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As a child, maybe you memorized
this verse, we love Him because He first loved us. Well, along
that line, would you say that we choose Him, choose God, because
He first chose us? Let's ponder that question next
on Grace To You. Charles Spurgeon put it this
way, from the Word of God, I gather that damnation is all of man,
from top to bottom, and salvation is all of grace, from first to
last. Well, what do you think about
that? If getting saved is completely by God's doing, what role, if
any, do you have in it? Bottom line, is salvation a matter
of the sinners choosing Christ or Christ choosing sinners? Well,
hopefully, John MacArthur's current series will help clear up any
questions you may have about the doctrine of election. The
title of the series, Chosen for Eternity. Let's study here on
Grace to You, and let me encourage you to give careful attention
to today's message as here's John MacArthur to begin. John
MacArthur First Peter 1, 1 and 2. Will you turn to that text? And we are in store for wonderful
riches as we share together in God's precious truth. Peter opens
this epistle, as you know, by calling his readers chosen, chosen. What a tremendous thought. We
are the chosen of God, chosen by God for the privilege of knowing
Him through His Son, Jesus Christ. And as he introduces the fact
that they are chosen, he gives us some of the elements of the
great doctrine of election. In the word chosen is the nature
of our election. That is, we are the select of
God by His grace. He then discusses the condition
of our election. Because we are the elect, we
reside, verse 1 says, as aliens. We don't belong here. We are
citizens of another kingdom, members of another family. We
are aliens here in temporary exile, if you will. That's the
condition of our election. Thirdly, the source of our election
in verse 2, according to the foreknowledge of God the Father. God chose us based upon a predetermined
relationship. The sphere of our election came
next, and we noted in verse 2 that we enter into the actual experience
of our election by the sanctifying work of the Spirit. Fifthly,
and those were just reviews, to the purpose of our election,
in verse 2, The sanctifying work of the Spirit has been done that
you may obey Jesus Christ. So Peter is telling us, then,
that that electing work produces obedience to Jesus Christ. It
is not perfect obedience, and where we fail, there will be
a heart of brokenness and confession, but it is characteristic of a
true believer to obey Jesus Christ. and then to seal that truth.
Peter mentions the sixth aspect of election that I want to call
to your attention. Let's call it, and there are
many things we could call it, let's call it the security of
our election. He says this, that you may obey Jesus Christ, and
notice the next phrase, underline that in your Bible and in your
mind, and be sprinkled with His blood. That phrase needs very
careful attention. What does Peter mean that sprinkling
blood on people is somehow connected to obedience? What does he mean? Can I submit to you that in the
death of Jesus Christ, there was not only provided in the
new covenant salvation, but also there was bound in that a covenant
of obedience. When we come and accept the sacrifice
of Christ for us, We are not just accepting the benefit of
His death on our behalf, we are covenanting with Him in obedience. And that is consecrated by blood,
by the death of Christ. The sprinkling of the blood on
the altar is seen in the sacrifice of Christ on the cross, satisfying
God. In fact, you might be interested
to know that Jesus, when He died, quoted Exodus 24, the exact words. When He spoke of His sacrifice
as the blood of the covenant and inherent in the new covenant,
was a promise. And the promise was that the
Lord would come and redeem us and we would respond to keep
His Word. To create a salvation without
that covenant is to create a false covenant. The sprinkling of blood
presupposed a shedding of blood. The consecration of the new covenant
presupposed the sacrifice on the cross where Christ offered
His life, blood for the sake of men at the will of God, He
did it in order that there might be a covenant. Peter's point,
summing it up, is this. The work of Christ satisfies
God. as He dies as a perfect atonement
for sin. But it goes beyond that and it
brings men into a covenant of obedience sealed in blood, a
vital and profound truth. And so we say that what Peter
is concluding is that when you were set apart by the Holy Spirit,
you were set apart to God for a life of obedience sealed in
the blood of Christ. Obedience is inseparable from
sprinkling of blood. When Christ shed His blood, there
was a covenant of obedience provided. That's why it says in Acts 5.32,
we are witnesses of these things, so is the Holy Spirit whom God
has given to those who obey Him. Obedience is inherent in the
covenant. Salvation and obedience are two
sides of the New Covenant. They are two sides of the New
Covenant. In Romans 6, And about verse
17, I believe, thanks be to God that though you were slaves of
sin, you became obedient. You can't talk of salvation without
talking of obedience. You can't talk of a new covenant
without talking of obedience. And the blood was sprinkled symbolically
on us as our part of obedience and on God as His part of faithfulness. We have been elect to obey, elect
unto obedience. And there's one more thought,
and this is one that thrills me. Listen to this. You say,
well, now, why the blood sprinkled on the altar? What is God's part? Listen to this. The blood sprinkled on us symbolizes
our commitment to obedience. The blood sprinkled on the altar
on God symbolizes His commitment to forgiveness. Did you get that?
