In
reference
to all the aspects from which God’s saving grace may be viewed we
must always
reckon with the reality and gravity of sin. The salvation God has
provided is
more than salvation from sin and its consequences. Its design embraces
the
exceeding riches of God’s grace and contemplates the highest
conceivable
destiny that could be bestowed upon creatures, conformity to the image
of God’s
own Son that he might be the firstborn among many brethren (cf. Rom.
8:29). But
no such destiny could be envisioned or achieved without salvation from
sin in
all its ramifications and liabilities. In order to be salvation to
it
must first of all be salvation from.
We
cannot
assess the gravity of sin unless we probe to that which is central in
its
definition. If we say that sin is selfishness we do state something
that
belongs to the character of sin, especially if we think of
self-centeredness
and construe this as involving the worship of self rather than of the
Creator
(cf. Rom. 1:25). The iniquity of sin is thereby disclosed. Again, if we
say
that sin is the assertion of human autonomy versus the sovereignty of
God we
are saying something relevant. Sin is precisely that, and it became
apparent in
But
we must ask:
are these analyses sufficient? To put it otherwise: does not Scripture
warrant
and compel a more penetrating description? When Paul says that
“the carnal mind
is enmity against God” (Rom. 8:7), he has surely provided us with
what is
ultimate in the definition of sin. Sin is the contradiction of God,
contradiction all along the line of God’s unique and essential
glory. Nothing
is more germane to God’s glory than his truth; he is truth. The
tempter was
well aware of this and so his strategy was framed accordingly. To the
woman he
said: “ye shall not surely die” (Gen. 3:4). This was
blatant contradiction of
God’s veracity. When the woman acceded to this contradiction her
integrity
collapsed and to sin she became captive. Our Lord’s indictment of
the tempter
is to the effect that his own fall from integrity was of the same
character as
that by which he seduced Eve. “He was a murderer from the
beginning and abode
not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a
lie, he
speaketh of his own: for he is a liar and the father of it” (John
8:44).
Yes,
the
essence of sin is to be against God (cf. Ps. 51:4); it is the
contradiction of
God in the whole range of its connotation and application. When Paul
wrote,
“the carnal mind is enmity against God,” he added,
“for it is not subject to
the law of God” (
The
contradiction which sin offers to God and to his will, if it is not
adequately
described as resistance, involves and is expressed in resistance.
Scripture
sometimes uses this term or its equivalents to express the attitude of
unbelief
(cf. Acts 7:51; 13:45; Rom. 10:21; II Tim. 3:8; Tit. 1:9). It is
obvious that
sin consists in resistance to the will of God. If the claims of God
were not
resistible, there would be no sin. The claims of God come to expression
in the
gospel and all rejection of the gospel and of its demands is
resistance. In the
gospel we have the supreme revelation of the grace of God, and Christ
is the
embodiment of that grace. The glory of God is nowhere more effulgent
than in
the face of
When
we speak
of irresistible grace, therefore, it is not to assert that all grace is
irresistible, nor is it to deny the numberless respects in which grace
is
resisted and resisted to the culmination of resistance in everlasting
doom. In
fact the truth of and necessity for irresistible grace may be most
cogently
demonstrated in the premise of resistible grace. The enmity of the
human heart
is most virulent at the point of the supreme revelation of God’s
glory. So
deep-seated and persistent is the contradiction that the Saviour as the
embodiment of grace is rejected. It is when we recognize this that the
need for
irresistible grace is perceived.
In
much of
present-day evangelism it is assumed that the one thing man can do in
the
exercise of his own liberty is to believe in Christ for salvation. It
is
supposed that this is the one contribution that man himself must make
to set
the forces of salvation in operation and that even God himself can do
nothing
towards this end until there is this crucial decision on man’s
own part. In
this assessment there is total failure to reckon with human depravity,
with the
nature of the contradiction that sin involves. Paul tells us that not
only is
the mind of the flesh not subject to the law of God but also that it
cannot be
(
The
foregoing
words of our Lord must be coordinated with another in the same context.
“All
that the Father giveth me shall come unto me, and him that cometh unto
me I
will in no wise cast out” (John 6:37). The giving on the part of
the Father in
this text has been understood as the election in Christ before the
foundation
of the world (cf. Eph. 1:4, 5) or, at least, in terms of giving to the
Son
correlative with or flowing from the election. But this does not by any
means
appear to be the action of the Father referred to in the text. There
are two
reasons for this conclusion. First, in this Gospel elsewhere, when
This
constraint has been called “efficacious.” No other
inference could reasonably
be drawn from John 6:44, 45.
