Showing posts with label salvation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salvation. Show all posts

Monday, October 4, 2021

Are Demons at Work Today?

The Bible has a lot to say about demons in both the Old and New Testament. In the Old Testament they're usually just called "evil spirits", and usually named "demons" in the New Testament. other names for them are "familiar spirits", unclean spirits, lying spirits, and principalities. Today I took a look at a great many passages that dealt with demonic possession or influence.  Once you begin reading them and writing down the symptoms each person had, it becomes very obvious that demons are alive and hard at work in our world today!  Let me give you some examples.  Remember that these are just examples and there are many more in the old Testament and even a some more in the New Testament. But this will give us more then enough to chew on for today. The Bible tells us that although all of these things can be cause by demon possession or demonic influence, they are not always caused by demons. People can get sick or do many of these things just because of our sin nature and/or because we live in a broken world. 

Demonic possession manifests itself in many ways: 

1. can’t speak, can’t hear, self harming, (Mark 9:17, Mark 9:18, 25; Matt. 9:32). 

2. can’t speak or see (Matt. 12:22). 

3. epilepsy, self harming, attempted suicide (Matt. 17:15, 18). 

4. great strength, insanity, cutting, self destruction, attempted suicide, screaming, going naked - inappropriate behavior, living in tombs or other inappropriate places, isolating, violent, (Matt 8:28–34; Mark 5:1–20; Luke 8:26–39) . 

5. convulsions, screaming, self harming, (Mark 1:26; 9:20). 

6. paralysis, screaming, cripples (like from a stroke) (Acts 8:7). 

7. high fever, Demons often manifest symptoms of diseases.. (Luke 4:38). However, not all physical problems are of demonic origin. In the Gospels illness and possession are often differentiated (cf. Mark 1:32, 34; 6:13; Matt. 4:24; 10:8; Luke 4:40–41; 9:1; 13:32).

8. harming others, (Acts 19:15–16). 

Also from the Old Testament: 

9. attempted murder, violence (1 Samuel 19:9–10 and many others). 

10. acting treacherously, (Judges 9:23). 

11. depression, (1 Samuel 16:14-16). 

12. prostitution, orgies, idolatry, murdering children, are all things that the people who worshipped idols (which are demons) did. When you worship a demon, they have a hold on you and cause you to do all these things and more. This is spoken about all though the OT, but I’m only going to list a couple that speak about it. (Deuteronomy 32:17, Ezekiel 16:15–21). 

Finally, back in the New Testament in Romans 1:21–32 we see a lot more of what demons cause in humans: 

13.  adultery, fornication, homosexuality and other perverted sexual acts, transvestites, trans genders, envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice, gossips, slanderers, God-haters, insolent, arrogant, boastful, disobedient to parents, senseless, faithless, heartless, ruthless, and finally filled with every kind of evil and wickedness.  

I'm sure you noticed as you read through this list that many things are repeated over and over. This whole list, and especially the last part may have made you think of another passage like it did for me, as it's very similar. This is the passage that speaks about what people will be like in the last days... the very times we're currently living in:  “But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God— having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with them.” (2 Timothy 3:1–5) 

So does this mean that we can blame all the horrible things that are happening today on demons and say it's not the fault of the persons themselves?  Absolutely not!  Demons can't influence or possess anyone who's not willing to allow it. Do you think that if we told people that these things could be caused by demons that the people would be horrified and quit doing them?  No, they'd just say we're crazy and continue, because they like their sins, and they like not being held accountable for them. That's why they pushed so hard for them to be normalized. I think the most we can say "in general" is that these things can be caused by demons, but also by our sin nature.  How can we tell the difference?  I honestly don't know for sure as I haven't tried to study that. What I do know though is that it doesn't matter what's causing it.  If we have a loved one that is described by these things, all we need to do is pray to our loving, and merciful God that He would save them and free them from Satan's clutches.  Another thing we can do is tell them to flee from sin like Joseph did (Genesis 39:10–12), resist it and draw near to God instead (James 4:7–8) and He will draw near to you. So we don't have to worry about figuring out whether it's demons, sin, or the world we live in that's causing these things to happen to people.  I just think it's good to know that demons are often involved when these things manifest.  Another way we could add to this study would be to look up the scriptures that speak about Satan and how he operates. That could give us more insight into what's going on today too. 

Knowing  all this, especially in the times we're living in, shows us that Satan and his demons are alive and well, and working as hard as they can to harm and kill as many people as they can, prevent people from being saved, and make as many who are saved as useless to God as they can. Mainly it reminds us that we are at war and need to stand firm in our faith and not fall prey to Satan's schemes. We can fight back by making sure we read and study God's Word daily, and so allow it to keep renewing our minds, apply the scriptures we read to our lives and pray constantly for the salvation of our loved ones and for ourselves to become more like Jesus daily. Most of all, don't allow this to cause you to fear. We have a friend who is much stronger than any demon or Satan, so we have no reason to fear as long as we know Him!  

“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.” (Romans 15:13). 

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Can a Goth be a Christian?

I’ve met some Goth’s who say they are saved and yet still dress, talk, and act very much like a Goth. This seemed strange to me until I realized that most Christians today still act the same way they did before they were saved.  Of course that doesn’t make it right, but it does make it very confusing for others who are newly saved. 

Christ call us all to be apart from the world, not a part of it, and that includes everything about us.  If a person is a Christian, a true follower of Christ, they are required to leave behind their old life, and to become a new person, set apart by God and for God. That means that those of us who used to dress in sexually suggestive clothing, stopped doing that, and began dressing modestly as befitted a follower of Christ. That means that those of us who got into music that was about drugs, sex, violence etc., stopped listening to it and instead listened to music that was uplifting and had the elements in it that the Lord told us to look for in the things we put into our minds: Phil 4:8 Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.

The same is true of the "Goth" experience. When you become a true follower of Christ, you are no longer "Goth", instead you belong to God, you become a Christian and are called by His Name.  Gal 2:20 I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.

So as far as being "Goth" goes, there is no such thing if you are indeed a true disciple of Christ. You must give up your life, pick up your cross, and follow Him. As we’re told in Ephesians, we are to put off our old way of life and put on our new self which is created to be like God.  Goth’s who want to be saved, need to do what Jesus told us all to do first: “Count the cost”. (Luke 14)  they need to decide if it’s worth it to them to really give up their old ways and live according to God’s Word, just as every person that comes to Christ needs to decide.  Sadly, we don’t hear a lot about “counting the cost” in churches today.  All we hear is about the free gift of salvation.  Well, the gift is free, but our response to it is going to cost us since we have to give up our old ways, and give up being the masters of our own lives and give Jesus the reigns. We no longer run our lives according to our wills, but instead according to God’s Will.

