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SERMON X. DOCTRINE
OF ELECTION
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Public Domain Text
Reformatted by Katie Stewart
CONTENTS.
SERMON I.
SINNERS BOUND TO CHANGE THEIR OWN HEARTS. (page 1) ---New Window
-- Ezek. 18-31.--
"Make you a new heart, and a new spirit, for why will ye die?"
SERMON II.
HOW TO CHANGE YOUR HEART. (page 2) ---New Window
-- Ezek. 18-31.--
"Make you a new heart, and a new spirit, for why will ye die?"
SERMON III.
TRADITIONS OF THE ELDERS. (page 3) ---New Window
-- Matthew, 15-6.--
"Thus have ye made the commandment of God of none effect, by your tradition."
SERMON IV.
TOTAL DEPRAVITY.
(page 4) ---New Window
-- John, 15:42.--
"But I know you, that ye have not the love of God in you."
SERMON V.
TOTAL DEPRAVITY.
(page 5) ---New Window
-- Romans, 8:7.--
"The carnal mind is enimity against God, for it is not subject to the law of
God, neither indeed can be."
SERMON VI.
WHY SINNERS HATE GOD. (page 6) ---New Window
-- John, 15:25.--
"They have hated me without a cause."
SERMON VII.
GOD CANNOT PLEASE SINNERS. (page 7) ---New Window
-- Luke, 7:31-35.--
"And the Lord said, Whereunto then shall I liken the men of this generation?
and to what are they like? They are like unto children sitting in the marketplace,
and calling one to another, and saying, We have piped unto you, and ye have not danced;
we have mourned to you, and ye have not wept. For John the Baptist came neither eating
bread nor drinking wine; and ye say, He hath a devil. The Son of man is come eating
and drinking; and ye say, Behold a gluttonous man, and a winebibber, a friend of
publicans and sinners! But wisdom is justified of all her children."
SERMON VIII.
CHRISTIAN AFFINITY.
(page 8) ---New Window
-- Amos, 3:3.--
"Can two walk together except they be agreed?"
SERMON IX.
STEWARDSHIP.
(page 9) ---New Window
-- Luke, 16:2.--
"Give an account of thy stewardship."
SERMON X.
DOCTRINE OF ELECTION.
(this page)
-- Ephesians, 1:45.--
"According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that
we should be holy and without blame before him in love: Having predestinated us unto
the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure
of his will."
SERMON XI.
REPROBATION.
(page 11) ---New Window
-- Jeremiah, 6:30.--
"Reprobate silver shall men call them, because the lord hath rejected them."
SERMON XII.
LOVE OF THE WORLD.
(page 12) ---New Window
-- I John, 2:15.--
"Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love
the world, the love of the Father is not in him."
SERMON X.
DOCTRINE OF ELECTION.
-- Ephesians i. 45.--
"According as he hath chosen us in him
before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before
him in love: Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ
to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will."
This lecture was typed in by Vic Johanson.
THE subject of this discourse is the doctrine of election, and in
the discussion of it, I shall pursue the following order:
I. Show what is not intended by this doctrine.
II. What is intended by it.
III. That it is a doctrine of the Bible.
IV. That it is the doctrine of reason.
V. Why they are elected.
VI. When they were elected.
VII. That it is not a partial election.
VIII. That there is no injustice in it.
IX. That it opposes no obstacle to the salvation of the non-elect.
X. That it is the best that could be done for the world.
XI. That it does not supersede the use of means for the salvation of the elect.
XII. That it is the only ground of encouragement for using means.
XIII. How it may be known who are elected.
I. I am to show what is not intended by this doctrine.
II. But, by the doctrine of election, is intended,
that a part of the human family are chosen to eternal salvation; that not only are
they chosen as a whole, but as individuals; every one of whom will finally be saved.
III. This doctrine is taught in the Bible.
It is plainly taught in the text. Peter directs his first epistle "to the strangers
scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, elect, according
to the foreknowledge of God the father, through sanctification of the Spirit unto
obedience, and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ: grace unto you, and peace
be multiplied. Blessed be the God and father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according
to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope, by the resurrection
of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and
that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you who are kept by the power of God,
through faith unto salvation, ready to be revealed in the last times." In 2d
Timothy i. 9.--The apostle says, "who hath saved us and called us with an holy
calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace which
were given us in Christ Jesus before the world began."
I will not take up your time in multiplying passages of Scripture; scarcely any doctrine
of the Bible is more abundantly and unequivocally taught than this. Much ingenuity
has been exercised in explaining these passages so as to show that they do not teach
election as I have stated it. But the manner in which the attempts to explain this
doctrine away have uniformly terminated, has fully demonstrated that it cannot be
explained away, and that the doctrine as it lies upon the face of the Scriptures
is that contained in the proposition I have stated, viz. that a part of mankind are
chosen to eternal life and salvation.
