Daily Radio Program with Charles Stanley - In Touch Ministries - The Transforming Grace of God - Part 2
Episode Date: April 16, 2026The most powerful influence in the life of the believer is the transforming grace of God.Donate: https://store.intouch.org/donate/generalSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Welcome to the In-Touch podcast with Charles Stanley for Thursday, April 16th.
What event would you say has had the most dramatic effect on you?
If you've received Christ as your Savior, there ought to be only one answer.
The transforming grace of God.
Here's more encouragement from the series, Grace for Today.
The Apostle Paul says the grace of God was not given to him in vain.
That is, it did not remain barren.
Something happened as a result.
of the grace of God in the life of the Apostle Paul.
And what happened to him, God intends to happen to everyone.
And so I want us to look at his life as an illustration of this whole principle
of the transforming grace of God, which has happened in your life already, if you are a believer.
And the first thing I want you noticed here is the transforming grace of God transformed the
Apostle Paul from a sinner into a saint.
When this transformation took place, what happened was he says,
I move from darkness into light.
I move from death into light.
I move from the course of this world into the course of the kingdom.
He says, something radically changed in my life.
It was so radical.
He said, now I realize that I have become a new creation in Christ Jesus.
Anyone who has experienced the grace of God in salvation is a brand new creation.
He says in First Peter, we have become partakers of his divine nature.
And you see, the idea of transformation means a change in nature.
a change in condition, a change in character, and can be, of course, a change in appearance.
And so Paul is describing what his life used to be like.
In fact, he says in Philippians chapter 3, he describes, if you'll note there for a moment,
he describes in Philippians chapter 3 what he used to be involved in, what he used to live like,
and he talks about how he used to depend upon his own good works and his own nature
and his own conduct and behavior to get him acceptance in the eyes of God.
Now listen carefully.
The only way any of us are made acceptable in the eyes of God
is that we accept by faith the death of his son at Calvary
as the full payment for our sins.
And when we receive his son, we have him.
And to do otherwise is to base our acceptance on something within us.
It cannot happen.
It will not happen.
It has never happened.
It won't happen.
it absolutely is impossible to happen.
And here's a terrible mistake people make.
Listen to me very carefully.
Many people say, well, I would be saved,
but there's some things in my life I need to straighten up.
God wouldn't accept me the way I am.
When I look back in my past and see how much sin and disobedience
and transgressing the law of God,
and I violated everything in the Bible,
you mean to tell me that all I have to do is to come to Jesus
and be accepted by God?
Listen, when I get some things straightened out
and I clean up my life, then I'm going to be a Christian. Let me ask you a question. What did the
Apostle Paul clean up in his life? Not one thing. You know why? Listen, think about this. A person who is
spiritually dead can't clean up anything. There's no power than them to clean it up. Now, they can say,
I'm not going to do this and do the other. They can't clean it up. There's no such thing as self-cleaning.
here's the man who is the most avowed enemy of the church.
One moment he's on his way as a persecutor.
The next moment, this man has been converted by the grace of God.
And so what did God do?
Not only did he transform him from a sinner to a saint,
he transformed him from a servant of sin
to a servant of the living God.
Go to Romans chapter 6.
Verse 16, he says, here's the principle.
Do you not know that when you present yourself to someone as a slave for obedience, you're a slave of the one whom you obey,
either of sin resulting in death or of obedience resulting in righteousness.
That is, if you choose to live in sin, you become a slave of sin.
Verse 20, when you were slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness.
That is, you can't live a righteous life if you're living in sin and become a slave to sin.
Well, Paul says that's what he was.
He was a slave to sin, and he was expressing.
He was expressing his sinfulness in his slavery as a persecutor.
Now, I want us to look at two or three passages here because I want you to listen to his words
what he says.
And let's go back to Acts 26, and then let's turn to, let's see, Acts 26 first of all.
And then we're going to go to First Timothy.
Acts 26, remember what he says in this passage.
