---
schema_version: "1.0.0"
id: "divine-design-framework:en:chapter-10"
work_id: "urn:systemstheology:book:divine-design-framework:chapter:chapter-10"
book_id: "divine-design-framework"
chapter_id: "grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion"
chapter_slug: "chapter-10"
title: "Grace, the Holy Spirit, and Restored Communion"
book_title: "Divine Design Framework"
language: "en"
source_language: "en"
translation_status: "source"
authors: ["Systems Theology"]
editorial_owner: "Systems Theology"
editors: []
review_status: "not_specified"
reviewers: []
content_version: "content-93624f09a8bc"
content_hash_sha256: "93624f09a8bcb4522b343738c6ff2cff1aa27452bf678d8d258b9aeacdfcac8e"
published_at: "2026-07-15T21:14:45.000Z"
modified_at: "2026-07-16T07:37:09.068Z"
canonical_url: "https://systemstheology.com/library/divine-design-framework/chapter-10/"
markdown_url: "https://systemstheology.com/research/books/divine-design-framework/en/chapter-10.md"
license: "All rights reserved; research use subject to the Use Policy"
license_url: "https://systemstheology.com/use-policy/"
correction_url: "https://systemstheology.com/library/divine-design-framework/chapter-10/#chapter-comments"
---

# Grace, the Holy Spirit, and Restored Communion

<a id="grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion"></a>

Because sin bends both the person and the channels that form the person, grace is more than better information, improved technique, or religious optimization. Grace is God's personal saving action in Christ by the Spirit: forgiveness, justification, reconciliation, liberation, adoption, union with Christ, holiness, witness, regeneration, and new creation. These are not competing mechanisms. They name the one saving economy from different sides: the estranged are reconciled, the guilty are set right, captives are freed, the diseased are healed, the dead are made alive, the image is renewed, and creatures are brought by the Spirit to participate in the Son's communion with the Father.

The early Paschal grammar places recapitulation and incorruption at the center. Irenaeus presents the incarnate Son as gathering Adamic humanity into Himself, obeying where humanity disobeyed, binding the strong enemy, and giving the Spirit so flesh may share incorruption. Athanasius describes the Word assuming a mortal body, offering it in death, breaking death's hold by resurrection, and restoring the divine image. The Didache, Ignatius, and Justin show this life received publicly in repentance, baptism, Eucharist, prayer, holiness, endurance, and care for the needy. Grace is therefore divine initiative and living participation, not a verdict isolated from the healed life or a healing process detached from Christ's once-for-all act. [^grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion-1]

Practices belong inside that gift. Scripture, worship, baptism, Eucharist, confession, repentance, prayer, Sabbath, service, truthful speech, wise counsel, and communal discipline are not techniques that save; they are received forms of participation through which the Spirit joins embodied persons to Christ and to one another. Their order is ecclesial and sacramental before it is technical: proclamation calls, catechesis teaches, baptism incorporates, Eucharist nourishes, confession returns, discipline corrects, almsgiving opens the hand, prayer turns the heart, and endurance proves hope. Created habit and psychological care can assist embodied healing, but they remain creaturely means within the Spirit's work, never its definition.

Hebrew רוּחַ (ruach) and Greek πνεῦμα (pneuma) can mean wind, breath, or spirit, and Scripture speaks of the Holy Spirit as divine agent: creating, empowering, speaking, grieving, indwelling, sanctifying, gifting, comforting, sealing, and renewing. Hebrew רוּחַ אֱלֹהִים (ruach Elohim, Spirit/wind/breath of God) and רוּחַ קָדְשְׁךָ (ruach qodshekha, your Holy Spirit) connect creation, prophecy, repentance, and renewal. John names the Spirit παράκλητος (parakletos, Advocate/Helper): the Spirit teaches, reminds, testifies to Christ, convicts the world, guides into truth, and glorifies the Son. Paul calls the Spirit ἀρραβών (arrabon, pledge/down payment) of the inheritance and gives χαρίσματα (charismata, gifts) for the body. Before Nicene precision, Theophilus speaks of God, His Word, and His Wisdom in creation, and Irenaeus names the Word and Wisdom---the Son and Spirit---as eternally with the Father in His creative and saving economy, with the Spirit preparing humanity for communion with God. [^grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion-2] The Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed confesses the Spirit as "the Lord and giver of life," worshiped and glorified with the Father and the Son, and Basil of Caesarea's On the Holy Spirit 16--18 argues from Scripture, salvation, and worship that the Spirit shares divine life.