IV. It is the doctrine of reason.
Peter asserts the foreknowledge of God, by addressing Christians as elect according to the foreknowledge of God. Paul, in the eighth chapter of his epistle to the Romans, says, "For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his son, that he might be the first-born among many brethren; moreover, whom he did predestinate, them he also called, and whom he called, them he also justified; and whom he justified, them he also glorified.
V. I am to show why they are elected.
VI. I am to show when the election was made.
The apostle says it was before the world began, or from eternity. It must have been
when the plan of the divine government was settled in his mind, and the present mode
of administration concluded upon. Some suppose that men are not elected until they
are converted, and confound their election with their conversion. But this is neither
reasonable nor scriptural. Christ will say to his saints in the judgment day; "Come,
ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world;" and certainly it is unreasonable to suppose that an unchangeable
God has changed his mind in regard to an individual, and made a new choice, and elected
him to eternal life when he sees that he is converted.
VII. I am to show that this election is not partial.
By partiality, we understand undue bias or favor towards one individual or party,
founded upon some interest or prejudice. Some particular liking we have for one individual
more than for others. I have already shown that election does not turn upon any thing
in the character of the elect, or any particular prejudice or partiality which God
has in their favor. The question of their election did not turn upon any thing in
them, but upon the best interests of his government. In electing them, God did not
look over the human family to see whom he loved best, but upon whom in the wisest
administration of his government he could bring sufficient moral influence to bear
to save them. It was no partiality to them, but a high and holy regard to the great
interests of his immense kingdom that led to their election.
VIII. I am to show that there is no injustice in this.
God was under obligation to no one--he might in perfect justice have sent all mankind
to hell. The doctrine of election will damn no one; by treating the non-elect according
to their deserts he does them no injustice; and surely his exercising grace in the
salvation of the elect is no act of injustice to the non-elect, and especially will
this appear to be true if we take into consideration the fact that the only reason
why the non-elect will not be saved is because they pertinaciously refuse salvation.
He offers mercy to all. The atonement is sufficient for all. All may come and are
under an obligation to be saved. He strongly desires their salvation and does all
that he wisely can to save them. Why then should the doctrine of election be thought
unjust.
IX. Election opposes no obstacle to the salvation of the non-elect.
The choice of some to eternal life, on the ground that they can be converted under
the wisest administration of government, is by no means throwing any difficulty in
the way of the conversion of the non-elect; for with them God uses all the means
that are consistent with wisdom to reclaim and save them. The conversion of the elect,
instead of being an obstacle in the way, is a powerful inducement to the non-elect
to turn and live. The conversion of the elect, sustaining such relations as they
do to the multitudes of the non-elect, is among the most powerful motives that could
be presented for the conversion of the non-elect.
X. This is the best that could upon the whole be done for the inhabitants of this
world.
It is reasonable to infer from the infinite benevolence of God that the plan of his
government includes the salvation of a greater number than could have been saved
under any other mode of administration. This is as certain as that infinite benevolence
must prefer a greater to less a good. To suppose that God would prefer a mode of
administration that would accomplish the salvation of a less number than could be
saved under some other mode, would manifestly be to accuse him of a want of benevolence.
It is doubtless true that he could so vary the course of events as to save other
individuals than he does. To convert more in one particular neighborhood, or family,
or nation, or at one particular time, than he does.
Suppose there is a man in this city, who has so strongly entrenched himself in error
that there is but one man in all the land who is so acquainted with his refuges of
lies as to be able to answer his objections and rout him from his hiding-places.
Now it is possible that if this individual could be brought in contact with him he
might be converted: yet if he is employed in some distant part of the vineyard, his
removal from that field of labor to this city, might not on the whole be most for
the interest of God's kingdom; and more might fail of salvation through his removal
here, than would be converted here by such removal. God has in view the good of his
whole kingdom. He works upon a vast and comprehensive scale. He has no partialities
for individuals, but moves forward in the administration of his government with his
eye upon the general good, designing to convert the greatest number, and produce
the greatest amount of happiness within his kingdom.
XI. Election does not supersede the necessity of means for the conversion of the
elect.
They are chosen to salvation through the sanctification of the spirit and belief
of the truth. They must then hear, believe, and obey the truth. If the end is to
be accomplished, the necessary means must be used: would a farmer, because he knew
that God had settled it in his own mind whether he should have a crop or not, say
that if he was to have a crop he would have it, whether he sowed his land or not?