To grace. Marvelous thought. That's the
covenant. The covenant is we promise to
obey and God promises to forgive when we don't. Is that a marvelous
covenant? That's what the blood provided.
That's the two sides of the covenant of obedience, and that's the
security of our election. We are secure as elect because
of the covenant. We are brought into a covenant
of obedience, and our life is characterized by obedience. And
if you say to someone, become a Christian and don't worry about
obedience, you're not giving them the true message. When you
call someone to salvation, you are calling them into a covenant.
Our part is obeying and God's part is forgiving when we fail.
And that's the covenant. That's the covenant. When you
come to God through Christ, you say, Oh God, I give my life to
you. I want to obey you. I promise
to live for you, to love you, to serve you as best I can. and you're sprinkled with the
blood of Christ symbolically and your sins are washed, you
become His child, the blood sprinkled on the altar on His part is His
bond to you that when you fail to keep that covenant, He is
eager and gracious to forgive your sin. Tremendous thought. Tremendous thought. The security
of our election comes in the fact that not only were we sprinkled
in the covenant, but God in the altar was sprinkled, and He'll
keep His side when we fail to keep our side. Same blood that
sealed the covenant covers the sin of the disobedient Christian. That's the security of our election.
That's why He keeps on cleansing us from all what? Sin. What a truth. So we see the truth
of election. It's nature, condition, source,
sphere, purpose, security. Lastly, the advantages of our
election, and I'm just going to extrapolate off of the concluding
statement in verse 2, may grace and peace be yours in fullest
measure. That is repeated often in the New Testament by the writers
of the epistles. The gift of salvation is grace.
The result is peace. Peter says, I want you to have
it in abundance. That's his wish. It's an optative verb. You Greek
students know that expresses a wish. I wish for you grace. I wish for you peace in maximum
measure. I wish for you all the best,
all that God has, all that God can give. multiplied again and
again and again. In other words, I wish you all
the blessings of being the elect. Isn't that good? And let me tell
you something, there's some tremendous blessings in being elect. Can
I jump off Peter's thought and close by just giving you a little
list? What are the advantages of election? We think about the
doctrine of election, and we sort of shrivel up. We don't
want to talk about it. It's too deep, too confusing,
too hard to understand. Let me tell you what election
ought to raise in your heart, the responses that it ought to
have. You shouldn't run from it. You should run to it. You
shouldn't be afraid of it. You should rejoice in it. Here's
why. Election is, first of all, the most pride-crushing doctrine
in Scripture. That's right. It produces humility. It produces humility. It is the
most humiliating truth there is, that you had absolutely nothing
to do with your salvation. It just crushes your spiritual
and religious pride. Spurgeon called it the most stripping
doctrine in the world. It strips you of everything.
He wrote this, I know nothing, nothing again that is more humbling
than this doctrine of election. I have sometimes fallen prostrate
before it when endeavoring to understand it, but when I came
near it and the one thought possessed me, God hath from the beginning
chosen you unto salvation, I was staggered by that mighty thought.
And from the dizzy elevation down came my soul, prostrate
and broken, saying, Lord, I am nothing, I am less than nothing. Why me? Why me? It is a pride-crushing doctrine,
and that is a blessing because God gives grace to the humbled. Secondly, it is a God-exalting
doctrine. It gives all the glory to God.
It declares that repentance is from God, that faith is from
God, that the power for obedience is from God, that even when we
fail, His part of the covenant is to cover our failures. No wonder we respond, not unto
us, not unto us, O Lord, but to Thy name give glory. The very fact that our will acted
was a result of His movement. It is the most God-exalting element
of the doctrine of salvation, just as it is the most pride-crushing
element. Thirdly, it is joy-producing. It is joy-producing. Listen,
folks, our only hope is to be elect. Did you get that? That's
our only hope. So that brings us supreme joy.
When I think about the fact that God chose me, that is the supreme
joy because I would have no hope of salvation apart from that.