Now here again, he's defending himself before King Agrippa, and he says,
verse 9, so then, I thought to my sense.
that I had to do many things hostile to the name of Jesus of Nazareth. I want to say this again,
friend. It may be that you're one of those persons that something has happened back yonder in your life
and it's turned you angry toward God and hostile toward God and you're spewing that hostility
and that anger on the people of God. Listen to this passage. So then I thought to myself that I had to do
many things hostile to the name of Jesus of Nazareth. And this is just what I did in Jerusalem.
not only did I lock up many of the saints in prisons, having received authority from the chief priest,
but also, when they were being put to death, I cast my vote against them.
And as I punished them often in all the synagogues, I tried to force them to blaspheme,
even as he had, and being furiously enraged at them.
I kept pursuing them even the foreign cities.
Here's a man who hated the Lord Jesus Christ, told him in deception about what was true
and what was untrue.
Go to 1 Timothy.
First Timothy, Paul here, again,
speaking of this arrogant hostility,
this anger, this bitterness,
this resentment,
this determination to destroy everything
that was Christ-like.
You say, well, why do you tell us that?
I'm coming to it.
Listen.
Verse 12 of 1st Timothy, chapter 1.
I thank Christ Jesus, our Lord,
who has strengthened me
because he considered me faithful,
putting me into his service.
even though I was formally a blasphemer and the persecutor, listen to this phrase, and a violent aggressor,
a violent aggressor, and yet I was shown mercy because I acted ignorantly in unbelief.
And the grace of our Lord was more than abundant with the faith and love which you found in Christ Jesus.
It is a trustworthy statement deserving full acceptance that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners among whom I am foremost of all.
Now look at this.
I love this.
and yet for this reason, even though he was so wicked, and yet for this reason, I found mercy
in all of that in me as the foremost, foremost of sinners, Jesus Christ might demonstrate his
perfect patience. Look at that. He says, God saved him as a demonstration of God's perfect patience
as an example for those who would believe in him for eternal life. Paul said,
one of the reasons he was convinced that God saved him was this. Watch this now. Be careful. Watch this.
Because he was saying, I want the world to know if I can save that. If I can save him,
if I can come out of nowhere, so to speak, knock him down, blind him, and transform him.
Who is alive? Who cannot be transformed with the grace of God? Cannot be forgiven of their sin?
Can I be redeemed and reconcile and justified? Who among us?
us cannot have his life or her life absolutely totally changed with the grace of God. Paul said,
here is the patience of God in perfection. What does that mean? That means it's complete. He waited and
he waited and he waited and he waited and he waited and he waited and he waited and he waited and he
and waited and he was on his way after murdering and imprisoning and beating and trying to get these
Christians to blaspheme. There came a moment when the patience of God was complete and bang, that was
it. Salvation is the grace of God poured out in the heart.
heart, that is the awareness of God, the conviction of the Holy Spirit, the love of God
poured out in your heart. You don't have to see any lights get knocked down by the bolts of
lightning or hit over the head with anything. God's, that's not the way God operates. The way
God operating in the life of the Apostle Paul was a unique experience for a particular man for a
particular purpose. When I was 12 years of age, I walked out, knelt down, began to weep. The only
thing I remember is that I knew that I was a sinner and I felt terribly guilty. If you asked me
what? As a 12-year-old kid, I couldn't tell you what it was. I just knew that I needed to be
forgiven of my sins and I needed to receive Christ as my Savior. That's all. Now, the difference
between the Apostle Paul, me is here it was a man who was already an adult, aggressively, vengefully,
vengefully, hostily, angrily, trying to destroy the church. And I grew up in a home. Well,
at least saw my mom read the Bible. She read it with me. And I knew,
early in life that I needed to be saved and getting saved at the age of 12 years was just
sort of natural normal. But I want to tell you something, and don't forget this. It took just as much
grace to save me at 12 as into the Apostle Paul at his age. Because listen, how much life does it
take to bring a dead man to life? It just takes life, that's all. If a dead man is dead at 70
or if it's a child dead at 6, life is life. How much grace does it take to save a man in a woman?
just grace, just the love of God and His forgiveness through the shed blood of Jesus Christ.
You can't get so evil that God cannot save you.
You cannot out-send the grace of a loving Father.