Would a sick man neglect to use means for the recovery of his health, because he
knows that God has numbered his days, and that it was settled in the divine mind
whether he would die or not? Certainly not. If the farmer is to have a crop, he must
sow his field and use the necessary means. So if the sick man is to live, the means
requisite for his recovery must be used. So in the cure of sinners, if means be not
used, not even the elect can be saved, and those that neglect the means will never
make their calling and election sure.
XII. The doctrine of election affords the only ground for encouragement in the
use of means for the salvation of sinners.
Knowing as I do that the carnal mind is enmity against God; that men are utterly
opposed to the way of salvation; that they hate the Gospel, and all the efforts that
are made to save them; what encouragement should I have to preach the Gospel, were
it not that I know that God has chosen some to eternal life, and that many or all
my hearers may be of this number; and that his providence has collected you here,
with a design to reach you with the arrows of his truth. It is this consideration
alone that can afford any ground for encouragement to hold forth in your heaving
the word of life.
XIII. I am to show how it may be known who are elected.
Those of the elect that are already converted are known by their character and conduct.
They demonstrate the reality of their election by their obedience to God. Those that
are unconverted may settle the question each one for himself whether he is elected
or not, so as to have the most satisfactory evidence whether he is of that happy
number. If you will now submit yourselves to God, you many know that you are elected.
But every hour you put off submission, increases the evidence that you are not elected.
INFERENCES AND REMARKS.
I. Foreknowledge and election are not inconsistent with free agency, but are founded
upon it. The elect were chosen to eternal life, because God foresaw that in perfect
exercise of their freedom, they could be induced to repent and embrace the Gospel.
II. You see why many persons are opposed to the doctrine of election, and try to
explain it away; 1st they misunderstand it, and 2d. they deduce unwarrantable inferences
from it. They suppose it to mean, that the elect will be saved at all events, whatever
their conduct may be; and again they infer from the doctrine that there is no possibility
of the salvation of the non-elect. Their understanding of the doctrine would be an
encouragement to the elect to persevere in sin, knowing that their salvation was
sure, and their inference would drive the non-elect to desperation, on the ground
that for them to make efforts to be saved would be of no avail. But both the doctrine,
as they understand it, and the inference are false. For election does not secure
the salvation of the elect irrespective of their character and conduct; nor, as we
have seen, does it throw any obstacle in the way of the salvation of the non-elect.
III. This view of the subject affords no ground for presumption on the one hand,
nor for despair upon the other. No one can justly say, If i am to be saved, I shall
be saved, do what I will, Nor can any one say, if I am to be damned, I shall be damned,
do what I will. But the question is left, so far as they are concerned, as a matter
of entire contingency. Sinners, your salvation or damnation is as absolutely suspended
upon your own choice, as if God neither knew or designed any thing about it.
IV. This doctrine lays no foundation for a controversy with God. But on the other
hand it does lay a broad foundation for gratitude, both on the part of the elect
and the non-elect. The elect certainly have great reason for thankfulness that they
are thus distinguished. Oh what a thought, to have your name written in the book
of life, to be chosen of God an heir of eternal salvation, to be adopted into his
family, to be destined to enjoy his presence, and to bathe your soul in the boundless
ocean of his love forever and ever. Nor are the non-elect without obligations of
thankfulness. You ought to be grateful if any of your brethren of the human family
are saved. If all were lost, God would be just. And if any of your neighbors or friends,
or any of this dying world receive the gift of eternal life, you ought to be grateful
and render everlasting thanks to God.
V. The non-elect often enjoy as great or greater privileges than the elect. Many
men have lived and died under the sound of the gospel, have enjoyed all the means
of salvation during a long life, and have at last died in their sins, while others
have been converted upon their first hearing the Gospel of God. Nor is this difference
owing to the fact that the elect always have more of the strivings of the Spirit
than the non-elect. Many who die in their sins appear to have had conviction for
a great part of their lives; have often been deeply impressed with a sense of their
sins and the value of their souls, but have strongly intrenched themselves under
the refuge of lies, have loved the world and hated God, and fought their way through
all the obstacles that were thrown around them to hedge up their way to death, and
have literally forced their passage to the gates of hell.
VI. Why should the doctrine of election be made a stumbling block in the way of sinners.
In nothing else do they make the same use of the purposes and designs of God, as
on the subject of religion; any yet in every thing else God's purposes and designs
are as much settled and have as absolute an influence. God as certainly designed
the day and circumstances of your death as whether your soul shall be saved. It is
not only expressly declared in the Bible, but is plainly the doctrine of reason.