Lastly, we’re told that when we are saved we become part of a “new man”, a part of the body of Christ. We’re also told that our job is to be an ambassador of Christ (2 Corinthians 5:20) to the world. We represent God and His Kingdom to the world.  Therefore we’re to dress, speak and act like citizens of Heaven, not citizens of this world.  So you shouldn’t try to dress, speak or act like me, or your pastor, or anyone else you know.  Instead, you should study God’s Word and find out what He says we’re to dress, speak and act like. For that’s the only way we have to know for sure how citizens of Heaven are to do things. In the “Pursuit of God” Tozer says:

"Millions call themselves by His name, it is true, and pay some token respect to Him, but a simple test will show how little He is really honored among them. Let the average man be put to the proof on the question of who or what is above, and his true position will be exposed. Let him be forced into making a choice between God and money, God and men, between God and personal ambition, God and self, God and human love, and God will take second place every time. Those other things will be exalted above. However the man may protest, the proof is in the choices he makes day after day throughout his life."

To that we can add, “let them choose between Goth or Christ, or Goth and popular music, etc” and God will take second place every time.”  Sad, but true.  All we have to do is look around and we can see the truth in it.  Not many have truly given up their lives for Christ, even though they say they have. I would certainly not want to be one of the ones who hear Jesus say, "I don’t know you” as He does in Matthew 25:12.

To help you get started, the following verses are a few that tell us how we’re to live when we’ve been saved.

Ephesians 4:22–24 —You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; *to be made new in the attitude of your minds; *and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.

James 4:4 You adulterous people, don’t you know that friendship with the world is hatred toward God? Anyone who chooses to be a friend of the world becomes an enemy of God.

Romans 12:2 —Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

Leviticus 20:26 `And you shall be holy to Me, for I the Lord am holy, and have separated you from the peoples, that you should be Mine.

Psalm 4:3 Know that the Lord has set apart the godly for himself; the Lord will hear when I call to him.

1 Peter 2:9 But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own special people, that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light;

1 Peter 3:15-16 But in your hearts set apart Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander.

John 15:19 "If you were of the world, the world would love its own. Yet because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.

Romans 13:14 —Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the sinful nature.

1 Thessalonians 5:22 Abstain from all appearance of evil.

Ephesians 5:1–2 —Be imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children *and live a life of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.

1 Corinthians 12:27 —Now you are the body of Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Homosexuality in the End Times

Not too long ago, I went off line at about 4:30 to finish cleaning up the house and get supper started for Bruce for when he got home from work. We both like to listen to the news when it comes on at 5pm so I turned the TV on our local news station so that it would be on the right channel when the news came on. While cleaning I realized that the show playing then was Oprah and she had on a young country music star who had apparently recently come out and said she was a lesbian. She told a heart wrenching story of how she hid it all her life from everyone including her parents and how being brought up in a good Christian home she was sure she was hated by God and would go to hell for it. Her story was truly heart wrenching and my heart went out to her and to all those like her.

Unfortunately she still doesn't understand the Truth. She thinks she feels a billion times better now because she's told the truth and she's not "living a lie" anymore. And well she should! Lying is a sin (as she knew too) and of course "living a lie" is a sin as well. Sin hurts us in many ways and hurts those around us. So here are these poor people who are so enslaved to many sins that they feel their only way out is to either kill themselves and get it over with, or be a practicing homosexual and decide (somehow) that God doesn't see homosexuality as a sin anymore.

What's even sadder is that many of these people were raised in "good Christian homes" and went to "good Christian churches". Where then was the discipleship they so badly needed when they were young??? Why then do they not understand that God never hated them because they were tempted to sin??? He hates the sin, not them. Where is their understanding that God doesn't make mistakes, that He doesn't create people as "homosexuals" or pedophiles, or thieves, or murderers, or liars etc. Why do they not understand that all of those things, like so many others, are quite simply sins and temptations??? Why do they not understand that God has called us to take our thoughts captive and make them obedient to Christ???

Do they seriously believe that God creates people to be murderers and thieves and homosexuals??? Apparently they do, but they are so very wrong!

How very sad that they feel they have to act on their sinful desires in order to "be happy". All they had to do was tell the truth about their sinful desires to have a homosexual relationship instead of hiding them. It's when we hide our sins that we give Satan a hold over us and many of these people obviously hid this sin for a very long time. Then instead of confessing the sinful thoughts/feelings and taking them captive in Christ, they went the other way and determined to find a way to reconcile their sin and yet remain "Christian". Just as Adam blamed God for his sin when he said, "the woman you gave me" made me do it, so they are blaming God for their sin by saying "God made me this way so it's His fault".

And now they are blaming those "good Christian churches" for all their problems and this young lady actually said that churches are ruining young people by telling them that homosexuality is wrong!!!

Unfortunately she's right in some ways. Churches that haven't been or aren't discipling their youngsters, and parents that are waiting for the church to teach their children God's Ways instead of doing it themselves are hurting the young.


Our children should all know that they will be tempted many times in many ways, but that being tempted doesn't make them "bad". It simply means that they need to turn to the Lord for His help and they need to be taught how to guard their minds and hearts by taking their thoughts captive for Christ. Basically, it means they're human! They need to know that they can always go to God about any thought or feeling they have and that He loves them always and that He will help them. That doesn't mean that He will make it easy for them though. There's a big difference between helping someone and doing it for them! And that's a HUGE thing that many people today simply don't get anymore.

Everyone wants everything handed to them on a silver platter instead of having to work for it. While God does give us gifts that way sometimes, for the most part He requires us to work out our salvation and use the tools He's given us in His Word.


I could go on and on about what they "should" have been taught, and what they should know, but you get the idea. What's so horribly sad though is that now, because these people think that they have finally been "freed" they are preaching their "salvation" to everyone, using every means at their disposal--TV, Radio, movies, the Internet, meetings and community groups, political activism etc.

Some of them are in many ways a part of this "new Christianity", that Warren, Piper, and others preach--but it's a Christianity without the Gospel and those people are going to go to Hell and will bring everyone else right along with them!
So this half of the homosexual group is attacking the church, the body of Christ, with all the ammunition they can bring on it, and the other half, the half that are "atheists" are paving the way for them in society by mocking God.

It really opened my eyes (even wider) to how very active Satan is in our times! It's like an old fashioned cattle round up, only humans are the cattle and they're being rounded up to go to Hell. I think these people, these "stars" are going to be at the forefront of the battle to have the bible banned as hate speech and that's just part of what they'll accomplish. The question is, how much of it will we witness before the rapture???
 
How should we respond to Homosexuals?

One thing that really distresses me is the horrible way that many Christians react toward gay people. It really breaks my heart, and their response to them, becomes the main excuse the gay person often uses to stay gay, because they feel that it proves that the person is wrong about God. Sadly, they confuse just what the person is wrong about. A Christian response to homosexuality is really no different then a response to any other sin that anyone's living in. It would depend on if they're saved yet or not. Of course we can be pretty sure that if they're gay they're probably not saved...not because they're too bad, but because most of them have had the scriptures totally twisted out of shape to them on both extremes, and have misinterpreted what the scriptures really say about it.

