If Grace is True: Why God Will Save Every Person

by Philip Gulley

Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Collection

Description

Why Everyone Will Be in Heaven Two pastors present their controversial belief in eternal salvation for all through God's perfect grace. Long disturbed by the church's struggle between offering both love and rejection, they discover what God wants from us and for us: grace for everyone.

Publication

HarperOne (2004), Edition: Reprint, 256 pages

Rating

½ (44 ratings; 3.9)

User reviews

LibraryThing member EHMeeting
Gathers all into God's love and removes the need to label the saved and the unsaved, to separate the sheep from the goats -- a concept that seems to be the basis of much organized religion and of much strife
LibraryThing member ALincolnNut
Quaker pastors Philip Gulley, author of the Harmony novels, and James Mulholland make the case for the controversial belief in universal salvation in "If Grace Is True." Grappling with the perceived dichotomy between God's love and God's justice, and in the face of some hard real world experiences,
Show More
they insist, "I believe God will save every person."

From the beginning, they recognize that this is neither a common nor popular belief among Christians. Indeed, it is likely to inspire passionate, even rabid, opposition from those who believe it is unbiblical and heretical. At its root, universal salvation contradicts the common Christian understanding that those who believe in Christ will go to heaven and those who do not will go to hell.

Contrary to this emphasis on human will in responding to God to receive salvation, Gulley and Mulholland ultimately focus on the divine will to offer salvation. The rationale for universal salvation, clearly implicit in their argument, is this: if God wills to save, and if God's grace extends to all of humankind, why would God allow any not be saved? Believing that God's grace does extend to all human beings, Gulley and Mulholland argued that God does will to save and, thus, God will save everyone.

In their argument, Gulley and Mulholland parse "I believe God will save every person" in detail, using scriptural references and stories from their ministries, and heavily relying on the image of God as a loving parent. At times, the argument is more emotional than rational, though given the significant emotions involved in the debate, that is understandable and probably wise. Given that their intended audience is general Christians, rather than pastors or academic theologians, the argument is much more anecdotal than rigorous and detailed.

As such, Gulley and Mulholland, while clearly empathetic and sympathetic with the beliefs of those who disagree with them, do not seriously consider the counter arguments to their claim. Though understandable, this is ultimately the book's greatest weakness. The challenge of theology is that there are multiple metaphors for God which do not easily co-relate. Gulley and Mulholland emphasize a couple at the expense of others. While few would argue with the significance of divine love or divine grace, one wonders where divine creation, divine revelation, divine justice, or divine suffering fit into the argument of universal salvation.

Still, the book is worth reading and discussing. It is well-written and engaging, and it takes Christians and their beliefs seriously, particularly about love and grace. If there are logical flaws in the argument, such as an unspoken belief in a kind of post-death purgatory to make universal salvation feasible, there is great merit in attempting to push the concepts of love, mercy, and grace to the fullest extent possible.
Show Less
LibraryThing member jonesb5
Fabulous book - life changing!
LibraryThing member lighten51
Very good book. The premise that all will be saved I do believe, but not all at once like these authors portend. Evil people non repentant of their sins do not go to heaven. I once believed this was so, but in time, observation and investigation of those who died and returned the hereafter does not
Show More
have calenders and clocks like we do. There are repentant souls who through cleansing and time do eventually go to the first level of heaven, but this after eons of time, but they would have to repent first, until then they would go to an unhappy place.
Show Less
LibraryThing member smallself
“What is your name besides Burns?”
“Helen.”

I think that eventually even the devils will be converted, something that has been good to me, for many are those who are like devils, and it does not do to hate them. It certainly does not make one like Christ.

...........................

I’m not
Show More
technically or intellectually exclusionary, but I also need the reminder that God loves people who treat people like crap. “When I am the winter, You are the fire, that burns.”
Show Less
LibraryThing member chuff
Excellent. Persuasive, compelling, and one of few books in my life that has done so much to change my mind.
LibraryThing member jntjesussaves
Writing: 4.0; Theme: 4.0; Content: 2.5; Language: 5.0; Overall: 2.5

The author believes and makes the claim that every person will be saved, even after death, because God's grace never ends. This belief violates many verses in Scripture. God's grace is wonderful, but the Bible teaches that when a
Show More
person dies, he will face the judgment. I believe the author's greatest error in this belief is that "every person" is a child of God. Every person is a created being by the Creator of the universe, but nowhere does the Bible claim that every person is a child of God. You enter into God's family by being adopted into His family through a personal relationship with His Son, Jesus Christ.

*Note: I totally disagree with Gulley and Mulholland's view of salvation (universalism), but I do like Gulley's downhome spun in his several fictional series.

***February 6, 2024***
Show Less
Page: 0.3103 seconds