UNCONDITIONAL
ELECTION
NO. 41-42
A SERMON DELIVERED ON SABBATH MORNING,
SEPTEMBER 2, 1855,
BY THE REV. C H. SPURGEON,
AT NEW PARK STREET CHAPEL, SOUTHWARK.
“But
we are bound to give thanks always to God for you, brethren beloved of
the Lord,
because God has from the beginning
chosen you to salvation through sanctification
of the Spirit and belief of the
Truth: Whereunto He called you by our Gospel,
to the obtaining of the glory of our
Lord Jesus Christ.”
2 Thessalonians 2:13, 14.
IF there were no other text in the Sacred Word
except this one I think we should all be bound to receive and
acknowledge the truthfulness of the great and glorious doctrine of
God’s ancient choice of His family. But there seems to be an inveterate
prejudice in the human mind against this doctrine—and although most
other doctrines will be received by professing Christians, some with
caution, others with pleasure—this one seems to be most frequently
disregarded and discarded. In many of our pulpits it would be reckoned
a high sin and treason to preach a sermon upon election because they
could not make it what they call a “practical” discourse.
I believe they have erred from the Truth. Whatever
God has revealed He has revealed for a purpose. There is nothing in
Scripture which may not, under the influence of God’s Spirit, be turned
into a practical discourse: “for all Scripture is given by inspiration
of God and is profitable” for some purpose of spiritual usefulness. It
is true, it may not be turned into a free will discourse—that we know
right well—but it can be turned into a practical free grace discourse.
And free grace practice is the best practice when the true doctrines of
God’s immutable love are brought to bear upon the hearts of saints and
sinners. Now, I trust this morning some of you who are startled at the
very sound of this word will say, “I will give it a fair hearing. I
will lay aside my prejudices, I will just hear what this man has to
say.”
Do not shut your ears and say at once, “It is high
doctrine.” Who has authorized you to call it high or low? Why should
you oppose yourself to God’s doctrine? Remember what became of the
children who found fault with God’s Prophet and exclaimed, “Go up, you
bald-head; go up, you bald-head.” Say nothing against God’s doctrines,
lest haply some evil beast should come out of the forest and devour
you, also. There are other woes beside the open judgment of Heaven—take
heed that these fall not on your head. Lay aside your prejudices—listen
calmly, listen dispassionately— hear what Scripture says.
And when you receive the Truth, if God should be
pleased to reveal and manifest it to your souls, do not be ashamed to
confess it. To confess you were wrong yesterday is only to acknowledge
that you are a little wiser today. Instead of being a reflection on
yourself, it is an honor to your judgment and shows that you are
improving in the knowledge of the Truth. Do not be ashamed to learn and
to cast aside your old doctrines and views. But take up that which you
may more plainly see to be in the Word of God. And if you do not see it
to be here in the Bible—whatever I may say, or whatever authorities I
may plead—I beseech you, as you love your souls, reject it. And if from
this pulpit you ever hear things contrary to this Sacred Word, remember
that the Bible must be the first and God’s minister must lie underneath
it.
We must not stand on the Bible to preach—we must
preach with the Bible above our heads. After all we have preached, we
are well aware that the mountain of Truth is higher than our eyes can
discern—clouds and darkness are round about its summit and we cannot
discern its topmost pinnacle. Yet we will try to preach it as well as
we can. But since we are mortal and liable to err, exercise your
judgment—“Try the spirits, whether they are of God”—and if on mature
reflection on your bended knees you are led to disregard election—a
thing which I consider to be utterly impossible—then forsake it. Do not
hear it preached, but believe and confess whatever you see to be God’s
Word. I can say no more than that by way of exordium.
Now, first. I shall speak a little concerning the
truthfulness of this doctrine—“God has from the beginning chosen you to
salvation.” Secondly, I shall try to prove that this election is
absolute—“He has from the beginning chosen you to salvation,” not for
sanctification, but “through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of
the Truth.” Thirdly, this election is eternal because the text says,
“God has from the beginning chosen you.” Fourthly, it is personal—“He
has chosen you.”
Then we will look at the effects of the doctrine—see
what it does. And lastly, as God may enable us, we will try and look at
its tendencies and see whether it is indeed a terrible and licentious
doctrine. We will take the flower and like true bees, see whether there
is any honey whatever in it—whether any good can come of it—or whether
it is an unmixed, undiluted evil.
