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Chapter 14. - Election: God's Initiative in Salvation

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Chapter 14.

Election: Gods Initiative In Salvation


1. Gods Sovereignty
IN a previous section (The Providence of God) we have briefly referred to the sovereignty of God. A number of closely related topics were there also discussed. It is necessary at this point to consider Gods sovereignty in its relation to human salvation. This relation is usually expressed by the terms predestination or election. As will appear in due time, however, the question of election and predestination turns upon the question whether God or man takes the initiative in salvation. In this question are bound up all other issues involved in the general problem. Hence we have adopted as the principle to be expounded here Gods initiative in the salvation of men. As in creation, so also in redemption, the fundamental truth is expressed in the language of Gen. 1: 1, In the beginning God. The motive, the method, and the end of human salvation all arose out of the nature of the infinitely holy God. The initiative was with God, not with man. This in brief is the ultimate meaning of the divine sovereignty as it relates to our salvation. All systems of theology in the end are bound to recognize it as a fundamental truth, despite the fact that many systems have failed to apply it consistently.

1. In approaching the subject we should avoid certain errors in the manner of


conceiving Gods sovereignty. Chief among these has been the habit of making the sovereignty of God depend upon his mere will or good pleasure. It is the same kind of error which we discussed in connection with the atonement. Many of the same general cautions are necessary here. The danger is the fallacy of the abstract method. We are in danger of taking a single aspect, or attribute, or quality in the divine nature instead of the divine nature as a whole. We may in our thoughts take Gods will apart from his righteousness and apart from his love, and combine it with his infinite power. In so doing we are in danger of conceiving God as an arbitrary despot instead of a being who loves and seeks the good of all. In a word, we must avoid the abstract method and think of God as he is revealed in the Scriptures, and especially as he is supremely revealed in Christ. God is more than will. He is an infinite Person, rich in all moral attributes. He is the eternal Father, as Christ is the eternal Son. We must never, therefore, exalt the mere will of God, apart from his character as so revealed, in our efforts to define his sovereignty.

2. Some forms of the older Calvinism will serve as examples of the danger we
are considering. There were two forms, of it which may be mentioned. Both arose as the result of applying the rigid forms of logic to the idea of Gods

sovereignty as inhering in his will alone. One form asserted that God foreordained some men to eternal life for the exhibition of his love, and others to eternal death for the exhibition of his justice, and that he created men with these ends in view. It followed from this that the atonement of Christ was made not for the whole world, but for the elect alone. The other was a somewhat modified form of this view. It held that the purpose to create preceded the purpose to save. But along with this it was held that some were chosen for eternal salvation and others were chosen in the same way for eternal reprobation or damnation. The limited atonement was also an essential element in this view.

3. In these views we have a striking example of the abstract method. They


were due to the fact that their authors conceived of Gods mere will apart from his character, and with this false premise they proceeded by a rigid logic to their false conclusions. Undoubtedly these views contain one truth, which is that the salvation of individual men is to be traced to the initiative of God. He took the first steps and continued his gracious action until men believed and were saved. But it is not true that God created men expressly in order that he might damn them, for he willeth that none should perish, but that all should live. It is not true that Christs atonement was limited. It was a universal atonement, as we have already seen. It is not true that God acted in saving and condemning men in an arbitrary manner after the fashion of a human despot. He was and is the personal eternal and holy Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. All his dealings with mankind are consistent with this supreme fact. That it is so consistent was the chief burden of his revelation of himself to us in Christ. In order that we may understand Gods sovereignty in saving men, it is necessary that we trace briefly the biblical doctrine of his eternal purpose toward mankind. It is only in the light of this larger purpose that we can understand his method in saving individuals.

2. Gods Purpose Toward Mankind


If we abandon the abstract way of thinking of Gods sovereignty and define it according to the teaching of Scripture, we find ourselves at once in a different atmosphere. Sovereignty at once becomes transformed into a glorious manifestation of Gods love for the race of man. There are four statements which may be made to set forth this truth.

