Predestination: Letting God Be God
Predestination: Letting God Be God
Predestination: Letting God Be God
Table of Contents
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Suggested Reading
James Montgomery Boice, Amazing Grace, Tyndale, 1993.
Michael Horton, Putting Amazing Back into Grace, Baker, 1994.
John F. MacArthur Jr, Ashamed of the Gospel, chapter 8, Crossway Books, 1993.
J.I. Packer, Evangelism & the Sovereignty of God, InterVarsity Press, 1961.
_______, Hot Tub Religion, chapter 2, 1987.
Edwin H. Palmer, The Five Points of Calvinism, Baker, 1972.
John Piper, The Pleasures of God: Meditations on Gods Delight in Being God, Multnomah,
1991.
W.J. Seaton, The Five Pints of Calvinism, Banner of Truth Trust, 1970.
Duane Edward Spencer, TULIP: The Five Points of Calvinism in the Light of Scripture, Baker,
1979.
R.C. Sproul, Chosen by God, Tyndale, 1986.
_______, Grace Unknown: The Heart of Reformed Theology, Baker, 1997.
_______, Willing to Believe: The Controversy over Free Will, Baker, 1997.
David Steele & Curtis Thomas, The Five Points of Calvinism, P&R, 1963.
R.K. McGregor Wright, No Place for Sovereignty, InterVarsity Press, 1996.
Week
Introduction
t the time of the American Revolution, almost every Christian denomination in America affirmed the
Reformed doctrine of predestination. Christians believed that God alone was to be credited with their salvation
even their cooperation with Gods grace was brought about by Gods grace. God had chosen some for eternal life
and not others, and only God knew his reasons for the selection. Baptists, Anglicans, Congregationalists, Dutch
Reformed, and (of course) Presbyteriansall stood solidly upon this biblical teaching. One thing, however, was
sureGod didnt choose us because he knew we would believe. Rather, we believed because God chose us. God
was God, and all the glory would go to him.
After two centuries of immersion in American culture, however, American Christianity has entered the new
millennium in a state of crisis. Few Americans today believe in predestination. They may say they do, but they then
define predestination as based upon Gods foresight of our faith. In the end, the reason Im saved was because of
my free will, not Gods sovereign choice. I guess the reason I believed when my neighbor didnt is because I was
just better than my neighbor. I was good enough to believe by my own free will. I thank you, Father, that I had the
good sense to cooperate with you....
ll say this right at the outset. Free-will Christianity is a bastardization of biblical Christianity. It is
inconsistent Christianity. Perhaps heresy is even a fair term for it. All this free will thinking is just another
form of legalism, making salvation depend upon us rather than upon Jehovah. Dont get me wrongmany who buy
this thinking are genuine, sincere believers and will be with the Lord forever. After all, a major point in this class
will be that Gods grace is more powerful than our blindness. But there has been a lack of biblical teaching here for
decades. The result of this dearth has been an even bigger problem, a problem so terrifying as to threaten the very
vitality of the American church. We have lost sight of Gods greatness. How rare today is a sermon on Gods
majesty, his sovereign power, his wrath, his judgment, his overpowering rule over history, his supremacy, his
fierceness, his eternal predestination. If were really, really honest with ourselves, Do we truly know God anymore?
We have tamed God. Castrated him, perhaps. As one theologian laments... our thoughts of God have become far
too human.
This should come as no surprise in America. For two centuries, the church has existed in an American
culture whose highest values are personal liberty and individual rights. It would be quite natural for Christians here
to filter the Bible through such a lens. The kingdom of God has to be all about me. It has to be relevant to my life,
right? And if I am saved, it has to be because of my decisions, right? My will has to be free, right? God would be
unfair to have it any other way. God has to be an equal opportunity Savior. Isnt God a democracy? Didnt Jesus
preach about the Republic of God? All this is to suggest that American churches dont teach predestination because
they are more American than they are Christian. We have come to think that our God is small. Now its time for a
new Reformation in the churches, a Reformation in which we honor God as God, not just as mascot. We need a
Reformation in which God is glorified as God, and not just as someone who fills our needs. Enough about our
needs! Its far past time we let God be God. I know of no need more pressing than this.
