top of page
Search

Glory and Grace


The Uncontainable Gift That Keeps Flowing


God has this wild, secretive plan.

In the midst of everything—

in the swirl of disappointment,

in the undoing of our expectations,

in the ache of unanswered prayers—

He means to fill us with glory again.


With glory and grace.


These aren’t just poetic words.

They are portals.


They are living frequencies resonating from eternity,

vibrating through language and light,

coded into the fabric of scripture and spirit.


We often speak of grace as if it were a one-time gift.

The pardon at the cross. The kindness of God.

The thing that covers our failure.


But grace is far more dynamic than we’ve been taught.

Grace is not passive. Grace is power.

Grace is not just a pardon. Grace is a person—the indwelling presence of Christ in us, moving us forward, making us new.


Grace in the Languages of Heaven


In Greek, the word for grace is χάρις (charis).

It means graciousness, favor, divine influence upon the heart and its reflection in the life. Charis speaks of unearned enablement—God’s empowering presence that transforms.


But in Hebrew, the word is חֵן (chen)

A deep, ancient word that paints a different picture.

Chen is often translated as “favor” or “grace,” but its root חָנַן (chanan) means to bend or stoop in kindness to an inferior; to show favor, to have mercy.


It implies a divine bowing low, a God who stoops to lift.

Grace, then, is not just something we get

It is Someone who comes close.


Hebrew letters each have visual meanings.

The letters in chen (חֵן) are:


  • Chet (ח) — a fence or gate, symbolizing protection, separation, or transformation

  • Nun (ן) — a fish or seed, symbolizing life, activity, or continuation


Together, these letters reveal a hidden message:


“Grace is the protective gate through which divine life flows.”


Grace is not soft permission.

Grace is the sacred conduit of transformation.

It is the field of possibility where divine life enters and multiplies.


And this grace—this chen and charis—is the language of Heaven,

written into every sunrise, every undeserved moment of beauty,

every stirring of the heart that says, “I don’t deserve this,”

but still dares to receive.



The Science of Receiving Grace


Neurologically, our brains are wired to protect us from perceived threats—even from the pain of disappointment. That means we can become subconsciously resistant to receiving good things.


Grace, by nature, offends that wiring.

Because it’s not earned. It’s not predictable.

It’s not “safe” by human logic. It is holy generosity.


To receive grace, the brain must reroute past trauma, let go of control, and surrender the belief that worth must be earned. That’s not easy for the ego or the nervous system. But it is the work of transformation.


Metaphysically, grace is like a frequency of divine favor—a flow state where you no longer strive to become, but allow yourself to become who you already are in Him.


This is why Paul writes:


His grace is sufficient for me, for His power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:9).


Grace is the power of God flowing into the places we would rather hide.

It is not just covering—it is co-creating.

It is the original current of Eden, now available again through the blood of Yeshua.



A River You Cannot Control, But You Can Receive


Much of life comes like a river:

fast, unpredictable, and wild.


You cannot control its course.

You can only posture yourself in one of two ways:

to resist, or to receive.


And here lies the divine invitation:

To receive grace is not to understand everything.

It is to choose trust anyway.

To open your hands in loss, and still whisper,


“Even here, I believe there is gift. Even now, I receive Your grace.”


This kind of receiving reshapes the mind, retrains the heart, and reprograms the nervous system to walk in a daily rhythm of favor. It is not self-dependence, but God-dependence.



Grace Upon Grace: The Overflow of Glory


John 1:16 says:


“From His fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.”


In Greek, it reads:

“χάριν ἀντὶ χάριτος” — literally:

“grace in place of grace”

or “grace layered upon grace”


This isn’t just stacking blessings—it’s divine layering, like waves of glory moving from depth to depth, from glory to glory.


It is one thing to choose to take the grace offered at the cross.

But to choose to live as one daily filled with His grace?


That is a sacred decision.


To fill with all that He freely gives,

and to fully live—with glory and grace and God?


This is our calling.

This is our inheritance.


God’s grace upon grace.

God’s favor upon free and ready favor.


He is not withholding.

He is always offering.

And now, we dare to receive it all.



Declaration: To Myself, From Myself, For Myself


Lord, Heavenly Father-

Today, I receive divine grace like breath.

Not because I earned it—because I didn’t.

But because I was made for it.


I open the gate of my heart and let the river flow.

Where there was resistance, I surrender.

Where there was fear, I release it.


I choose to believe that grace is active in me,

filling me with glory, aligning me with truth,

rewiring my thoughts to reflect the mind of Christ.


I say yes to unexplainable favor.

I say yes to daily, moment-by-moment mercy.

I say yes to grace as empowerment—not excuse.

Grace to rise. Grace to rest. Grace to become.


And when the river comes,

I will not fear its strength—

I will float in its current.


For I am not outside His reach.

I am held within His grace.


In your name Yeshua,

Amen



I Hear the Spirit Say…


I am pouring My grace into the hidden places where you’ve silently wrestled and called it strength.

Where you have withheld from yourself what I have freely given, I now invite you to receive without resistance.


You do not have to prove your worth to Me.

You have always been Mine.


The glory you seek is not far off—it is in the grace you resist.

Let it rush in.


Let it fill the crevices of your history,

the ache in your story,

the doubts in your becoming.


Grace is not only what covered your past—

it is what carries your now

and crowns your next.


I am not asking you to strive.

I am asking you to stay open.

To breathe Me in.

To allow the river of My favor to wash through the dry riverbeds of your soul.


There is glory in the letting go.

And there is glory in the filling.


Let Me fill you again—with glory and grace.”



Final Thought


Grace is not just what saved you.

It is what sustains, empowers, and elevates you.


It is the unrelenting kindness of God

disguised as strength,

clothed in softness,

moving through your life like a gentle flood

that never runs dry.


The hidden thread in His divine tapestry has always been this:

You were never meant to carry it alone.

You were meant to be carried.


So, open your hands.

Open your heart.

And let grace make its home in you.


You are already standing in the overflow.

Now—receive it.

 
 
 

Comments


Join the Community

Thank you for joining!

bottom of page