The Scandal of Free Grace is a bold, thought-provoking exploration of one of the most misunderstood truths at the heart of Christian faith: that God's grace is not only infinite and freely given-it is also profoundly offensive to the human heart. Why? Because we are wired to value what is scarce, earned, or owned. In a world shaped by competition and control, true grace doesn't compute.
This book dives deep into the unsettling truth that many of us-whether inside or outside the church-struggle to embrace grace because of a deeply ingrained scarcity mindset. We instinctively mistrust what's freely available, preferring systems that let us measure, compare, and earn our worth. That same scarcity logic, the book argues, has infected religious institutions, where grace has too often been turned into a product: something doled out in limited supply, accessed through spiritual gatekeepers, or earned through moral performance.
The Scandal of Free Grace unpacks this distortion in six interconnected parts. It begins with the fall of humanity and the spiritual virus of scarcity, tracing how fear and shame rewired us to believe that if something isn't exclusive, it isn't valuable. This sets the stage for understanding how even sacred spaces-churches, doctrines, rituals-can become places where grace is controlled rather than celebrated.
Next, the book examines how capitalist thinking-based on scarcity, ownership, and transaction-has subtly shaped our theology, leaving us more comfortable with religious systems that feel "earned" than with a God who gives without condition. It shows how grace, by its very nature, resists being owned or distributed by institutions, making it both liberating and threatening.
At the center of the book is the scandal itself: grace is not fair. It is not merit-based. It welcomes the undeserving, lifts up the last, and equalizes the field in ways that offend our sense of justice. Drawing on Jesus' most provocative parables-the prodigal son, the workers in the vineyard-it confronts the reader with a hard truth: we don't just want to be loved; we want to be loved more than others.
The book also explores the human hunger for ritual and tangible spirituality. While Christianity did away with blood sacrifices through the once-for-all act of Christ, it left many believers feeling disoriented in a faith that promises intimacy but lacks the embodied rhythms that once shaped spiritual life. This section reflects on how grace invites us beyond substitutionary systems and into relationship-a communion not mediated by ritual, but by presence.
In its final chapters, The Scandal of Free Grace turns our notions of value upside down. Citing the image from Revelation-streets of gold trampled underfoot-it challenges us to reconsider what we treasure and why. The Kingdom of God is not a market where we earn favor, but a banquet where the undeserving feast.
Throughout, the message is clear: grace cannot be controlled, quantified, or sold. It is the most abundant force in the universe-and that abundance itself is what makes it so hard for us to see. Yet once we do, everything changes.
To the proud, grace is offensive.
To the possessive, grace is threatening.
To the religious, grace is uncontrollable.
But to the desperate, grace is life.
This is the invitation: to unlearn the economy of scarcity and step into the scandalous freedom of grace.