till, even with all this misunderstanding about predestination, nearly every major Christian denomination
in history has felt compelled to have some doctrine of predestination. Our generation is not the first to have to work
through this biblical issue. About the year 400, Augustine and Pelagius fought over this doctrineand Pelagius was
condemned as a heretic for his doctrine of free will. Then at the Council of Orange in 529 AD, the Christians united
to reject free will in favor of Gods sovereign grace. And again in 855, the Council of Valence affirmed a double
predestination. During the Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century, Martin Luther called the doctrine of
predestination the cor ecclesia, the heart of the Church. Luther wrote more about predestination than did John
Calvin, even though the term Calvinism was unfortunately applied to the doctrine. If one looks at the greatest
theologians in the 2,000 years of Christian historyAugustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Edwardsalthough these
men disagree on other issues and are by no means infallible, all of them agree on this question of predestination.
2. The Arminian view: God has predestined some to eternal life because He
saw in advance that such persons would cooperate with the Holy Spirit and
believe by their own free will. God gives everyone an equal amount of grace,
and those willing to take it are saved. God chose us because we were going to
choose Him.
3. The Reformed (Calvinist) view: God predestined some to eternal life, not because He saw that they would have
believed on their own (They wouldnt have!), but because of His own good pleasure. God chose us despite our
rejection of Him, not because we would be cooperative. God chose to change our hearts, and he has done so and
will continue to do so until all of his elect are gathered.
Calvinists and Arminians agree that only some are elect, and that those who are elect will come to faith
and believe until the end (if, in fact, they are elect). And everyone agrees that those who turn from sin to follow
Christ are saved. The question is this: On what basis did God predestine them? Did God predestine some because
He knew they would believe of their own free will, or did He predestine without regard to human choices? Was
God's choice based on our choice, or is our choice itself as a result of God's choice?
Total depravity, Unconditional election, Limited atonement, Irresistible grace, and the Perseverance of the
saints. There are better titles for each of these doctrinesand this class will not deal with the extent of the
atonement (that will have to be dealt with later). The two theological systems may be compared as follows:
The Arminian Objections to Protestant Theology
The Five Points of Arminianism
3. Unlimited Atonement (Jesus died to make salvation 3. Particular Atonement (Limited Atonement-- Jesus
possible, and therefore did so for everyone)
died to actually assure salvation, and therefore died only
for His elect)
4. The Holy Spirits work limited by human will
The name Five Point of Calvinism is a little misleading, of course. Calvinist churches teach more than
five pointsthe vision is to teach the whole counsel of God! These particular five points were simply the five under
fire in the seventeenth century. One might suggest that these are five of the hundred or so points of biblical
Christianity. Yet the one great point behind all five points is the supreme point that salvation is of the Lord, from
beginning to end. God is God, and he does as he pleases. And if he has chosen to give us salvation, were going to
make sure that we give all the glory for it to him, not to ourselves. Predestination is not just a Presbyterian thing.
As the nineteenth century English Baptist preacher C.H. Spurgeon exclaimed, I love to preach the strong old
doctrines nicknamed Calvinism, but which are surely and verily the revealed truth of Go d as it is in Christ Jesus.
Week
few years ago, a Christian company in Florida began marketing Jesus the Doll, a doll the makers
claim will help children discover Jesus. For $29.95, the doll promises to provide solace for the elderly and the
infirm, for those in recovery programs, and those in emotional duress. The real Lord is just too ethereal. Its hard
to hug air, the company notes. They planned to follow this doll with the release of God the Doll, a two-foot ragdoll with white hair and a long beard, completely machine washable, of course. Is this the God in whom we trust?
