Sunday, November 08, 2009
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Amazing Grace or Random Grace
Tim Challies 

A while ago I received an email from a father, concerned about the task of 
sharing the gospel with his children. Here is what he sent to me: 

I have such a hard time grasping the notion of election as a father. I struggle 
with why so much of Bible addresses us as decision making/choice making
creatures, appealing to us to recognize something and depart from sin and 
accept Christ. 

Yet if God is simply "zapping" us with irresistible Grace, it seems to me that 
our efforts for others to turn away sin and accept Christ is really not genuine.
It seems rigged.

Is there anything that can assure me that I have an influence in whether my 
child's number is called?

I certainly understand the heart behind this question. I, too, am a father and 
one who is deeply concerned about the eternal welfare of my children. I love
them so deeply and desire nothing greater than that they would turn to Christ 
in repentance and faith

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Like this reader, I am sometimes tempted to express frustration with the way 
God has chosen to save a people for Himself. But through it all I know that
his ways are not only good; his ways are best.

Here's the 3-part answer I gave this father:

First, I think we need to have much greater confidence in God's sovereignty 
than in the ability of our children to choose God without his foreordaining
grace. Without God's grace, none of us could ever turn to him. So we need to 
take refuge in God's sovereignty and not make it an occasion of fear or dread.


Second, I think it is helpful to see predestination as something that is of far 
greater concern to God than to us. While we see from Scripture that God
has predestined his elect to eternal life, I'm not sure that it is helpful for 
us to think too much about who is among the elect and who is not. 

Third, we need to be careful in how we understand God's work of election. 
Scripture does not say that certain people "had their number called" and others
did not. Instead, we read that God chose some because he had special love for 
them. There is nothing random about it.

Take adoption for example.

When a couple sets out to adopt a child, they have a large number of potential 
children available to them. But somewhere in the process of adoption they
set their heart on a particular child. It is not that they have chosen this 
child randomly, but rather that they did so because their affections were set
upon him.

Their selection of a particular child is not unfair to the other children. One 
child was graciously selected for the special blessing of adoption while
many others were not. Giving a gift to one person does not make it unfair to 
withhold a gift from another.

While God has, indeed, ordained who will be saved, he has not told us who he 
will save. And so we are called us to take the gospel message far and wide,
preaching it to all men and allowing God to work the gift of faith into those 
whom he has chosen for life.

Our task in evangelism is not ultimately to win people to Christ but to 
faithfully preach the gospel message. If we preached that message, we have done
what God calls us to.

As believers, we must learn to rejoice in His goodness as well as in His 
sovereign choice and grace. His grace is not random.

It is amazing.
Tim Challies

O. Addison Gethers

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