I. First, I must try and prove that the doctrine is
TRUE. And let me begin with an argumentum ad hominen—I will speak to
you according to your different positions and stations. There are some
of you who belong to the Church of England and I am happy to see so
many of you here. Though now and then I certainly say some very hard
things about Church and State, yet I love the old Church, for she has
in her communion many godly ministers and eminent saints. Now I know
you are great believers in what the Articles declare to be sound
doctrine. I will give you a specimen of what they utter concerning
election, so that if you believe them, you cannot avoid receiving
election. I will read a portion of the 17th Article upon Predestination
and Election:
“Predestination to life is the everlasting purpose
of God, whereby (before the foundations of the world were laid) He has
continually decreed by His counsel secret to us, to deliver from curse
and damnation those whom He has chosen in Christ out of mankind and to
bring them by Christ to everlasting salvation, as vessels made to
honor. Wherefore they which are endued with so excellent a benefit of
God are called according to God’s purpose by His Spirit working in due
season: they through grace obey the calling: they are justified freely:
they are made sons of God by adoption: they are made like the image of
His only-begotten Son Jesus Christ: they walk religiously in good works
and at length, by God’s mercy, they attain to everlasting felicity.”
Now, I think any churchman, if he is a sincere and
honest believer in Mother Church, must be a thorough believer in
election. True, if he turns to certain other portions of the Prayer
Book, he will find things contrary to the doctrines of free grace and
altogether apart from Scriptural teaching. But if he looks at the
Articles, he must see that God has chosen His people unto eternal life.
I am not so desperately enamored, however, of that book as you may
be—and I have only used this Article to show you that if you belong to
the Establishment of England you should at least offer no objection to
this doctrine of predestination.
Another human authority whereby I would confirm the
doctrine of election is the old Waldensian Creed. If you read the creed
of the old Waldenses—emanating from them in the midst of the burning
heat of persecution—you will see that these renowned professors and
confessors of the Christian faith did most firmly receive and embrace
this doctrine as being a portion of the Truth of God. I have copied
from an old book one of the Articles of their faith: “That God saves
from corruption and damnation those whom He has chosen from the
foundations of the world, not for any disposition, faith, or holiness
that before saw in them, but of His mere mercy in Christ Jesus His Son,
passing by all the rest according to the irreprehensible reason of His
own free will and justice.”
It is no novelty, then, that I am preaching no new
doctrine. I love to proclaim these strong old doctrines which are
called by nickname Calvinism but which are surely and verily the
revealed Truth of God as it is in Christ Jesus. By this Truth I make a
pilgrimage into the past and as I go I see father after father,
confessor after confessor, martyr after martyr, standing up to shake
hands with me. Were I a Pelagian, or a believer in the doctrine of free
will, I should have to walk for centuries all alone. Here and there a
heretic of no very honorable character might rise up and call me
Brother. But taking these things to be the standard of my faith, I see
the land of the ancients peopled with my Brethren—I behold multitudes
who confess the same as I do and acknowledge that this is the religion
of God’s own Church.
I also give you an extract from the old Baptist
Confession. We are Baptists in this congregation—the greater part of us
at any rate—and we like to see what our own forefathers wrote. Some two
hundred years ago the Baptists assembled together and published their
articles of faith to put an end to certain reports against their
orthodoxy which had gone forth to the world. I turn to this old
book—which I have just published—Baptist Confession of Faith—and I find
the following as the 3rd Article: “By the decree of God for the
manifestation of His glory some men and angels are predestinated, or
foreordained to eternal life through Jesus Christ to the praise of His
glorious grace. Others being left to act in their sin to their just
condemnation to the praise of His glorious justice. These angels and
men thus predestinated and foreordained, are particularly and
unchangeably designed and their number so certain and definite that it
cannot be either increased or diminished. Those of mankind that are
predestinated to life, God, before the foundation of the world was
laid, according to His eternal and immutable purpose and the secret
counsel and good pleasure of His will, has chosen in Christ unto
everlasting glory out of His mere free grace and love, without any
other thing in the creature as condition or cause moving Him hereunto.”
As for these human authorities, I care not one rush
for all three of them. I care not what they say, pro or con, as to this
doctrine. I have only used them as a kind of confirmation to your
faith, to show you that while I may be railed upon as a heretic and as
a hyper-Calvinist, after all I am backed up by antiquity. All the past
stands by me. I do not care for the present. Give me the past and I
will hope for the future. Let the present rise up in my teeth, I will
not care. What though a host of the churches of London may have
forsaken the great cardinal doctrines of God, it matters not. If a
handful of us stand alone in an unflinching maintenance of the
sovereignty of our God, if we are beset by enemies, yes and even by our
own Brethren who ought to be our friends and helpers, it matters not—if
we can but count upon the past—the noble army of martyrs, the glorious
host of confessors. They are our friends. They are the witnesses of
Truth and they stand by us. With these for us, we will not say that we
stand alone, but we may exclaim, “Lo, God has reserved unto Himself
seven thousand that have not bowed the knee unto Baal.” But the best of
all is—God is with us!