That's the power of the cross.
That's not licensed to sin.
That's the power of the work of Jesus Christ at the cross that when he died,
he opened the door of salvation, forgiveness, and cleansing,
and a brand-new life to every single creature on the face of this earth.
It's open to all.
And here's this man who is a blasphemer, who said, I am chief among the sinners.
He said, if you line them all up, put them in a row and put the worst up front, he says,
what you're going to find is he says, you're going to find me right up at the front.
Who can God save anybody?
Who's he willing to save anybody?
The transforming grace of God.
Listen, there's not a single thing within you.
It doesn't make a difference.
What you've done, how many sermons you may have preached, or how many wonderful things you may have done for God,
or whatever it may be, it's still the only thing within us that is worthy of boasting of is Jesus
Christ. He and he alone. Grace is God's graciousness and kindness toward us without regard to our
merit, without regard to our worthiness, and in spite of everything we deserve. And what I want
you to see is this. Don't look back and say, well, I would give my life to Christ, but you don't know
the kind of life I've lived. I want to ask you a question. You ever murdered Christians,
thrown them in jail, made them blaspheme? My friend, you may say, yes, I've done all that.
Well, I want to tell you something. You just joined the ranks of a great apostle. And if he saved
him, he'll save you. You can't do anything to keep God from saving you, but refuse him.
You can't do anything to squelch the grace of God, but choose to refuse him. Because the grace
of God is poured out upon everyone. And you can be saved. You can be saved. You can. You can't. You
You can be forgiven.
He will clean up your past.
You see, what he does, he just wipes it away.
He doesn't try to make the past better.
He just wipes it.
The blood of Jesus Christ wipes away the past.
It's gone and forgotten as far as the east is from the West.
It doesn't make any difference.
And you see, we believe us ought to be shouting and praising and thanking God,
not trying to live in the past.
And listen, do enough good to cover up the past.
The blood of Jesus covered it once and for all.
We're saints.
Doesn't mean we don't sin.
And we make mistakes.
we do sin against them with the blood of Jesus Christ, he says, is continually cleansing us.
We are products and fruits of the grace of God.
The grace of God was not poured out in your heart and my heart in vain, but fruitfully and
productively to the grace of God and the power of God.
Now, what's the proper attitude for a saint who's been transformed from sinner to saint?
Well, there are four things, and you can check yourself out with these.
First of all, humility.
Listen to what the apostle, Paul said.
He said in this 10th verse of 1 Corinthians 15, back to original text,
1st Corinthians 15 says, verse 9, he said,
for I am the least of the apostles and not even fit to be called.
Listen, he says, not even fit to be called an apostle.
Here's a man who is preeminent in the world of his day
as a missionary and as the preacher of the gospel, what does he say? He says, oh, I'm
to tell you, I am the least of the apostles, I am the least of the saints. But go back to
1 Timothy chapter 1. Remember what he said here? First Timothy chapter 1. He said,
you'll me tell you something that's the truth, the gospel truth, nothing but the truth,
so help me God. He said, here it is. It is a trustworthy statement deserving full acceptance
that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am foremost of all.
When you line them up, Paul says, I'm in front.
And you know what?
Listen, you're not going to find pride in the heart of a man or woman who understands the grace of God.
You're not going to find it.
Because that person is always going to be pointing people to Christ, to God.
It is all of God, none of us, all of Christ and none of us.
There's not going to be any arrogance and pride.
in the person who understands the grace of God.
So first of all, the spirit of humility.
The second attitude I want you to notice here is this sense of obligation.
Listen to what Paul says.
Back to 1 Corinthians 15 now.
Notice what he says in this passage.
He says, the grace of God was not poured out in vain upon him.
And he says, but by the grace of God, I am what I am.
So he's giving God the credit, spirit of humility.
And his grace told me did not prove vain,
but I labored even more than all of them.
You know what he was saying?
He was so grateful to God.
He was so overwhelmed of the grace of God
and the goodness of God to him.
He knew that he was heading the wrong direction.
And this is why in all of his testimony
he gives testimony of how awful he'd been.