So to me the Christian response would be to attempt to witness to them and tell them the true Gospel: "that God really does love them and wants to forgive them and save them. Yes, He does hate homosexuality and no it's not natural, it's a sin, just as sex outside of marriage is. But they can be forgiven and He will help them overcome it, in fact He's the only one that can." etc.... But really that's to be our response to anyone that's not saved that we know. We may also have to show them that their "gay feelings" are no different then any other feeling that people have, such as a desire to steal something, or to lie, or to cheat etc, and remind them that God consistently tells us not to trust our feelings, but to trust His Word instead. Then, if or when they allow us to, we can also share with them the way God gives us to overcome our wrong thoughts and feelings. That should be a huge relief to them to know that God has a plan and a way for us to overcome these things and it actually works!

Aren’t we told not to judge others?

No, the Bible tells us that we are to judge righteously. If you don't "judge" them, then how will you know if they’re right or wrong? We must be willing to stop being afraid of people and start doing what the Lord tells us to do in His Word. His Word tells us that when someone is living in sin, we are to tell the person that they are sinning and why. We are to do it in a loving but very firm and unwavering manner. We are to stand on the Word of God and not worry about what others will say of us or if that person will like or respect us any longer. 

If a minister announces that they’re a homosexual and at peace with it, he has become a wolf in sheep’s clothing and will kill and destroy many of our brothers and sisters if he isn't stopped. God wants us to be concerned about that and to do something about it.

Romans 14:1 Accept him whose faith is weak, without passing judgment on disputable matters.

John 7:24 Do not judge according to appearance, but judge with righteous judgment.

We are not to pass judgment on disputable matters but this is not a disputable matter. God's Word is quite clear on this subject regardless of how badly they twist the scriptures to make it seem otherwise.

I know it's very hard to do, but it is what God says we must do. When we do things like this that is when we will be persecuted for being true Christians and followers of Christ. As long as we are like the world, no one will bother us or persecute us, but as soon as we stand up for Christ and stand firm on His Word, then everyone's fangs come out and you will be reviled for Christ's sake. The fleshly part of me cringes at that thought but my spirit wishes that it would happen to me so that I could stand for Jesus.

Matthew 5:11-12 “Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you, and say all kinds of evil against you falsely for My sake. Rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

I'm sure you don't need these but I'll post them here for lurkers who might not understand what God's Word calls us to do:

Isaiah 8:20
; 2 Peter 2:9; 1 Timothy 4:1-6 ;1 Timothy 5:20; 2 Timothy 3:16-17; 2 Timothy 4:2-5; Titus 1:9; Titus 1:13; Ephesians 5:11 ; 2 Thessalonians 3:6; Romans 15:4; 1 Corinthians 6:9-11;

How do we know when it’s our job to say something, or if we should just pray?

The way we know if we're supposed to do something is if we are aware of it and it's been brought to our attention personally, then it's our job to do something. God doesn't show us problems so we can go tell someone else to fix them, he shows us so that we will handle it for Him.  When God places me in a situation where I am confronted with someone speaking falsely or with someone who doesn't know the Lord and I'm in a situation where I can tell them the truth, then I know it's the Lord who has put me there. I've heard it called "divine appointments".  For example, if I’m in a roomful of people and one of them is talking about being gay and that it’s not a sin, then it’s my job to correct them.  If however, I’m in a meeting where the speaker is saying something like that, and I just happen to be in the audience but have no way of getting to the speaker, then that job belongs to someone else, and my job is to pray.

Isn’t it chemical makeup that makes a person gay?

If you're saying, "God made him that way" then what you're really saying is that either, God made a mistake, or that God purposely made people in such a way that it would be impossible for them to be saved. That goes against everything the Bible says, so I cannot and will not believe that. Even according to their own studies, that's simply not true. Most of the studies done on this are no more then jokes anyway.

If on the other hand it's something that's physically medically wrong with them, then it's something the medical community should be studying to cure rather then trying to proclaim it's OK and normal which is what they're saying. But then they're also leaning toward saying that pedophilia is also normal and OK along with a number of other things. Basically all they're doing is giving people an "excuse" for their reprehensible behavior and then telling the rest of us that we have to accept it. I refuse to do that too.

The Bible says that God cannot, will not, and does not tempt us, that we are tempted by our own sinful desires. It is our choice to allow those sinful thoughts/ideas/fantasies etc or to do what the Bible says and stop them, taking them captive to Christ and replacing them with the Truth from His Word.

The problem is that this hasn't been taught to people for generations and instead they've been filled with the worlds "wisdom" and ideas and we all know where that leads....straight to hell.

No one "has" to be homosexual, anymore then anyone "has to be" a murder, thief, a pedophile, a rapist, or anything else. They weren't "born" that way. They chose to allow those thoughts and ideas and then they chose to act on them. Thoughts and ideas become emotions; emotions beget more thoughts and ideas until eventually they become actions; given enough time they then become habits, and given more time they then become part of our character. And lo, a homosexual is born.

How do we deal with someone that’s become a homosexual and won’t repent?

Assuming that the person knew the Gospel and had been saved, what I would do first would be to make sure the person in question understood the correct biblical way to handle their situation/problem. If they did understand it and refused to accept the fact that they themselves brought this about by (probably unknowingly) not taking control of their thought life, refused to confess their sin, (admit to God that it is in fact a sin) and repent of it, (turn away from it and choose to take responsibility for their thoughts and emotions instead) then I would have to obey God's Word and not have anything more to do with them other then praying for them. I would tell them that I loved them and that I would be praying for them, but that until they chose to repent of their sin that I had to obey God's Word and not have anything more to do with them. I would also let them know that I was in fact showing my love for them by being obedient to God and telling them the Truth so that they too would hopefully some day come to really know Him and following Him and live a life of victory rather then one of defeat wallowing in their own sinful desires.

I'm not saying that it would be easy for me to do, because it wouldn't. It would be the hardest thing in the world to do, but I would do it for Christ.

God never promised that following His path would be easy. In fact He said it would be hard. He even told us that this kind of thing would happen and that families would be driven apart due to our following and obeying Him. On top of that, He told us this would be the cost of following Him and said this would be the cross that many of us would have to bear:

Matthew 10:34-39 “Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to turn “ ‘a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law— a man’s enemies will be the members of his own household.’ “Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.

Luke puts it this way:

Luke 14:25-27 Large crowds were traveling with Jesus, and turning to them he said: “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters—yes, even his own life—he cannot be my disciple. And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.

We are to put Christ above everyone and everything in our lives, even if it means dying physically because we do.

We are in the last days and God said that this would happen and that it's only going to get worse: Micah 7:4-7; Mark 13:12-13;

He also promised us this: Matthew 19:29 And everyone who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or children or fields for my sake will receive a hundred times as much and will inherit eternal life.

Let me share this wonderful email from a man who was gay and who’s family kept telling him the truth because they loved him.

Thanks for offending me with the Gospel


Mike Goeke

MIDLAND, Texas (BP)--As a pastor and as someone in ministry to churches and people across the country, I have seen a growing trend over the last several years.

