What if the church has been settling for half a definition of grace?
For too long, grace has been reduced to a neat religious slogan: "unmerited favour." But the New Testament word charis is far more than a polite theological phrase. It is the divine influence of God at work in the heart, turning a person toward Christ, strengthening faith, and producing real, visible change in the life: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
In this forceful and uncompromising book, Doulos DeYeshua goes after the shallow language that has left so many Christians content with partial truth. Drawing from Scripture, Strong's, Thayer's, and a deeply personal journey of discovery, he argues that grace is not only what saves us - it is what transforms us, trains us, and brings us into the life of God.
This is a book for readers who are tired of slogans, tired of religious fog, and tired of being told that grace means less than it does. It challenges legalism, exposes spiritual laziness, and insists that if grace is real, it will show up in the heart, the mind, the conduct, and the fruit.
If you want a safe book, this is not it. If you want a serious one, start reading!
It will confront your assumptions, sharpen your thinking, and press one question home: Do you really know what grace is?