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Eveil a La Grace

par Charles R. Swindoll

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1,93998,527 (4.02)5
(English Title: The Grace Awakening)Les assassins de la grâce sont partout: dans nos milieux de travail, dans nos voisinages, peut-ètre dans nos maisons et, malheureusement, mème dans nos églises. Nous sommes environnés de personnes qui critiquent, condamnent et détruisent tout espoir d'une vie remplie de joie. Et, comme Charles Swindoll le fait si bien remarquer, bon nombre de ceux qui devraient propager l'Évangile de grâce sont plutôt devenus de petites brutes pharisaïques, prenant sur eux de juger les autres.Dans ce qui est peut-ètre son livre le plus profond jusqu'ici, Charles Swindoll n'y va pas de main morte. Éveil à la Grâce est un livre osé, perspicace, qui met en plein dans le mille. Par-dessus tout, c'est un livre d'espoir qui nous amène à dépasser la frustration et la culpabilité ressenties à force de vouloir plaire aux autres, et à goûter la grâce merveilleuse et libératrice de Dieu.Pour le nombre croissant de personnes qui pensent que la vie devrait ètre plus qu'une religion triste et sévère, Éveil à la Grâce offre une option glorieuse: la vérité qui nous affranchit.AuteurCharles Swindoll (1934 - ) est né au Texas, aux États-Unis. Après avoir fait des études d'ingénieur, il a fait des études de théologie au Dallas Theological Seminary. Il est considéré comme l'un des plus influents prédicateurs américains de la deuxième moitié du xxe siècle. Charles Swindoll a été président du Dallas Theological Seminary. Il est aussi l'auteur de plus de 70 livres, dont la série Grandes vies de la Parole de Dieu .Table des matièresPréface des éditeursRemerciementsIntroduction1. La grâce: c'est vraiment merveilleux !2. Le don gratuit3. La grâce ne comporte-t-elle pas un certain risque ?4. Une faveur imméritée et un amour inconditionnel5. La résistance au légalisme6. Affranchis ? Alors vivons en rapport !7. Guider les autres vers la liberté8. La grâce de laisser les autres ètre eux-mèmes9. La persévérance malgré les divergences d'opinion10. La grâce: si intime et personnelle11. Sommes-nous réellement des dispensateurs de la grâce ?12. Un mariage imprégné de grâce13. La joie du don par grâce14. La grâce ou l'acceptation véritableConclusionNotes… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 5 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 9 (suivant | tout afficher)
An excellent book, showing the need for God's grace, and what it means in real life. A plea against fundamentalism and legalism, towards a richer, freer life in Christ. A little heavy in places, perhaps, but very sound. Well worth the effort. Similar message to Philip Yancey's 'What's so Amazing about Grace?' ( )
  SueinCyprus | Jan 26, 2016 |
Enjoyed meditating on this devotional about grace. Some of my favorite quotes include:
During his days as president, Thomas Jefferson and a group of companions were traveling across the country on horseback. They came to a river which had overflowed its banks because of a recent downpour. The swollen river had washed the bridge away. Each rider was forced to ford the river on horseback, fighting for his life against the rapid currents. The very real possibility of death threatened each rider, which caused a traveler who was not part of their group to step aside and watch. After several had plunged in and made it to the other side, the stranger asked President Jefferson if he would ferry him across the river. The president agreed without hesitation. The man climbed on, and shortly thereafter the two of them made it safely to the other side.
As the stranger slid off the back of the saddle onto dry ground, one in the group asked him, "Tell me, why did you select the President to ask this favor of?" The man was shocked, admitting he had no idea it was the president who had helped him.
"All I know," he said, "Is that on some of your faces was written the answer 'No,' and on some of them was the answer 'yes.' His was a 'Yes' face."
"Please understand, to be justified does not mean "just as if I'd never sinned." I hear that often and it always troubles me. In fact, it weakens the full impact of justification. Justification really means this: Even though I still sin periodically and have found myself unable to stop sinning on a permanent basis—God declared me righteous when I believed. And because I will continue to sin from time to time, I find all the more reason to be grateful for grace. As a sinner I deserve vengeance. As a sinner I'm afraid of justice. And so, as a sinner, my only hope for survival is grace. In its purest form, it makes no earthly sense!"