1. The first is that from the beginning Gods gracious purpose has been not national, but racial. He has had in view not one family or nation, but the whole of mankind. There were chosen families and a chosen nation. But these were not only ends in themselves, they were also means toward a larger end. At one

crisis in the worlds history Noah and his family were chosen as the channel of Gods blessing to mankind. Later God chose Abraham, whose descendants became the nation of Israel. Gods promise to Abraham was the disclosure of his purpose toward mankind: I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee and make thy name great; and be thou a blessing; and I will bless them that bless thee, and him that curseth thee will I curse: and in thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed (Gen. 12: 2, 3). This promise was repeated to Abraham many times in substantially the same form. We do not rightly understand the calling of Abraham unless we see in him the manifestation of Gods world-wide purpose of grace.

2. The second statement is that the course of Old Testament history clearly shows that the unvarying and consistent purpose of God was the bestowal of his favor upon the world at large through Israel. Israel became a nation, an elect and holy people. In the end it was destroyed because of pride and selfrighteousness and spiritual blindness. God had made her an exclusive people for a world-wide end. She became pharisaical in spirit. But the spiritual treasure she bore was not lost to mankind. We need only to read the messages of the prophets in all the great crises of the nation to understand Gods allinclusive plan which he was working out through Israel. Isaiah recalls to Israel the message of Jehovah,
I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the earth (Isa. 49: 6). Again he says: For behold, darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the peoples; but Jehovah will arise upon thee, and his glory shall be upon thee. And nations shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising (Isa. 60: 2, 3). These passages represent a great class of prophetic utterances. When the nation was broken up by the captivity the prophets came with their enlarged conceptions of God as the key to the meaning of the great tragedy.

3. The third statement is that the incarnation and atonement of Christ imply and involve the same world-wide purpose of Gods grace. Christ was the Son of man, and not merely a Jew of the first century. His incarnation made him organic, with mankind. As we have already seen, his atonement was for all. The Great Commission expressly includes all nations and every creature in the destination of the gospel. (Mat. 28:19, 20; Mar. 16:15, 16.)

4. The fourth statement is that the New Testament history and teaching
generally confirms the above interpretation of the incarnation and atonement. The book of Acts records the spread of the gospel among the Gentiles. The choice of the apostle Paul and his mission especially signalize the universality of the gospel. His doctrine of justification by faith was squarely against the Jewish narrowness which would have required converts to become Jews in principle and practice. In Ephesians Paul declares that the universality of the gospel was the secret of the ages now made known through Christ. (See Ephesians 2 and 3, especially Eph. 3: 4-13.) The book of Revelation in many places gives us visions of great multitudes from every nation and kindred and tribe and tongue redeemed unto God through the blood of Jesus Christ. From the foregoing we draw the following conclusions: First, the details of Gods sovereign plan for men can best be understood in the light of his larger plan for the race. His method of saving individual men can best be understood only in its context of the larger plan and purpose. Secondly, all that may at first sight seem arbitrary or capricious in Gods dealing with men ceases to be so when viewed in the light of his gracious purpose toward mankind. Thirdly, when there are delays in the execution of his gracious purpose it is not due to indifference on his part to human welfare. It arises rather out of the needs of the situation. The New Testament writers, especially Paul, speak of the fulness of times as a principle in the unfolding of Gods plan. Delay may be essential to the final end in view. A Fourth conclusion is that God has never lost interest in the Gentile nations. He has never relinquished his claims upon them. He has ever planned great and gracious things for them. A Fifth conclusion is that while logic is good in itself, it may easily go astray if it starts with a false premise, such as the mere will of God conceived of, apart from his reveled purpose toward all nations, his good-will toward all mankind. This truth must never be overlooked.

3. The Salvation Of Individuals


We can best discuss the sovereignty of God in the salvation of individuals by asking and answering a series of questions. The first question will deal with the crucial point of difference between opposing theories of election.