I would have no hope if God in His sovereign mercy had not chosen
me. What a joyous thought. Fills
my heart. Romans chapter 9. except the
Lord had left to us a posterity, we would have become as Sodom,
verse 29. We'd be destroyed like the rest
of the ungodly if the Lord hadn't chosen us. Psalm 65, 4 says,
blessed is the man whom you choose, listen to this, and cause to
approach you that he may dwell in your courts. Psalm 65, 4,
blessed is the man whom you choose. Oh beloved, that ought to inspire
joy. God has loved you since He was God, and He's always been
God, and He'll always love you. Fourthly, it is the most privilege-granting
doctrine in salvation. It is the most pride-crushing,
God-exalting, joy-producing, privilege-granting truth. because
it grants to us all spiritual blessings in the heavenlies in
Christ Jesus, Ephesians 1, 3 says. We receive benefit upon benefit
upon benefit. who we have been made according
to chapter 2, verse 9, a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, a people of God's own possession, in order that we
might proclaim the excellencies of Him who called us out of darkness
into light." Look at the privileges we have, incredible privileges
out of election. You ought to love that doctrine.
You ought to cling to that doctrine. It is the most holiness-promoting
of the elements of salvation. What other more compelling thing
could there be for me to live to the glory of God than to know
that He chose me out of His own love, out of absolute gratitude
I should be compelled to a life of purity. I really feel, people,
that when the doctrine of election is not properly taught and understood,
people run around under the assumption that they did something for their
salvation, and because they feel that it was partly them, they
are not compelled to serve and love and glorify the God whose
alone was the will and the act of salvation. You don't help
people by not having them understand this. Why do you think Paul in
Colossians 3.12 says, And so, as those who have been chosen
of God, holy and beloved, put on a heart of compassion, kindness,
humility, gentleness, patience, and so forth. Get your act together
because you're the chosen of God. What a compelling thing. What an absolutely compelling
thing that is. Election should produce obedience. Spurgeon again said, nothing
under the gracious influence of the Holy Spirit can make a
Christian more holy than the thought that he is chosen. Shall
I sin, he says, after God has chosen me? Shall I transgress
after such love? Shall I go astray after so much
loving kindness and tender mercy? Nay, my God, since Thou hast
chosen me, I will love Thee, I will live to Thee, I will give
myself to Thee to be Thine forever, solemnly consecrating myself
to Thy service." End quote. It's a compelling thing. Sixthly,
the doctrine of election is the most strength-giving of the elements
of salvation. What do you mean? If I'm the
elect, I'm secure. If I entered into a covenant
of obedience through the sprinkling of blood, and the blood was sprinkled
on the altar representing God, it means that God is bound to
keep covenant. My part is to obey, His part
is to forgive my disobedience. I'm secure in that. It's the
most strength-giving element. To know that He which has begun
a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ,
or perfect it. Jesus said, Him that comes to
Me, I'll in no wise cast out. All that the Father gives to
Me will come to Me. I've lost none of them, I'll raise them
all up at the last day." Why? They're the elect. Listen, beloved,
if you are elect, that seals your eternity. What a strengthening
truth that is. And again, I go back to what
Spurgeon said on this subject. Listen to this rather lengthy
quote, but rich quote. He said, no man will be so bold
as he who believes that he is the elect of God. What cares
he for man if he is chosen of his maker? What will he care
for the pitiful chirpings of some tiny sparrows when he knows
he is an eagle of a royal race? Will he care when the beggar
points at him? When the royal blood of heaven
runs in his veins? Will he fear though the whole
world stand against him? If earth be all in arms abroad,
he dwells in perfect peace, for he is in the secret place of
the tabernacle of the Most High in the great pavilion of the
Almighty. I am God's, says he. I am distinct from other men. Is not my name written in God's
book? Does he care for the world? Nay,
like the lion that careth not for the barking dog, he smiles
at all his enemies. And when they come too near him,
he moves himself and dashes them to pieces. He walks about them
like a colossus, while little men walk under him and understand
him not. His brow is made of iron, his
heart of flint. What does he care of man? Nay,
If one universal hiss came up from the wide world, he would
smile at it and say, he that hath made his refuge God shall
find a most secure abode." That's right. What do we fear? We're
the elect. Nothing can make a man more bold,
more strong, more courageous, more secure than that. See how
wonderful this doctrine is? Wonderful doctrine. It crushes
our pride, makes us humble. It exalts our God. It produces
joy, joy from deep down within. It grants privileges, compels
holiness, gives strength and boldness. Can you ignore that
kind of doctrine? If the church ignores that doctrine,
look what it loses, look what it misses. Tremendous truth. Beloved, we
need to understand what God has given us in His grace, and we