Persecuting the church, he says,
but look, here's what God did.
And now here's what I'm doing.
God call him to preach.
He said in Galatians chapter 1, he said,
from my mother's womb.
He said, I was separated from my mother's womb
to preach the unsearchable riches
of the grace of God.
And so he gave his life, traveling all over the place.
And if you read the mission, if you look in the back of your Bible and those maps and look
at all of his missionary journeys, read the book of Acts and all the turmoil and the heartache
and the bloodshed and the different difficulties and things that Paul had to go through.
And what is he doing?
He's just praising God for the privilege.
Let me ask you a question.
In what practical, explainable, definable ways are you expressing,
gratitude and thanksgiving to Almighty God for saving you by His grace.
Don't tell me you come to church.
That's not good enough.
Don't say, well, I'd tie.
That's not good enough.
You see, listen, the Apostle Paul was saved with the grace of God to do what?
To tell other people.
What had happened to him?
That's what I said.
He said, God wants you to tell them what's happened to you.
If you'll think about what God has done in your life,
and you may be going through a difficult time,
but think what you'd be like without him.
Listen, if you think it's bad,
think what it'd be like without God.
We should be so grateful,
so overwhelmingly grateful to God.
We have to tell it.
We have to share it.
We've got to tell somebody
that God is a God of love and goodness and mercy and kindness.
You have a message to share.
You can't keep the love of God to yourself.
when there's a whole world of people hurting, dying in agony, sorrow, frustration, anger, hostility, bitterness, resentment, disappointment, disillusionment, depression, despair. And you've got the answer. You see, if I understand the grace of God, there's going to be a sense of humility about me. Secondly, there's going to be a sense of obligation. And thirdly, there's going to be a sense of dependence. Look at this. Back to the 15th chapter, he says, but by the grace of God,
I am what I am, and His grace toward me did not prove vain, but I labored even more than all of them,
yet not I, but the grace of God with me. Paul said, it wasn't I. And how many times Paul says,
not I but Christ Jesus living within me? He said, I didn't labor in my own efforts. He said,
listen, watch this. The same grace, goodness, and love and power of God that brought about the
transformation of our experience from sinner to saint is the same gracious loving power of God
that is at work in your life and my life every day. And that is, we don't have to
have to depend upon ourselves, our own wisdom, our own abilities and talents and strength.
It is Christ. Listen, the resurrected Christ, this is why Paul said, listen, he said, above all
else, what do I want to know? Here's what I want to know. I want to experience the resurrection power
of Jesus. He said, I want to experience in my daily life the same power that raised Jesus from
the dead. And he said, that power is the grace of God laboring in me and laboring through me.
The spirit of humility, the spirit of obligation, motivated by love.
and motivated by thanksgiving and gratitude to God,
the spirit of absolute and total dependence upon God.
And the last is the spirit of absolute confidence.
Look at this.
Coming to the end of his life, death's nearby,
and here's what he says.
Verse 6 and 7 of 2 Timothy chapter 4.
I am already being poured out as a drink offering,
and the time of my departure has come.
I've fought the good fight,
I've finished the course, I've kept the faith.
In the future, somewhere, sometime, there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness,
which the Lord the righteous judge will award to me on that day, and not only to me, but also
to all who have loved his appearing.
What an awesome example of the transforming power of the grace of God that he could take a man
who was hostily, angrily, bitterly, murderously opposed to Christ, and transform him
into the greatest missionary of the world has ever known.
And a man who understood the grace of God
is no man understood it
and who gave of himself absolutely without any reservation
to the proclamation of the gospel of Christ.
I want to ask you one last question.
As you think about all the good things God's done for you
and all that he is in you today
and then think about what you're doing for his kingdom
apart from salvation,
has the grace of God been poured out
in your life in vain?
Have you kept it to yourself?
or is there something burning inside of you that will not let you be quiet about the universal
author of the grace of God?
Thank you for listening to Part 2 of the Transforming Grace of God.
If you'd like to know more about Charles Stanley or InTouch Ministries, stop by intouch.org.
This podcast is a presentation of InTouch Ministries, Atlanta, Georgia.