What would you say on going home from meeting, if you should be called in to see
a neighbor who was sick, and on inquiry you should find he would neither eat nor
drink, and that he was nearly starved to death: on expostulating with him upon his
conduct, he should calmly reply, that he believed in the sovereignty of God, in foreknowledge,
election, and decrees; that his days were numbered, that the time and circumstances
of his death were settled, that he could not die before his time, and that all the
efforts he could make would not enable him to live a moment beyond his time. If you
attempted to remonstrate against his inference, and such an abuse and perversion
of the doctrine of decreed, he should accuse you of being a heretic, of not believing
in divine sovereignty. Now should you see a man on worldly subjects reasoning and
acting thus, you would pronounce him crazy. Should farmers, mechanics, and merchants
reason in this way in regard to their worldly business, they would be considered
fit subjects for bedlam.
VII. How forcibly the perversion and abuse of this doctrine illustrate the madness
of the human heart, and its utter opposition to the terms of salvation. The fact
that God foreknows and has designs in regard to every other event, is not made an
excuse for remaining idle or worse than idle on these subjects. But where their duty
to God is concerned, and here alone, they seize the Scriptures and wrest them to
their own destruction. How impressively does this fact bring out the demonstration
that sinners want an excuse for disobeying God, that they desire an apology for living
in sin, that they seek an occasion for making war upon their Maker.
VIII. I have said that the question is as much open for your decision, that you are
left as perfectly to the exercise of your freedom, as if God neither knew nor designed
any thing in regard to your salvation. Suppose there was a great famine in this city,
and that John Jacob Astor alone had provisions in great abundance, that he was a
benevolent and liberal-minded man, and willing to supply the whole city with provisions
free of expense, and suppose there existed a universal and most unreasonable prejudice
against him, insomuch that when he advertised in the daily papers that his store-houses
were open, that whosoever would might come and receive provisions, without money
and without price, they all with one accord began to make excuse and obstinately
refused to accept the offers. Now suppose that he should employ all the cartmen to
carry provisions around the city, and stop at every door. But still they strengthened
each others hands, and would rather die that be indebted to him for food. Many had
said so much against him that they were utterly ashamed to feel and acknowledge their
dependence upon him. Others were so much under their influence, as to be unwilling
to offend them, and so strong was the tide of public sentiment, as that no one had
the moral courage to break loose from the multitude and accept of life. Now suppose
that Mr. Astor knew beforehand the state of the public mind, and that all the citizens
hated him, and had rather die than be indebted to him for life. Suppose he also knew
from the beginning that there were certain arguments that he could bring to bear
upon certain individuals that would change their minds, and that he should proceed
to press them with these considerations until they had given up their opposition,
had most thankfully accepted his provisions, and were saved from death. Suppose he
used all the arguments and means that he wisely could to persuade the rest, but that
notwithstanding all his benevolent efforts they adhered to the resolution and preferred
death to submission to his proposals. Now suppose he had perfect knowledge from the
beginning, of the issue of this whole matter; would not the question of life and
death be as entirely open for the decision of every individual as if he knew nothing
about it.
IX. Some may ask why, does God use means with the non-elect, provided he is certain
they will not accept? I answer because he designs that they shall be without excuse.
He will demonstrate his willingness and their obstinacy before the universe. He will
rid his garments of their blood; and although he knows that their rejection of the
offer will only enhance their guilt and aggravate their deep damnation, still he
will make the offer, as there is no other way in which to illustrate his infinite
willingness to save them, and their perverse rejection of his grace.
Lastly, God requires you to give all diligence to make your calling and election
sure. In choosing his elect, you must understand, that he has thrown the responsibility
of their being saved upon them, that the whole is suspended upon their consent to
the terms; you are all perfectly able to give your consent, and this moment to lay
hold on eternal life. Irrespective of your own choice no election can save you, and
no reprobation can damn you. The spirit and the bride say Come, let him that heareth
say Come, let him that is athirst come, and whosoever will, let him take the waters
of life freely. The responsibility is yours. God does all that he wisely can, and
challenges you to show what more he could do that he has not done. If you go to hell,
you must go stained with your own blood. God is clear, angels are clear. To your
own master your stand or fall; mercy waits, the Spirit strives; Jesus stands at the
door and knocks; do not then pervert this doctrine, and make it an occasion of stumbling
till you are in the depth of hell.
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SERMON 1 ---New Window
SERMON 2 ---New Window
SERMON 3 ---New Window
SERMON 4 ---New Window
SERMON 5 ---New Window
SERMON 6 ---New Window
SERMON 7 ---New Window
SERMON 8 ---New Window
SERMON 9 ---New Window
SERMON 10 (this page)
SERMON 11 ---New Window
SERMON 12 ---New Window
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