The great Truth is always the Bible and the Bible
alone. My Hearers, you do not believe in any other book than the Bible,
do you? If I could prove this from all the books in
Christendom—if I could fetch back the Alexandrian library and prove it
there, you would not believe it any more. But you surely will
believe what is in God’s Word. I have selected a few texts to read to
you. I love to give you a whole volley of texts when I
am afraid you will distrust a Truth so that you may be too astonished
to doubt, if you do not in reality believe. Just let
me run through a catalogue of passages where the people of God are
called elect. Of course if the people are called
elect, there must be election. If Jesus Christ and His Apostles were
accustomed to call believers by the title of elect, we
must certainly believe that they were so, otherwise the term does not
mean anything. Jesus Christ says, “Except that the Lord
had shortened those days, no flesh should be saved; but for the elect’s
sake, whom He has chosen, He has shortened
the days.”
“False Christs and false prophets shall rise and
shall show signs and
wonders, to seduce, if it were possible, even the elect.” “Then shall
He send His angels and shall gather together His
elect from the four winds, from the uttermost parts of the earth to the
uttermost part of Heaven.”—Mark 13:20, 22, 27.
“Shall not God avenge His own elect who cry day and night unto Him,
though He bear long with them?”—Luke 18:7. Together
with many other passages which might be selected, wherein either the
word “elect,” or “chosen,” or
“foreordained,” or “appointed,” is mentioned—or the phrase “My sheep,”
or some similar designation, showing that Christ’s people
are distinguished from the rest of mankind.
But you have concordances and I will not trouble you
with texts.
Throughout the Epistles the saints are constantly called “the elect.”
In the Colossians we find Paul saying, “Put on
therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies.”
When he writes to Titus, he calls himself, “Paul, a
servant of God and an Apostle of Jesus Christ, according to the faith
of God’s elect.” Peter says, “Elect according to the
foreknowledge of God the Father.” Then if you turn to John, you will
find he is very fond of the word. He says, “The elder to
the elect lady.” And he speaks of our “elect sister.” And we know where
it is written, “The church that is at Babylon,
elected together with you.”
They were not ashamed of the word in those days.
They were not afraid
to talk about it. Nowadays the word has been dressed up with
diversities of meaning and persons have mutilated
and marred the doctrine so that they have made it a very doctrine of
devils. I do confess that many who call themselves
believers have gone to rank Antinomianism. But not withstanding this,
why should I be ashamed of it, if men wrest it? We
love God’s Truth on the rack as well as when it is walking upright. If
there were a martyr whom we loved before he came on
the rack we should love him more still when he was stretched there.
When God’s Truth is stretched on the rack, we do not call it falsehood.
We love not to see it racked but we love it
even when racked because we can discern what its proper proportions
ought to have been if it had not been racked and
tortured by the cruelty and inventions of men. If you will read many of
the Epistles of the ancient fathers you will find
them always writing to the people of God as the “elect.” Indeed the
common conversational term used among many of the churches by the
primitive Christians to one another was that of the
“elect.” They would often use the term to one another showing that it
was generally believed that all God’s people
were manifestly “elect.”
But now for the verses that will positively prove
the doctrine. Open
your Bibles and turn to John 15:16 and there you will see that Jesus
Christ has chosen His people, for He says, “You
have not chosen Me, but I have chosen you and ordained you, that you
should go and bring forth fruit and that your
fruit should remain: that whatsoever you shall ask of the Father in My
name, He may give it you.” Then in the 19th verse,
“If you were of the world, the world would love his own, but because
you are not of the world, but I have chosen you
out of the world, therefore the world hates you.” Then in the 17th
chapter and the 8th and 9th verses, “For I have given
unto them the words which You gave Me; and they have received them and
have known surely that I came out from You and
they have believed that You did send Me. I pray for them: I pray not
for the world, but for them which You have given
Me for they are Yours.”
Turn to Acts 13:48: “And when the Gentiles heard
this, they were glad
and glorified the Word of the Lord; and as many as were ordained to
eternal life believed.” They may try to split
that passage into hairs if they like—but it says, “ordained to eternal
life” in the original as plainly as it possibly
can. And we do not care about all the different commentaries thereupon.
You scarcely need to be reminded of Romans 8,
because I trust you are all well-acquainted with that chapter and
understand it by this time. In the 29th and following
verses, it says, “For whom He did foreknow, He also did predestinate to
be conformed to the image of His Son, that He
might be the first-born among many brethren. Moreover, whom He did
predestinate, them He also called: and whom He
called, them He also justified and whom He justified, them He also
glorified. What shall we then say to these
things? If God be for us, who can be against us? He that spared not His
own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He
not with Him also freely give us all things? Who shall lay anything to
the charge of God’s elect?”
It would also be unnecessary to repeat the whole of
the 9th chapter of
Romans. As long as that remains in the Bible, no man shall be able to
prove Arminianism. So long as that is written
there, not the most violent contortions of the passage will ever be
able to exterminate the doctrine of election from
the Scriptures. Let us read such verses as these— “For the children
being not yet born, neither having done any good or
evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of
works, but of Him that calls; it was said
unto her, The elder shall serve the younger.” Then read the 22nd verse,
“What if God, willing to show His wrath and to
make His power known, endured with much longsuffering the vessels of
wrath fitted to destruction? And that He
might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy, which
He had afore prepared unto glory?”
