Working together with Him, we also appeal to you not to receive the grace of God in vain. For He says, ‘At an acceptable time I listened to you, and in a day of salvation I helped you.’ Behold, now is the acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation.
2 Corinthians 6:1–2
The phrase “day of salvation” —an open season when anyone may receive the gift of eternal life by faith in Christ. That day stretches from the beginning of the gospel’s proclamation (Protoevangelium – Genesis 3:15) and remains open until the Second Coming of Christ. But in 2 Corinthians 6:1–2, Paul’s aim isn’t to re-explain justification. He’s writing to believers to protect the gospel he preached from distortion and to urge the church at Corinth to walk worthy of Christ. The context is sanctification—how saved people live, serve, and persevere—inside the very era when eternal life is freely available.
Setting the Stage: Corinth and the Battle for the Gospel’s Fruit
- A turbulent relationship: Between 1 and 2 Corinthians, Paul endured a "painful visit" and wrote a severe letter. Titus later brought good news of repentance, but opposition still swirled.
- The opponents: Judaizing influences and status-seeking teachers questioned Paul's credentials, pushing a ministry measured by outward impressiveness, law-leaning performance, and social polish.
- Paul's aim: Defend the apostolic gospel and call believers to wholehearted faithfulness. He frames ministry as cross-shaped—weakness, endurance, integrity, and Spirit-empowered truthfulness, not showmanship.
Don’t Receive the Grace of God in Vain
Paul’s appeal assumes the Corinthians have already received grace. The danger is not losing eternal life but wasting grace’s purpose in their lives. Grace can be “in vain” when believers:
- Muffle the message of reconciliation through compromise or fear.
- Measure ministry by worldly standards instead of fidelity to Christ.
- Withhold their hearts from faithful servants, fracturing partnership and witness.
- Shrink back from hardship, even though suffering often becomes the stage where grace shines.
The outcome of wasted grace isn’t loss of salvation; it’s lost fruitfulness, damaged witness, temporal discipline, and loss of reward at the judgment seat of Christ (2 Corinthians 5:10). Paul is pleading with a family of believers to cooperate with the grace they’ve already received—so it bears lasting fruit.
Why Paul Quotes Isaiah 49:8
Isaiah 49 portrays the Servant of the Lord who restores Israel and becomes a light to the nations. Verse 8 promises a divinely chosen moment when God hears and helps the Servant, establishing and extending saving blessing.
By quoting this, Paul does three things:
- He marks the calendar: The prophetic “acceptable time” is here. Now—throughout this era until the rapture—is the day of salvation when eternal life is offered to all who believe.
- He validates his ministry: The Servant’s mission to the nations explains Paul’s work. The spread of salvation beyond Israel isn’t a novelty; it’s fulfillment.
- He presses urgency on believers: If God has opened this window, believers must not drift. They should align with the true gospel, support its messengers, and invest their lives where the Servant is at work.
A Word About Babylon and Isaiah's Setting
Isaiah as a whole moves from warning to comfort. Earlier chapters (1–39) warn of judgment and anticipate exile, with Babylon looming as a future threat. But Isaiah 40–55 shifts to comfort for a humbled people, promising deliverance, the fall of Babylon, and the rise of the Servant. Isaiah 49 sits squarely in this comfort section. When Paul cites Isaiah 49:8, he draws on a promise originally spoken into an exile horizon: at God’s appointed “acceptable time,” He will hear and help through His Servant—bringing restoration to Israel and salvation that radiates to the nations. Paul applies that promise to his own era to say, “That appointed time is on the horizon.”
The Day of Salvation and Today's Stewardship
Hold two truths together:
- Justification: The "day of salvation" is the open season for receiving the gift of eternal life by faith in Christ alone—an offer that stands until the Second Coming.
- Sanctification: In 2 Corinthians, Paul addresses those already saved. He leverages the very same "now" to say: Don’t waste it. Live in a way fitting for this appointed season.
How to Keep Grace from Being "in Vain"
- Hold fast to the apostolic gospel. Refuse distortions that smuggle performance and prestige into the center. Measure ministry by truth, not polish.
- Open your heart to faithful servants. Paul pleads for mutual openness (2 Corinthians 6:11–13). Partnership fuels mission; suspicion chokes it.
- Embrace hardship as normal. Paul catalogs afflictions and virtues (2 Corinthians 6:3–10) not to boast, but to model how grace actually works—in patience, purity, genuine love, truthful speech, and the power of God.
- Speak plainly as an ambassador. The ministry of reconciliation (2 Corinthians 5:18–21) doesn’t require clever spin—just faithful, clear testimony about Christ.
- Live with urgency. Opportunities to reconcile, forgive, witness, give, and serve are time-bound. If now is the acceptable time, now is the time to act.
Bringing It Home
We live inside God’s appointed “now.” Until the rapture, the day of salvation is open for anyone to receive eternal life by faith in Christ. And within that same “now,” believers are called to refuse a wasted grace—standing with the true gospel, embracing God’s servants, enduring difficulty with integrity, and investing in what lasts.
Behold, now is the acceptable time. Behold, now is the day of salvation. Don’t let grace stop at your conversion. Let it energize your whole life.

