Truth and Grace

Every soldier knows you can’t win a battle with softness alone, and you can’t win it by swinging wildly either. Victory requires strength and strategy—power and restraint. That’s the picture John gives us of Jesus Christ: not a lopsided Savior leaning to one side of the spectrum, but the perfect balance of grace and truth.

Some believers cling to truth with iron fists. They know what’s right, but their delivery wounds more than it helps. Others lean so far into grace that they excuse sin instead of confronting it. But Jesus never sacrificed one for the other. He confronted sin without cruelty, and He offered mercy without compromise. He didn’t dilute truth to keep peace, nor did He crush the weak with condemnation.

Walking with Christ means adopting this same balance. A soldier of Jesus must stand firm in truth—unmoved by culture, unmoved by pressure—yet carry a heart full of grace toward the wounded and weary. Truth is our belt; grace is our gentleness. One keeps us steady, the other keeps us human.

In a world that loves lies and hates correction, truth must be spoken boldly. And in a world bruised by shame and regret, grace must be offered freely. The church doesn’t need more harsh critics or more soft compromisers. It needs men and women who reflect Christ—people who can hold a line with conviction and extend a hand with compassion.

The more we walk with Jesus, the more we learn that truth guides our steps and grace softens them. March forward with both. The Savior you follow was full of grace and truth—and He calls His soldiers to the same.

4 thoughts on “Truth and Grace”

  1. Great reminder today, Eric! “Truth is our belt; grace is our gentleness.” Love that! I tend to lean too far towards the grace side. I am a people-pleaser, when I should be a God-pleaser. We need to speak the truth and not excuse sin.

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