Then go on to Romans 11:7—“What then? Israel has not
obtained that
which he seeks for; but the election has obtained it and the rest were
blinded.” In the 6th verse of the same
chapter, we read—“Even so then at this present time also there is a
remnant according to the election of grace.” You, no
doubt, all recollect the passage in 1 Corinthians1:26-29: “For you see
your calling, Brethren, how that not many wise
men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called: but
God has chosen the foolish things of the world to
confound the wise; and God has chosen the weak things of the world to
confound the things which are mighty; and base
things of the world and things which are despised, has God chosen, yes
and things which are not, to bring to nothing
things which are: that no flesh should glory in His presence.”
Again, remember the passage in 1 Thessalonians
5:9—“God has not
appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus
Christ,” and then you have my text, which methinks
would be quite enough. But, if you need any more, you can find them at
your leisure if we have not quite removed
your suspicions as to the doctrine not being true. Methinks, my
Friends, that this overwhelming mass of Scripture
testimony must stagger those who dare to laugh at this doctrine. What
shall we say of those who have so often despised it and
denied its divinity? What shall we say to those who have railed at its
justice and dared to defy God and call Him an
Almighty tyrant, when they have heard of His having elected so many to
eternal life? Can you, O Rejector cast it out of the
Bible? Can you take the penknife of Jehudi and cut it out of the Word
of God?
Would you be like the women at the feet of Solomon
and have the child
rent in halves that you might have your half? Is it not here in
Scripture? And is it not your duty to bow before it
and meekly acknowledge what you understand not—to receive it as the
Truth even though you could not understand its
meaning? I will not attempt to prove the justice of God in having thus
elected some and left others. It is not for me to
vindicate my Master. He will speak for Himself and He does so—“But, O
man, who are you that replies against God? Shall the
thing formed say to Him that formed it, Why have you made me thus? Has
not the potter power over the clay of the
same lump to make one vessel unto honor and another unto dishonor?” Who
is he that shall say unto his father, “What
have you begotten? . . . or unto his mother, “What have you brought
forth?” “I am the Lord—I form the light and
create darkness. I, the Lord, do all these things. Who are you that
replies against God? Tremble and kiss His rod; bow
down and submit to His scepter; impugn not His justice and arraign not
His acts before your bar, O man!”
But there are some who say, “It is hard for God to
choose some and
leave others.” Now, I will ask you one question. Is there any of you
here this morning who wishes to be holy, who wishes
to be regenerate, to leave off sin and walk in holiness? “Yes, there
is,” says someone, “I do.” Then God has elected
you. But another says, “No. I don’t want to be holy. I don’t want to
give up my lusts and my vices.” Why should you
grumble, then, that God has not elected you? For if you were elected
you would not like it, according to your own
confession. If God this morning had chosen you to holiness, you say you
would not care for it. Do you not acknowledge
that you prefer drunkenness to sobriety, dishonesty to honesty? You
love this world’s pleasures better than religion—then
why should you grumble that God has not chosen you to religion?
If you love religion, He has chosen you to it. If
you desire it, He has
chosen you to it. If you do not, what right have you to say that God
ought to have given you what you do not wish for?
Supposing I had in my hand something which you do not value and I said
I shall give it to such-and-such a
person—you would have no right to grumble that I did not give it to
you. You could not be so foolish as to grumble that the
other has got what you do not care about. According to your own
confession many of you do not want religion—do not want a
new heart and a right spirit—do not want the forgiveness of sins. You
do not want sanctification. You do not want to
be elected to these things—then why should you grumble?
You count these things but as husks and why should
you complain of God
who has given them to those whom He has chosen? If you believe them to
be good and desire them, they are there
for you. God gives liberally to all those who desire—but first of all
He makes them desire—otherwise they never
would. If you love these things, He has elected you to them and you may
have them. But if you do not, who are you that you
should find fault with God when it is your own desperate will that
keeps you from loving these things? Suppose a man
in the street should say, “What a shame it is I cannot have a seat in
the chapel to hear what this man has to say.” And
suppose he says, “I hate the preacher—I can’t bear his doctrine—but
still it’s a shame I have not a seat.”
Would you expect a man to say so? No—you would at
once say, “That man
does not care for it. Why should he trouble himself about other people
having what they value and he
despises?” You do not like holiness, you do not like righteousness. If
God has elected me to these things, has He hurt you
by it? “Ah, but,” say some, “I thought it meant that God elected some
to Heaven and some to Hell.” That is a very different
matter from the Gospel doctrine. He has elected men to holiness and to
righteousness and through that to Heaven. You
must not say that He has elected these simply to Heaven and others only
to Hell. He has elected you to holiness if you
love holiness. If any of you love to be saved by Jesus Christ—Jesus
Christ elected you to be saved. If any of you desire to
have salvation you are elected to have it—if you desire it sincerely
and earnestly. But, if you don’t desire it, why on
earth should you be so preposterously foolish as to grumble because God
gives that which you do not like to other people?
