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Grace Reigning |
"Vain man would be wise, though he
be born like a wild ass's colt."
Accordingly, he finds
fault with election, as a mere system of arbitrary partiality and favouritism: and tells
us that if there be such a thing as total helplessness in man, and sovereign election in
God, then man is not to blame if he be lost. Mans
entire apostasy and death in sin, so that he cannot save himself, and God's entire
supremacy, so that He saves whom He will, are doctrines exceedingly distasteful to
human-pride. But they are Scriptural.
Why was one thief saved and the other lost? "Even
so, Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight."
God was not bound to save the one, and He had power enough to have saved the other,
and neither could save himself. What made the
difference? The sovereign grace of God.
Why was Paul saved and Judas lost? Was
it because the former deserved to be saved and the latter to be lost? No, neither deserved to be saved. Was it because the one was a fitting object for
the grace of God and the other not? No, the
one was no more a fitting object than the other. Was
it because Paul chose Christ, and Judas rejected Him?
Well, but how was it that Paul chose Christ?
Was it not because Christ chose him?
Why was it that Judea was made a land of light and Egypt remained a region of
darkness? Who made the difference? Man or God? Was
God unjust in leaving Egypt in the shadow of death when He made light to arise on Israel? What had Israel done to deserve a privilege like
this?
Why is it that Britain is a land of light and Africa a land of darkness? Who made the difference? Who sent the gospel to Britain and withheld it
from Africa? Is God unjust in leaving the
mighty continent in the hands of Satan, and in delivering from his yoke this small island
of the sea?
None have deserved saIvation. No man
is more fit for it than another. God was not
bound to save any. God might have saved all. Yet He has only saved some. Is He, then, unjust in only saving some when He
could have saved all? Objectors say, Oh,
those who are lost, are lost because they rejected Christ.
But did not all equally reject Him at first?
What made the unbelief of some give way?
Was it because they willed it, or because God put forth His power in them? Surely the latter.
Might He not, then, have put forth His power in all, and prevented any from
rejecting the Saviour? Yet He did not. Why? Because
so it seemed good in His sight.
Is it unjust of God to save only a few when all are equally doomed to die? If not, is there any injustice in His determining
aforehand to save these few, and leave the rest unsaved?
They could not save themselves, and was it unjust in Him to resolve, in His
infinite wisdom, to save them? Or, was it
unjust in Him not to resolve to save all? Had
all perished there would have been no injustice with Him.
How is it possible that there can be injustice in His resolving to save some?
There can be no grace when there is no sovereignty.
Deny God's right to choose whom He will and you deny His right to save whom He
will. Deny His right to save whom He will,
and you deny that salvation is of grace. If
salvation is made to hinge upon any desert or fitness in man, seen or foreseen, grace is
at an end.
One of the controversies of the present day is respecting the WILL of Godas to whether His will or
man's is the regulating power in the universe, and the procuring cause of salvation to
souls. The supremacy of God's will over
individual persons and events is questioned. Things
are made to turn upon man's will, not on God's. Conversion
is made to turn on man's will, not on God's. Man's
will, not God's, is to decide what individuals are to enter heaven. Man's pen, and not God's, is to write the names
of the saved ones in the Lamb's book of Life! Much
zeal is shown for the freedom of man's will, little jealousy seems to be left for the
freedom of God's will. Men insist that it is
unjust and tyrannical in God to control their wills, yet see nothing unjust, nothing
proud, nothing Satanic in attempting to fetter and direct the will of God. Man, it seems, cannot have his own foolish will
gratified, unless the all-wise God will consent to relinquish His!
Such are some of the steps in the march of Atheism.
Such are the preparations making in these last days by the wily usurper for
dethroning the Eternal Jehovah.
Men may call these speculations. They
may condemn them as unprofitable. To the law
and to the testimony! Of such speculations,
the Bible is full. There man is a helpless
worm, and salvation from first to last, is of the Lord.
God's will, and not man's, is the law of the universe. If we are to maintain the gospelif we are to
hold fast graceif we are to preserve Jehovah's honourwe must grasp these
truths with no feeble hand. For if there be
no such a Being as a Supreme, pre-determining Jehovah, then the universe will soon be
chaos: and if there be no such thing as free electing love, every minister of Christ may
close his lips, and every sinner upon earth sit down in mute despair.