1. Does God choose men to salvation because of their good works or because
he foresees they will believe when the gospel is preached to them? Beyond doubt God foresees their faith. Beyond doubt faith is a condition of salvation. The question is whether it is also the ground of salvation. The Scriptures answer this question in the negative. The gospel is efficacious with some and not efficacious with others because Gods grace is operative in the one case beyond the degree of its action in the other. There are many passages which teach this. We cite a few. Jesus says to the disciples: Ye did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you, that ye should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should abide; that whatsoever ye shall ask of the Father in my name, he will give it you (Joh. 15:16). Observe here that the disciples were chosen not as an end in itself merely, but as a means to fruit-bearing, and that this latter end was to be achieved through prayer. The election included in its scope the good works which were to follow the faith. It included also the power in prayer which was to be the expression of the faith. Salvation is rich in contents. It is not a bare deliverance from sin. The faith which is the condition of justification is also the germ of a fruitful life. Again, Jesus says: All that which the Father giveth me shall come unto me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out (Joh. 6:37). Again he says: No man can come to me except the Father that sent me draw him: and I will raise him up in the last day (Joh. 6:44). In connection with the preaching of Paul and Barnabas we read, As many as were ordained to eternal life believed (Act. 13:48). In Rom. 8:29, 30 Paul joins together Gods foreknowledge, his foreordination, his calling, his justification, and his final glorification of the saints in a bond of spiritual unity and traces all back to the eternal purpose of God. And in Rom. 9:11-13 the apostle refers to the fact that prior to their birth, before Esau or Jacob could know good and evil, and in order that the purpose of God according to the election might stand, he chose Jacob. In Eph. 1: 4 he declares that God chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world. In close connection with the above truth is the further truth that faith, repentance, and good works are all the gift of God. In Rom. 12: 3 we read as to faith, according as God hath dealt to each man a measure of faith. Again, in Eph. 2: 8, 9: For by grace have ye been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God; not of works, that no man should glory. As to repentance the same type of teaching appears. In Act. 5:31 we read, Him did God exalt with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, to give

repentance to Israel and remission of sins. In Act. 11:18 also, Then to the Gentiles also hath God granted repentance unto life. The good works of Christians are also attributed to God. In Php. 2:12, 13 we read: Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who worketh in you both to will and to work for his good pleasure. And again, in Eph. 2:10, For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God afore prepared that we should walk in them. It would be easy to multiply passages showing how the calling of sinners effectually to repentance, their regeneration and conversion, are all attributed to Gods initiative and grace. (See Act. 18: 9, to; Joh. 1:13; 1Jo. 4:10; 1Co. 1:24-29; 11:29; Gal. 1:15, 16.)

2. The second question concerns the human will and choice: Does Gods election coerce mans will, or does it leave it free? The answer is emphatically that the will of man is not coerced, but is left free. In his free act of accepting Christ and his salvation man is self-determined. He would not have made the choice if left to himself without the aid of Gods grace. But when he chooses, it is his own free act. Gods grace is not irresistible as a physical force is irresistible. Grace does not act as a physical force. It is a moral and spiritual and personal power.
Here we confront a great fundamental truth, viz., the moral, spiritual, and personal method of divine grace in saving men. This truth contains several other subordinate truths, as follows: (1) Gods appeal to men through the gospels addressed to the faculties and powers in man which distinguish him as a moral, spiritual, and personal being. Man has intelligence. The gospel appeal is addressed to the intelligence. As Paul expressed it, Knowing therefore the fear of the Lord, we persuade men (2Co. 5:11). The gospel is a gospel of argument and persuasion. Again, man has conscience. The gospel is an intensely moral appeal directed to the deepest moral consciousness of man. Paul adds to the preceding statement: but we are made manifest unto God; and I hope that we are made manifest also in your consciences (2Co. 5:11). The gospel is thus a moral tonic. Again, man has emotions. The gospel appeals to all proper human emotions. Hope is a large element in it. For in hope were we saved (Rom. 8:24). Love is aroused to its depths by the gospel message. Nothing else avails if love is wanting. (1 Corinthians 13.) The gospel produces godly sorrow: For godly sorrow worketh repentance unto salvation, a repentance which bringeth no regret (2Co. 7:10). And so on through the list of human emotions. The gospel purifies and stimulates all human emotions. Again, man has will. The gospel appeal is addressed to the will.

