Friday, December 31, 2010


God's Sovereign Grace

I've recently been reading John MacArthur's book, "The Gospel According To The Apostles" and came across a great section on Irresistible Grace that I thought I'd share with you. Pastor MacArthur does a great job of breaking down and showing how salvation is through God alone and we can effect none of it. He states:

"Don't misunderstand; we are not idle in the process. Nor does saving grace force people to believe against their will. That is not what irresistible grace means. Grace is not coercion. But by transforming the heart, grace makes the believer wholly willing to trust and obey.

Scripture makes clear that every aspect of grace is God's sovereign work. He foreknows and foreordains the elect (Rom. 8:29), calls the sinner to Himself (Rom. 8:30), draws the soul to Christ (John 6:44), accomplishes the new birth (John 1:13; James 1:18), grants repentance (Acts 11:18), and faith (Rom. 12:3; Acts 18:27), justifies the believer (Rom. 3:24, 8:30), makes the redeemed holy (Eph. 2:10), and finally glorifies them (Rom. 8:30). In no stage of the process is grace thwarted by human failure, dependent on human merit, or subjugated to human effort. "What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us? He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how will He not also with Him freely give us all things?" (Rom. 8:30-32). That's Grace.

Many people struggle with the concept of sovereign grace, but if God is not sovereign in the exercise of His grace, then it is not grace at all. If God's purposes were dependent on some self-generated response of faith or on human merit, then God Himself would not be sovereign, and salvation would not be wholly His work. If that were the case, the redeemed would have something to boast about, and grace wouldn't be grace (Rom. 3:27; Eph. 2:9)."

Speaking about being saved by grace, MacArthur continues by looking at God's actions in Ephesians 1: "Paul's central point was God's sovereignty in graciously saving the elect. He wrote that God chose us (v.4), predestined us (v.5), guaranteed our adoption (v.5), bestowed on us His grace (v.6), redeemed us (v.7), forgave us (v.7), lavished riches of grace on us (v.8), made known to us His will (v.9), obtained an inheritance for us (v.11), guaranteed that we would glorify Him (vv.11-12), saved us (v.13), and sealed us with the Spirit (vv.13-14). In short, He "has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ" (v.3). All of this was the work of His sovereign grace, performed not because of any good in us, but simply "according to the kind intention of His will" (v.5,cf. v.9) and "according to His purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will" (v.11)."

Wow! What an amazing God we serve. God bless.