All Consuming Grace

Paul and Rebecca Turner

All Consuming Grace exists to challenge, equip, and transform lives through the grace of God.

  1. VOR 1 TAG

    When Grace Creates Loyalty

    In this weeks  All Consuming Grace Podcast, hosts Paul and Rebecca Turner continue with part5 in the series “Difficult Relationships: When Grace Becomes Visible”with a powerful turning point. After walking through the pain, fractures, and realitiesof broken relationships in previous episodes, this conversation shifts the focus forward. What happens when God’s all-consuming grace not only heals—but binds hearts together in something deeper than natural connection? Paul and Rebecca explore how grace forms a profound bondamong those who are fully surrendered to what God is doing. This is not surface-level friendship or convenient companionship. It is a Spirit-forged loyalty—one that often surpasses even familial ties. When believers walk in sharedsurrender, shared purpose, and shared grace, they find themselves drawn into relationships marked by trust, defense, and unwavering commitment. This episode highlights how grace moves us beyondsurvival mode and into intentional connection. Instead of being defined by past wounds, we begin to recognize and pursue the relationships God is building in the present. These are the people we stand with, fight for, and remain faithfulto—not because it is easy, but because grace has made it necessary. As the series reaches this pivotal moment, Paul andRebecca remind listeners that God’s grace doesn’t just restore what was broken—it creates something entirely new. A loyalty rooted in Him. A closeness shaped by surrender. A fellowship that reflects the very heart of Christ. This is the beauty of all-consuming grace: it doesn’t just healrelationships—it redefines them.

    40 Min.
  2. This World Should NOT be Worthy of You— Courage, Conviction, and the Faith of Hebrews 11

    VOR 5 TAGEN

    This World Should NOT be Worthy of You— Courage, Conviction, and the Faith of Hebrews 11

    In this second episode of The Guide Service, Paul Turner takes listeners into one of the most powerful passages about faith in the Bible—Hebrews 11. Known as the “Faith Chapter,” it introduces us to men whose lives were marked by deep conviction and courageous obedience. Paul begins with the foundation: “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). What does it really mean that faith is substance? In this episode, Paul explores the idea that substance is not passive belief—it is courage. Real faith produces the courage to stand on truth even when the outcome cannot yet be seen. The men highlighted in Hebrews 11—Abel, Noah, Abraham, Moses, and others—lived with such conviction that Scripture ultimately says something remarkable about them: “the world was not worthy” of them. Their faith shaped their actions, their decisions, and the direction of their lives. That raises a searching question for every man listening: Does your life show the kind of faith and conviction that makes the world unworthy of you? Paul challenges the community of men listening to examine whether their lives truly reflect the faith they claim to hold. Along the way, he introduces a vision for The Guide Service itself. Like King Arthur gathering his knights to the round table for counsel and accountability, this podcast is meant to be more than something you passively listen to. It is meant to become our counsel table…our counsel ring—a place where men think together, challenge one another, and sharpen their convictions. Because faith that has substance produces men who live with courage. And the real question is this: Is the world worthy of you?

    27 Min.
  3. The Guide Service – Thinking Like Men of the Word

    19. MÄRZ

    The Guide Service – Thinking Like Men of the Word

    The All Consuming Grace Channel began with Paul and Rebecca Turner’s conversations about the transforming power of God’s grace. Now, a new podcast with a new focus joins the channel. Welcome to The Guide Service, a podcast hosted by Paul Turner and dedicated to challenging men to think biblically so they can live honestly and faithfully before God. Scripture calls men to “walk honestly, as in the day” (Romans 13:13, KJV). But honest living does not happen by accident—it begins with honest thinking shaped by the Word of God. In this podcast, Paul lays out the future of these podcasts where he will take listeners on a guided journey through the lives of men in Scripture. Some were courageous and faithful. Others failed in painful and public ways. Yet every story teaches us something about what it means to follow God as a man. Together we will examine what they did well, where they went wrong, and what their lives reveal about faith, leadership, responsibility, and integrity. We will also step outside the pages of history and look carefully at the world around us. Like the sons of Issachar, who had “understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do” (I Chronicles 12:32, KJV), men today must learn to think clearly about the culture, the pressures, and the challenges of our day. This is not a podcast about winning arguments or proving ourselves right. It is about learning to think rightly so we can live rightly. Join us for The Guide Service, where we look to Scripture, history, and the present moment to challenge the way we think—and to become the men God calls us to be.

    24 Min.
  4. 16. MÄRZ

    Grace That Rewrites the Story of Our Pain

    In Episode 4 of the All Consuming Grace Podcast series “Difficult Relationships: When Grace Becomes Visible,” Paul and Rebecca explore one of the most powerful ways grace works in our lives—it rewrites the story of our pain. When we experience betrayal or deep hurt, it’s easy for those moments to define the narrative of our lives. Left in our own perspective, painful experiences often lead to bitterness, resentment, or a sense that something has been permanently lost. But Scripture shows us that God is able to do something far greater. In this episode, Paul and Rebecca look at the life of Joseph and the betrayal he suffered at the hands of his own brothers. What seemed like the destruction of his future—being sold into slavery and separated from his family—became the very path God used to accomplish His greater purpose. Twenty years later, Joseph confronts the reality of what happened, yet he sees it through a completely different lens, declaring in Genesis 50:20 (KJV), “But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good.” Grace does not require us to forget what happened or pretend the pain wasn’t real. Instead, grace teaches us to see our story from God’s point of view. When we look only through our own perspective, wounds often produce bitterness. But when we begin to see how God works through even the most painful moments, those same experiences can become evidence of His providence and purpose. Join Paul and Rebecca as they discuss how God can transform betrayal into testimony, pain into purpose, and why seeing our story through the lens of grace can fill us with hope and anticipation that God is still working all things for good.