The disobedient will alone prevents the salvation of men. Jesus said to the Jews, And ye will not come to me that ye may have life (Joh. 5:40). In his words to Jerusalem he said, How often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not (Mat. 23:37). Thus the gospel arouses the will. We repeat then that the gospel of Gods grace acts as a moral and spiritual and personal force, and not as a physical force. Men have been ever prone to think of electing grace as if it were dynamite or some other kind of material force compelling men instead of a moral force persuading them. Grace does not become effective until men freely respond to it. The preachers appeal may be to hope or fear. He may cover the entire range of human emotions. He may appeal to the reason, the will, the conscience, the imagination. But whatever be his form of appeal, his message aims at a free response of mans will. Gods grace acting through and along with Gods message aims at the same result. It appears supremely as grace when it produces this free response in man. (2) A second truth contained in the general truth that Gods method is moral and spiritual and personal is this: To reach men through the divinely given powers and faculties, God employs a system of means. Among these the most prominent are the church and its ordinances, the lives of Christians, the ministry, the Bible. In a word, the means and apparatus of the gospel conform to Gods moral and spiritual and personal method. It is not a priesthood with exclusive rights to approach God, but a universal priesthood. It is not a church which saves, but a church which is the spiritual home of the saved. It is not sacraments possessing magical power, but ordinances which symbolize the truth for the discerning disciple. It is not human custodians of the grace of God bestowing it upon those who become obedient to the church, but preachers proclaiming a salvation for all who will believe. In all respects the means are thus moral and spiritual. The electing grace of God acts through such means and achieves the salvation of men. (3) A third truth is that the Holy Spirit acts in conformity with Gods moral and spiritual and personal method. The work of the Holy Spirit is to teach, to guide, to lead, to take the things of Christ and show them to disciples. (Joh. 16: 7 ff.) The work of the Holy Spirit is summed up as moral demonstration of the truth of the gospel. This appears in Joh. 16: 8-11, where his work is described as conviction of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment. It is not proof to the intellect merely. It is not a stirring of the emotions merely. It

is not sheer power exerted upon the will of man. It is rather a work which contains all these elements in a conviction or moral conquest in the soul. Paul employs a like form of statement where he declares that his preaching was in demonstration of the Spirit and of power (1Co. 2: 4). Gods moral and spiritual and personal method in the gospel thus includes a moral demonstration within the soul by the Holy Spirit of God. Let us now restate the doctrine of election in the light of these truths. Election is not to be thought of as a bare choice of so many human units by Gods action independently of mans free choice and the human means employed. God elects men to respond freely. He elects men to preach persuasively and to witness convincingly. He elects to reach men through their native faculties and through the church, through evangelism and education and missionary endeavor. We must include all these elements in election. Otherwise we split the decree of God into parts and leave out an essential part. The doctrine may be presented as a mere fragment, which leads to many errors. We may illustrate our answer to the question as to mans freedom at the head of this section as follows: When God saves A. he wills two things, viz., that A. shall be an agent or medium for conveying those blessings to B. In like manner he wills that B. shall be a means of blessing to C., and so on through the entire list. Now Gods grace saves A., not by a bare forgiveness and justification. Gods grace in saving A. means the love, the sympathy, the prayers, the efforts, and strivings of A. to save B. Grace does not fully work itself out in saving A. unless A. permits grace to awaken in him a desire, yearning, prayer, effort for B. This desire, yearning, prayer, effort is an essential part of the salvation of A. Gods purpose in A. comes short unless grace reappears in A. as tender love for the lost, for B. The salvation God brings to men is a far richer gift than men sometimes imagine. It is not the mere plucking of a human unit here and there as a brand from the burning. It is this, but far more. It is a salvation which works through human agents and agencies and which involves a great series of human relationships and influences.

3. A third question about Gods sovereignty is this: Can we reconcile the


sovereignty of God and human freedom in his electing grace? The answer is in the negative. We are dealing here with ultimate forms of experience and of thought. Gods sovereignty held in an abstract way and apart from our freedom, or mans freedom held in an abstract way apart from Gods sovereignty, is a very hurtful and dangerous teaching. We are conscious of freedom as an ultimate fact of experience. We are driven to Gods sovereignty as an ultimate necessity of thought. One has expressed it thus: I am fated; that is false. I am free: that is false. I am fated and free: that is true. The word

fate is not proper to express any relation to God. But apart from this the above statement suggests the great truth with which we are dealing.