I fear that many or even most American Christians have forgotten the sovereign power of God. Our God is
abounding in love and mercy, but not in hugs. He is too big to hug. And those who have seen himmen like Isaiah
in Isaiah 6wanted to run from God rather than to hug him. In terror they cry, Woe is me, I am ruined! Even the
sinless angels who minister before Gods throne dare not look God in the face, but cover their eyes and feet and cry
out, Holy, Holy, Holy! Our God is a consuming fire, not a rag-doll. And God is sovereignhe is in control.
s R.C. Sproul points out, were there one maverick molecule out there somewhere apart from the plan of
God, we would have no reason to hope in God. That one maverick molecule could be the one detail that defeats
Gods eternal purpose. For lack of the nail, the shoe was lost. For lack of the shoe, the horse was lost. For lack of
the horse, the rider was lost. For lack of the rider, the battle was lost. For lack of the battle, the war was lost.
th
God controls the entire universe: Ps 103:19; Rom 8:28; Eph 1:11
God controls all of nature: Ps 135:6-7; Mt 5:45; 6:25-30
God controls angels & Satan: Ps 103:20-21; Job 1:12
God controls nations: Ps 47:7-9; Dan 2:20-21; 4:34-35
God controls human beings: 1 Sam 2:6-7; Gal 1:15-16
God controls animals: Ps 104:21-30; 1 Ki 17:4-6
God controls "accidents": Pr 16:33; Jon 1:7; Mt 10:29
God controls free acts of men: Ex 3:21; 12:25-36; Ez 7:27
God controls sinful acts of men and Satan: Acts 2:23; 4:27-28; 2
Sam 24:1; 1 Chr 21:1; Gen 45:5; 50:20
Concurrence
A key biblical principle that helps illuminate Gods sovereignty is called
concurrence. People have plans, which may be good or may be evil, and people are
responsible for the plans they make. God also has a plan, a plan which overrules all
other plans. Gods eternal purpose and humanitys purposes concurthey take
place at the same time. As J.I. Packer explains, Gods control is absolute in the
sense that men do only that which He has ordained that they should do; yet they are
truly free agents in the sense that their decisions are their own, and they are morally
responsible for them. While our motives may be impure, even our attempts to
thwart Gods eternal plan in fact only serve to further it. We see this principle of
concurrence active in several biblical passages.
In Acts 2:23 and 4:27-28, God plans the murder of Jesus, the worst sin in
history. God tells us that Christs murderers were working out his eternal
plan, then goes on to say that they will be judged for their actions.
In Genesis 45:5 and 50:20, God plans the attempted murder and
enslavement of Joseph so that God could eventually rescue millions of
people from famine. Joseph tells his brothers that their plan was wicked
You intended to harm me. But Gods plan trumped their plan, Joseph
explains, But God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being
done, the saving of many lives.
In Job 1, we see the Sabeans and Chaldeansspurred on by Satan
killing Jobs cattle and livestock, even though we know what Job could
only perceive by faiththat their actions were in fact a part of Gods plan,
who had chosen to allow Satan to inspire these actions.
he greatest idol in American culture today is the idol of personal selfdetermination. Personal choice is cherished above God. Perhaps the reason it is so
hard to teach the doctrine of predestination is because to preach this doctrine is to
pierce the very heart of man's rebellion. "In Him we were chosen, having been
predestined according to the plan of Him who works out everything in conformity
with the purpose of His will" (Ephesians 1:11). Who decides? God does, and He
doesn't care how you feel about it. God is holy. God is sovereign. God is God.
Bow the knee and fear the Lord. Fall before him and worship.
Week
THE TRIAL
DEFENDANT: God
OCCUPATION: Maker, ruler, judge of heavens and earth
ADDRESS: Everywhere, particularly the heavens
CHARGE: Being selfish
THE EVIDENCE:
1. Hell, Fires of. Billions will suffer there, and the Defendant says he will do it to display his wrath.
2. Intolerance of non-Christian religions. He calls them idolatry and says he will punish them.
3. Intolerance of numerous behaviors that people enjoy.
4. Insistence that people focus all attention on Defendant all the time. Intolerant of those who do otherwise.
5. Multiple unexpected outbursts of anger.
a. Nadab & Abihu, whom Defendant burned with fire while they offered sacrifices in Defendants temple.
b. Uzzah, whom Defendant struck dead while trying to keep Defendant's ark from falling to the ground.
c. Ananias and Sapphira, whom Defendant killed while they were donating money to Defendant's church.
d. Christians in Corinth whom Defendant killed because they ate their communion bread too quickly.
