Wrath and Mercy: Sermon 3 - Predestination
How are the elect called unto
salvation?
Wrath
and Mercy: Sermon
3
by
Christopher Love
"For
God hath not appointed us unto wrath, but to obtain salvation by our
Lord Jesus Christ." 1 Thessalonians 5:9
In
order to further prosecute this great doctrine of predestination, I
shall lay down eight doctrinal conclusions concerning it:
1.
A man who is ordained and appointed by God from all eternity to obtain
salvation may know that he is so appointed and ordained; not only the
Lord knows who are His, but also man may certainly know that he is
appointed by God to obtain salvation. But the papists are of another
judgment, and look upon this truth (that a man may be certainly sure of
his salvation) as very pernicious and presumptuous doctrine. They hold
that he can only have a conjectural faith, and not a faith of assurance.
But that is a manifest untruth. For why should our Savior bid His
disciples "rejoice not so much because the spirits were subject to
them, as because their names were written in heaven" (Luke
10:20)? How could they rejoice in this privilege if they i were ignorant
of it, or could not know that their names were written in the Book of
Life? So the apostle says, "having predestinated us unto the
adoption of children" (they were assured of their adoption)
(Ephesians 1:5). So "to him that overcometh I will give to eat of
the hidden manna, and will give him a white stone, and the stone a new
name written, which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it"
(Revelation 2:17). The new name here is "regeneration," and
the white stone is absolution. They shall have a white stone given
them; that is, the Lord shall give them a seal, a pledge in their own
hearts, that their sins are forgiven, and that they are brought into a
state of grace and salvation, and he who has this white stone shall know
that he has it.
But
I shall prove and clear this further to you by demonstrating that a man
may be assured of his election, and that for these reasons: (1)
Because God commands and enjoins men to labor to make their calling and
election sure. "Wherefore the rather, brethren," says the
apostle, "give all diligence to make your calling and election
sure" (2 Peter 1:10), not sure on God's part, but sure in reference
to your knowledge of it; and if it were not a thing attainable, the
apostle would never enjoin us to do it. Therefore, it is not a thing
impossible, but which may be obtained, and has been obtained by many of
God's precious servants.
(2)
Other men may have conjectural knowledge of our salvation, as in
"knowing brethren beloved, your election of God" (1
Thessalonians 1:4). Paul gave a strong conjecture that the Thessalonians
were elect of God. Why, now, if another man may guess so rightly of us,
then much more may we be assured of it ourselves. So again, Paul
speaking of some of his fellow laborers, says "whose names are in
the book of life" (Philippians 4:3). If others may know that our
names are in the book of life, then much more ourselves. We may be sure
of our vocation, and, if so, then may we also be sure of our election.
For effectual vocation is an infallible mark of our election (Romans
8:30). And that we may be sure of our vocation the Scripture often
mentions, and this is the first doctrinal conclusion: those who are
elected and appointed by God to obtain salvation may know and be fully
assured that they are so appointed.
2.
No man can assuredly know that he is elected and appointed by God to
obtain salvation by climbing and searching into the decrees and secrets
of God. For "who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been
His counselor?" (Romans 11:34). But we are to search and find it
out by the efficacy of the decrees of God upon our hearts. If we find
those fruits and effects of election upon our hearts that accompany
those who are elected, then we may conclude that we are elected. The
Apostle Peter says, "give all diligence to make your calling and
election sure." Election was before calling, but here calling is
put before election to note that, though election is before vocation,
yet a man cannot prove his election by his vocation; and therefore if
you have or feel in your own heart your effectual vocation, from thence
you may undoubtedly conclude your election, "for whom He did
predestinate, them He hath also called" (Romans 8:30). We may know
our election as it is operative and efficacious upon our hearts in carrying
us on in all the ways of new obedience. We must first prove our
vocation, and then by that our election. If you do not try your
election, and prove it by your sanctification, your feelings that you
are elect are at best the wild conjectures, fond persuasions, enthusiastic
delusions, and bold presumptions of a deceived heart.
3.
Though a man may know, and ought to know, that he is elected and
appointed by God to obtain salvation, yet he ought not to know, nay, he cannot
know that he is appointed unto wrath. A man may make his election
sure, but he cannot make his reprobation and damnation sure. We find
some men in Scripture who have been sure of their election, but none who
have been sure of their damnation. A man who runs on in wicked and
sinful courses may say that he is not called, but he cannot say he is
not elect; no, not the wickedest man in the world (unless he has sinned
the sin against ( the Holy Ghost), for though he may run on a
long time in sinful and pernicious courses, yet God may at last call him
home to Himself.