4. A fourth question is: Can we assign any reasons why God should adopt the
method of election in saving men? The reply is that we certainly cannot fully understand. But there are some reasons which will shed light upon the matter. We need to remember, first of all, that God is limited in his methods by the moral ends of his kingdom. His limitations are of course self-imposed. But they govern him when once adopted. God is limited in two ways in his dealings with men. First, he is limited by human freedom. He made us free. He will not coerce man in his choices. If he did so he would destroy our freedom. We would cease to be persons and become things. Gods problem is to save men and at the same time to leave them free. This is the greatest and most difficult of all problems. It is this problem which explains the system of moral, spiritual, and personal agencies we have been considering. God cannot take the soul by sheer omnipotence. He cannot storm the will and take it by assault, overpowering and crushing it. This would not save it, but lay it waste. Human agents of redemption, persuasion, argument, entreaty, prayer, personal influence in a word, moral and spiritual forces are the only kind available for the end in view. God is limited by mans freedom. Again, God is limited in his method by human sin. Sin enslaves men. They are endowed with moral freedom, but their wills have a bias which inevitably leads to the rejection of the gospel except when aided by Gods grace in Christ. It is not a question merely of ability, but of inevitability. Man inevitably chooses evil. The carnal mind is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be. Now combine these two thoughts. If man is free, and if he will inevitably reject the gospel unaided by divine grace, what will be the outcome? No one would be saved. But if God interposes, it can only be some form of election. But in adopting the method of election he must work in a moral, spiritual, and personal way on man, the moral, spiritual, and personal being. He must reduce his own action to the minimum lest he compel the will. He must interpose sufficiently to secure the result because the moral and spiritual process is gradual. Character comes by degrees. Regeneration is instantaneous. But the new birth is the beginning only of the new character in Christ. Preaching, persuasion, in short, all the moral and spiritual agencies, require time. If salvation were achieved as a complete whole in a twinkling, if character could arise at one stroke, the case might be different. We conclude, then, that God is limited by human freedom and sin to the method of election, and that in executing his purpose he must, by reason of these limitations, work gradually and through human agents.

5. A fifth question is: Would it not be fairer and more just if God left men to
accept or reject when the gospel is preached to them, without any previous choice on his part? The reply is that if the final outcome is the salvation of some and the loss of others, any other system would be ultimately traceable to Gods sovereignty and election. Assume that equal grace is given to all. Some are receptive, and some hostile to it. The receptive are saved, the hostile lost. Then Gods sovereignty and election operated to provide efficaciously for the receptive only. He did not give grace to overcome hostility. He elected thus the receptive and only the receptive. Assume again that with equal grace to all, some respond and believe because they are better morally, or less stubborn in will, or more believing, or for any other conceivable reason. Clearly if these are saved and the others lost, it is because God elected to offer a gospel adapted to reach one class and not adapted to reach the other class. As we remarked at the outset, the fundamental truth is that of Gen. 1: 1, In the beginning God. If it be assumed that God could save all, but refuses to do so, then any scheme whatever carries with it the idea of an election based on Gods sovereignty. Our own view, as we have just stated it, holds that under the moral and spiritual conditions involved in mans sin and freedom, God could not save all. Gods choice becomes effective through special grace based not at all on human merit, and on no principle of partiality or arbitrary selection. He chooses rather on a principle which makes possible a rapid movement toward his all-embracing purpose for the human race. No instance of individual election can be fully understood when viewed out of relation to the universal plan and purpose. The next question brings out this point more fully.