6. Repeated remarks that everything must happen for Defendants own glory. Refusal to share glory with others.
DEFENDANTS PLEA: Guilty as charged.
here are lots of passages in the Bible that honestly trouble a lot of Christianspassages where God kills
people, punishes people, says things that seem intolerant, offensive, even selfish. Whenever a passage in the Bible
rubs us the wrong way, it should give us pause, because the problem is not with the Bible, but with us. What is it we
dont understand about Gods character that makes some of Gods actions seem so unfair? There is one simple truth
thatonce graspedmakes us see things as God sees them and unlocks
a renewed understanding of God and Gods ways. One single passion
drives Gods heart. That passion, as teachers like Augustine and
Jonathan Edwards have helped us to see, is this: Gods primary concern
in everything he does is to bring glory to himself.
od is chiefly concerned with his own fame. God is selfcentered. Selfish, one might even say. If there's one thing we know
from the Bible, it's that God is chiefly concerned with the honor of his
namejust look at the prayer Jesus taught us to pray. Before ever
getting to ourselves and our needs, we pray for Gods name to be
honored, for Gods rule (kingdom) to be furthered and for Gods will to
be done. Even when God saves sinners from their sinsa supreme act
of generosityGod insists that he's doing it for his own benefit more
than for theirs. Observe how God speaks of salvation in Isaiah 48:11:
"For my own sake, for my own sake, I do this. How can I let myself be
defamed? I will not yield my glory to another."
hink about it. If it is man's highest purpose that he glorify God, how can we expect God to have a lesser
purpose? Jesus said the greatest commandment is to love God with all of our heart, mind, soul and strength. God
has not disobeyed this commandment. The first commandment was to have no other gods before the LORD. God is
not an idolater. The most passionate heart for God in all the universe is God's heart. God's chief end is to glorify
God and to enjoy himself forever. God is not an instrument, but the end for which we exist. This is why the English
revivalist George Whitefield cried, Let the name of Whitefield perish, so long as God is glorified!
God is ultimate, not us. And true religion ultimately exists not for humanity, but for God. This is only
reasonable. It is wrong for a man to be self-centered because man is not actually the center of the universe. God is,
has always been, and always shall be the center of the universe. Were God to act as if another were central to the
universe, that "other" would be God. It is wrong for man to judge, as if he were God, because he isn't God. But
God is God, and it is right for him to perform the functions that are only worthy of God. Besides, God is God, and
his perfect character is the very standard of good and evil. Whatever God desires is good. And God chiefly desires
himself. The biblical doctrine of predestination will make no sense until we grasp this central aspect of Gods heart.
od even ordains evil for the greater good of the display of God's character. Look at Romans 9:19-24.
God ordains human sin so he can make his wrath known. This display would be impossible without evil. God also
allows our evil choices so he can make his mercy known. This too would be impossible without evil. A world with
evil is thus eternally significant in a way that a world without evil would not be. It can bring a greater display of
Gods character. Again, in all he does, Gods chief concern is to bring honor to himself.
This teaching tends to hit people like a ton of bricks. Why? Is this a terrible notion? Not at allthis is it a
cause for joy! Granted, if were living for ourselves, then we should be depressed. But if what we really want is
for our Father to be honored, then no teaching should thrill us
more! Gods self-centered majesty is what I find most beautiful
f it is right for man to have the glory of
about Godthat God is God and there is no other! Jonathan
God as his goal, can it be wrong for God to
Edwards suggested that until God's selfishness is precisely what
have the same goal? If man can have no
attracts us to God, we may not yet have begun to love God at all,
higher purpose than Gods glory, how can
but only ourselves. The heart of true worship is in line with
God? If it is wrong for man to seek a lesser
Gods heart, and wants nothing more than for the King to be
end than this, it would be wrong for God,
magnified. Let us remember Henry Blamires warning:
too. The reason it cannot be right for man
to live fore himself, as if he were God, is
If we try to change the face of eternal God, we indulge in the
because he is not God. Those who insist
supreme idolatry, beside which perhaps, in the scale of sin,
that God should not seek His glory in all
adultery weighs like a feather and murder like a farthing. Yet the
things are really asking that He cease to be
sin is committed among us, within Christendom, within the
God. And there is no greater blasphemy
Church-- maybe within ourselves; for are we sure, after all, that
than to will God out of existence.
we prayed to the true God this morning?
