail or mess up in any way we are not going to take this back. It is a gift.†In most cultures, when you attempt to pay for a gift, it is very insulting. It is the same when it comes to God’s gift of salvation. If we attempt or believe that we can pay for this gift that He offers, we insult Him by calling His character and sincerity into question. We are in essence saying “I don’t really believe you. You are probably an Indian giver. I had better do something to make sure that you don’t take this back.†But God’s give of salvation is antithetical to any type of payment.
Neither is this gift of salvation a “lay-away†option. We don’t pay God back in increments for the gift. Again, if this were the case, it would not really be a gift. It might be kind of God to give us this “loan,†but if it is paid back in any way, it cannot be called a gift. This type of “lay-away salvation†does not even fit into the semantic range of the Christian concept.
Therefore, we must understand that we did not do anything to deserve God’s favor, we cannot do anything to earn it, and we cannot pay it back. All we can do is humbly accept it. Indeed, when understood in such a way, grace is truly a unique element to Christianity.
Sadly, I believe that because grace is so amazing, people never really get it. They either subscribe to the cheap payment idea or the lay-away option. Why? I don’t know, but I have my suspicions. I think most people probably just think that true grace is too good to be true. They don’t really experience it in their day-to-day living. Our world works off of loans, payment plans, lay-aways, and expectations based on a job-well-done mentality. As a consequence I believe that most never understand or experience the full benefits of salvation and never are able to serve God truly motivated by His love.
But grace is not cheap and it is not trivial. One must understand their dept, their helplessness, hopelessness, and insufficiency before grace can ever be understood. One must also understand that there was a price paid. When I listened to Chuck speak on grace back in 1993, I understood well my dept. Drunken tears of pain and sorrow were the receipts. The IOU was out of reach. I knew it.
Ironically, this message of grace did not give me a credit card. I suppose that I could have thought of it as such, but its radicalness, its “you have got to be kidding me” radicalness, resulted in my allegiance. An imperfect allegiance, yes. But one that I had yet to find until listening to this series.
In my opinion, Chuck Swindoll is the greatest living preacher. He is the golden tongue of this age. His legacy will be one that is shaped by his preaching, his commitment to Scripture, and his unyielding call for people to recognize God’s majesty and sovereignty. But most of all, for me, he opened my eyes to grace—he caused me to have a Grace Awakening.
Thank you Chuck. May God multipy many more like you.
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- My Grace Awakening: Thank You Chuck Swindoll
- What is Grace?
- The Cursing Christian 2: Now my pastor needs soap in his mouth!
- Leaving Christianity for All the Wrong Reasons
- How Do I Fit Rewards into My Grace Centered Theology? A Theology of Rewards
C Michael Patton on 28 Mar 2008 at 2:12 am #
Here is a quote from Grace Awakening the book:
“I’m not a charismatic. However, I don’t feel it’s my calling to shoot great volleys of theological artillery at my charismatic brothers and sisters. … My encouragement for you today is that each one of us pursue what unites us with others rather than the few things that separate us. … There was a time in my life when I had answers to questions no one was asking. I had a position that life was so rigid I would fight for every jot and tittle. I mean, I couldn’t list enough things that I’d die for. The older I get, the shorter that list gets, frankly. … More than ever we need grace-awakened ministers who free rather than bind†(pp. 188, 189, 233).
Leslie on 28 Mar 2008 at 4:50 am #
Michael:
Chuck Swindoll is also my hero. He indeed is a great guy. If not, how come he would affect a lonely, struggling Christian, who lives time-zones apart from him (Oh, I live in southern India). I was radio-surfing one day in 1996 when I bumped into a non-conservative sounding Bible teacher. I didn’t about Chuck Swindoll then. But I stuck around, and he was teaching on the book of Romans, chapters 6 - 8. I was secretly struggling with issues in my life. My Mom had died just four years back, relationship with my father was in shambles for a really, really long time, and worst of all, my spiritual life was in a mess. I was just pulling on. And the message that day on our indentification with Jesus in his death and resurrection turned the course of my life. Now realistically, the change was slow for me. But the change had begun that day, and it continues for good.
Later I bought my own radio just to listen to Chuck, and I have followed his teachings ever since, and have bought as many books of his as possible (that make it to India). GRACE AWAKENING is my favorite too. The teaching on horizontal grace was mind-changing, and as a result, life-altering.
And to top it all, I had the privilege to work for him “indirectly”. I worked for TWR- India for a year, and answered letters that were addressed to IFL.
Quite frankly, I look like Chuck, and I excited when friends admit it too. One friend even calls me, Chuck Jr.
Okay, I better stop here … I’d go on and on every time I talk about Chuck, the greatest Bible teacher around. Oh, how excited I would be if God “takes” me to DTS, like I desire. Chuck Swindoll would be the first person I’d meet, and I’d excitedly express my gratitude to him for playing a major part in my Christian life.
djohn on 28 Mar 2008 at 5:52 am #
For me it was his ” Top Temptations Fathers Face” so I like you CMP say thank you but, I can’t stop there because he led me to people like you and RMM so CMP thank you for your ministry as well.
