Grace-Filled Growth, Not Spiritual Grinding: How Abiding in Christ Produces Real Change

Grace-filled Christian growth contrasted with spiritual grinding, featuring bold text “GRACE NOT GRINDING” over a dark-to-gold gradient background with subtle broken chain imagery and soft light symbolizing freedom and rest in Christ

⏱️ Estimated Reading Time: 4 min read

Grace-Filled Growth, Not Spiritual Grinding

Show: Contending for the Word Q&A with Dave Jenkins

Show Summary

Christian growth is real—but it is often misunderstood.

Many believers quietly assume that spiritual maturity comes primarily through pressure, intensity, and constant effort. When growth feels slow, they push harder. When they stumble, they double their resolve. Over time, the Christian life can begin to feel like spiritual grinding rather than grace-filled growth.

In this episode of Contending for the Word Q&A, Dave Jenkins explains why Scripture presents a very different picture. Drawing from Matthew 11:28–30, John 15:1–11, and 2 Peter 3:18, this episode shows that Jesus calls the weary not to greater pressure, but to rest. Spiritual fruit does not come from striving harder, but from abiding in Christ.

This episode helps listeners see that biblical effort is not the same as self-reliant striving. Growth in Christ happens through dependence on Him, through His Word, prayer, repentance, worship, and trust. Grace is not passive. The Holy Spirit is at work. And God is more committed to your growth than you are.

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Key Scriptures

  • Matthew 11:28–30
  • John 15:1–11
  • 2 Peter 3:18

Episode Highlights

  • Christian growth is often misunderstood as pressure-driven effort
  • Jesus invites the weary to come to Him for rest
  • Fruit comes through abiding in Christ, not grinding harder
  • Biblical effort is different from self-reliant striving
  • Grace is the foundation of lasting spiritual growth
  • The Holy Spirit produces real growth through dependence on Christ

Reflection Questions

  • Where am I tempted to replace dependence with pressure?
  • Do my spiritual habits feel rooted in grace or driven by fear?
  • How can I return to abiding rather than striving this week?

Full Article

Christian growth is real, but it is often misunderstood. Many believers quietly assume that spiritual maturity comes primarily through pressure, intensity, and constant effort. When growth feels slow, they push harder. When they stumble, they double their resolve. Over time, the Christian life can begin to feel like spiritual grinding rather than grace-filled growth.

But Jesus gives us a very different picture of what spiritual growth looks like. In Matthew 11:28–30, He invites the weary and burdened to come to Him—not for heavier demands, but for rest. His yoke is easy, and His burden is light. That does not mean discipleship is effortless, but it does mean that it was never meant to be crushing. Growth in Christ is meant to be dependent on the sufficiency of Christ, not driven by desperation.

Jesus also teaches this clearly in John 15. Fruit comes from abiding, not straining. Branches do not produce fruit by grinding. They bear fruit by remaining connected to the vine. Life flows from the source outward. This is an important correction for many Christians. Spiritual growth is not driven by anxiety, comparison, or constant self-measurement. It is produced through steady communion with Christ through His Word, prayer, repentance, worship, and trust.

Now, Scripture does call believers to effort. We are told to pursue holiness, to resist sin, and to put sin to death. But effort is not the same thing as grinding. Biblical effort rests in the grace of God. Grinding relies on the self. When spiritual growth becomes exhausting in a self-reliant way, we have often shifted from dependence to self-sufficiency.

That is why 2 Peter 3:18 gives believers such an important framework: “But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” Christian growth is rooted in grace from beginning to end. Grace does not make effort unnecessary, but it does make striving in our own strength unnecessary. The Holy Spirit is active. Christ is sufficient. And God is at work in His people.

If your Christian life has begun to feel heavy, anxious, or exhausting, this passage calls you to return to the foundation. Christ is enough. His grace is active. His Spirit is at work. God is more committed to your growth than you are. So do not measure your life merely by intensity, pressure, or personal resolve. Return again to abiding in Christ, trusting His Word, and resting in His grace.

Takeaways

  • Spiritual growth is real, but it must be understood biblically
  • Jesus calls His people to rest in Him, not to crushing pressure
  • Abiding in Christ produces fruit more deeply than striving ever can
  • Biblical effort depends on grace rather than self-reliance
  • The Christian life grows strongest when rooted in Christ’s sufficiency

Call to Action

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