J.I. Packer
Week
As Augustine pointed
out, unbelievers are not even able to cooperate with God's gracesinful man
is not just mistaken; sinful man is hostile toward God (See chart). If
humanity had the opportunity to kill God, it would do so (as it did 2,000
years ago). Human depravity runs far deeper than we realize. Saving faith
can only flow from a heart that loves God as He actually is good fruit
cannot come from a bad tree. Yet Scripture teaches that man in his natural,
fallen condition does not and cannot love God. There is no one righteous,
not even one; there is no one who understands, no one who seeks God
(Romans 3:10-11). As Luther argued in his 1524 Bondage of the Will, sinful
man is incapable of seeking God, for man's free will is in bondage to sin.
What do the following passages teach about human inability?
Psalm 58:3
Genesis 6:5
John 6:44
1 Corinthians 2:14
2 Corinthians 4:4
Luke 16:19-31
ichael Horton puts like this, We cannot find God for the same reason that a thief can't find a police
officer. Sinful man cannot find God because he doesn't want God. R.C. Sproul explains, Fallen man has the
natural ability to make choices but lacks the moral ability to make godly choices. From conception onward,
humanity is spiritually dead, hostile to God, and unable to incline its heart toward God. Free will profits man
nothing, for the will is in bondage to sin, leaving human beings helpless.
Pre-Fall
Man
Post-Fall
Man
Reborn
Man
able to sin
able to sin
able to sin
able to
not sin
able to
not sin
Glorified
Man
able to
not sin
unable to
not sin
unable
to sin
10
11
Week
Foreknowledge
Some object to the concept of predestination by arguing that God predestines the elect because he knows in advance
that they will come to Christ by their own free will. As seen in the previous lesson, however, that notion is blatantly
unbiblical. No one has the ability to even cooperate with Gods grace. Several biblical passages, however, do speak
of Gods foreknowledge. While God certainly knows the future (he determines it!), the biblical concept of
foreknowledge is something different. The term (???????? ) is used, not of knowing events, but of knowing people.
God tells us that he knew us before we knew him. As God told Jeremiah, Before I formed you in the womb I knew
you; before you were born I set you apart (Jer. 1:5). Indeed, the major Greek lexicon (BAG) states that foresight
or prescience is not even a possible meaning for foreknowledge in passages such as Romans 8:29-30. And in
the Great Chain of Salvation in this passage, it should be noted that only those who were foreknown are called by
the Holy Spiritnot everyone. Rather, foreordination (choosing) is always meant in the Greek when this term is
used of a man with God as subject, as in 1 Peter 1:20, where God foreknew Jesus as savior before creationGod
appointed Jesus as savior, that is. The foreknowledge view of predestination is not an explanation of the biblical
teaching, but rather a denial of it.
Is Predestination Double?
Up to this point, we have already seen that predestination cannot have been conditioned by faith, as man would
never have faith on his own. It is God who gives faith. Our predestination was not on the basis of anything good or
cooperative in us-- it was simply for God's good pleasure. God controls who does and does not believe. Those
whom God has predestined to eternal life believe; the rest do not. But what of those who do not? Has God chosen
that they not believe?
1. The Bible teaches that God has chosen or predestined some sinnershis electto inherit eternal life.
Romans 8:29, 33
1 Corinthians 1:27-29
Colossians 3:12
2 Timothy 2:10
Titus 1:1
2. The Bible also teaches that God has predestined other sinnerssome call them the reprobateto condemnation.
Romans 9:1-24
Romans 11:4-10
1 Peter 2:8-9
12
ROMANS 9
Paul discusses this question in Romans 9. In Romans 9-11, Paul is answering an objection raised against the gospel.