6. A sixth question: Is God seeking to save as few or as many as possible? Men have sometimes conceived of election as if it were a plan to save as few as possible. The whole tenor of the Bible is in the other direction. Here we must speak with caution. But there are many indications that God is seeking to save men as rapidly as the situation admits in view of sin and freedom and the necessity for respecting human freedom. The hostility of the world to Christ and the persecutions of Christians during the first centuries of the Christian era show clearly that an earlier giving of the gospel in its fulness might have been disastrous. In a moral kingdom men must be prepared before great epoch-making advances are possible. First the blade, then the ear, then the full corn in the ear, is the process. The following points will serve to make clear the purpose of God to save not as few, but as many as possible:
(1) The purpose expressed in the call of Abraham. We have clearly seen that Gods purpose in that call was twofold, the blessing of Abraham and his seed and through them the blessing of all mankind. This wider purpose never

disappears from the Old Testament history. It becomes most explicit in the later history after the exile in the teaching of the prophets. (2) The land given to Abraham and his descendants suggests the same truth. Palestine was at the center of the known world on the central sea, the Mediterranean. It was the highway of the nations going eastward from the west, or westward from the east. The Jewish theocracy was like a grain of musk deposited in the very heart of mankind to prepare the whole lump in due time. The Jewish dispersion in all directions was the preparation for the spread of the gospel. The synagogue was usually the nucleus and center of evangelization. Converted Jews bridged the chasm across to the Gentile world. (3) The unity of the world under the Roman Empire when Christ was born and the facilities for travel to every part of it were parts of divine preparation for the apostle and the missionary with the good tidings of salvation. Thus the good will of God for all the race begins to be manifest in a most striking way. (4) The spread of the Greek language and culture as a medium for communicating the truth of the gospel is another mark of the universal plan of God. One has expressed it thus: As the river Nile at a certain season overflows its banks and floods a wide area, leaving its deposit of rich soil for the Egyptian farmer, and then subsides again into its narrow channel, so also in Gods providence Greece overflowed the national limits and left its deposit of language and literature and then subsided into its narrow channels. This universal language became the instrument for the spread of the gospel over the earth. (5) The career of the apostle Paul was a notable factor in this great series of secondary causes. This is seen in his message and in his travels. His message was Christianity stated in universal terms and maintained with all vigor against Jewish narrowness and the tendency to make it a mere Jewish sect. His doctrine of justification by faith apart from works of the law proclaimed it as a Gentile as well as a Jewish religion. Pauls travels took him westward, not to the dreamy and inactive people of the East. He planted the gospel in Europe among the aggressive, ambitious, individualistic, inventive races, who in due time were to recover the early faith from a vast ecclesiasticism and again make it a conquering missionary religion. In our own day we witness a new fulness of time, in the world preparation for the gospel and a new outburst of missionary life and power. The great war in progress at this writing will no doubt change the face of civilization in many ways. It will prepare for new fulfilments of Gods purpose in Christ.

Now this historical survey suggests in a very impressive way that Gods electing grace has never been a narrowing, but always a widening principle. He has been ever eager to prepare men for larger blessings than they could receive at the time. His purpose and plan have ripened as rapidly as the moral and spiritual and personal kingdom and its appropriate forces could bring it to pass. His love has ever sought to overleap the barriers which human sin and unbelief have interposed.

7. A seventh question: Can we discover any principle which has guided in the electing love of God? In reply two or three things are perfectly clear.
First, men are not chosen because of merit of any kind on their part. This is the constantly recurring note in all Pauls epistles. Salvation is not of works, lest any man should boast. Whatever be the reason for the salvation of men, it is not due to any merit or moral worth in them. Secondly, it is also clear that men are chosen for service in Gods kingdom. The Bible nowhere regards men as detached atoms unrelated to other men. This choice for service applied to Abraham as we have seen. It applied to Israel as a nation. The later prophets interpreted Israels mission as a mission to mankind. Isaiah especially insisted that the remnant of Israel was the prophet of God to teach the nations. The apostle Paul conceived of himself as chosen from birth for his apostleship and mission to the Gentiles. Jesus expressly told the disciples that he had chosen them, that they might be his witnesses. They were to await the enduement of power after his departure that they might carry forward his work. In the third place, we may infer that Gods election pursues the course which will yield the largest results in the shortest time. Men may be so placed in relations to other men that their election could easily become an avenue of approach to others, and these in turn to others. There might thus arise a principle of electing strategic men, through whom Gods widening purpose might swiftly realize itself. This would not imply merit on the part of those chosen. In some cases, indeed, the strategic man might be among the worst of men morally, and yet so related to others, or so endowed, that he could be employed best for the ends of the kingdom. Paul declared himself to have been the chief of sinners. But for this very reason Gods grace obtained a monumental victory through him so that other bad men might hope. In bowling the aim of the bowler is to hit the king pin so that it will knock down the other nine. It is not that the king pin is in any essential way different from the others in itself, but rather that it is so related to the other pins that to hit it right means the largest results. It occupies a strategic position in relation to the other pins. We may assume, therefore, in the light of Gods universal purpose for the race of man, that he has ever pursued this plan.