4.
God's decrees and appointments touching men's future estates and
conditions are irrevocable and unalterable. "The foundation of
God standeth sure" (2 Timothy 2:19), that is, the decrees and
purpose of God touching man's salvation are unchangeable; they stand
sure. If the law of the Medes and Persians was so absolute that it could
not be reversed, then much less can the decrees of God be reversed. No
man who is not elect can be elect, and no man who is elect can be
damned. "This is the Father's will which hath sent Me, that of all
those which He hath given Me I should lose none" (John 6:39). There
is not one of them lost who were given unto Christ by God's decree
(Romans 11:22). God has not cast away His people which He foreknew;
those whom God first purposed to bring to eternal life He cast away none
of them.
But
the papists and others strongly oppose this doctrine, and look upon the
decrees of God as mutable and various; and at this day this opinion
breaks out among us. There are many who hold that the decrees of God are
changeable, and there are three places of Scripture they allege to prove
it. The first is that in John where Christ says to His disciples,
"Have not I chosen twelve, and one of you is a devil?" From
this they argue that all those who are chosen of God shall not obtain
salvation by Him.
There
is a twofold choosing: There is an external and an internal choosing,
and between these you must distinguish. Where Christ says, "Have
not I chosen twelve?" He speaks there of an external choosing to
the office of the apostleship. Judas was not chosen in God's eternal
decree of election, for he was the son of perdition, and hell was his
own place, but only externally to be an apostle.
Another place of Scripture they allege against the immutability of God's
decrees is that in Exodus 32:32, where Moses prays that if God would not
forgive the sins of the people He should "blot out his name out of
his book. And the Lord said unto him, 'Whoever hath sinned against Me,
him will I blot out My book' " (Exodus 32:33). Now, they say, if
the names of those who are written in God's book of life may be blotted
out, then the decrees of God are changeable. So it is said, "that
if any man shall take from the words of the book of this prophecy God
shall take away his part out of the book of life" (Revelation
22:19).
I
shall answer this objection very briefly. Divines observe that there
are several sorts of books attributed to God in Scripture:
There is a book of providence: "In Thy book were all
my members written" (Psalm 139:16), that is, the book of God's
providence. There is a book of God's judgment: "And I saw the
dead, small and great stand before God, and the books were opened, and
the dead were judged out of those things that were written in the
books" (Revelation 20:12). When Christ shall come to judgment,
there shall be a great book of accounts opened wherein all things that
are done here upon the earth are recorded.
There is a book of life, wherein when any man's name is
once written it can never be blotted out again. But the book of life
mentioned in Scripture has a double significance. Sometimes by the
book of life is meant the eternal decree and purpose of God touching
those who shall be saved by Him; and in this sense it is to be taken: in
"whose names are in the book of life" (Philippians 4:3). And
so "rejoice because your names are written in the book of
life" (Luke 10:20). And ordinarily, in the New Testament, the
book of life is to be taken for the eternal decree and purpose of God
touching those who shall be saved.
There
is also a book of life in Scripture which is to be taken not for the
eternal decree of God, but for the providences of God, and the special
care and preservation of God over His church, the preserving of His
people under the wings of His providence. This is called the book of
life as in, "whosoever hath sinned against Me, Him will I blot out
of My book" (Exodus 32:33); that is, "That man who shall go on
in sin perniciously, obstinately, and presumptuously, I will blot his
name out of My book"; that is, "I will cast him out of My
protection and providence. He shall be an excommunicated man."
And in this sense it is taken by Moses when he desired God to blot his
name out of His book.
So
says God in Ezekiel, "My hand shall be upon the prophets that see
vanity, and that divine lies; they shall not be in the assembly of My
people, neither shall they be written in the writing of the house of
Israel" (Ezekiel 13:9), which is as if He had said, "They
shall not be written in the book of life." In this sense, this is
to be excommunicated out of the church.
I
shall confirm this doctrine to you further by demonstrating that the
decrees of God are unchangeable and irrevocable. For were it
otherwise. God must be a mutable God, which is directly contrary to what
the Scripture affirms of Him, namely that with Him "there is no
variableness, nor shadow of turning" (James 1:17).
Jesus
Christ (may I say it with reverence) would be a liar and falsify His
word if this were not true. For He says, "I give unto My sheep
eternal life, and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck
them out of My hand" (John 10:28). Christ would not be as good as
His word if any of these who are given Him by His Father should be lost,
or any of those who are appointed to salvation should come short of
it.
