God will never reject you. Whether you accept Him is your
“God will never reject you. Whether you accept Him is your decision.” — these words, spoken by Charles Stanley, flow like a river of mercy through the parched deserts of the human heart. In them lies a truth as ancient as creation itself — that divine love is constant, unwavering, and eternal, yet it waits humbly for the heart of man to open its door. Stanley, a shepherd of souls and teacher of faith, reminds us that the distance between heaven and the human soul is not caused by God’s absence, but by man’s refusal to receive what has already been given. God’s grace does not withdraw; it patiently lingers, like the sun behind the clouds, waiting for the heart to turn toward its warmth.
The origin of this quote comes from the ministry and teachings of Dr. Charles Stanley, a pastor known for his steadfast trust in God’s sovereignty and unchanging love. His words were often born not from ivory towers, but from the crucible of personal trials. Stanley knew betrayal, loss, and misunderstanding, yet his faith did not falter. Through all seasons of life — triumph and pain alike — he preached the same unyielding truth: that God never turns away from His children. The Almighty may allow the storms to come, but He never ceases to call through the thunder. In Stanley’s view, every soul, no matter how far it strays, remains loved, pursued, and redeemable. But the key, he said, lies in choice — the sacred freedom bestowed upon every human being to either open or close the heart to that love.
This is the essence of free will, the divine paradox that dignifies and challenges humankind. God, being perfect love, does not force Himself upon His creation. He offers Himself as light, but He will not drag anyone out of darkness. He stands at the door and knocks, but He will not break it down. This truth is both comforting and sobering — comforting because it assures us of God’s steadfast acceptance, and sobering because it places responsibility upon our own souls. The decision to accept Him, to trust Him, to walk with Him — that is ours alone. And in this sacred exchange between divine grace and human freedom, the story of salvation unfolds anew in every generation.
To understand this fully, one need only remember the parable of the prodigal son, that eternal story of love’s patience. The father, representing God, never rejected his wayward child. He did not hunt him down with anger, nor erase him from memory. Instead, he waited — not passively, but with yearning. Each day he looked toward the horizon, hoping to see his son return. And when that moment came, he did not question, did not scold, did not demand repayment. He ran to embrace him, clothing him in forgiveness and celebration. The son’s fall had never made him unloved; it was only his own rebellion that kept him from home. In the same way, Charles Stanley’s words remind us that God’s heart is ever-open — the question is whether ours will be.
History, too, tells stories of this divine truth. Consider John Newton, once a slave trader lost in sin and cruelty, who later became the author of Amazing Grace. In the midst of a violent storm at sea, he cried out to God — not because he believed himself worthy, but because he had nowhere else to turn. And in that moment, grace found him. The God who had never rejected him lifted him from despair and transformed his heart. Newton’s acceptance of divine mercy turned a life of shame into one of service. His story stands as living proof of Stanley’s message: that no one is beyond redemption, for the love of God waits on the edge of every human decision.
This teaching is not a call to guilt, but to hope. To say “God will never reject you” is to proclaim that there is no sin too great, no distance too far, no heart too broken for divine mercy. The universe itself is built on this truth — that love endures forever, even when we do not. The choice before every soul, then, is not whether God loves us, but whether we will let that love remake us. To accept God is to surrender pride, to lay down resistance, to believe that grace is greater than failure. It is a decision made not once, but daily — in prayer, in forgiveness, in faithfulness to what is right when the world urges us otherwise.
So, my child, take this wisdom as a torch in the night: you are never beyond the reach of God’s love. The door of heaven is not locked — it is your hand that must turn the handle. When you feel unworthy, remember that worthiness is not required; only willingness. When you feel forgotten, remember that God’s silence is not absence, but patience. He will not reject you, for rejection is foreign to His nature. The question is whether you will open your heart and say, “Yes, Lord, I am Yours.”
And in that surrender, peace will descend like rain upon dry earth. You will find that the love you thought you had lost was never gone — it was waiting for your answer. For Charles Stanley’s words are eternal truth: God will never reject you. Whether you accept Him is your decision. This is the mystery and the glory of faith — that the Creator of all things still waits, quietly and tenderly, for the creation to return His gaze.
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