In view of all the preceding it appears that Gods sovereignty in his electing love in no way brings reproach upon the love and grace of God. It is rather a masterpiece of love and grace seeking to bless men. We can never fully fathom the depths of the divine motives in his dealings with men. We can never grasp entirely the significance of all his methods. Especially is this true regarding the doctrine of election. But it is not difficult to see that there is nothing arbitrary in Gods ways. Infinite love is behind all his acts as well as infinite righteousness.

4. Objections
Most of the objections to the doctrine of election have already been answered indirectly in the preceding discussion. There are a few, however, which need specific treatment.

1. It is objected that the teaching makes God partial. Why should he save some
and refuse to save others. The answer is contained chiefly in what has already been expressed. Election is his method for realizing a great purpose for all. It is the only method possible under all the circumstances. But we add that election is a universal principle in Gods methods. He chooses some plants and flowers to be more beautiful than others. He chooses some birds to be singers while others can only croak. He chooses to endow some men as poets and artists while others are commonplace plodders. The black races in Africa might complain of the partiality of God for the white races of Europe and America. God chose Israel as his peculiar people out of all the races of men. The modern doctrine of natural selection as applied in biology generally is a scientific expression of the same general principle. It is evident that Gods ends in the world could not be achieved by means of a dead level of privilege. Life in all its forms, physical, moral, and spiritual, involves differences of various kinds, and these differences imply ultimately a principle of election.

2. It is also objected that election involves insincerity in the offer of salvation


to all. The reply is that there is absolutely no barrier to the salvation of any, save their own wills. Christ died for all. God is willing to receive all who will come. God knows that some will not accept. Indeed, he knows that all will refuse unless by his special grace some are led to believe. But invitation and persuasion and appeal and mans free response are the only means available in a moral and spiritual order. Grace can only operate thus. If angels were sent to capture the elect and bring them in by force, this would not be a method in harmony with grace. It would leave the will unmoved and character unchanged. The choicest element in mans spiritual life in Gods sight is his own free act in choosing God and returning to him. The gospel invitation

makes this choice possible. No other method is conceivable by which it could be so well done.

3. Again, it is objected that God does not desire the salvation of all, or else he
would elect all. But the Scriptures expressly declare that God so loved the world that he sent his Son, and also that he wishes none to perish, but that all should come to repentance. (2Pe. 3: 9.) The objection assumes falsely that there are no moral limitations of any kind in God, and that he can do anything he desires. But human freedom limits God, as does human unbelief and sin. Men cannot be made righteous by sheer omnipotence. God cannot force or compel any one to be good. The situation does not admit of the use of force. It is a situation rather in which a race of men is bent on self-destruction, or moral and spiritual suicide. God interposes by a method which respects their freedom and gradually works out a universal purpose of blessing.

4. It is objected also that election cuts the nerve of Christian endeavor. It is felt that if the number of the saved is fixed beforehand, there is little need on our part to strive for their salvation. But this forgets the meaning of salvation. Our salvation means in part our love and effort for the lost. It means our sharing the redemptive passion of Christ. It means all the forms of self-sacrifice and of moral worth which are required to save others. The objection also forgets that the kingdom of God is a kingdom of human relations. God is perfecting us through our interactions in a moral and spiritual realm. It forgets also that the kingdom is a historical movement in which all the parts are closely related and interdependent.
The objection forgets the alternative of Gods election. Our effort would be hopeless indeed without it. We would soon cease all effort because all effort would appear to be fruitless. There is no greater incentive to effort than the consciousness of a divine purpose working in us. All great reformers and evangelists have had the conviction. Revolutions were successful in such large measure because a sense of Gods purpose was the impelling motive behind them.

