The Robe Of Grace Is Given, Not Earned
1 Corinthians 1:3
"Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ."
Such a beautiful and inspiring message of Christ's love in this short greeting.
But why is this greeting so beautiful?
The simple truth is, because without fully appreciating what's being said, and experiencing what that saying is saying, you can never really have peace and assurance in your faith.
What you can do, and many do, is you can spend a lifetime in religious faith practices, and never understand grace and the peace of our Lord.
Grace's beauty lies in both what it says and what it reveals about the heart of the Christian gospel. "Grace to you" is not a polite wish, it’s a declaration of divine favor that is undeserved, unearned, unmerited; however you want to say it, it comes to you from God's good graces.
In a world (and even in religious systems) where people strive to earn approval, Paul begins with the radical truth: God’s love is a gift, not a reward. This flips human instinct on its head. Peace isn’t achieved after effort, it flows from grace.
Peace always follows grace.
What is this "peace"?
"Peace" (in Greek: eirēnē) isn’t just the absence of conflict; it’s wholeness, restoration, reconciliation. True peace with God (and inner peace) is impossible without first receiving grace. You can’t have the fruit without the root.
Now here's the thing, this grace and peace don’t come from Paul, from rituals, from studying scripture, or from acts of self-improvement. They come "from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ", (Father and Son, with the Spirit implied in the giving), echoing the Trinity. It’s a reminder: You’re not alone. You’re not orphaned. You’re loved by the Father through the Son, by the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
This greeting is both personal and universal. Paul uses this greeting in nearly every letter, but here it’s for the Corinthians; a messy, divided, morally confused church.
Why is it beautiful?
Because the same grace and peace are offered to the worst of us. If they can receive it, anyone can.
And therefore, the greeting isn’t just doctrine, it’s an invitation to rest in what Christ has already done. When you know you’re accepted not because of your performance but because of His, peace floods in, His peace.
See that's the thing, it's not your peace. That's why it seems so unachievable. And it is.
The world says: "Find your peace. Create your calm. Earn your rest."
And the Bible says,
1 Corinthians 1:9
"God is faithful, by whom you were called into the fellowship of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord."
Biblical peace (shalom, eirēnē) is not a state you achieve, it’s a Person you receive. It’s His peace (John 14:27):
"Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives."
That’s why striving fails.
You can’t generate, through your own efforts, the peace of the God who spoke galaxies into being.
You can only open your hands and let Him place it in you.
How? How does He place it in me?
Grace → the favor of the Father → Peace → the fruit of the Son’s finished work → Delivered → by the Spirit who applies it to the heart.
The Father decrees it from the beginning. The Son secures it from the beginning and in time. And the Spirit seals it in you while you live in this life.
No wonder Paul doesn’t say, "Work hard and maybe you’ll feel peaceful."
He says: "Grace to you and peace", already yours in Christ.
He doesn't teach about an afterlife self-service laundromat where sinners wash their own clothes for the heavenly banquet. Nor does he suggest that others can send offerings to that afterlife dry cleaners on your behalf.
You don't bring your stained soul, scrubed up with good deeds you wouldn't do on earth, and hope the cycle finishes in time for the banquet.
That’s false religion.
That’s exhausting.
And that’s not Christianity.
Jesus didn’t say:
"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened…and I will give you a washing machine."
He did say:
"Come to me…and I will give you rest." (Matthew 11:28)
Because He is the washer.
He is the water.
He is the robe.
Revelation 7:14
"They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb."
Not in their tears.
Not in their effort.
But in His blood, already shed.
The stain remover isn’t your morality.
It’s His mercy.
Grace is the atmosphere of the new covenant. You don’t enter it by works. You breathe it because you’re in Christ.
The Father isn’t checking laundry tags: "Did you pre-treat that sin? Did you use cold or hot water on the pride?"
No.
The gospel invitation reads:
"Come, everything is already prepared." (Luke 14:17)
The Lamb has been slain.
The table is set.
The robes are pressed, and handed out at the door for those who are in Christ's effort.
So What Do We Do?
Nothing.
And everything.
Nothing to earn it. Everything to enjoy it.
"Grace to you and peace…"
Not a suggestion.
Not an afterlife salary.
A gift. Already wrapped. Already yours. You’re not at the laundromat. You’re at the banquet. Shoes off. Robe on. Feet washed, by Him.
Now sit. Eat. Rest.
The work is done. The peace is His.
And it’s already on the table.