It seems that we, as the church and as individual Christians, spend a lot of time pulling back the outward expression of our faith for fear of offending people. Churches sometimes water down theology and their message to make sure no one leaves offended. People ignore the destructive, sinful behavior of their friends to make sure their friends are not offended. People seek community that is intentionally non-confrontational so that they will not personally be offended.

In the last weeks, it seems like I have been inundated with issues that almost seem to be begging for confrontation, but ones in which no one wants to take that step. It has made me think about my own faith. Do I believe the Word of God? If I do believe it, why am I so afraid to share it with people I say I love? If I really love people, shouldn't I risk their offense if it means saving their lives?

The reality is that the Gospel of Christ, and the truth of the Word, is by its nature offensive. It is described as a sword, and it divides, and it exposes, and it digs to deep, hidden places. It also leads us to God, to truth, to healing, to fulfillment and to freedom.


As I have thought about this, I have been reminded of a time in my life when I was deeply offended by my friends and family. I had left my wife to pursue a life built around and defined by my feelings of same-sex attraction. I had expected my friends and family to accept what I was doing, support what I was doing, and not question what I was doing. I was offended by much of Christianity, and for a season I walked away from people who loved me, and I walked away from the church.

But today, 13 years later, I would like to say a hearty "THANK YOU" to my wife, and my parents and family, and my friends who cared enough about me to offend me. I get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach when I consider the ramifications in my life, had the people in my world bought into the lie that to love me was to affirm me in my sin. When I left my wife, she boldly told me that she knew God could work in me and in our marriage and that she would not pursue divorce. She protected her interests but always professed her love for me and her desire to work through this together.

My parents (and other family members) told me that what I was doing was wrong. They bought books and other materials and tried to get me to talk to a counselor. They also called frequently to check on me, sent me money when I needed it, came to see me on my birthday, and flew me home for holidays. My friends drove hours to talk to me about what I was doing, and told me what they believed. They flew from other towns to take me to dinner and tried to convince me to get help and to turn from the life I was living. They also sent me cards and letters full of love and affirmation of our friendship.

And each of them offended me. Each of them made me angry. I viewed them as bigoted, unenlightened, ignorant, prejudiced and hateful. If they truly loved me, I told them, they would accept me and affirm me in the lifestyle I was living. I ignored their calls and I viewed them with skepticism.
I did my best to sever my relationships with those who were offending me. But they would not let me go. They did not coddle me, but they refused to give up on me.

I eventually took a book from my dad. I did not want the book -- I viewed it as more of his "right-wing Christian propaganda" -- but I took it just to shut him up. I was ready to draw a line in the sand and cut all ties with my wife, my family and my friends. But God was ready to pierce my heart. The book that my dad gave me did not condemn me, but instead showed me more than the sentimental, saccharine love of Jesus that my new theology had sold me. It showed me the powerful love of the risen Savior, and I was compelled back to Him by that love. The offending parties in my life were waiting, as loving and gracious as they had ever been, not holding my sin against me, but standing there, ready to walk with me in the journey ahead of me.

Today my marriage is restored and has grown beyond my imagination. I have three beautiful children and am living out the call on my life to vocational ministry. Healing has happened in my family relationships, and I am closer to that cadre of friends than ever before. As I listen to people worry about offending people, and as I watch people change their whole belief systems to make other people feel more comfortable, and as I see people enabling destructive behavior just to avoid conflict, I wonder where I would be today had Stephanie simply pursued divorce like I wanted her to do. I wonder where I would be if my parents and friends had supported me and encouraged me to divorce Stephanie and had rallied around me in my new found identity. I wonder where I would be if my pastors and spiritual shepherds had encouraged me to accept the very thing I needed to lay before the cross of Christ. I shudder at the thought. I know it must have killed them to think of losing me, but they loved me enough to take that risk.

Thank you, dear friends, for your offense to me. At the time, the truth you shared was the aroma of death to me (2 Corinthians 2:15) but today it is the sweet fragrance of life.


 Now THAT is a beautiful picture of how individual Christians and the body of Christ together is supposed to work! Praise God for the people who aren't afraid to speak the Truth in love and save the soul of a loved one! Or perhaps I should say Praise Him for the people who are terrified but still speak the Truth in love to save the soul of a loved one. I pray the Lord will help me and each of us be just like that, able to speak the Truth even though it hurts, even though we're terrified the loved one will turn away from us, or try to cut ties with us, or will say they hate us, etc. That's real love!

Friday, March 13, 2015

The Doctrine of God's Effectual Call

The Doctrine of God's Effectual Call

By John MacArthur


We have a wonderful subject to talk about tonight and I took up a little more time than I ought to have, in one sense, but wanted to share with you what I did, so we’re going to try to squeeze it in the time we have. I want you to open your Bible to Romans 8 - Romans chapter 8 - and let’s begin in Romans 8 with some very familiar revelation from God.


Verse 28, which is familiar to all of us, is a good starting point. Romans 8:28. “And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose. For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren; and whom He predestined, these He also called; and whom He called, these He also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified.”


In our doctrinal study, we have talked about foreknowledge. We’ve talked about predestination, or the doctrine of election. We’ve talked a little about justification. And we will talk about glorification. But the one word that I want you to focus on with me tonight is the word “called.” Called. In verse 28, “Those who are called.” In verse 30, “Whom He predestined these He also called; and whom He called, these He also justified.”


Now, one of the most simple words in the English language is the word “call.” We all understand that word. We use it in a daily manner. It’s one of the more common words in our vocabulary. We call our kids to come to dinner in the hope that they will respond. Or we call our husband to come to dinner and hope he will respond. We call our friends on the phone and hope that they will spurn the answer machine option and pick up the phone.


It gets a little more important when a church calls a pastor hoping he will accept the offer to come and shepherd them. And when you are called by your boss, the call becomes equally compelling. I remember as a kid being called to the principal’s office. I remember in college receiving what was called a “call slip” to come immediately to the dean’s office. Some of you have received a summons from a court. A summons is a call you really shouldn’t ignore because if you are summoned to court, you probably ought to show up or you may even get a visit from law officers. Maybe a little stronger than just a summons is a subpoena. A subpoena is a summons commanding the person designated to appear under a penalty for failure to do so.


And so really there are all kinds of calls. There are those sort of minimalist calls that you sort of meekly offer to somebody to get them to the table, or those phone calls you hope somebody might answer, all the way through to the far more serious call from your boss, or call from a church, or from a principal’s office or a summons from a court or a subpoena with a threat for non response. So there are increasingly more compelling kinds of calls.