II. Thus I have tried to say something with regard
to the Truth of the
doctrine of election. And now, briefly, let me say that election is
absolute, that is, it does not depend upon what we
are. The text says, “God has from the beginning chosen us unto
salvation.” But our opponents say that God chooses
people because they are good—that He chooses them on account of sundry
works which they have done. Now, we ask in reply
to this, what works are those on account of which God elects His
people? Are they what we commonly call “works of
Law”?—works of obedience which the creature can render? If so, we reply
to you—If men cannot be justified by the
works of the Law, it seems to us pretty clear that they cannot be
elected by the works of the Law. If they cannot be
justified by their good deeds, they cannot be saved by them.
Then the decree of election could not have been
formed upon good works.
“But,” say others, “God elected them on the foresight of their faith.”
Now, God gives faith, therefore He could
not have elected them on account of faith which He foresaw. There shall
be twenty beggars in the street and I determine to
give one of them a shilling. Will anyone say that I determined to give
that one a shilling—that I elected him to have the
shilling—because I foresaw that he would have it? That would be talking
nonsense.
In like manner to say that God elected men because
He foresaw they
would have faith—which is salvation in the germ—would be too absurd for
us to listen to for a moment. Faith is the
gift of God. Every virtue comes from Him. Therefore it cannot have
caused Him to elect men, because it is His
gift. Election, we are sure, is absolute and altogether apart from the
virtues which the saints have afterwards. What if a
saint should be as holy and devout as Paul, what if he should be as
bold as Peter, or as loving as John, yet he could claim
nothing but what he received from his Maker. I never knew a saint yet
of any denomination who thought that God saved
him because He foresaw that he would have these virtues and merits.
Now, my Brethren, the best jewels that
the saint ever wears, if they are jewels of our own fashioning, are not
of the first water. There is something of earth
mixed with them. The highest grace we ever possess has something of
earthliness about it. We feel this when we are most
refined, when we are most sanctified and our language must always be—
“I the chief of sinners am;
Jesus died for me.”
Our only hope, our only plea, still hangs on grace
as exhibited in the
Person of Jesus Christ. And I am sure we must utterly reject and
disregard all thought that our graces, which are gifts of
our Lord, which are His right hand planting, could have ever caused His
love. And we ever must sing—
“What was there in us that could merit
esteem
Or give the Creator delight?”
“Twas even so Father we ever must sing,
Because it seemed good in Your sight”
“He will have mercy on whom He will have mercy.” He
saves because He
will save. And if you ask me why He saves me, I can only say because He
would do it. Is there anything in me that
should recommend me to God? No. I lay aside everything, I had nothing
to recommend me. When God saved me I was the most abject,
lost and ruined of the race. I lay before Him as an infant in my blood.
Verily, I had no power to help myself. O
how wretched did I feel and know myself to be! It you had something to
recommend you to God, I never had. I will
be content to be saved by grace, unalloyed, pure grace. I can boast of
no merits. If you can do so, still I cannot. I
must sing—
“Free grace alone from the first to
the last
Has won my affection and held my soul
fast.”
III. Then, thirdly, this election is ETERNAL. “God
has from the
beginning chosen you unto eternal life.” Can any man tell me when the
beginning was? Years ago we thought the beginning
of this world was when Adam came upon it. But we have discovered that
thousands of years before that God was
preparing chaotic matter to make it a fit abode for man, putting races
of creatures upon it who might die and leave behind
the marks of His handiwork and marvelous skill before He tried His hand
on man. But that was not the beginning, for
Revelation points us to a period long before this world was
fashioned—to the days when the morning stars were
begotten—when, like drops of dew, from the fingers of the morning stars
and constellations fell trickling from the hand of
God. When, by His own lips, He launched forth ponderous orbs. When with
His own hand He sent comets, like thunderbolts,
wandering through the sky to find one day their proper sphere.
We go back to years gone by, when worlds were made
and systems
fashioned, but we have not even approached the beginning yet. Until we
go to the time when all the universe slept in
the mind of God as yet unborn—until we enter the eternity where God the
Creator lived alone, everything sleeping within
Him, all creation resting in His mighty gigantic thought—we have not
guessed the beginning. We may go back, back, back,
ages upon ages. We may go back, if we might use such strange words,
whole eternities and yet never arrive at
the beginning. Our wings might be tired, our imagination would die
away. Could it outstrip the lightnings flashing
in majesty, power and rapidity, it would soon weary itself before it
could get to the beginning.
But God from the beginning chose His people. When
the unnavigated ether
was yet unfanned by the wing of a single angel, when space was
shoreless, or else unborn when universal silence
reigned and not a voice or whisper shocked the solemnity of silence.