Paul said in Romans 8:39 that God promises that nothing can separate the elect from God's love. But, the objection
comes, What about God's promises to Israel? Most Jews do not believe, yet they were the chosen people of God!
It is not as though God's word had failed, Paul writes, for not all who are descended from Israel are Israel. Here
Paul begins his first explanation of why some Jews believe Christ and others do not. In chapter 10, Paul will explain
that the gospel was offered to the Jews, but that they had rejected it. In chapter 11, Paul will discuss God's future
plans for Israelthat God will work among the Jewish people in the future. Thus, Paul answers the problem in
three ways: human responsibility (ch.10), God's future grace (ch.11), and in chapter 9, God's sovereign
predestination.
9:6-9 In the past, God has chosen some and rejected others. God did this with the children of Abraham. Abraham
had two sonsIshmael and Isaac. Yet God rejected Ishmael; it was Isaac who was chosen by God. God's promise
has not failed, but it did not apply to all descendants of Abrahamonly to the line of Isaac.
9:10-13 God worked this way with Isaac's twin sons, as well. Even though Esau was born first, Esau was rejected.
Paul stresses that God chose the younger (Jacob) before either twin
was born or had done anything good or badGod's choice was not
based on anything good in Jacob. God loved Jacob. God hated
Esau.
9:14-18 In Moses' day, God chose some for mercy and hardened
others, too. God hardened Pharaoh to display His power before the
earth. God owes compassion to no one. He owes no one mercy.
Sinners deserve justice, that is, punishment. The fact that God
shows mercy to one and not to another is not unfair, because neither
one deserves mercy. Ultimately, salvation does not depend on
man's desire or decision, but on God's choosing to show mercy.
9:19-21 Paul deals with an objection that is never raised against
Arminians, but which was raised against Paul: How can God blame
people for not believing if He controls who does or does not
believe? Paul doesn't answerhe rebukes the question as being
impenitent. God is God. God created people, and He can do
whatever He wants with them. It is the Potter's prerogative to do
what He wants with the clay.
9:22-24 Up until this time, Paul has been speaking about God's
choosing and rejecting in the past, but now he applies it to the
present. Today, God has called some Jews and Gentiles (some of
each) to become vessels displaying God's glory. God has also prepared other Jews and Gentiles for destruction in
order to demonstrate before the world God's wrath and power. Here is a double predestination: God, without
regard to human desire or effort, has chosen some for glory (election) and others for wrath (reprobation).
13
Week
ne major debate within Christian circles is the question of whether or not a Christian can lose his or her
salvation. Arminians argue that true believers can sin so much that they lose their faith and perish. Some Christians
respond by arguing that once a person professes fa ith in Jesus, he is eternally secure in his salvation andeven if he
commits complete apostasy (falls away) and vocally rejects Jesus Christwill still go to heaven, for once saved,
always saved. In light of the biblical doctrine of predestination, how should we understand the security we have
under Gods care? There have been three main approaches to the question:
1. Classic Arminianism
One must persevere in faith to
be saved.
True believers can lose their
faith.
Those dying without faith in
Christ are condemned.
2. Antinomianism
One need not persevere in
faith to be saved.
True believers can lose their
faith.
Those who lose their faith are
saved, since they once believed.
3. Classic Calvinism
One must persevere in faith to
be saved.
True believers cannot lose
their faith, since its Gods gift.
Those dying without faith in
Christ are condemned.
Those who lose their faith
never had it to begin with.
God will preserve true
believers and they will be saved.
roponents of the first two approaches quote biblical references, but each must strain to explain away the
other group's biblical data. How can an Arminian read Romans 8, then tell true believers that they may screw up
and go to hell??? Then again, how can Charles Stanley read Hebrews 6 and 10 and tell unbelievers who once
professed faith not to worry, that they will be saved??? Any true biblical teaching must fit with ALL the biblical
data, without pitting one text against another and without having to explain away a single jot or tittle of God's
inerrant Word. I believe that only the classical Calvinist model takes into account all of the biblical data.