JoanieD on 28 Mar 2008 at 6:08 am #
I am reading “Grace Awakening” now and like it very much. I like what you quoted from him, Michael: “More than ever we need grace-awakened ministers who free rather than bind.” This is very true.
(I wonder what it says about me that I was reading three books at one time: one by Dan Kimball, one by Chuck Swindoll and one by Bishop Ware (Eastern Orthodox for anyone who doesn’t know him.) AND…I like them all.
Joanie D.
Eric S. Mueller on 28 Mar 2008 at 6:35 am #
When I first got saved in 2002, I came across Chuck’s “Insight for Living” broadcast. I even adjusted my commute time in order to listen to it in the mornings. Chuck Swindoll had a tremendous affect on my early Christian walk.
rick on 28 Mar 2008 at 6:54 am #
His sermon on hypocrisy (masks!) is one I heard years ago, and yet it still frequently comes to mind. He is a classic.
I still struggle to picture him as a motorcycle rider (a “Harley” I believe).
dac on 28 Mar 2008 at 8:27 am #
No wonder you like him Micheal - he gets labeled as Emergent too!
When the word emergent gets defined that way, I am proud to wear the label.
Alyssa B-D on 28 Mar 2008 at 11:15 am #
A few years back I totally blew myself away by my own sinfulness. For years, I had been sort of “perfect-looking” from the outside: pastor’s daughter, no drugs or alcohol, went to a Christian University and sang in the choirs, no premarital sex, high GPA, youth group leader, etc.
Then God graciously allowed me to experience the fullness of my sin — the end result of my addiction to approval, particularly male approval. I left my job and my home and moved thousands of miles away to shack up with an abusive fiance, stopped praying, reading the Bible and attending church. God let go of my leash so I could see just how far I really would go. And it was a long, long way from home.
I sincerely believed that I was too far gone.
About 40 hours before I was set to marry the abuser, God miraculously saved me and I began to understand the grace you’re talking about. Grace for people who are too far gone.
“# Step 1 - I admitted I was powerless over my addiction - that my life had become unmanageable
# Step 2 - Came to believe that God could restore me to sanity
# Step 3 - Made a decision to turn my will and my life over to the care of God”
kolabok21 on 28 Mar 2008 at 1:51 pm #
Can the next generation carry the torch? I have my doubts that it can in the tradition of men like Swindoll. I believe much prayer is needed and listening before the last one goes on to be with the Lord
Lisa R on 28 Mar 2008 at 6:45 pm #
I recall fondly and vividly about a couple of years ago when I was just coming to realize that I maybe held to some distorted views of scripture and doctrine that was not supported biblically. A day after I prayed one of the most sincere prayers of my christian life asking to really know truth, Chuck Swindoll made a comment at the end of his Insight for Living broadcast that was the impetus for what eventually became a paradigm shift into “correct thinking about theology” as he had mentioned.
Grace Awakening is definately on the top of my reading list.
Alyssa B-D on 29 Mar 2008 at 9:18 am #
CMP can carry the torch!
CA SKILES on 29 Mar 2008 at 10:36 am #
I REMEMBER THE FIRST TIME I HEARD CHUCK ON THE RADIO WAS PROBABLY AROUND 1980. I WAS RAISED IN WHAT I WOULD CALL A BACKWOODS BAPTIST CHURCH. BASIC DOCTRINE WAS ORTHODOX, BUT VERY LEGALISTIC. I WAS IN MY FIRST YEAR OF COLLEGE , I WAS SITTING AT A GAS STATION IN MY DADS PICKUP TRUCK . I WAS WAITING THERE TO MEET SOMEONE TO PLAY THE PIANO AT A WEDDING. I JUST CAUGHT THE LAST 10 OR 12 MINUTES OF CHUCKS MESSAGE THAT DAY BUT I WAS INSTANTLY HOOKED. I HAVE READ ALMOST ALL OF CHUCKS BOOKS AND LISTENED TO HIM ON RADIO EVER SINCE. I WANT TO BE CAREFUL HERE NOT TO PUT ANY MAN ON TOO HIGH A PEDISTAL BUT THERE ARE A HANDFUL OF PEOPLE , FAITHFUL SERVANTS OF GOD WHO HAVE HAD A POWERFUL AND LASTING IMPACT ON MY LIFE. I HAVE NEVER TAKEN THE OPPOTUNITY TO TELL HIM SO , SO I HOPE CHUCK READS THIS POSTS SO HE WILL KNOW WHAT HIS LIFE AND MINISTRY HAVE MEANT TO ME. I TOO HAVE HAD MANY GRACE AWAKENINGS OVER THE PAST 28 YEARS OF LISTENING AND READING CHUCK SWINDOLL.
THANKS CHUCK!
Eric Stephens on 29 Mar 2008 at 7:07 pm #
Swindoll’s book was a major factor in my own Grace Awakening back in 2003 or so. I think this article does an excellent job explaining the concept of grace. Many of my friends will be receiving this article right now.