When there was no being and no motion, no time
and nothing but God himself, alone in His eternity—when without the
song of an angel, without the attendance of
even the cherubim, long before the living creatures were born, or the
wheels of the chariot of Jehovah were
fashioned—even then, “in the beginning was the Word,” and in the
beginning God’s people were one with the Word and “in
the beginning He chose them into eternal life.”
Our election then is eternal. I will not stop to
prove it, I only just
run over these thoughts for the benefit of young beginners that they
may understand what we mean by eternal, absolute
election.
IV. And, next, the election is PERSONAL. Here again,
our opponents have
tried to overthrow election by telling us that it is an election of
nations—and not of people. But here the
Apostle says, “God has from the beginning chosen you.” It is the most
miserable shift on earth to make out that God has
not chosen persons but nations, because the very same objection that
lies against the choice of persons lies against the
choice of a nation. If it were not just to choose a person it would be
far more unjust to choose a nation, since nations
are but the union of multitudes of persons. To choose a nation seems to
be a more gigantic crime—if election is a
crime—than to choose one person.
Surely to choose ten thousand would be reckoned to
be worse than
choosing one—to distinguish a whole nation from the rest of mankind
seems to be a greater extravaganza in the acts
of divine sovereignty than the election of one poor mortal and leaving
out another. But what are nations but men? What
are whole peoples but combinations of different units? A nation is made
up of that individual and that and
that. And if you tell me that God chose the Jews, I say then, He chose
that Jew and that Jew and that Jew. And if you say
He chooses Britain, then I say He chooses that British man and that
British man and that British man.
So that it is the same thing after all. Election
then is personal—it
must be so. Everyone who reads this text and others like it, will see
that Scripture continually speaks of God’s
people one by one and speaks of them as having been the special
subjects of election—
“Sons we are through God’s election,
Who in Jesus Christ believe;
By eternal destination
Sovereign grace we here receive.”
We know it is personal election
V. The other thought is—for my time flies too
swiftly to enable me to
dwell at length upon these points—that election produces GOOD RESULTS.
“He has from the beginning chosen you unto
sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth.” How many men
mistake the doctrine of election altogether!
And how my soul burns and boils at the recollection of the terrible
evils that have accrued from the spoiling and the
wresting of that glorious portion of God’s glorious Truth!
How many are there who have said to themselves, “I
am elect,” and have
sat down in sloth and worse than that! They have said, “I am the elect
of God,” and with both hands they have done
wickedness. They have swiftly run to every unclean thing because they
have said, “I am the chosen child of God,
irrespective of my works, therefore I may live as I like and do what I
like.” O, Beloved! Let me solemnly warn everyone of
you not to carry the Truth too far—or, rather not to turn the Truth
into error, for we cannot carry it too far. We
may overstep the Truth—we can make that which was meant to be sweet for
our comfort a terrible mixture for our
destruction.
I tell you there have been thousands of men who have
been ruined by
misunderstanding election—who have said, “God has elected me to Heaven
and to eternal life”—but they have
forgotten that it is written, God has elected them “through
sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth.” This is
God’s election—election to sanctification and to faith. God chooses His
people to be holy and to be believers. How many
of you here, then, are believers? How many of my congregation can put
their hands upon their hearts and say, “I trust in
God that I am sanctified”? Is there one of you who says, “I am elect”?
One of you says, “I trust I am elect”—but I jog your
memory about some
vicious act that you committed during the last six days. Another of you
says, “I am elect”—but I would look you
in the face and say, “Elect? You are a most cursed hypocrite and that
is all you are.” Others would say, “I am elect”—but
I would remind them that they neglect the mercyseat and do not pray.
Oh, Beloved! Never think you are elect
unless you are holy. You may come to Christ as a sinner but you may not
come to Christ as an elect person until you can
see your holiness. Do not misconstrue what I say—do not say, “I am
elect,” and yet think you can be living in sin.
That is impossible. The elect of God are holy. They
are not pure, they
are not perfect, they are not spotless—but taking their life as a whole
they are holy persons. They are marked and
distinct from others—and no man has a right to conclude himself elect
except in his holiness. He may be elect and yet
lying in darkness but he has no right to believe it. No one can say it,
if there is no evidence of it. The man may live one
day but he is dead at present. If you are walking in the fear of God,
trying to please Him and to obey His Commandments,
doubt not that your name has been written in the Lamb’s Book of Life
from before the foundation of the world.
And, lest this should be too high for you, note the
other mark of
election, which is faith—belief of the Truth. Whoever believes God’s
Truth and believes on Jesus Christ is elect. I
frequently meet with poor souls who are fretting and worrying
themselves about this thought—“What if I should not be elect!”
