Multiplicity of Grace: How God Increases Your Capacity Through Relationship and Favor

Multiplicity of Grace: How God Increases Your Capacity Through Relationship and Favor

Multiplicity Of Grace · Part 1 of 3

Part 2
Teaching by Prophet Lovy L. Elias · Watch on YouTube · 4 August 2021

Grace is not just given — it is multiplied through the people God connects you to.

Every person is born with a measure of grace that determines how God deals with them, what they can accomplish, and how far they can go. But grace is not static — it can grow. The multiplicity of grace reveals that God has designed a system in which grace is transferred, shared, and increased through relationship, honor, and favor with those He has already blessed.


Multiplicity of Grace: How God Increases Your Capacity Through Relationship and FavorWatch on YouTube ↗

Teaching Overview

  1. Every person is born with a personal measure of grace that determines how God deals with them individually.
  2. Grace is multiplied not primarily through prayer alone, but through working the system of grace — connecting with and serving those who already carry greater grace.
  3. God always elevates people through other people — there is no person in Scripture who was a product of themselves.
  4. The grace of a person of God can be transferred to those they love, accept, and carry in their heart.
  5. Grace is distinct from both anointing and favor — it produces ease, protection, and divine cover beyond what effort or prayer alone can achieve.

Key Distinctions

GraceAnointingFavorDivine Cover
What it isUnmerited favor beyond ordinary favor — God's disposition toward you that determines how He deals with youBeing appointed for a specific workAn opportunity given that was not deservedThe protection that comes from being covered by someone else's grace
ScopeCovers all things — healing, provision, protection, relationship with GodPermits specific functions, e.g. prophecyOpens doors to opportunityShields you from a just God's judgment
How it operatesGod looks at you as the person whose grace you have been givenEnables you to function in a particular giftingStill requires personal effort to work the opportunityOperates through the love of a person of greater grace toward you
How it growsBy connecting with and being received by someone who carries greater graceDeveloped through consecration and assignmentThrough being in proximity to those who are favoredIncreases as you are carried in the heart of a man or woman of God
Biblical exampleJacob covered by Isaac's grace; Solomon spared because of DavidAnointing oil poured on a king or priest for officeCornelius favored through prayer and almsgivingLot protected from Sodom's destruction through Abraham's intercession
Limitation without itWithout sufficient grace, God cannot bless you beyond what your measure containsCannot cover all areas of lifeDoes not guarantee ease — only accessWithout it, judgment falls on individual merit

Everyone Is Born With a Measure of Grace

  • Every human being is born with a personal measure of grace, and that measure determines how God deals with them.
  • Grace is completely unmerited — it causes some people to get away with things others cannot, not because of righteousness but because of the measure assigned to them.
  • The dealing of God with a person is distinct and is measured by the grace He has accorded them, not by their actions alone.

"The measure of grace God has given to you determines even the dealing of God with you."

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Grace Is a Product of Love

  • Salvation itself came through grace — not because humanity deserved it, but because God so loved the world.
  • The personal measure of grace each person carries is entirely separate from the grace of salvation — some are given more, some less, and some so little it is almost nonexistent.
  • Sin is sin before God, but how God responds to that sin in a person's life is measured by the grace that has been accorded to them.

"The measure of grace differs. Sin is sin with God, but the dealing of God with a person is also distinct, measured by grace."

Growing in Grace: Working the System

  • The biblical command to "grow in grace" is not fulfilled through prayer alone — it requires working the system of grace.
  • Things that would take twenty years of prayer to receive can be obtained immediately by connecting with someone who already carries the grace you need.
  • To grow in grace means finding a person of grace, pleasing them, and being received by them — because their faith causes God to have faith in you.

"To grow in grace it means I need to work the system of grace."

God Always Elevates Through a Person

  • There is nowhere in Scripture where a man was a product of himself — every person in the Bible received their grace through someone else.
  • When God is elevating someone, He does not bypass human relationship — He sends that person to find another person who will show them what to do.
  • Moses met God through Jethro; Paul's ministry was unlocked through Ananias; Cornelius received the Holy Spirit through Peter.