If
the decrees of God were mutable, then Paul's golden chain in Romans 8:30
would be broken; "Whom He did predestinate them also called, and
whom He called, them He also justified, and whom He justified, them He
also glorified."
5.
The decrees of God in reference to salvation runs but to the smallest
number of mankind in the world. God's decrees touching the ordaining of
men to life runs but to a very small remnant. The world of unbelievers
is like a flock of goats, very numerous, whereas the elect of God are
but like sheep scattered here and there upon the mountains. The wicked
are like weeds that grow everywhere, but the godly are trees of righteousness
of Christ's own planting, planted but very sparingly in the world.
Christ's flock is but a very little flock in comparison of the world.
There is but a remnant according to the election of grace, a very
small remnant that shall obtain salvation; the rest are hardened.
6. Though the decrees of God in reference to men's salvation extend but
to a very few, yet this is no ground at all for us to have hard thoughts
of God, or to look upon Him as cruel and unmerciful. The reasons of this
were in part hinted at before: (1) Because God is not bound to save any,
and therefore it is no act of cruelty or injustice in Him that He saves
so few. (2) God has a sovereignty over all His creatures. He may do with
them what He pleases, and none can say unto Him, "What doest
Thou?" (3) The Lord would have shown more mercy when He saved but
one man in the world than He would have done rigor of justice had He
condemned all, because all have sinned and thereby deserved damnation,
and God is not bound to save any of them.
(4) God has dealt better with us than He did with the angels that
sinned. For you know all the angels in heaven that sinned, in aspiring
to be like the Most High, were all thrown down and damned, not one of
them being saved, but all reserved in chains of darkness to the
judgment of the great day. But yet, notwithstanding, though all
mankind had sinned, and so fell short of the glory of God, yet they were
not all condemned, and that because Jesus Christ took upon Himself not
the nature of angels, but of man; and therefore, though all the angels
that sinned perished, yet though we have all sinned, we do not all
perish, but there is a remnant rescued from death and damnation and
appointed to obtain salvation.
7.
The world fares the better for those very persons who are within the
decrees of God to obtain salvation. For, were it not so, God's decree of
election that such a number of men should be saved, the world should not
have continued to this day, and it shall continue no longer than till
the number of the elect are fulfilled. And then the elements shall melt
with fervent heat, and the earth and all that is therein shall be burned
up. God gives deliverance, safety, and preservation to the world for the
elect's sake. We are beholding to the decrees of God, in reference to
the elect, that the world continues to this very day. The men of the
world fare better, in regard of the comforts of this life, for the sake
of God's elect. The days of affliction that came upon Jerusalem and all
Judea was shortened for the elect's sake (Mark 13:20). For their sakes
it was that Israel was not made as Sodom, and like unto Gomorrah, that a
remnant was left (Isaiah 1:9). So it was, "Thus saith the Lord, 'As
the new wine is found in the cluster, and one saith, "Destroy it
not for a blessing is in it," so will I do for My servants' sakes,
that I may not destroy them all' " (Isaiah 65:8). And Job witnesses
that an island is delivered by the pureness of the hands (Job 22:30).
8.
Last, observe this conclusion: though you are bound to pray for the
remission of your sins and the sanctification of your nature, yet you
are not bound by God to pray for your election. Why? Because this work
is perfectly done already. As we are not to pray for the creation of
the world (because that work is perfected), so neither are we to pray
for our election, because that work is fully done already. Works
perfectly done we are not to pray for. But we must pray for those
effects and fruits of predestination and election, such as vocation,
sanctification, remission, regeneration, and the like, but not for
election.
Application
We
come now to the application, and the use that I shall make of what has
been said shall be first by way of information and trial, that you may
know whether you are in the number of those that are appointed by God to
salvation or not, and then by way of consolation and comfort in the next
sermon.
If you are within the decrees of God for salvation, then sooner or later
God will cause the power of His Word to come with authority and conviction
upon your conscience, as in "knowing brethren beloved, (says the
apostle) your election of God, for our gospel came not to you in word
only, but also in power and in the Holy Ghost" (1 Thessalonians
1:4—5). The Word will come with power and conviction upon your
consciences sooner or later if you belong to the election of grace.
You
shall sooner or later be effectually called, for whom God has
predestinated, them He will also call (Romans 8:30).
If
the Lord has ordained you unto salvation, He will beget and increase
sanctification in you. Likewise, you are "elect according to the
foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit
unto obedience, and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus" (1 Peter
1:2). All the elect of God
shall have the sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience, and the
sprinkling of the blood of Christ upon their hearts, sooner or later. |
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