When Jesus the night before His death prayed His last prayer to His heavenly 
Father in John 17 in the presence of His few disciples, He clearly 
distinguished between two classes of people: (1) The "all people" which are the 
same as the "all flesh" mentioned in 17:2. He says that the Father sent Him 
into the world so that He might "give to them everlasting life." (2) The second 
group is the people whom the Father gave Him who are "OUT OF THE WORLD" (vs. 
6). To them He says He "has manifested Your name, and they have observed [or 
received]" the blessing which the Father has given to the world "in Christ."
The fact that many "in the world" don't want to receive the gift God has given 
them does not mean that the gift was not given to them. If a person refuses to 
believe in Christ, that does not mean that Christ did not die for him. "God so 
loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son" long before you or I chose 
to believe or disbelieve!

Our unbelief cannot annul the faith of God, says Paul in Romans 3:3. In the 
final judgment before the Great White Throne at the end of the biblical 
millennium (Rev. 20:11-15) the lost will realize that their life-long unbelief 
was a rejection of the "everlasting life" which the Father had GIVEN them "in 
Christ." They will see themselves as Esau who "despised" and "sold" the 
birthright that God had given (not merely offered) him (Gen. 25:34; Heb. 
12:16). Oh, may the realization of the gift GIVEN move our hearts out of our 
collective lukewarmness today!

Jesus has a burden on His heart that last night: the disunity that has plagued 
His followers through the ages. Could it be that the root of that tragically 
persistent disunity is the unconscious refusal of "Christian" hearts to 
appreciate that the gift was GIVEN to the world? Could it be that in our 
"lukewarm" hearts we want to circumscribe or limit the love of Christ and 
reduce salvation to a mere offer? Do we want to glory in our own initiative to 
receive? When we enter the New Jerusalem do we want to say, "I'm here because I 
believed! I grabbed the offer! I took the initiative in my salvation!"

It seems very likely that those who enter will beat upon their breasts and say, 
"I'm unworthy! I'm here only because of the grace of God, not because of my 
taking the initiative to believe. To Him alone be all the glory! I thank Him 
for all the troubles He allowed me to have so that unbelieving I might learn to 
believe!"

--Robert J. Wieland

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