The Spirit's work is personal, ecclesial, and moral. First Corinthians 12--14 places tongues, prophecy, knowledge, healing, discernment, and other gifts under the body, interpretation, edification, order, and love. Galatians 5 names fruit as character formation: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. The concrete terms keep power accountable to character: παράκλησις (paraklesis, exhortation, encouragement, or consolation) strengthens the Church; σφραγίζω (sphragizo, seal) names belonging; ἁγιάζω (hagiazo, sanctify) names holy formation; καρπὸς τοῦ πνεύματος (karpos tou pneumatos, fruit of the Spirit) names character; πνευματικός (pneumatikos, spiritual) is tested by οἰκοδομή (oikodome, building up) and διάκρισις (diakrisis, discernment). Comfort, power, gifts, and guidance are tested by Scripture, holiness, communal discernment, and love.

Paul's law-court language has semantic priority when defining justification, even though justification is one relation within the wider Paschal salvation. It must neither be erased nor made the ontology that controls every other image. It keeps restoration from becoming therapeutic gradualism or self-produced repair. δικαιόω (dikaioo, justify), δικαίωσις (justification), and δικαιοσύνη (dikaiosyne, righteousness) occur in forensic, covenantal, and ethical contexts. Romans 3--5 uses δικαιόω and δικαίωσις for God's forensic verdict concerning the ungodly and places δικαιοσύνη within God's setting-right action. The verdict must not be absorbed into moral transformation. Courtroom imagery does not exhaust salvation, but its meaning governs the doctrine of justification. This gift is received by πίστις (pistis, faith/faithfulness). χάρις (charis, grace), ἀπολύτρωσις (apolytrosis, redemption), and καταλλαγή (katallage, reconciliation) name God's initiating rescue; υἱοθεσία (huiothesia, adoption) names filial belonging, reconciled access, inheritance, and identity. παλιγγενεσία (palingenesia, regeneration/new birth or renewal) keeps salvation from being reduced to external status or self-improvement: God gives new life. Paul's repeated phrase ἐν Χριστῷ (en Christo, in Christ) contributes across its contexts to the doctrine of union with Christ; it does not lexically encode that whole doctrine by itself. Believers pass through βάπτισμα (baptisma, baptism) into His death, are raised with Him, seated with Him, members of His body, and made καινὴ κτίσις (kaine ktisis, new creation). Michael J. Gorman's Cruciformity: Paul's Narrative Spirituality of the Cross develops the modern participation comparison; Paul's texts carry DDF's claim that verdict and participation belong together because salvation conforms people to the crucified and risen Christ.

Law, gospel, flesh, and Spirit clarify the moral shape of grace. Paul does not solve law and grace by making Torah evil. In Romans 7:12 the νόμος (nomos, law) is ἅγιος (hagios, holy), and the commandment is ἁγία καὶ δικαία καὶ ἀγαθή (holy, righteous, and good). The problem is that ἁμαρτία (hamartia, sin) seizes opportunity through the commandment and fallen σάρξ cannot generate resurrection life from holy instruction. [^grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion-3] The εὐαγγέλιον (euangelion, gospel) announces that God does in Christ and by the Spirit what law could expose but not accomplish in fallen human beings. σάρξ (sarx) has several Pauline senses; in the argument of Romans 7--8 it can name humanity in its mortal, Adamic, sin-dominated condition when read in contrast with the Spirit's new-creation life. It does not mean that created flesh is evil. πνεῦμα (pneuma) in that contrast names the Holy Spirit's life and work; ἁγιασμός (hagiasmos, sanctification) names holy formation; and ἐκλογή (ekloge, election) is grace and vocation rather than ethnic or religious boasting. Romans 9--11 makes that last point nonnegotiable: Israel's hardening, Gentile inclusion, divine mercy, election, promise, root, branches, and final doxology forbid Gentile arrogance and every identity claim that treats grace as superiority. Second Corinthians adds the ministry form: treasure is held in jars of clay so the power is known as God's and not the minister's. Weakness, suffering, reconciliation, generosity, and truthfulness are not embarrassing side notes; they are the epistemic correction that keeps ministry from confusing charisma, success, or polish with divine power. Restoration includes repaired mediation, but its full shape is forensic, participatory, familial, pneumatological, ethical, and eschatological salvation in Christ.

Because salvation is participation in the Son's communion with the Father, the account now turns from salvation's grammar to the heart's ordinary life before God.

[^grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion-1]: Irenaeus, Against Heresies III.18.1--7; V.1.1--3; V.21.1--3; Athanasius, On the Incarnation 6--10 and 20--30; Didache 7--10 and 14; Ignatius, Ephesians 18--20; Justin Martyr, First Apology 61, 65--67.
[^grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion-2]: Theophilus of Antioch, To Autolycus II.15; Irenaeus, Against Heresies IV.20.1 and IV.38.3.
[^grace-the-holy-spirit-and-restored-communion-3]: Romans 7:7--13, especially Romans 7:12, SBLGNT.