"Whenever God is elevating somebody on earth, God will always send you to a man. If you ever meet any person that says that they are what they are because of themselves, it is demonic and it is devilish."

Paul's Declaration: Partakers of My Grace

  • Paul does not tell the Philippians they are partakers of God's grace alone — he declares they are partakers of his grace personally.
  • Carrying someone in your heart before God is the mechanism through which grace is transferred — Paul interceded for his followers even in chains.
  • A man or woman of God does not merely preach the gospel — they give those they receive access to the grace God has placed within them.

"You are partakers of my grace. You are what you are because of what is in me. I share it with you. I didn't just preach the gospel to you, but I gave you access to the grace that God has endowed within me."

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Jacob, Esau, and the Grace Assigned Before Birth

  • God declared His preference for Jacob over Esau before either had done anything — this was not based on actions but on the grace assigned to each.
  • Even though God already loved Jacob, God could do nothing for Jacob beyond what Jacob's own measure of grace permitted — Jacob's greatness required Isaac.
  • Jacob had to work the science of the multiplicity of grace — he needed to receive Isaac's blessing in order to increase beyond the grace he was born with.

"Even though God already loved Jacob, God could do nothing for Jacob because of the grace that Jacob was born with is the grace he was given."

God Looks at You as the One Whose Grace Covers You

  • When a person of greater grace loves you and carries you in their heart, God no longer evaluates you by your own measure — He evaluates you by theirs.
  • God blesses you not only according to your personal measure but according to the measure of the one who has received you.
  • This is why Abraham's love for Sarah prevented God from judging her lie — God could not act against the mother of the nation whom Abraham loved.

"If that person loves you and shares their grace with you, God no longer looks at you as you. He starts looking at you as them."

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Abraham, Lot, and the Limits of Borrowed Grace

  • Lot prospered entirely because of his proximity to Abraham — the moment God separated them, everything Lot had accumulated disappeared.
  • God could not make Abraham the father of one nation while Lot, whom Abraham had taken into his heart, was still attached to him and becoming a father of nations alongside him.
  • Abraham's intercession for Sodom was not a request God was inclined to grant — yet because of Abraham's grace, God sent angels to rescue Lot before destroying the city.

"God has to remove him so that Abraham could be the only father of the nation."

Grace vs. Anointing vs. Favor

  • Anointing appoints a person for a specific work; grace grants favor in all things — they are not the same.
  • Favor gives an opportunity that was not deserved; grace gives that opportunity plus ease in the working of it.
  • Those who carry great grace do not struggle in the same way others do — not because of superior skill, but because God has simply permitted it to be so.

"Anointing is good. Grace is better. Grace is better."

Samuel, Eli, and the Transfer of Spiritual Heritage

  • God judged Eli's sons and removed them physically, but He did not destroy the spiritual heritage they carried — He transferred it to Samuel first.
  • Samuel served in Eli's house long enough to receive not only what was in Eli's sons but what was in Eli himself — making him a product of complete accumulated grace.
  • Joshua was not chosen by God directly — Moses was instructed to lay hands on him so that what was in Moses would be transferred to Joshua.

"By the time he stood up, he was a product of complete grace."

Grace Cannot Be Earned — It Is Given Through Love

  • Grace is never given because someone worked for it — it is given because someone has loved you.
  • The measure of grace given to each person from birth already reflects their assignment — some are given more, some less, according to what they are called to carry.
  • Grace is contracted like a condition — simply being present where there is grace can cause the multiplicity of grace to come upon you.

"Grace is never given because somebody is worked for it. Grace is given because somebody has loved you."


Key Definitions

Grace — Unmerited favor that goes beyond ordinary favor; the measure accorded to a person by God that determines how God deals with them, what they can contain, and how far they can go — entirely independent of their actions or deserving.