“Oh, Sir,” they say, “I know I put my trust in Jesus. I know I believe
in His name and trust in His blood. But what if
I should not be elect?” Poor dear creature! You do not know much about
the Gospel or you would never talk so, for he that
believes is elect. Those who are elect, are elect unto sanctification
and unto faith. If you have faith you are one of
God’s elect. You may know it and ought to know it for it is an absolute
certainty.
If you, as a sinner, look to Jesus Christ this
morning and say—
“Nothing in my hands I bring,
Simply to Your Cross I cling,”
you are elect. I am not afraid of election frightening poor saints or
sinners. There are many Divines who tell the enquirer, “election has
nothing to do with you.” That is very bad, because the
poor soul is not to be silenced like that. If you could silence him so
it might be well—but he will think of it, he can’t help
it. Say to him then, if you believe on the Lord Jesus Christ you are
elect. If you will cast yourself on Jesus, you are
elect. I tell you—the chief of sinners—this morning—I tell you in His
name—if you will come to God without any works of your
own, cast yourself on the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ—if
you will come now and trust in Him, you are
elect—you were loved of God from before the foundation of the world,
for you could not do that unless God had given
you the power and had chosen you to do it.
Now you are safe and secure if you do but come and
cast yourself on
Jesus Christ and wish to be saved and to be loved by Him. But think not
that any man will be saved without faith and
without holiness. Do not conceive, my Hearers, that some decree, passed
in the dark ages of eternity will save your souls,
unless you believe in Christ. Do not sit down and fancy that you are to
be saved without faith and holiness. That is a
most abominable and accursed heresy and has ruined thousands.
Lay not election as a pillow for you to sleep on, or
you may be ruined.
God forbid that I should be sewing pillows under armholes that you may
rest comfortably in your sins. Sinner!
There is nothing in the Bible to palliate your sins. But if you are
condemned, O man! If you are lost O woman! You will not
find in this Bible one drop to cool your tongue, or one doctrine to
palliate your guilt. Your damnation will be entirely
your own fault and your sin will richly merit it— because you believe
not you are condemned. “You believe not because you
are not of My sheep. You will not come to Me that you might have life.”
Do not fancy that election excuses sin—do not dream
of it—do not rock
yourself in sweet complacency in the thought of your irresponsibility.
You are responsible. We must give you
both things. We must have divine sovereignty and we must have man’s
responsibility. We must have election, but we
must ply your hearts, we must send God’s Truth at you. We must speak to
you and remind you of this, that while it is
written, “In Me is your help,” yet it is also written, “O Israel, you
have destroyed yourself.”
VI. Now, lastly, what are the true and legitimate
tendencies of right
conceptions concerning the doctrine of election? First, I will tell you
what the doctrine of election will make saints
do under the blessing of God. And, secondly what it will do for sinners
if God blesses it to them.
First, I think election, to a saint, is one of the
most stripping
doctrines in all the world—to take away all trust in the flesh or all
reliance upon anything except Jesus Christ. How often do
we wrap ourselves up in our own righteousness and array ourselves with
the false pearls and gems of our own works and
doings? We begin to say “Now I shall be saved, because I have this and
that evidence.” Instead of that, it is naked
faith that saves—that faith and that alone unites to the Lamb
irrespective of works, although it is productive of them.
How often do we lean on some work other than that of
our own Beloved
Jesus and trust in some might, other than that which comes from on
high? Now if we would have this might taken
from us we must consider election. Pause my soul and consider this. God
loved you before you had a being. He loved
you when you were dead in trespasses and sins and sent His Son to die
for you. He purchased you with His precious
blood before you could say His name. Can you then be proud?
I know nothing, nothing again, that is more humbling
for us than this
doctrine of election. I have sometimes fallen prostrate before it when
endeavoring to understand it. I have stretched
my wings and, eagle-like, I have soared towards the sun. Steady has
been my eye and true my wing for a season. But,
when I came near it and the one thought possessed me—“God has from the
beginning chosen you unto salvation,” I was lost
in its lustre. I was staggered with the mighty thought—and from the
dizzy elevation down came my soul, prostrate and
broken, saying, “Lord, I am nothing, I am less than nothing. Why me?
Why me?”
Friends, if you want to be humbled, study election,
for it will make
you humble under the influence of God’s Spirit. He who is proud of his
election is not elect—and he who is humbled
under a sense of it may believe that he is. He has every reason to
believe that he is, for it is one of the most blessed
effects of election that it helps us to humble ourselves before God.
Once again—Election in the Christian should make him
very fearless and
very bold. No man will be so bold as he who believes that he is elect
of God. What cares he for man if he is
chosen of his Maker? What will he care for the pitiful chirpings of
some tiny sparrows when he knows that he is an eagle of a
royal race? Will he care when the beggar points at him—when the blood
royal of heaven runs in his veins? Will he fear if
all the world stand against him? If earth be all in arms abroad, he
dwells in perfect Peace—for he is in the secret place
of the tabernacle of the Most High, in the great pavilion of the
Almighty.
