My Grace is Sufficient
Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. . – 2 Corinthians 12:8-9
There is
something quietly revolutionary about God saying, “My grace is sufficient.” It
is not a promise that pain will evaporate or that the struggle will suddenly
dissolve. Instead, it is a declaration that God’s presence is enough even when
the situation remains unchanged.
This simple
statement overturns our assumptions about what divine help should look like. We
often expect God to intervene by removing the difficulty, but here God offers
something deeper: Himself.
Paul longed
for his “thorn” to be taken away. Whatever that thorn represented—physical
suffering, emotional anguish, spiritual opposition—it was painful, persistent,
and humbling. Yet God did not respond with removal; He responded with
reassurance. That alone reshapes our understanding of strength.
We tend to
imagine strength as the absence of weakness, as if being strong means never
struggling. But God reframes strength as the transformation of weakness.
Strength is not the elimination of frailty but the infusion of divine power
into human limitation.
Divine love
reveals itself not by preventing the valley but by walking with us through it.
This is the same love that accompanied Israel through the wilderness, stood
with Daniel in the lions’ den, calmed the disciples’ fears in the storm, and
strengthened Paul in prison.
God’s love
does not vanish in hardship; it becomes more visible there. The presence of
difficulty does not contradict God’s love. Instead, hardship becomes the very
stage where His sustaining presence is revealed. His love is not fragile or
conditional—it stands firm even in the darkest places.
God does not
remove every struggle because certain aspects of His character—His power, His
faithfulness, His sufficiency—can only be experienced when we reach the end of
ourselves. In this way, hardship becomes a sacred meeting place. The thorn Paul
wanted gone becomes the very thing that teaches him to rely on grace rather
than self-sufficiency. God’s love is proven not by changing the situation but
by changing Paul within the situation.
When Paul
hears God say, “My power is made perfect in weakness,” everything he thought he
understood about strength is reframed. Weakness is no longer a sign of
spiritual deficiency or evidence that God has stepped back. Instead, it becomes
a sacred space where God’s presence becomes most visible.
Human
strength tends to draw attention to itself, but weakness draws attention to
God. When we reach the end of our own abilities, we discover that God has been
steady, present, and active all along.
God’s
unwavering presence turns what feels like limitation into an opportunity for
divine strength to be revealed. Weakness is not something to hide or be ashamed
of—it is a doorway through which God’s grace enters our lived experience.
Because God is present in our weakness, the meaning of weakness itself changes.
It is no
longer a place of abandonment but a place of encounter. When we feel fragile,
overwhelmed, or insufficient, God does not stand at a distance waiting for us
to “get it together.” He steps into that very space and fills it with His
sustaining power.
This is why
Paul can eventually say he “boasts” in his weaknesses—not because he enjoys
suffering, but because he has learned that weakness is where God’s strength
shines brightest. The struggle may remain, but it is infused with purpose, held
by grace, and transformed by the God who refuses to leave us alone in it.
The thorn Paul desperately wanted removed becomes the very instrument God uses to reshape his dependence. Instead of granting Paul the relief he prayed for, God offers something far more transformative—grace that teaches him to stop relying on his own strength.
Paul was capable, passionate, and driven, but the thorn exposed
his limits and redirected his confidence away from self-sufficiency. In that
painful place, Paul discovers that grace is not merely a theological concept
but a lived reality that sustains him moment by moment.
The thorn becomes a tutor, reminding him that spiritual strength does not come from personal ability but from God’s empowering presence. What Paul once viewed as an obstacle becomes a pathway to deeper humility, deeper trust, and deeper intimacy with God. God’s love is proven not by changing Paul’s circumstances but by changing Paul within them.
The thorn
that once felt like a barrier becomes a place of encounter—a place where Paul
learns that God’s love is steady, unshakable, and transformative. In this way,
the unchanged circumstance becomes the soil where a changed heart grows,
revealing a God who loves us too deeply to leave us untouched by the struggles
we face.
Grace is one
of the most profound themes in Christianity because it reveals the heart of God
toward humanity. Grace is God’s unearned favor—His love, acceptance, and
forgiveness freely given. It interrupts the idea that we must earn God’s
approval through performance or perfection.
Instead,
grace declares that God moves toward us out of His own goodness, not our merit.
This is why grace is liberating: it removes the pressure to prove ourselves and
invites us to rest in a love that is steady and unconditional.
Grace is
God’s active love at work in our lives. It is the strength that meets us in
weakness, the forgiveness that meets us in sin, and the comfort that meets us
in sorrow. Grace shapes how we relate to God because it assures us that His
love is not fragile.
It also
shapes how we see ourselves—not as people striving to be worthy, but as people
already embraced by God’s kindness. Grace is the foundation of the Christian
life: we begin with grace, grow through grace, and stand each day because grace
holds us.
Grace begins
the journey, but it also sustains it. Every step of spiritual maturity depends
on God working within us—shaping, strengthening, and transforming us. Our
endurance, our ability to forgive, our capacity to love, and our strength in
weakness all flow from grace at work in our lives.
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Pastor Godwin, FBC Danvers

Thank you! What a wonderful reminder.
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