Arminians are right when they say the Bible teaches that only those who persevere will be saved, and
theyre right in accusing Antinomians of easy-believism and cheap grace. Antinomians (they wouldnt use the term)
are right in telling committed believers that they are secure in
Christ and once saved, always saved. But both of these views
are wrong is assuming that a true believer can lose his faith and
fall away from Christ. Faith is a gift of Godnot by works, lest
any man boast. Paul was confident that, since Christ had begun
a good work in believers, He would continue that work until
completion (Phil. 1). John said that those who fell away were
never really true Christians, since true believers don't leave the
faith (1 John 2:19).
14
1. You Must Persevere until the End: God's Requirement of His People
God does not merely command us to begin to believe for a time, and then fall away. He requires us to continue to
believe until the end, living lives of repentance and covenant faithfulness. Granted, He does not ask for a perfect
faith, but He does ask for a real faith, one that produces real, lasting change.
Colossians 1:21-23
Hebrews 10:26-31
1 John 1:5-10; 3:3-6
Hebrews 12:1
2. You Will Persevere Until the End: God's Preservation of His People
We will persevere because God preserves us. God will keep us from fallingnot one will be lost of all those who
belong to the Son. True believers are not able to leave Christ, for Christ is at work within them.
John 6:38-40
Philippians 1:4-6
John 10:28-29
Philippians 2:12-13
Romans 8:28-39
1 John 2:19
15
Week
16
The mistake of God's people has always been to view election as a privilege rather
than a responsibility. God warned Israel about this in Deuteronomy 9:6;
Understand, then, that it is not because of your righteousness that the Lord your
God is giving you this good land to possess, for you are a stiff-necked people.
Rather, while some were destined to disobedience, we have been chosen so as to
declare the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into His wonderful
light (1 Pe 2:8-9). We were predestined in order that we tell others about Christ.
Predestination requires evangelism. This was the realization William Carey came
to, a realization that drove him around the world to India to spread the good news
about Jesus Christ. Careys work became the foundation for the modern missions
movement, used by God to save millions.
nd the Lord does command us to spread the gospel to the whole earth.
Obedience is never a bad reason to engage in an activity. The same sovereign God
who decreed our salvation also decrees that we should be involved in the process.
God has chosen to call out his elect from the nations through the voices of his
people. God has not only ordained the end of salvation for his elect. He has also
ordained the means by which those elect will be saved.
God will not do without evangelism what he has ordained to do through
evangelism. We dont want to be foolish and think that God will save the nations
without the gospel. Indeed, God tells us explicitly otherwise. In Romans 10:1315, after discussing predestination for two chapters, Paul tells us that unless we
send a missionary, no one will be saved. If we dont send a preacher, no one will
preach. And if no one preaches, no one will hear. And if no one hears, no one will
believe. And if no one believes, no one will call upon Jesus. And if no one calls
upon Jesus (the Lord), no one will be saved. We are Gods eternally designated
instruments of eternal life.
f God is going to save Sally Elect, he first lays Sally upon the heart of a particularly average believer
named ChristinaChristina Christian. And God leads Christina to pray for Sally and ask God to give her
opportunities to talk about Jesus with Sally. God then leads Christina to ask him to give Sally a heart of flesh, to
change her heart and give her new life. God burdens Christina to ask
Jesus to save Sally. Christina even secretly fasts one day a week as a
prayer of reliance on God to save Sally.
And God leads Christina to ask her friend Bill to pray for
Sally too. Bill gets his whole church praying for Sally, because Bill
believes that only the Holy Spirit can truly convert Sally. Neither Bill
not Christina try to manipulate Sally, and neither try to hide their own
faultsthey want Gods power displayed in their weakness.
Suddenly God starts bringing Christians into Sally Elects life.
First a new co-worker, and then Christina, and then Bill.
One day, when Christina has five more things to do than she can
possibly finish, she remembers she has some library books overdue and
runs into Sally in the library parking lot (What a coincidence!). God
leads Sally to mention some things have really been rough in her life
recently, and Christina asks, So how have things been between you and
God recently?