It
is a moral
and spiritual impossibility for a person to come to Christ apart from
the
Father’s drawing. What we find now is that it is a moral and
spiritual
impossibility for the person given by the Father to the Son not to
come. There
is by
The
reality of
such grace is inscribed on
Thus
far
attention has been focused upon the action of God the Father in the
constraint
that issues in faith. It is highly important that this emphasis of
Scripture
should be appreciated. Otherwise we dishonor God the Father and our
view of the
provisions of salvation is seriously distorted. The love of the Father
is the
fountain from which all the acts and processes of redemption proceed.
But we
must also recognize that at the inception of salvation in possession
lie the
operations of grace of which the Father is agent. It is he who calls
effectually into the fellowship of his Son (cf. Rom. 8:28, 30; I Cor.
1:9; Gal.
1:15, 16; Eph. 1:18) and he draws men to the Saviour. When sinners
first
experience the invincible attraction of the Redeemer, are entranced by
his
beauty, and invest their all in him, it is because the Father has made
a
donation to his own Son and placed upon men irresistible constraint. To
conceive of all this as less than irresistible grace is to deny its
character
and impugn the efficacy of the Father’s will.
Most
frequently in theology irresistible grace has been thought to find its
focus in
regeneration, and regeneration is specifically the act of the Holy
Spirit (cf.
John 3:3-8). It would be easy to say that the actions of the Father
referred to
above are simply different ways of expressing regeneration. This is far
too
simplistic and fails to reckon with the manifoldness of the operations
of
grace. In the design of salvation there is an economy. In the
once-for-all
accomplishment of redemption there is an economy. That is, there are
the
specific and distinguishing functions of the distinct persons of the
Godhead.
There is also economy in the application of redemption and we must take
full
account of the diversity involved. To equate the actions of the Father
with
regeneration is to ignore the diversity; our theology is thereby
truncated and
our faith deprived of the richness which the economy requires.
Regeneration
is specifically the work of the Holy Spirit, and our appreciation of
the
economy of salvation demands that we honor him in the distinctive
functions he
performs.
No
ingredient
in the manifold of God’s saving operations bears more relevantly
on the subject
of irresistible grace than does regeneration. Again, our Lord’s
own teaching is
basic. “Except a man be born from above, he cannot see the
The
provision
of grace appears in this connection, as in John 6:44, 65, in the
exception,
born from above, of water, and of the Spirit, the exception that
insures
understanding of and membership in the
It
is John
alone who records for us the Lord’s discourse to
When
these
data are placed in contrast with the impossibility of which our Lord
spoke to
It
is
significant that in the prologue of John’s Gospel there occur the
words, “who
were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of
man but
of God” (John 1:13). The cumulative negatives reinforce the
positive and the
lesson is that of divine monergism. It is not what man does but what
God
effects and God alone to the exclusion of all human volition or agency.
The
same monergism is patent in our Lord’s own teaching. In John
3:3-8 we cannot
suppress the analogy on which the language of regeneration turns. When
a person
is begotten or born according to the flesh, it is not because he or she
decided
for this event. It was wholly by the volition and agency of others. So
in the
new birth. And by whose will and agency is not left in any doubt. The
Holy
Spirit is the agent and he alone. In terms of verse 3 the action is
supernatural,
in terms of verse 5 it is by radical purification and impartation, in
terms of
verse 6 it is invincibly determinative, in terms of verse 8 it is
mysterious
and sovereignly effective.
Why
should
there be any reluctance to accept the truth of irresistible grace? It
is God’s
interposition to do for us what we cannot do of ourselves. It is
God’s amazing
grace to meet our hopeless impotence. Here is the gospel of sovereign
mercy. In
evangelism it is the only hope of its success unto the salvation of
lost souls.
The Holy Spirit accompanies the gospel proclamation with his sovereign
demonstration and power. The lost are born of the Spirit and the fruit
is unto
holiness and the end everlasting life.
In
concluding,
may we return to John 6:37, 44, 65. When a sinner comes to Christ in
the
commitment of faith, when the rebellious will is renewed and tears of
penitence
begin to flow, it is because a mysterious transaction has been taking
place
between the persons of the Godhead. The Father has been making a
presentation,
a donation to his own Son. So perish the thought that coming to Christ
finds
its explanation in the autonomous determinations of the human will. It
finds
its cause in the sovereign will of God the Father. He has placed upon
this
person the constraint by which he has been captivated by the glory of
the
Redeemer and invests in him all his interests. Christ is made wisdom
from God,
righteousness, sanctification, and redemption. Here is grace
surpassing; and it
is grace insurmountable.