2Co 8:9 For you have experienced the extravagant grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that although he was infinitely rich, he impoverished himself for our sake, so that by his poverty, we could become rich beyond measure.
God wants us to know His grace. He wants us to learn about it, and then to experience it at work in our lives. Grace has rightly been described as “unmerited favor.” The acrostic, “God’s Riches At Christ’s Expense,” catches more of its majesty. Today we Difine Grace as God the father in Christ Jesus transmited into us by the Spirit to be life and life supply. Grace is God freely providing for us (as we trust in the work of His Son) all that we will ever need, all that we will ever yearn for, all that He has commanded us to walk in and become, realities that we could never produce on our own, could never earn, and could never deserve. Grace offers what every human desperately needs, but what God alone can provide.
This grace is found only in a person, the Lord Jesus. It is the “grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Thus, it is accessible only through an ongoing personal relationship with Him.
Grace was made available to us by Jesus’ willingness to take our spiritual bankruptcy upon Himself, that we might be able to partake of His spiritual richness. Before coming to earth below, Jesus enjoyed heavenly riches above (“that though He was rich”). He knew the infinitely rich fellowship of the Father and the Spirit. He received the rich worship of angelic beings. He enjoyed the limitless privileges of deity.
Then, for our benefit, Jesus voluntarily became poor (“for your sakes He became poor”). He humbled Himself to walk as a man among sinful humanity. He who was adored above became despised below. He who shined forth in glorious divinity in heaven was clothed in humble humanity on earth. He who created all things was slain by those He created. He who always existed in eternity past died in time. He who was holy took our sin upon Himself.
Through these workings of His grace, all who believed in Him would become spiritually rich (“that you through His poverty might become rich”). Now, we whose “righteousness were as filthy rags” (Isa_64:6) have become “the righteousness of God in Him” (2Co_5:21). We “who once were not a people . . . are now the people of God” (1Pe_2:10). Now, we have been “blessed with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ” (Eph_1:3).