Multiplicity of Grace — The system by which grace is increased, transferred, and multiplied through relationship, honor, and favor with a person who already carries a greater measure of grace.

Anointing — To be appointed for a certain work; the enabling of God that permits a person to function in a specific gifting or office.

Favor — An opportunity given to someone they did not deserve; unlike grace, favor still requires personal effort to work the opportunity it opens.

Divine Cover — The protection that comes not from unknowing alone, but from being carried in the heart of a person of greater grace, causing God to evaluate and deal with you according to their measure rather than your own.

Major vs. Minor Prophets — The distinction is not only in assignment or gifting but in the degree of favor recorded to them — major prophets were those whose grace made them known beyond their own capacity.


Key Takeaways

  • Every person is born with a personal measure of grace that governs how God deals with them — this means no two people are evaluated by God on identical terms; your grace is your spiritual capacity set by God before you acted.
  • Grace grows through relationship, not prayer alone — what can take decades of prayer to receive can be granted immediately through being received by someone who carries a greater measure.
  • God always elevates through people — there is no biblical precedent for a man being a product of himself; understanding this compels you to honor, serve, and rightly position yourself under those God has blessed.
  • When a person of greater grace carries you, God evaluates you by their measure — this is the mechanics of how Lot prospered, how Solomon was initially spared, and how the Philippians were partakers of Paul's grace.
  • Grace produces ease that effort and anointing alone cannot produce — the person who walks in grace does not merely gain access to opportunity; they work that opportunity with a supernatural ease that distinguishes them from others of equal or greater natural ability.

Reflection Questions

  1. Who in your life carries a greater measure of grace, and are you genuinely honoring them, serving them, and positioning yourself to receive from what God has placed in them?
  2. Have you been trying to grow through prayer and effort alone while bypassing the system of grace God has established through people — and what has that cost you?
  3. Is there someone God has connected you to whom you have distanced yourself from, undervalued, or taken for granted — and what has been the spiritual consequence of that separation?
  4. When you consider the people whose grace covers you, are you living in a way that protects that covering, or are your attitudes and actions working against the very relationships through which God is multiplying your grace?
  5. What would change in your life this week if you genuinely believed that God is evaluating you through the lens of the person whose grace you are under — and that how you treat that relationship directly affects what God can do in your life?

Scripture References

  • Philippians 1:6-7 — "Being confident of this very thing, that He which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ: Even as it is meet for me to think this of you all, because I have you in my heart; inasmuch as both in my bonds, and in the defence and confirmation of the gospel, ye all are partakers of my grace." (KJV)
  • John 3:16 — "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." (KJV)
  • Ephesians 2:8
  • Romans 3:23
  • Matthew 16:19
  • Genesis 25:23
  • 1 Samuel 3
  • Acts 9:6
  • Acts 10:1-6

Golden Nuggets

"The measure of grace God has given to you determines even the dealing of God with you."

"To grow in grace it means I need to work the system of grace."

"Whenever God is elevating somebody on earth, God will always send you to a man. If you ever meet any person that says that they are what they are because of themselves, it is demonic and it is devilish."

"There is nowhere in Scripture that a man was a product of himself."

"Grace is never given because somebody is worked for it. Grace is given because somebody has loved you."

"Anointing is good. Grace is better."

"When I call Him He will come. You are as great as the grace you carry."

"If that person loves you and shares their grace with you, God no longer looks at you as you. He starts looking at you as them."

"By the time he stood up, he was a product of complete grace."

"You are partakers of my grace. You are what you are because of what is in me."


Resources and Further Reading

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Topics

GraceDiscipleshipKingdom Principles

Related Teachings

GraceMultiplicity of Grace Pt. 2: Humility, Honor, and Contracting the Grace You Were Not Born WithGraceMultiplicity of Grace Pt. 3: Angels, Access, and the Divine System of GraceSpiritual AuthorityThe Greater and the Better: Positioning Yourself to Receive the Blessing That Transforms

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