But in all those cases, you can still choose to ignore them. You can resist any of those calls and go on your way and do what you want. But Scripture reveals a truth about a call, a summons that cannot be ignored and it cannot be resisted. It is the unyielding summons from God. It is a subpoena to appear before Him in His court for the purpose of being declared righteous, being declared just, having all your sins forgiven, and being set free from any judgment or any condemnation.
This is the call that you read about in Romans 8. It is a call that justifies. It is a call that comes according to the divine purpose. It is a call that comes to those who are predestined, those who are elect, those who are chosen. It is a call that leads through justification to eternal glory. Theologians have called this call an effective call, an efficacious call, a determinative call, a decisive call, a conclusive call, an operative call and an irresistible call. It is the call to salvation. It is the divine summons. It is the divine subpoena, not for judgment and not for punishment, but so that you can be declared righteous, free from condemnation, forgiven. It is the call to salvation.


The question is: Can it be denied? Can it be resisted? Is there such a thing as non-compliance? Well verse 30 says, “Whom He predestined, these He called.” So this call is limited to those who are the elect. We’re not talking here about a general call, just a broad-sweeping gospel call, the kind of general call that the apostle Paul talks about quoting the Old Testament prophet, nor are we talking about the Matthew 22 words, “Many are called, but few are chosen.” We’re not talking about what we could call the general call of the gospel, the general outward invitation of the gospel. We’re talking about something that comes only to the predestined and results in justification. And that is why it is called an efficacious call, or an effectual call.


Now, I want you to look at the word “called” here. It’s part of a group of words that come out of a root kaleō… kaleō. Kaleō means “to call into one’s presence,” or “to summon.” It is used, for example, in Matthew 2:7, where it says, “Herod called the magi into his court and they came.”


The word can be used in less serious circumstances, but it is the word that is used in the Scripture to speak of a summons. In fact, it is so descriptive that we as believers actually are “the called.” We are the called, the church is the ekklēsia, not from kaleō, but from ekkaleō. Kaleō to be summoned. Ekkaleō a stronger word, a stronger summons, to be called out and the church then becomes the noun form of that verb, “the called out ones.” So, if you ask what is a church? It is the assembly of those called, summoned.


Now, this becomes very clear throughout the Scripture, not just Romans 8. So I want to do a little Bible study with you. Go back to Romans 1. And I think you’re going to enjoy this, and it’s going to stretch you into a wonderful new category of understanding. “Paul – ” Romans 1:1, “ - a bond-servant of Christ Jesus, called as an apostle, set apart for the gospel of God.” He’s a good one to look at for this kind of call because when the call of God came on the life of the apostle Paul, it was a sovereign, divine, gracious, and irresistible summons. He was slammed in to the dirt on the road to Damascus with nothing to do but respond. He is called as an apostle.


Down in verse 6 he’s talking about the “obedience of faith.” In verse 5, obeying the gospel, “among whom you also are the called. You are the called ones of Jesus Christ to all who are beloved of God in Rome, called saints - ” called holy ones. You are the called, the holy ones, the ones called out.


Look at 1 Corinthians 1:1. Again “Paul called an apostle.” He doesn’t mean that’s his title. He means he was called by God, by the will of God, to be an apostle of Jesus Christ. And again, it was not something that he could resist. Verse 2. “To the church of God which is at Corinth, to those who have been sanctified in Christ Jesus, saints by calling.” So whatever this calling is, it makes you a saint. In Romans 8 it justifies you. Here, it sanctifies you. And down in verse 9, “God is faithful, through whom you were called into fellowship with His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.” You were called into the fellowship that you enjoy with the Lord Jesus Christ, called by God.


Over in verse 23. “We preach Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumbling block, to Gentiles foolishness, but to those who are - ” here it is again “ - the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God.” Now follow this. If you are among the called, then when Christ crucified is preached, He becomes to you the power of God and the wisdom of God. To the Jews a stumbling block, to the Gentiles it’s foolishness, but to the called whether Jew or Gentile, Christ is the power of God and the wisdom of God.


This is a call that makes the one called a part of the called, the ekklēsia. Verse 26. “Consider your calling.” Consider it. Consider your summons. Consider your divine subpoena. “Brethren, there are not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, but God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise. God has chosen the weak things of the world to shame the things which are strong and the base things of the world and the despised God has chosen.”


And there you have your calling, brethren, is a calling based upon the fact that God has chosen. God has chosen. Verse 30 sums it up by saying, “But by His doing you are in Christ Jesus.” Christ becomes to you the wisdom of God in righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption by His doing. He chose you, you are the predestined and He called you. Whomever He predestines He calls, whomever He calls He justifies and glorifies. We’re talking here, then, about a calling into the fellowship of the saints, into fellowship with His Son.


Turn to Galatians chapter 1 and see the consistency of this truth. Galatians 1:6. Paul says, “I’m amazed - ” the Galatians were wandering off, being led astray by some false teachers, though they were believers. He says, “I am amazed that you are so quickly deserting Him who called you by the grace of Christ.” And he is saying here that God called you to Himself, summoned you to Himself through the grace of Christ and I’m amazed that you are wandering away from that, chasing after a deceptive, distorted, and different gospel.


Down in verse 11 he says, “I would have you know, brethren, that the gospel which was preached by me is not according to man. I neither received it from man, or was I taught it, I received it through a revelation of Jesus Christ. You have heard of my former manner of life in Judaism, I used to persecute the church of God beyond measure, tried to destroy it; and I was advancing in Judaism.” And we talked about that this morning, didn’t we? If you want to advance in Judaism, kill Christians. That’s how passionate they were about their religion. So he was “ - advancing in Judaism beyond many of my contemporaries among my countrymen, being more extremely zealous for my ancestral traditions. And when he who had set me apart even from my mother’s womb and called me through His grace, was pleased to reveal His Son in me - ” when God was pleased God reached down, knowing it had all been determined even from His mother’s womb, and He called him through His grace when it pleased Him, and He “ - revealed His Son in me that I might preach Him among the Gentiles.”


Paul understood that he was just grabbed by the neck by God and awakened to the glory of Christ and saved and made an apostle. Look at Ephesians chapter 4. And again so that you understand that this is such common New Testament language, Ephesians 4:1. “I, therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, plead with you - ” or entreat you “ - walk in a manner worthy of the calling with which you have been called.” This cannot be a general call. This cannot be a call that you can take or leave. It is a calling by which you have been called that demands that you live your life a certain way. Therefore, it is a transforming calling, it is a justifying, sanctifying calling. And so that you are to live “ - with all humility and gentleness and patience and showing forbearance to one another, and be diligent to preserve the unity of the Spirit and the bond of peace. This is that one body, that one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all who is over all and through all and in all.”
This is a calling to salvation and nothing else. This is a calling into the one body, the one Spirit, the one hope, the one Lord, the one faith, the one baptism, the one God, and one Father of us all. It is a calling then that assumes a response of a life that is walked in a worthy manner. Whenever you see the idea of a call to salvation in the New Testament epistles, it is always this efficacious, effectual, determinative, operative call, the saving call.


Turn to Colossians 3:15. And here it says in this familiar verse, “Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, to which indeed you were called in one body.” Here again you were called into the body of Christ. You were called to peace through Christ, who now rules in your heart. Turn to 1 Thessalonians chapter 2 and again he says what he says in Ephesians 4, does Paul. “So that you may walk in a manner worthy of the God - ” listen to this “ - who calls you into His own Kingdom and glory.”


