Grace changes more than our relationship with God—it changes the way we relate to everyone around us.
We sat down with Benjamin Crawshaw and Brittany Coulson to explore what grace actually looks like in everyday relationships. From receiving grace when we fail, to building deeper trust through vulnerability, to extending grace to the people who are hardest to love, we unpack how grace moves from a theological concept to a lived experience. We also talk about high-trust relationships, why being known is so risky, and how God often uses other people to help us experience His love in tangible ways. If you've ever struggled to let people see the real you, wondered how to find deeper community, or wrestled with extending grace to difficult people, this conversation is for you.
What We Learned
* Grace is not just a one-time gift at salvation—it is the environment in which we live the entire Christian life.
* Receiving grace often feels harder than giving grace because it requires surrendering control and self-righteousness.
* High-trust relationships are built through small acts of vulnerability that gradually establish trust.
* Many people avoid being fully known because they fear what others will think if they see their struggles and weaknesses.
* Being "first on the beach" means risking vulnerability before knowing how others will respond.
* Grace allows us to own our mistakes without letting them define our identity.
* Difficult people often act out of fear, wounds, and self-protection rather than malice.
* The more deeply we experience God's grace toward us, the easier it becomes to extend grace to others.
Resources Mentioned
The Cure by John Lynch, Bruce McNicol, & Bill Thrall
Dr. T.A. Powell - Beyond the Mask
Marcus Warner - Deeper Walk International
Trueface Life App
Produced by Sound of a Rose — https://soundofarose.com