“I am God’s,” he says, “I am distinct from other
men. They are of an
inferior race. Am I not noble? Am I not one of the aristocrats of
Heaven? Is not my name written in God’s Book?” Does
he care for the world? No—like the lion that cares not for the barking
of the dog, he smiles at all his enemies—and
when they come too near him, he moves himself and dashes them to
pieces. What cares he for them? He walks about them
like a colossus—while little men walk under him and understand him not.
His brow is made of iron, his heart is of flint—what
does he care for
man? No—if one universal hiss came up from the wide world, he would
smile at it, for he would say—
He that has made his refuge God,
Shall find a most secure abode.”
“I am one of his elect. I am chosen of God and precious—and though the
world cast me out, I fear not. Ah, you timeserving professors, some of
you will bend like the willows. There are few
oaken-Christians nowadays that can stand the storm—and I will tell you
the reason. It is because you do not believe
yourselves to be elect. The man who knows he is elect will be too proud
to sin—he will not humble himself to commit the
acts of common people.
The believer in this Truth will say, “I compromise
my principles? I
change my doctrines? I lay aside my views? I hide what I believe to be
true? No! Since I know I am one of God’s elect, in
the very teeth of all men I shall speak God’s Truth, whatever man may
say.” Nothing makes a man so truly bold as to feel
that he is God’s elect. He shall not quiver, he shall not shake—who
knows that God has chosen him.
Moreover, election will make us holy. Nothing under
the gracious
influence of the Holy Spirit can make a Christian more holy than the
thought that he is chosen. “Shall I sin,” he says,
“after God has chosen me? Shall I transgress after such love? Shall I
go astray after so much loving kindness and tender
mercy? No, my God, since You have chosen me, I will love You. I will
live to You—
“Since You, the everlasting God,
My Father are become.”
I will give myself to You to be Yours forever, by election and by
redemption, casting myself on You and solemnly consecrating myself to
Your service.
And now, lastly, to the ungodly. What says election
to you? First, you
ungodly ones, I will excuse you for a moment. There are many of you who
do not like election and I cannot blame you
for it, for I have heard those preach election who have sat down and
said, “I have not one word to say to the sinner.”
Now, I say you ought to dislike such preaching as that and I do not
blame you for it. But, I say, take courage, take
hope, O you Sinner, that there is election!
So far from dispiriting and discouraging you, it is
a very hopeful and
joyous thing that there is an election. What if I told you perhaps none
can be saved, none are ordained to eternal life?
Would you not tremble and fold your hands in hopelessness and say,
“Then how can I be saved, since none are elect?”
But, I say, there is a multitude of elect, beyond all counting—a host
that no mortal can number. Therefore, take heart, poor
Sinner! Cast away your despondency—may you not be elect as well as any
other?—for there is a host innumerable
chosen! There is joy and comfort for you!
Then, not only take heart, but go and try the
Master. Remember, if you
were not elect, you would lose nothing by it. What did the four lepers
say? “Let us fall unto the host of the
Syrians, for if we stay here we must die and if we go to them we can
but die.” O Sinner! Come to the Throne of electing mercy! You
may die where you are. Go to God—and, even supposing He should spurn
you, suppose His uplifted hand should drive
you away—a thing impossible—yet you will not lose anything. You will
not be more damned for that. Besides,
supposing you are damned, you would have the satisfaction at least of
being able to lift up your eyes in Hell and say, “God, I
asked mercy of You and You would not grant it. I sought it, but You did
refuse it.”
That you shall never say, O Sinner! If you go to Him
and ask Him, you
shall receive—for He never has spurned one yet! Is not that hope for
you? What though there is an allotted number,
yet it is true that all who seek belong to that number. Go and seek—and
if you should be the first one to go to Hell,
tell the devils that you did perish thus—tell the demons that you are a
castaway after having come as a guilty sinner to
Jesus. I tell you it would disgrace the Eternal— with reverence to His
name—and He would not allow such a thing. He is
jealous of His honor and He could not allow a sinner to say that.
But ah, poor Soul! Do not think thus, that you can
lose anything by
coming. There is yet one more thought—do you love the thought of
election this morning? Are you willing to admit
its justice? Do you say, “I feel that I am lost. I deserve it and if my
brother is saved I cannot murmur. If God destroys
me, I deserve it, but if He saves the person sitting beside me, He has
a right to do what He will with His own and I have
lost nothing by it.”
Can you say that honestly from your heart? If so,
then the doctrine of
election has had its right effect on your spirit and you are not far
from the kingdom of Heaven. You are brought where
you ought to be, where the Spirit wants you to be—and being so this
morning, depart in peace! God has forgiven your
sins. You would not feel that if you were not pardoned—you would not
feel that if the Spirit of God were not working
in you. Rejoice, then, in this! Let your hope rest on the Cross of
Christ. Think not on election, but on Christ
Jesus. Rest on Jesus—Jesus first, last and without end.