need not to be ignorant because in every doctrine that God provides,
there is the privilege of giving a response of praise to Him. And therefore, to be ignorant
of the doctrine of election would be to be retarded in an ability
to praise and glorify God. Let's pray together. How thankful
we are for Your choosing us. We are awestruck, and yes, we
do not fully understand it. But, oh God, how we rejoice in
it, how we rejoice in it. We are in the covenant of obedience. When we came to Christ, it was
our heart's desire to obey Him. We're so thankful that it was
Your desire and Your promise through blood to forgive our
disobedience. We, like Israel of old, have
made the grandiose promise that we will obey, and we, like them,
have failed. Thank You for the blood that
covers those failures. Thank You for choosing us. Thank
You for choosing Your church. Oh, mystery, mystery, mystery. But what is mystery to our intellect
is sunshine to our hearts. Thank you for what you've done
for us. Amen. Repeating what John MacArthur
just said, nothing makes you more bold, strong, courageous,
and secure than being God's elect. That's the wonderful reality
of being chosen for eternity, and that's the title of John
MacArthur's current study here on Grace To You, Chosen For Eternity. John, throughout the study you
focused your attention on the benefits of election. Today alone
you looked at six of those benefits with all the good things the
Bible says about election. Why do you think that so many
folks are hesitant to embrace it? Well, I think there might
be a few reasons, Carl, why people don't embrace it. There is a
whole branch of Christianity coming out of Pelagianism through
John Wesley, Charles Finney, down to the modern time, which
shows rejection of the doctrine of election, rejection of it
from a biblical viewpoint. There are people who have been
exposed to that, raised in those traditions and taught those things.
There are a large number of people who, while not being Wesleyan
in the sense that they fully reject the doctrines of grace,
as we believe the Bible teaches them, they reject some of them.
They want to hang on to the sovereignty of God in saving someone without
works. They want to hang on to the perseverance
of the saints, eternal security, but they don't like the idea
that God chose people to be saved, so they pick and choose a little
bit. And so I think the first reason that people reject the
doctrine is because they've been taught not to accept it, and
they have been taught that it's not fair, it's not just, God
would never do that, and so it's sort of loaded with negative
connotations. I think it becomes the most hated
doctrine in Scripture. for this primary reason, because
sinners want to think they make a contribution to their salvation. What the doctrines of grace do,
what the doctrine of sovereign election says is that every person
is utterly unwilling and incapable of contributing to his or her
own salvation. That is a mighty blow against
human pride. There are many more issues in
this discussion. I want to tell you about something
that will help you with all of them. It's a CD entitled Answering
the Key Questions about Election and we'll send it to you free
of charge if you ask. Does election discourage evangelism? Is free will a biblical concept? Should new believers be taught
the doctrine of election? Those are three common and difficult
questions John answers in this interview. Again, the CD answering
the key questions about the doctrine of election is yours free. Request
your copy today. Make that request by email the
address letters at gty.org. Or, if you're using the regular
mail, that address is graced to you, Post Office Box 4000,
Panorama City, California, 91412. Or, call the toll-free number
anytime, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. 1-800-55-GRACE. Now be sure you
ask for the free CD of Answering the Key Questions about the Doctrine
of Election. Send an email to letters at gty.org or write to
Box 4000, Panorama City, California, 91412. Or call 1-800-55-GRACE. Now, I'd also like to encourage
you to visit the Grace To You website, gty.org, because there you can
download John's current study, Chosen for Eternity. Those lessons
and 3,000 other sermons by John are free of charge in MP3 or
transcript format. You can also download the Grace
To You application for your iPhone, Android, or iPad. It gives you
immediate, free access to John's verse-by-verse Bible teaching
wherever you are. Again, get the app that you need
to download any of the free messages. That's at gty.org. And now, for John MacArthur,
our Director of Communications, Jay Flowers, and the entire staff,
I'm Carl Miller, inviting you back tomorrow for another 30
Minutes of Unleashing God's Truth, one verse at a time, on Grace
To You. How does election affect your
day-to-day life? Be here tomorrow as John walks
you through a watershed passage that pulls this challenging doctrine
together. On the next Grace To You!
Chosen by God, Part 3B
Series Chosen for Eternity
First John says, “We love Him” — God — “because He first loved us.” But would you also say we choose God . . . because He first chose us? Ponder that question . . . as you examine the issue of election.
| Sermon ID | 83111208478 |
| Duration | 28:56 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Bible Text | 1 Peter 1:2 |
| Language | English |
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