Series Details
When life falls apart, how do you pick up the pieces and move forward? The answer is REFRAME. To reframe is to see your losses, struggles, and burdens through God’s lens of grace and to let Him reshape your pain into new purpose. Paul describes this process: “Let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think” (Romans 12:2).
With God’s power, you can become a new person as God guides your thoughts, heals your heart, and energizes new habits. Reframing is not easy; it is an ongoing process of growth as God transforms you by His grace. Join Chuck Swindoll and his daughter Colleen Swindoll Thompson as they transparently share their reframing journeys.
When life falls apart due to prolonged seasons of calamity or heartache, how do you pick up the pieces? In this transparent series, Pastor Chuck Swindoll and his daughter, Colleen Swindoll Thompson, explore the concept of Reframing. Reframing is the spiritual discipline of seeing your losses and burdens through God’s lens of grace rather than your own pain. By allowing God to change the way you think, you can emerge from the “crucible of His will” with a new personhood and a reshaped purpose.
1. Transformed by Grace (Message & Interview)
- Overview: Introduces the process of “reframing” life’s struggles. Through a combination of teaching and personal testimony, Chuck and Colleen discuss what it means to be a “new person” as God heals the heart and energizes new habits.
- Key Fact: Transformation is an ongoing process of growth, not a one-time event, requiring us to continually surrender our thoughts to God’s perspective.
- Scripture: Romans 12:2 – “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”
Common Questions: Transformed by Grace
1. What does it mean to “reframe” my pain? In this series, “reframing” is defined as looking at your circumstances through a different “lens”—God’s lens. Instead of seeing a loss as purely a disaster, reframing allows you to see how God might be using that very struggle to reshape your character and reveal a new purpose for your life.
2. Is this series just for people going through major tragedies? While it addresses “prolonged seasons of calamity,” the principles of reframing apply to anyone carrying burdens or feeling “stuck” in a negative mindset. It is for anyone who needs to “renew their mind” to experience the freedom and healing found in God’s grace.
3. How does God “energize new habits” in my life? The series suggests that as our thinking changes (the reframe), our actions naturally follow. When we stop viewing ourselves as “victims of circumstance” and start seeing ourselves as “recipients of grace,” God provides the spiritual energy to replace old, destructive patterns with new, healthy ones.
4. Why is transparency emphasized in this series? Pastor Chuck and Colleen share their own “reframing journeys” to show that even those in ministry face seasons where life falls apart. Their transparency serves as a powerful confirmation that God’s grace is sufficient for everyone, regardless of their position or the depth of their heartache.
5. How long does the “reframing” process take? The series emphasizes that this is an ongoing process. It is a daily, sometimes moment-by-moment, commitment to let God transform you. There is no “quick fix,” but there is the constant, sustaining presence of God’s power as He guides your thoughts and heals your heart over time.