Is Your Heart Pure?
What's Full Salvation?
What's Common Grace?
"The Lord is good to all; he has compassion on all he has made" (Psalm 145:9). Many theologians refer to this as common grace. That's not because grace is common, but it is common to all mankind. The line is drawn between common grace and saving grace. God is good to restrain evil, give people time to repent, provide fruitful seasons and food, and many other benefits that are common to all mankind.
Bruce Demarest wrote, "In sum, God's common grace facilitates that sustains and enhances life on a fallen planet." This planet is morally fallen with the sin of all mankind. While judgment is coming, until then God's common grace sustains the world in which we live.
Abraham Kuyper recognized common grace as primarily restraining sin. He wrote, "By His common grace God bridles the evil of fallen human nature, restrains the ruin which sin has produced and spread, and enables even the unregenerated men to do good in the broad non-redemptive sense." God shows common grace even to those who reject God's goodness and compassion. They falsely believe there is no God who will judge them.
God is temporally the Savior of all mankind in common grace. "God, who is the Savior of all people, especially of those who believe" (1 Timothy 4:10). However, the time of God's common grace will end for those who reject his saving grace in Christ. It will happen in the day when this present earth and sky will be aflame in God's justice and judgment on sin. To the contrary, saving grace in Christ Jesus our Lord is everlasting.
The Kingdom Stone
Daniel the prophet declared that "the God of heaven will set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed" (Daniel 2:44). It is a kingdom that shall stand forever. Messiah, our Lord Jesus, is the kingdom stone who will establish the kingdom. He shall reign forever. His kingdom shall fill the whole earth (Daniel 2:35).
Messiah, the kingdom stone, was "cut out of the mountain without hands" (Daniel 2:45). That is a way of speaking about the supernatural work of God. Jesus the Messiah had a supernatural birth. He was raised from the dead through the supernatural power of God. His second coming will be in supernatural power and great glory.
At his first coming, Jesus declared the kingdom of God is at hand. His miracles of healing, delivering people from demons, and raising the dead, were all signs of the kingdom. He came preaching the gospel of the kingdom. He taught that all who are born again enter the kingdom of God (John 3:3).
The kingdom stone is at work in our world. After his glorious resurrection, Jesus declared, "All authority is given unto me in heaven and on earth" (Matthew 28:18). As the chief cornerstone, he is building his church. He said, "I will build my church and the gates of hades shall not prevail against it" (Matthew 16:18). The kingdom works through "righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit" (Romans 14:17).