This is a call to fellowship. This is a call into a relationship with Jesus Christ. This is a call to holiness. This is a call into the body of Christ, to join with the one Spirit, the one Lord, the one faith, the one God and Father of us all. And this is a call into His Kingdom and glory. And again I say - and theologians who understand the Word of God in its magnificent simplicity have always said - this is a saving call. This is a divine summons. I like to call it the unyielding summons of God.
In 2 Thessalonians 2:14. Verse 13. “We should always give thanks to God for you, brethren beloved by the Lord, because God has chosen you from the beginning for salvation.” That’s the great doctrine of election. God has chosen you from the beginning, before time began in the counsels of eternity, inside the Trinity, God chose you for salvation through sanctification by the Spirit and faith in the truth. Verse 14. “And it was for this He called you.”


You were called because you were chosen. You were called because you were chosen from the beginning for salvation. You were chosen to be sanctified by the Spirit, you were chosen to put faith in the truth, and He called you to that through our gospel in order that you might gain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. There you have it again. Election led to a calling, which led to salvation, justification, sanctification, and final glorification.


Again, verse 14. “It was for this He called you through our gospel, - ” for what? “ - that you might gain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Putting it all together, whomever it is that the Lord calls, He calls into His Kingdom, whomever it is He calls, He calls to salvation, He calls to faith in the truth, He calls to sanctification by the Spirit, and He calls to eternal glory. This again is a saving call. Second Timothy 1:9. They are made parallel here, end of verse 8. “God.” “God, who has saved us and called us with a holy calling - ” that’s two ways to say the same thing. “God, who has saved us and called us with a holy calling.” It doesn’t say “God who called us with a holy calling and because we responded He saved us.” It doesn’t say that.


It says “He saved us,” which is to say, “He called us with a holy calling, not according to our works but according to our own purpose and grace which is granted us in Christ Jesus before time began.” There you go back again. He calls whom He predestines and elects. Unmistakable teaching of Scripture.


Second. Well, 1 Peter 2:9. This is a rich, rich verse. Verse 9. “You are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation - ” these are just grand designations “ - a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light.”


Now, I think probably when you study your Bible, every time you come across this word “called” in the epistles you’re going to see it jump off the page. This is not a wishful act on God’s part to call you. It’s not like calling the kids for dinner. This is an efficacious, effectual, determinative, operative call. He “called you out of darkness into His marvelous light.” He didn’t call you out of darkness hoping you’d come, He “called you out of darkness into His marvelous light.” That’s where you went when He called you.


When He called you, you came into His court and you were declared just. When He called you, you came into His body and you became a part of the body of Christ. When He called you, you came into the fellowship. When He called you, you became holy. When He called you, you were sanctified. When He called you it was so that you would finally be glorified. Verse 21 says that you were “called for this purpose...to follow in the footsteps of Christ.” It was a call to live your life following the example of the Savior.


Chapter 3 verse 9. “Be harmonious - ” verse 8 “ - be sympathetic, be brotherly, be kindhearted, be humble in spirit; don’t return evil for evil or insult for insult, give a blessing instead; for you were called for the very purpose that you might inherit a blessing.” This is a call that made you into a person who could be a blessing. This is a call that brought you into a life that you are to walk worthy of. This call has an effect.


First Peter 5:10. 1 Peter 5:10. This is so great. “After you’ve suffered for a little while, the God of all grace, who called you to His eternal glory in Christ.” What a statement. God has called you to justification. He has called you to sanctification and holiness. He has called you to communion and fellowship with the saints. He’s called you to live a godly and virtuous life and walk worthy of your calling and adorn His name. And He has called you to His eternal glory in Christ.

And He called you because He chose you and predestined you to this end. Second Peter 1:3, well verse 2. “Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and Jesus our Lord; seeing that His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness, through the true knowledge of Him - ” listen “ - who called us by His own glory and excellence.” He called us by His own glory. He called us by His own excellence. And He gave us everything pertaining to life and godliness. Staggering stuff, really.


The preacher can call people to repentance. The preacher can plead with people to come to salvation in Christ. We can do our best. Prophets have, and apostles have, and preachers still do. That’s the general outward plea, very different than the inward call that saves.


Finally Hebrews 3:1. Here’s the difference. Here’s the difference. Hebrews 3:1. “Therefore, holy brethren - ” I love that. I have to refer to you more often as that. It’s true, it’s true, it’s all true, separated, imputed with righteousness. “Therefore, holy brethren - ” here it is “ - partakers of a - ” what? What is the word? “ - a heavenly calling.” We’re not talking about the preacher here. We’re talking about God. This is a divine calling, a heavenly calling. You are holy because of this divine calling. This is a glorious truth. Glorious truth, this calling. This is not obscure is it? This is everywhere and there are more. There are more.


What are we talking about here? We’re talking about a calling of God that results in a person’s salvation. And I will say it again. Every use of the word “call” with regard to salvation in the New Testament epistles refers not to a general outward call, but to a specific, inward, efficacious, saving act of God. It is, in that sense, an unyielding summons from God that you will respond to. That is why theologians have called it “irresistible grace.”


I like the word “call” better. And I like the idea of an unyielding summons, because that emphasizes God’s unyielding, saving work, rather than man’s resistance. But nonetheless, it does fit the little outline in Calvin’s theology of the irresistible grace. When God seeks to save and call a sinner out of darkness into His marvelous light, the question is can the sinner resist?


By the way, 1 Corinthians 7:17, I just thought of it, I don’t want to leave it out. “Only as the Lord has assigned to each one as God has called each in this manner, let him walk.” This is speaking about whether you’re single or married or whatever, But again, it indicates that God has assigned to each one. It says “as the Lord has assigned to each one,” another way to say it, “as God has called each.” So what you have here in the word “calling” is a comparison with the word “assigned.”


God has predetermined this by His own purpose in eternity past. He has assigned salvation to some and He reaches out to save them through this call. He calls them out of darkness. He calls them out of unbelief. He calls them out of confusion and chaos. He calls them out of sin and unholiness. This is God’s sovereign, saving call. And He is unyielding in exercising His power to make the elect sinner come into His court, come in and be presented as forgiven, and justified, and on the way to eternal glory.


Now to say this bothers some people. It doesn’t bother me because the Bible says it. It bothers some people. They say, “Well, this isn’t right. It is not right to say God is going to bring sinners to Himself kicking and screaming. To say this is to say that you can’t fight it. You can’t resist it. God’s going to overpower you against your will and violate your freedom.”


And there are many who say God will not violate our free will. I hear that all the time. God will not violate our freedom to choose. And they want to say, “Well look, we can - God makes really strong suggestions. That’s what He does. And, you know, sometimes He’s really convincing. And a lot of times He makes really strong suggestions through good preachers who are really convincing. And we can pray and we can ask God to crank up those strong suggestions. We can ask God to open people’s minds, and open their hearts, and remove their blindness and make them responsive, but not force them to come. We can ask God to give them opportunity, and a whole lot of information and motivation. But in the end, it’s got to be up to them.”


