NONFICTION BOOK INDEX

What should the world see when it looks at us? Christ. But we've come up with hundreds of principles and thousands of rules attempting to be Christlike. It's too complicated to wrap our minds around. And Christ gets buried under lists, rules and formulas.

John 1:14 boils down for us what it means to be Christlike. It means to be full of only two things: Grace and Truth. Instead of a dozen, this gives us just two balls to juggle. It's succinct, a two point checklist of Christlikeness. Everything we do can and should be measured by the test of grace and truth.

Christlikeness means living by grace and truth, extending both to others. Instead of the world's apathy and tolerance, we offer grace. Instead of the world's relativism and deception, we offer truth.

If we minimize grace the world sees no hope for salvation. If we minimize truth, the world sees no need for salvation. To show the world Jesus, we must offer full-orbed, unabridged truth and grace, magnifying both, never downsizing or apologizing for either.

The grace question:
Why did sinners want to be around Jesus, but don't want to be around us?


The truth question:
Why did sinners crucify Jesus, but have no problem with us?

Truth without grace breeds a self-righteousness legalism that poisons the church and pushes the world away from Christ. Grace without truth breeds moral indifference and keeps people from seeing their need for Christ.

Truth is quick to post warning signs and guardrails. Yet it fails to empower people to drive safely, to avoid plunging off the cliff, and fails to help them when they crash. Grace is quick to post ambulances and paramedics at the bottom of the cliff. But without truth, it fails to post warning signs and build guardrails, and therefore encourages the very self-destruction it attempts to heal.

Grace without truth deceives people, and ceases to be grace. Truth without grace crushes people, and ceases to be truth.

Any attempt to "soften" the gospel by minimizing truth ultimately keeps the world from grace. Any attempt to "toughen" the gospel by minimizing grace keeps the world from the greatest truth—His redemptive work on man's behalf. Christ went to the cross, in the ultimate act of grace, because He would not ignore the truth of His holiness and our sin. Grace never ignores or violates truth—rather, it offers restitution and joy by satisfying Truth's demands. ("Go and sin no more.")

Like a binary star consisting of two suns that revolve around each other, truth and grace are equal and inseparable. Luther said the devil doesn't care which side of the horse we fall off of—as long as we don't stay in the saddle. A saddle has two stirrups. To stay in the saddle, the church needs to mount the horse with one foot solidly in the stirrup of truth, and the other solidly in the stirrup of grace.

Grace and truth make us live in such a way that there is no human explanation for our lives—in the absence of human explanation, people turn to God as the reason behind what they see. Our children, our neighbors, and we ourselves long for Jesus—we can offer Him only by offering His grace and truth.
 
Reader Responses

A copy of your book The Grace & Truth Paradox lies on the nightstand, next to the alarm clock; each night when I lie down I am reminded, not just to read it again, but more importantly that the One I long to know more is forever gracious about truth, truthful about grace and truthfully gracious.  Just as the priests were not to wear seamed garments, I am reminded in your book that the garment He wears is seamless.  For every other attribute of His, there is that grace and truth.  You can't tell where one begins and the other ends.

 If I could, I would leave a copy of this one book on every coffee table in my hometown and I'd remove every book from the local Christian bookstore and fill the shelves with it.  - D. B.

 
Endorsements

"Reading a Randy Alcorn book is like opening a treasure chest. This is truth seasoned with grace and presented with excellence. A jewel you dare not pass up!"
- Hank Hanegraaff, host of The Bible Answer Man, author of The Covering

"The Grace and Truth Paradox may very well be to our generation what Francis Schaeffer's Mark of the Christian was to his."
- The Right Books

"I'm not a big fan of very short and easy reads, since in my experience most are as superficial as their size suggests, but Randy Alcorn's The Grace and Truth Paradox (Multnomah, 2003) is simple but elegant in its succinct presentation of the mighty truth that grace and telling the truth work together."
- Marvin Olasky, editor-in-chief, World magazine, May 3, 2003

 
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