“Grace is God’s universal good news of salvation. The tragedy is that some continue to live lives in a death bog because they have been so turned off by a message full of restrictions, demands, negativism and legalism. You may have been one of those held in bondage, victimized by a system that has stolen your joy and snuffed out your hope….if you can come to the camp of grace beneath the cross you’ll never be in the awful bog again.
You will be free ... free at last."
“Grace also brings a freedom to do something else—a freedom to enjoy the rights and privileges of being out from under slavery and allowing others such freedom. It’s freedom to experience and enjoy a new kind of power that only Christ could bring. It is a freedom to become all that he meant me to be, regardless of how he leads others. I can be me—fully and freely. It is freedom to know him in an independent and personal way. And that freedom is released to others so they can be who they are meant to be—different from me.”
The one place on earth where we would most expect to be set free is, in fact, the very place we are most likely to be placed into slavery: the church.
With all this talk about grace and liberty, perhaps it's time for me to clarify something. Some may be asking: Doesn't liberty have its limits? Shouldn't folks restrain their freedom and occasionally hold themselves in check? Yes, without question. Grace can be and sometimes is---abused. By that I mean exercising one's liberty without wisdom, having no concern over whether it offends or wounds a young and impressionable fellow believer. But I must hasten to add that I believe such restraint is an individual matter. It is not to be legislated, not something to be forced on someone else. Limitations are appropriate and necessary, but I fail to find in Scripture anyplace where one is to require such restraint from another. To do so is legalism. It plugs up breathing holes. It kills grace. The best restraint is self-restraint that comes from the inner prompting of the Holy Spirit through the person and presence of Jesus Christ in each individual life. It's been my observation over the last thirty years that the vast majority of believers need to be freed, not restrained. Our job is to free people; God's job is to restrain them. God is doing His job much better than we are doing ours.
In spite of the terrible consequences sins may bring, grace also means we allow others the freedom to choose, regardless. To do otherwise abuses as much as those who use their freedom as a license to sin. I am a firm believer in mutual accountability, but grace means I will not force or manipulate or judge or attempt to control you, nor should you do those things to me. It means we will keep on helping others to freedom by providing breathing holes. It means we deliberately let go so each of us can grow and learn on our own; otherwise, we shall never enjoy the liberty of an open sea. For most of us, letting others go is neither natural nor easy. Because we care, it is more our tendency to give people hints or advice. The thought of letting them fail or fall is extremely painful to us, but God treats us like that virtually every day of our lives. We tend to clutch, not release . . . to put people in our frame and not allow them any breathing holes unless and until they accept the shape of our molds.
Few people realize better than non-Christians how guilt-ridden many Christians are. A lady in our congregation tells of a conversation she had with a fellow student while the two of them were students at the Berkeley campus of the University of California. He knew she was a Christian, and he made it painfully clear that he had no interest whatsoever in her faith. When she asked why, his answer bore the sting of reality: "Because the most guilt-ridden people I know are Christians. No thanks."
Grace releases people, not only from sin but from shame. Do you do that in your ministry? Or do you make a note of those things and keep reminding yourself when that particular name comes up: "Well, you know, you'd better watch her" or, "You've gotta watch him." Do you give people reasons to feel greater shame? Who knows what battles of shame most folks struggle with? It is enormous.
My hope has been to create an appetite for grace that is so strong nothing will restrain us from pursuing the freedom and spontaneity it can bring---a longing so deep that a new spiritual dawn, a "grace awakening," if you will, cannot help but burst through the wall of legalism. Since I am a Christian minister, much of my involvement and exposure is in the realm of the church and Christian organizations. It has been my observation that even here most folks are not free; they have not learned to accept and enjoy the grace that has come to us in Jesus Christ. Though He came to set us free, it saddens me to say that many still live behind the wall of bondage. Regrettably, the stones of constraint are everywhere to be found. Instead of being places of enthusiastic, spontaneous worship, many churches and Christian ministries have become institutions that maintain a system of religion with hired officials to guard the gates and to enforce the rules.
In vain I have searched the Bible, looking for examples of early Christians whose lives were marked by rigidity, predictability, inhibition, dullness, and caution. Fortunately, grim, frowning, joyless saints in Scripture are conspicuous by their absence. Instead, the examples I find are of adventurous, risk-taking, enthusiastic, and authentic believers whose joy was contagious even in times of painful trial. Their vision was broad even when death drew near. Rules were few and changes were welcome. The contrast between then and now is staggering.