5. It is also objected that an insoluble mystery confronts us when we seek to unite the two ideas of Gods sovereignty and mans freedom. The reply is that this is true and should be expected rather than cause surprise. All the relations between the infinite and the finite run back into mystery. The ideas of incarnation and prayer and Providence and all others which combine the eternal with the temporal, the infinite with the finite, carry us finally into a realm beyond our present powers. But this fact ought not to create doubt. In science and philosophy, just as in theology, the same difficulty exists. The

facts of experience, however, are their own best evidence, and in religion these are incontestable. One point should never be overlooked in considering the doctrine of election. We should bear in mind the importance of proclaiming a universal gospel. We are untrue to the spirit of the New Testament when we fail here. Whatever of mystery or of difficulty remains after all we can say about election, one thing stands out in clear sunlight in the New Testament. And that is that God sent his Son on a world-wide mission, that preachers are not only authorized, but commanded to preach the gospel to every creature, and to give a universal invitation.

Hardening the Heart


6. Before leaving the subject one other difficulty should be briefly considered.
Certain passages of Scripture seem to represent God as actively working to harden the human heart and prevent acceptance of offered mercy. In Exo. 7: 3 God foretells that he will harden Pharaohs heart. In Exo. 7:13 it is declared that Pharaohs heart was hardened. In Exo. 10: 1 God is represented as saying, I have hardened his heart. There are many similar passages in other parts of the Bible which seem to attribute directly to God the blindness of sinners, or the hardening of their hearts. It is not necessary to review all of them. The same general principles apply in interpreting them in whatever connections they are found. The following statements supply the needed guidance: (1) In the Scriptures we find a sense in which any event or act, good or evil, is attributed to God. In Isa. 45: 7 Jehovah says I make peace and create evil; I am Jehovah that doeth all these things. The context here shows that Jehovahs sovereignty is expressed by these words. He is in no sense the author of the wicked deeds of men, but he permits them and overrules them for a higher end. The permissive decree or purpose of God explains his relation to events or acts which involve sin and guilt. (2) Again, in practically all the passages in question, the context shows that the sin or hardening of the heart was due to the voluntary acts of the men themselves, and not to God. In the case of Pharaoh it is declared repeatedly that he hardened his own heart. (Exo. 8:15, 32.) The whole course of events suggests an appeal of the divine mercy and forbearance. The final blow does not fall until every resource has been exhausted to move Pharaoh to repentance. Sometimes he shows signs of temporary change of heart, but the old stubbornness always returns. (Exo. 9:27, 28.) (3) The Scriptures clearly declare that men bring upon themselves a moral and spiritual blindness and insensibility by persistence in sin. This may be

attributed to God. But Gods agency in it is expressed through the moral and spiritual laws involved We cannot violate conscience without dulling the moral sense. We cannot resist moral and spiritual light without losing our finer appreciation of moral and spiritual realities. This appears in Mat. 13:13-15 and in Mar. 4:11, 12 and Luk. 8:10. These are parallel passages. In Matthew the explanation is given: For this peoples heart is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes have they closed; lest haply they should perceive with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and turn again, and I should heal them (Mat. 13:15). A judicial blindness or hardening came as a result of their own sin. It was the result of Gods action only as expressed in the laws of their moral constitution. (4) Finally, we must understand all such passages in the light of the uniform teaching of Scripture that God willeth that none should perish. He invites all men everywhere to accept his mercy. No hand that was ever stretched out to him for help in genuine repentance was stayed by him. If he should refuse mercy to the truly penitent it would be a denial of his own nature and a failure to keep his promises. For him to work actively to prevent the salvation of men would be to undo the gospel and nullify the deepest meaning of the incarnation and atonement. Nothing could be more directly opposed to all that Christ has made known to us than the idea that God could or would hinder men from accepting his grace. The final state of the wicked is their own self-wrought destiny, as we shall see.

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