R
Ron_Conte
Guest
Actual grace is divided into two types:
a. operating prevenient grace
b. cooperating subsequent grace
Operating grace is God’s grace prior to any choice by our free will, prior to any meritorious act on our part. Operating grace was merited for us by Christ on the Cross; we do not merit operating grace.
Suppose that you pray for grace, and in response, God grants you grace. Before you prayed, God gave you grace to say that prayer. This ‘prevenient’ grace ‘goes before’ any cooperation with grace by us. Any good act in which we cooperate with grace was always without exception preceded by ‘operating grace’ – by God acting first in a free and undeserved, unearned, gift of grace. Operating grace is also called ‘prevenient’ grace, because it occurs first.
Cooperating grace is subsequent to operating grace, and is therefore also called ‘subsequent grace’. Only after God first acts to give you a free gift of grace, are you then able, with free will, to cooperate with subsequent graces. Your cooperation with these subsequent (cooperating) graces is meritorious. But the initial gift of prevenient (operating) grace is undeserved and involves no merit, nor any act at all, on your part.
Prevenient grace is received by all persons in this life, even the very wicked. The person has no choice to accept or reject prevenient grace, and it is not merely an offer of grace. The prevenient grace of God does affect each person’s soul, prior to any choice of the free will to cooperate or not cooperate with subsequent grace.
a. operating prevenient grace
b. cooperating subsequent grace
Operating grace is God’s grace prior to any choice by our free will, prior to any meritorious act on our part. Operating grace was merited for us by Christ on the Cross; we do not merit operating grace.
Suppose that you pray for grace, and in response, God grants you grace. Before you prayed, God gave you grace to say that prayer. This ‘prevenient’ grace ‘goes before’ any cooperation with grace by us. Any good act in which we cooperate with grace was always without exception preceded by ‘operating grace’ – by God acting first in a free and undeserved, unearned, gift of grace. Operating grace is also called ‘prevenient’ grace, because it occurs first.
Cooperating grace is subsequent to operating grace, and is therefore also called ‘subsequent grace’. Only after God first acts to give you a free gift of grace, are you then able, with free will, to cooperate with subsequent graces. Your cooperation with these subsequent (cooperating) graces is meritorious. But the initial gift of prevenient (operating) grace is undeserved and involves no merit, nor any act at all, on your part.
Prevenient grace is received by all persons in this life, even the very wicked. The person has no choice to accept or reject prevenient grace, and it is not merely an offer of grace. The prevenient grace of God does affect each person’s soul, prior to any choice of the free will to cooperate or not cooperate with subsequent grace.