    39 Min.
  5. 9. MÄRZ

    Grace That Confronts Failure

    Grace is one of the most beautiful words in the Christian life—but it is also one of the most misunderstood. Many people think grace means ignoring sin, overlooking failure, or giving someone a pass when things go wrong. But that kind of grace doesn’t actually restore anyone. In this episode of the All Consuming Grace Podcast, Paul and Rebecca Turner talk about how grace really works according to Scripture. Looking at the powerful moment between Jesus and Peter in John 21, they explore how Christ lovingly confronted Peter after his threefold denial. Jesus didn’t ignore Peter’s failure, and He didn’t pretend it never happened. Instead, He addressed it directly—with truth, compassion, and purpose. Real grace does not avoid hard conversations. It moves toward them. Grace exposes failure so that restoration can begin. Avoiding confrontation might feel easier, but it does not redeem the failure or restore the person who has fallen. The good news is that failure is not the end of the story. God is not finished with us when we fail. In fact, He often uses our failures as the very place where His grace becomes most visible. Because God sees more than our worst moments—He sees the faithfulness He intends to produce in us. Join Paul and Rebecca as they discuss the biblical definition of grace and why understanding it correctly changes how we handle failure, relationships, and restoration. Grace isn’t about giving people a pass—it’s about bringing people back. Grace is a beautiful thing. Let’s not avoid it. Let’s embrace it.

    36 Min.
  6. 2. MÄRZ

    Restored Before We Restore: When Grace Rebuilds the Relationship

    In this second episode of Difficult Relationships: When Grace Becomes Visible, Paul and Rebecca explore a foundational truth: before we can restore others, we must first be restoredourselves. Turning to John chapters 18 and 21, Paul and Rebecca walk through Peter’s devastating denial and Christ’s gracious restoration. In John 18, Peter denies Jesus three times…backto back to back.  This should serve as a sobering reminder that we all fail. But in John 21, Jesus does not discard Peter.Instead, He confronts him with a question that reaches beyond behavior to the heart: “Do you love Me?” Jesus begins the conversation by reestablishingthe relationship. What would it look like if we followed that pattern? When confronting our child, a spouse, a brother or sister in Christ—do we begin with the relationship? Do we remember that restoration flows from love, not frustration? As Jesus presses Peter with the repeated question, “Do you love Me?”, Peter is grieved. Yet his grief is not rejection—it is grace at work. As II Corinthians 7:9 says, “Ye sorrowed to repentance.” Godly sorrow leads to change. Paul and Rebecca discuss how God’s grace must first teach us. If grace is not shaping our own hearts, we can quickly become harsh, critical, and bitter in our difficult relationships. Whether or not grace seems to be working in “the other person,” it must be working in us. Before you seek to restore someone else, allowChrist to restore you. Grace becomes visible when it first becomes personal.

    44 Min.
  7. 23. FEB.

    When Relationships Break: Why We Need All-Consuming Grace

    Series: Difficult Relationships: When Grace Becomes Visible Part 1Broken relationships are not the exception—they are the human experience. In this opening episode of our new series, Paul and Rebecca Turner begin at the very beginning. Before there were fractured marriages, strained parent-child dynamics, or siblings who no longer speak, there was a garden. In the book of Genesis, mankind’s relationship with God was shattered by sin. When Adam and Eve fell, fellowship was broken—and every human relationship since has felt the ripple effects. From there, the fracture spreads. Adam and Eve turn on one another. Cain’s jealousy and resentment erupt in violence against Abel. Later, Joseph’s brothers betray him out of envy. Throughout Scripture, we see the same patterns we see in our homes today: jealousy, disappointment, betrayal, failure, unmet expectations, wounded pride. Why do relationships break? Sometimes it is resentment. Sometimes it is betrayal. Sometimes someone fails us. Sometimes we fail them. Sometimes we simply feel we deserved more. But here is the hope that frames this entire series: when relationships break, grace has an opportunity to become visible. Paul and Rebecca take us to Romans 5:10, where we are reminded that when we were enemies, Christ died for us. God did not wait for reconciliation to begin grace. He moved toward us in the middle of hostility. He demonstrated all-consuming grace. We cannot cheapen grace. When we minimize grace, we miss its transforming power. We never get to see what grace does in betrayal, what grace does when loyalty is tested, what grace does when we feel overlooked or wronged. What does grace do when a marriage feels strained? What does grace do between siblings who carry old wounds? What does grace do in parent-child relationships marked by disappointment? God’s grace works—but it works on His timeline. In this foundational episode, Paul and Rebecca lay the groundwork for a journey through difficult relationships, especially within families and marriages. Because when grace becomes visible in the places that hurt the most, it doesn’t just repair relationships—it reveals the heart of God. Join us as we begin exploring what happens when relationships break… and grace steps in.

    37 Min.

Info

All Consuming Grace exists to challenge, equip, and transform lives through the grace of God.