The difference, I am convinced, is grace. Grace scales the wall and refuses to be restricted. It lives above the demands of human opinion and breaks free from legalistic regulations. Grace dares us to take hold of the sledge of courage and break through longstanding stones. Grace invites us to chart new courses and explore ever-expanding regions, all the while delighting in the unexpected. While others care more about maintaining the wall and fearing those who guard it, grace is constantly looking for ways to freedom. Grace wants faith to fly, regardless of what grim-faced officials may say or think or do.
There is a "grace awakening" loose in the land. Will you become a part of it? While you take your turn with the sledgehammer and pound away, a host of us are standing near, and some of us may be half a world away, cheering you on. Don't think of it as a lonesome, isolated task. You are breaking through to freedom, and no one is more delighted than the Lord Jesus Christ, who has promised you His grace. Never forget His words: "If therefore the Son shall make you free, you shall be free indeed." Stay at it. By the grace of Almighty God, the new movement will someday sweep across every continent and the longstanding wall that has kept people in bondage for centuries will come tumbling down. And we shall all, at last, be free indeed. ( )
  dannywahlquist | May 14, 2013 |
I love Chuck's writing, as much as I enjoy his radio show. He also has a great collection (9) "GREAT LIVES FROM GOD'S WORD' series, each worth reading. Reading Chuck is like him talking directly to you face -to-face. ( )
  Jim-Per | Jul 5, 2008 |
This book can change a legalists life. Swindoll sticks with the Bible and has an absolutely wonderful message, Christ came to set us free from the law. We don't have to live by a bunch of dos and donts anymore, we live in the age of the Spirit. This book is worth reading. ( )
  lmathews | Jun 3, 2006 |
Case 4 shelf 3
  semoffat | Aug 7, 2021 |
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(English Title: The Grace Awakening)Les assassins de la grâce sont partout: dans nos milieux de travail, dans nos voisinages, peut-ètre dans nos maisons et, malheureusement, mème dans nos églises. Nous sommes environnés de personnes qui critiquent, condamnent et détruisent tout espoir d'une vie remplie de joie. Et, comme Charles Swindoll le fait si bien remarquer, bon nombre de ceux qui devraient propager l'Évangile de grâce sont plutôt devenus de petites brutes pharisaïques, prenant sur eux de juger les autres.Dans ce qui est peut-ètre son livre le plus profond jusqu'ici, Charles Swindoll n'y va pas de main morte. Éveil à la Grâce est un livre osé, perspicace, qui met en plein dans le mille. Par-dessus tout, c'est un livre d'espoir qui nous amène à dépasser la frustration et la culpabilité ressenties à force de vouloir plaire aux autres, et à goûter la grâce merveilleuse et libératrice de Dieu.Pour le nombre croissant de personnes qui pensent que la vie devrait ètre plus qu'une religion triste et sévère, Éveil à la Grâce offre une option glorieuse: la vérité qui nous affranchit.AuteurCharles Swindoll (1934 - ) est né au Texas, aux États-Unis. Après avoir fait des études d'ingénieur, il a fait des études de théologie au Dallas Theological Seminary. Il est considéré comme l'un des plus influents prédicateurs américains de la deuxième moitié du xxe siècle. Charles Swindoll a été président du Dallas Theological Seminary. Il est aussi l'auteur de plus de 70 livres, dont la série Grandes vies de la Parole de Dieu .Table des matièresPréface des éditeursRemerciementsIntroduction1. La grâce: c'est vraiment merveilleux !2. Le don gratuit3. La grâce ne comporte-t-elle pas un certain risque ?4. Une faveur imméritée et un amour inconditionnel5. La résistance au légalisme6. Affranchis ? Alors vivons en rapport !7. Guider les autres vers la liberté8. La grâce de laisser les autres ètre eux-mèmes9. La persévérance malgré les divergences d'opinion10. La grâce: si intime et personnelle11. Sommes-nous réellement des dispensateurs de la grâce ?12. Un mariage imprégné de grâce13. La joie du don par grâce14. La grâce ou l'acceptation véritableConclusionNotes

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