The Power of Hyper-Grace
Living Beyond Fear and Control
Most people don’t really understand the grace of God in Scripture. To many, it’s just another word — a passive idea, a theological concept, or a polite phrase before a meal. But true grace — the kind Scripture reveals — is hyper-grace: an active, living force that carries you through life with the favor of God, through redemption and divine empowerment.
It’s easy to minimize what is meaningful. Human nature has a way of reducing extraordinary truths into ordinary expressions. But grace is no ordinary thing. It’s the very breath of divine influence upon the soul — freely given, abundantly poured out, and eternally sustaining.
What would we do without it?
Without grace, how could we endure, how could we rise, how could we ever reflect the goodness of God? Grace is not a license to live loosely, but a liberation to live freely — through the influence of God Himself working within us.
The Struggle of Sharing Revelation
It’s been twenty-five years since this great awakening — the revelation of grace that changed my life. And even now, sharing this message isn’t easy. Some people understand what I’m saying, but many choose to deny it. Why? Because to admit that grace alone sustains us would dismantle their systems of fear and control — systems that rely on human effort, guilt, and manipulation rather than divine trust.
But fear and control are the enemies of grace. They may produce outward results, but never inward transformation. They may modify behavior, but they cannot create godliness. Only God can do that — through His Spirit, through His grace.
I know those methods well, because I once believed in them. I once thought that behavior modification was holiness, that rule-following was righteousness, and that control was leadership. But grace taught me otherwise. It taught me that the work of God is just that — the work of God.
The Journey of Faith
Preaching and believing the ways of God is not for the faint of heart. Few will follow this path of grace, and even fewer will understand it. Yet, some will — those whose hearts are open, whose souls are tired of striving, and who finally realize that God alone brings about the results.
And yes, there will always be scoffers. They’ll mock, they’ll resist, they’ll think they’re defending truth. But no one can favor God the way He favors us. His grace is unearned, unstoppable, and unchangeable — and no amount of human effort can improve upon it.
So, we walk on — not by fear, not by control, not by self-effort — but by grace.
And that grace is more than enough.