A long conversation develops, and after a few weeks of
discussions, God pours out his Spirit upon Sally one evening as shes
thinking about her discussions with Christina, and Sally commits her life
to Jesus Christ.
Sally then joins a Methodist church and learns that it was all
about her free will. (Ouch! SorryI couldnt help myself!)
C.H. Spurgeon (1834-92)
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Week
f salvation is all of graceif God is God and he has chosen us for salvation even though we did nothing
to deserve itthen we ought to live by the grace we have received. Of course, some of you will look at that and say
to yourselves, Yeah, I really need to do better at living by grace. Ive really been a failure there. I hope God will
forgive me again. If thats you, you still dont get it. Go back and re-read the last seventeen pages and (if youre a
believer) remember that youre one of the elect!
Our hearts so quickly try to relate to God on a works-basis! Its our pride, really. Im convinced that thats
the problem with free-will Arminianism. People naturally process it like this: God requires one work from me, to
believe. Once I believe, Ive done my work and deserve heaven. Of course, in more hard-line Arminian circles, it
goes a step further. Unless Im holy enough, Ill still go to hell, and maybe Ive even committed the unpardonable
sin and will be damned even if Im sinlessly perfect from here on out. Legalism. Legalism. Legalism. Such a
religion is barely recognizable as Christianity.
But Calvinists can fall into legalism just as easily. You see, I understand predestination. Im a superior
Christian. Ive got all my theological ts crossed and my Reformed is dotted. I sure am close to God. Pride is
the Presbyterians favorite form of legalism, so watch out! But if God really is for us, and if we had nothing to do
with that decisionif even our faith was given to us by the Fatherthen theres no room for boasting. Gods
sovereign choice of us leaves us free from pride. It leaves us aware of our brokenness and humble before God, but
all the while confident that his eternal purpose will stand, that we will glory in God forever as objects of his saving
mercy. As Gods eternal blessing really begins to sink from our heads into our hearts, we see a new freedom that we
never would have imagined when we first encountered the raw, holy, sovereign power of God. Among the
newfound freedoms:
Rembrandt, Return of
The Prodigal Son, 1669
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If God really is for you, then you can quit trying to look good. If youre
trying to be good enough for God, hes not buying ithe didnt choose you
because of your great faithfulness. If youre trying to be good enough for
other people, dont bother. God wants to display his mercythat means we
have to be broken. Gods glory is not displayed by trying to look like you
have it all together. Faith is not a work, and even if it were it still wouldnt
earn you any brownie points. Let God be God. If you wont show your
weakness, then others wont see Gods power displayed in it.
Penance
Tries to bargain with God
Makes excuses for sin
Grieves over getting caught
Promises to do better
Is too proud to publicly confess
Relies on own promises to God
Turns inward on self
Produces guilty feelings, anxiety
God has obligated himself to receive any repentant sinner who comes to him.
Without this realization, true repentance is impossible. Until we realize that
God is for us, we cannot truly be for God.
DISCUSSION
You know you don't
understand God's grace when
you...
...Live with a vague
sense of God's disapproval.
...Feel sheepish
bringing your needs before him
when you've just failed him.
...Feel you deserve an
answer to prayer because of
your hard work and sacrifice.
...Think that there is
no point in confessing your sin
to God since you've already
failed him so many times.
...Feel more confident
before God when you've been
faithful with your Christian
disciplines (prayer, Bible
reading, evangelism)
...Cannot honestly say
you see yourself as blameless
in his eyes.
...Arent experiencing
consistent peace and joy in your
Christian life.
...Dont really believe
God likes you.
...Can think of
someone you look down on.
...Shy away from
asking God for things because
you think it annoys him.
...Fear that the day
may not go as expected because
you missed your quiet time.
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Greg
Greg
became a Christian in 1990 through the ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ.
He has led Bible studies, taught classes for adults and children, preached in churches
of several denominations, and spoken at conferences and retreats. He has taught
Theology and Christian Ethics at the Donetsk Regional Theological College in
Donetsk, Ukraine. When hes not studying theology, Greg loves old buildings.
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