A notable scholar who is very helpful in many of his writings, Norman Geisler, wrote a book called Chosen But Free. And he presents the reality of irresistible grace or this saving calling, this effectual calling as, according to him, making God into a dictator with power that crushes our freedom by dragging us into His Kingdom.


Well, all of that is really needless because that’s not what Scripture says. No one was ever saved against their will. No one was ever brought into the Kingdom kicking and screaming, protesting. No one was ever saved who was dragged against the grain of having dug their heels in. That is not what Scripture teaches. No one has ever been saved against his will. No one ever will be. Everybody who is saved is saved because they will to believe the gospel. In fact, they will with all their heart and soul to believe the gospel. No one is ever saved without being willing. It is an act of the will to believe.


The question is what made them willing? Or better, who made them willing? Was it them? Was it the preacher? That’s what we would have to conclude in that kind of system. Somehow it’s them in the end, and somehow though they were not willing they became willing, they found somewhere they could get a hold of a boot strap and pull themselves up out of unwillingness into willingness. Or the preacher smashed their resistance, and by his preaching he made them willing.


There’s a little verse tucked in to Psalm 110. You don’t have to look it up, just note it. Psalm 110:3. It says this. “Your people will be willing in the day of Your power.” Really good. “Your people will be willing in the day of Your power.” No sinner is ever going to be willing until the power of God comes upon that sinner. There’s nothing in the sinner to make him willing. There’s nothing in the sinner, even under the best of the preacher’s effort. It is only when the power of God makes him willing that he becomes willing.


Am I sure about that? Absolutely. No sinner has the capacity to be willing. Can I prove that to you? Look at Romans chapter 3 - just a couple of passages here. Romans chapter 3. I always think I’m going to have plenty of time and I never have enough. Romans 3:10. “There is none righteous, no not one. There’s none who understands, there’s none who seeks for God.” That’s pretty complete, isn’t it? “All have turned aside, together they’ve become useless. There is none who does good. There is not even one. Their throat is an open grave, with their tongues they keep deceiving, the poison of asps is under their lips whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness. Their feet are swift to shed blood. Destruction and misery in their paths and the path of peace have they not known and there is no fear of God before their eyes.”

I would say that’s a pretty sad condition. That’s a broad way to say the heart of man is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked. Nobody seeks God. Nobody on their own is willing. Ephesians 2:1. Here’s why. Ephesians 2:1. “And you were dead in your trespasses and sins.” Dead people don’t respond. “You formerly walked according to the course this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit working in the sons of disobedience. You lived in the lust of our flesh, indulging in the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just like everybody else.” That’s you. It’s hopeless.

First Corinthians 2:14. “The natural man understandeth not the things of God. They’re foolishness to him.” Second Corinthians 4:3-4. “If our gospel is hidden, it’s hidden to them that believe not; and they believe not because the God of this world has blinded their minds, lest the light of the glory of the gospel should shine unto them.” We went through this in great detail. This is what we mean by “total depravity,” the utter inability of the sinner to be willing.

No sinner left to himself is able. No sinner left to himself is willing to understand, willing to repent, willing to believe, willing to choose God, Christ and salvation. Corruption is far too profound and too spiritually systemic. We can’t choose that. We can’t seek it. The sinner only becomes willing in the day of divine power. God must display His sovereign power in summoning us, in giving us the will to believe. He must make us willing. “Your people will be willing in the day of Your power.”
But it’s not that the sinner comes kicking, and screaming, and protesting, and trying to resist, because when the summons comes, the sinner is made willing. In fact, it is the passion of his heart. When the gospel comes, the sinner is so eager to respond. As lost sinners, people have the freedom of the will. That’s right. Their will is - look at them, look at the sinners. They operate freely. And what do they do? They choose to sin. They just kind of pick and choose which ones.

The lost sinner has the freedom of the will. In salvation we also have the freedom of the will, but instead of choosing sin we choose Christ and the difference is because we have been summoned with a divine call. Jonathan Edwards said, “What we choose is not really determined by the will as if it existed independently. What we choose,” said Edwards, “is really determined by the mind and what it is that the mind thinks is best.” And by the way, the mind is not neutral and the mind is not objective. The mind is corrupt. So what the mind thinks is best is what we choose. We are free to choose what our mind thinks is best, and apart from God and apart from Christ, our mind is corrupt and it thinks that sin is best.


Edwards says, “When confronted with God, the mind of the sinner never thinks that following or obeying God is a good choice.” The sinner’s will is never to choose God. Nothing is stopping him, but his mind doesn’t regard submission to God and the gospel as desirable, so that unless God changes the way we think, our mind will always tell us to rebel against God and the gospel. Which is precisely what we do.


The sinner will resist until the kind of grace comes out of heaven, a heavenly call. I don’t like the idea of irresistible grace because irresistible is negative and I’d rather see it as unyielding summons by God than something negative. Secondly, because irresistible grace is redundant. If grace is all of God, then it is irresistible because it says in Romans that God says, “I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious,” also in the book of Exodus. It is by definition irresistible. If God decides to be gracious, then it’s all of Him, enough said.


So I don’t like the word “irresistible” because it’s negative and it’s redundant. And thirdly, it over-qualifies or under-defines grace. Grace is much more than irresistible. The Bible doesn’t call this irresistible grace, it calls it a heavenly calling, a calling to holiness, a calling to sanctification, a calling to justification, a calling to communion with the saints, a calling into the body of Christ. And that word just under-defines that.


How about just calling it a saving call? You might mess up your little acrostic a little bit, that’s okay. This is God’s gift to us, Ephesians 2:8-9. Do you remember that? Ephesians 2:8-9. “For by grace you have been saved through faith and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God not of works, that no one should boast.” The whole thing is a gift from God. The whole thing comes as a gift from God to us.
I love what it says in Philippians 1:29. “For to you it has been granted for Christ’s sake not only to believe in Him but to suffer for His sake.” It’s been granted to you for the sake of Christ to believe. The call brought you to faith. The call brought you to understand. It brought you to conviction, repentance, faith. Clearly, this is a saving call and nothing less than that makes any sense of the Scripture.


It’s like Acts 13:48, where it says, “As many as had been appointed to eternal life believed.” How did those that were appointed to eternal life believe? Because God called them out of their ignorance. He called them out of their confusion. He called them out of their darkness. He called them out of their iniquity, called them out of their sin. And the call was an efficacious call activated by the power of God that brought them into the light, into the truth, into repentance and into faith.


It’s like Lydia in Acts 16:14. It says, “The Lord opened her heart.” I love that. “The Lord opened her heart.” That is the efficacious call. The Lord opens the mind and the heart, and the one who is unwilling becomes willing. Acts 18:27 says, Paul “helped greatly those who believed through grace.”


