You don't seem to understand that if grace isn't taught the way Charles Stanley teaches it then it's not 'hyper' grace. Hyper grace is above and beyond the traditional, Biblical teaching about grace. It says grace hyper-extends to even cover going back to not trusting in grace.
Even Calvinism, which was the one and only 'once saved always saved' theology of the church for centuries doesn't agree with that. It says if you leave you were never really saved to begin with. But Hypergrace 'once saved always saved' says you are still saved even though you left because it erroneously concludes that since salvation is by nothing at all (which it isn't) then you can't lose it by doing anything--not even by denying Christ in willful unbelief and a return to the world.
Grace is far reaching, but there is one place it will not hyper-extend to: your return to unbelief. It can and will go everywhere else but it will not follow the person who willfully returns to the world in unbelief and a denial of Christ. But this new generation of people in the church are being taught that it does. And it seems even the old timers are getting on board with it.
Even Calvinism, which was the one and only 'once saved always saved' theology of the church for centuries doesn't agree with that. It says if you leave you were never really saved to begin with. But Hypergrace 'once saved always saved' says you are still saved even though you left because it erroneously concludes that since salvation is by nothing at all (which it isn't) then you can't lose it by doing anything--not even by denying Christ in willful unbelief and a return to the world.
Grace is far reaching, but there is one place it will not hyper-extend to: your return to unbelief. It can and will go everywhere else but it will not follow the person who willfully returns to the world in unbelief and a denial of Christ. But this new generation of people in the church are being taught that it does. And it seems even the old timers are getting on board with it.