So we could just call it grace. It is the grace that actually saves. It is the grace that actually saves. The sinner can’t change his will, can’t move his will toward God. Do you remember John 1:12? “As many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name who were not born of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man but of God.” Nobody would will that unless God first willed it and activated it.


It isn’t because the sinner comes to his senses. It isn’t because the sinner is persuaded by clever preaching, or an emotional appeal. Those are all deceptive illusions. It isn’t because you’re so nice or you’ve made Jesus look so nice. People are saved because God summons them, and He summons them under the proclamation or the understanding of the gospel. Forget all the nonsense. The gospel alone is what God uses to awaken the sinner and He makes him willing, whereas he has never been willing before.


I am a part of a group of pastors and theologians called “The Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals,” and happily a part of it. It is a formidable group of leading theologians around the country, and I’m very honored to hang around them. In 1996, the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals put out what is called “The Cambridge Declaration.” This is what it says, “Unwarranted confidence in human ability is a product of fallen human nature.” Good statement. “Unwarranted confidence in human ability is a product of fallen human nature.” The only reason we think we can will to be saved is because our thinking is corrupt.

It goes on to say, “This false confidence now fills the evangelical world from the self esteem gospel to the health and wealth gospel, from those who have transformed the gospel into a product to be sold and sinners into consumers who want to buy, to others who treat Christian faith as being true simply because it works. God’s grace in Christ is not merely necessary. God’s grace in Christ is not merely necessary, but is the sole efficient cause of salvation. We confess that human beings are born spiritually dead and are incapable even of cooperating with regenerating grace.”


Further, the statement says, “We reaffirm that in salvation we are rescued from God’s wrath by His grace alone. It is the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit that brings us to Christ by releasing us from our bondage from sin and raising us from spiritual death to spiritual life, and we deny that salvation is in any sense a human work. Human methods, techniques or strategies by themselves cannot accomplish this transformation. Faith is not produced by our unregenerated human nature.”
Now, I love hymns. Yesterday and today I was reading hymns, reading the Psalms in meter yesterday, because I was given a Bible from the year 1672, 330-some years old. And in the back of it somebody has taken a 150 Psalms and put them to meter and rhyme and I’m reading through. I’m determined to write some more hymns in the years ahead. I just - I love great music. And one of my favorite writers, Charles Wesley - now you’ve got to understand the Wesley brothers, they were anti-Calvinists. And you know what? The Calvinism they were against was pretty bad stuff.


Calvinism had gotten corrupted in the days of the Wesleys and it was harsh and unbending and many of the people who espoused Calvinism were anything but Christians. But Charles Wesley, who wrote so many hymns from an Arminian or anti-Calvinist viewpoint, believing in the freedom of the will and the freedom of the sinner to choose, in spite of his theology knew better. Because listen to what he wrote. You’ll recognize it. It’s from a hymn that he wrote called “And Can It Be.” This is what it says.


“Long my imprisoned spirit lay, fast bound in sin and nature’s night. Thine eye defused, a quickening ray I woke the dungeon flamed with light. My chains fell off, my heart was free. I rose, went forth to follow Thee.” Now only a Calvinist could write that. What? Come on, Charles, fess up. You’re a prisoner in darkness and night, but until God shined the light and broke your chains, nothing could change. This is the glory of this great truth. In the end, it all goes to God.


I want to close. Over the years several times we’ve had Dr. Jim Boice preach here. Great, great servant of God, great scholar, preacher, monumental life. And his books are still a blessing to me. I certainly considered him a mentor. In fact, R.C. Sproul told me one day that the death of Jim Boice was God’s judgment on America. He has left a huge hole. Boice, who loves hymns and wrote hymns, wrote in one of his books about John Newton. It was 1779 when John Newton wrote “Amazing Grace,” which we all know. But I don’t know if you all know the whole story of this man born in 1725 who died in 1807. Let me just read you a little of what Boice wrote about him.


“Newton was raised in a Christian home in which he was taught verses of the Bible, but his mother died when he was only six years old, and he was sent to live with a relative who hated the Bible and mocked Christianity. Newton ran away to sea. He was wild in those years and was known for being able to swear for two hours without ever repeating himself. He was forced to enlist in the British Navy but he deserted, was captured and beaten publicly as a punishment.


“Eventually, Newton got into the Merchant Marines and went to Africa. In his memoirs he wrote that when he went to Africa he went for one reason only, ‘That I might sin my fill.’ Newton fell in with a Portugese slave trader in Africa in whose home he was cruelly treated. This man often went away on slaving expeditions and when he was gone his power passed to his African wife, the chief woman of his harem. She hated all white men and vented her hatred on poor Newton.


“He says that for months he was forced to grovel in the dirt eating his food from the ground like a dog. He was beaten mercilessly if he touched it.” That is, he had to eat it with his face and not his hands. “In time, thin and emaciated, Newton made his way to sea, where he was picked up by a British ship making its way up the coast to England. When the captain of the ship learned that the young man knew something about navigation as a result of being in the British Navy, he made him his ship’s mate.


“But even then, Newton fell into trouble. One day when the captain was ashore, Newton broke out the ship’s supply of rum and got the whole crew drunk. He was so drunk himself that when the captain returned and struck him on the head, Newton fell overboard and would have drowned if one of the sailors hadn’t quickly hauled him back on board. Near the end of one voyage as they were approaching Scotland, the ship ran into bad weather and was blown off course. Water poured in, the ship began to sink. The young profligate was sent down into the hole to pump water. The storm lasted for days. Newton was terrified. He was sure the ship would sink and he would drown.


“But in the hold of the ship as he desperately pumped water, the God of all grace, whom he had tried to forget but who had never forgotten him, brought to his mind Bible verses he had learned in his home as a child. The way of salvation opened up to him, he was born again in the hold of the ship. He was deeply transformed and much later when he was again in England, Newton began to study theology, eventually became a preacher first in a little town called Olney and later in London.”


Of this storm William Cooper - really the very unique British poet - who became a fast personal friend of Newton and lived with him for several years, wrote this. Cooper wrote about the storm in which God called Newton. This is what he wrote. You’ll remember these words. “God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform, He plants His footsteps in the sea and rides upon the storm.”
“And so he does,” says Boice. “Newton was a great preacher of grace for he had learned that where sin increased, grace abounded all the more. He is proof that the grace of God is sufficient to save anybody and that He saves them by grace alone.”


And now you know when John Newton wrote “Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound,” it was when he heard the call of the sound of God’s grace that he was awakened. And believers ever since have been singing of Amazing Grace, summoning grace as God calls the sinner to Himself. Bow your heads with me.

This great truth, Father, thrills our hearts to the very core that You have stooped down to call us because You chose us for glory. We bless You, we praise You, we thank You. And may we live lives worthy of this heavenly calling, having been called to holiness, called to fellowship, called into the body, called into intimate union with Christ, called to be messengers. May we walk worthy of this calling. And we praise You in Your Son’s name. Amen.


posted with permission

http://www.gty.org/resources/sermons/90-296/the-doctrine-of-gods-effectual-call?Term=predestination