Intro
In 418 AD, the Church held a council at Carthage, today in Tunisia, to deal 
with a false teaching in the Church.  That teaching was called “Pelagianism.”  
Pelagianism taught that we humans are born neutral before God, neither good nor 
evil.  And because we are neutral, someone’s own choices or efforts get him 
into heaven. 

The Church council at Carthage condemned Pelagianism as heresy.  But people 
being what they are, wanting to choose the doctrines they like, some protested 
against the Church’s upholding of the truth.  Some who liked Pelagianism began 
causing problems within the Roman Empire, protesting and creating civil unrest. 
 

Main Body
So, the Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, Flavius Augustus Honorius, became 
involved.  Now, we must remember the Roman Empire was then split into a western 
empire, based in Rome, and an eastern empire, based in Constantinople.  And by 
this time, the Roman Empire had largely become Christian.  And so the Roman 
Emperor even involved himself and issued a decree, hoping it would not only 
help get rid of a heresy within the Church, but end the civil unrest.  Emperor 
Flavius declared, “Praise the Name of the Lord, who saves us by grace alone, 
apart from our efforts, works, or decisions, because of Christ.”  

But by human logic, Pelagianism sounds reasonable--that a person’s own choice 
gains him entrance into heaven.  Often our own experience even supports this.  
We think back in our lives and say, “Yes, I remember a time, many times, when I 
considered who Jesus is and what that means for me.  And yes, I chose to follow 
Him.”  And although our human experience often leads us to think that we are 
neutral before God, that experience contradicts what God Himself tells us about 
ourselves.  Romans 3:10-12 says, “Not one is righteous, not even one.  No one 
understands.  No one seeks God.  All have turned away.”

Even more, as we learn more about what God expects of us, how His standard for 
our lives is perfection, fear begins to fill our hearts.  For when moments of 
brazen honesty seize our hearts, we can’t explain why we sometimes do what we 
know is wrong, even when we don’t want to do such deeds.  Those few moments of 
brutal honesty destroy our excuses and rationalizations, letting us know that 
we aren’t neutral before God.  We then realize that we are messed up in many 
ways. 

Well, what happened to Pelagianism?  It disappeared.  It would not rear its 
hideous head again until Protestant churches formed and began to promote a 
“decision theology.”  Today, the teaching that you become a Christian by asking 
Jesus into your heart as your personal Lord and Savior is just Pelagianism 
wearing a new mask. 

Well, if we cannot choose God, what does it mean when--as far as we can 
tell--that we do choose Him?  It means that when we do “decide” to choose Him, 
God has already placed faith in our hearts by the Holy Spirit.  That means such 
choices we make toward God are a result and fruit of faith, not that which 
brings about our salvation.  

But how can we miss such a work of God in our hearts?  Ah, now we get to the 
Gospel reading for today.  It’s because the work of the Holy Spirit is a quiet 
work.  In our Gospel reading, we heard these words: The Holy Spirit “will not 
speak on his own, but he will speak only what he hears.”  

The message from the Holy Spirit is not about Himself; He speaks what God the 
Father gives Him to speak.  And so the Holy Spirit does not create and work 
fervor in our hearts about Himself.  Instead, the message from the Holy Spirit 
is about grace--God the Father’s grace in sending God the Son to us and for us. 
 

In other words, the Father tells the Holy Spirit to speak about and bring us 
Jesus.  It’s as Paul wrote in 2 Thessalonians: “God chose you from the 
beginning to be saved through sanctification by the Spirit and faith in the 
truth.  He called you to this through our gospel, so you would obtain the glory 
of our Lord Jesus Christ” (2 Thess 2:13-14). 

When Flavius decreed that God “saves us by grace alone, apart from our efforts, 
works, or decisions, because of Christ,” that decree pointed Christians away 
from themselves and their choices to the grace of God.  And what is the “grace 
of God”?  It’s is an attitude that originates from God Himself; it’s a judgment 
in the mind of God.  

Now, you’re probably thinking that “judgment” is automatically something bad.  
If God passes judgment on me, then I’m already without hope.  But that’s not 
the case.  For the “grace of God” is a judgment from God that you do not 
receive what you deserve because of your sins.  And that grace of God then 
foists all of that on the shoulders of Christ Jesus.  

God’s judgment of grace is also something good for you.  For God’s judgment of 
grace is that He chooses to see you and treat you as He would Jesus, His own 
Son (and it treats His Son as you deserve).  Do you see who’s doing the 
choosing?  And so, God’s grace is His attitude toward you that grows from an 
eternal love, granting and giving complete and eternal forgiveness.  Since this 
grace originates in the mind of God, that means it doesn’t come about from your 
efforts, works, or decisions.  God holds such a judgment because of Jesus.  

Yet, sadly, because we American Christians know almost nothing of our own 
New-Testament Church history, we often think that “grace alone” means “grace 
plus.”  It’s grace plus your efforts.  It’s grace plus your works.  It’s grace 
plus your decision.  

That’s how the human world works, right?  We barter for something.  Each side 
has to give, so it can take.  Otherwise, it’s no deal.  We expect our elected 
leaders to pass legislation, which means that both Democrats and Republicans 
have to give up something, all so they can get something they each want passed 
into law.  And so we naturally bring that thinking and mindset to our 
relationship with God.  We think, “I’ve got to give something to God for Him to 
give me salvation.”  And so, today, many think we have to give Him our heart 
before He will save us. 

But there’s nothing that we can exchange for the grace of God!  Apart from 
Christ’s blood already covering our sins, no effort or decision to choose God 
will even do.  For sin even taints our decisions, which make them unacceptable 
to God.  That means not even a choice you make to choose God will enable you to 
receive and enjoy God’s grace.  For if your salvation needed anything from you, 
even your self-generated belief, you would die in your sins.  For you can’t 
self-generate faith.  After all, as Ephesians 2:8 tells us, faith is a gift 
that God gives you. 

Every form of “grace plus” denies and rejects the grace that God gives, which 
is only by grace alone!  It’s as we earlier sang: “Not what I feel or do, can 
give me peace with God; not all my prayers and sighs and tears can bear my 
awful load….  Thy grace alone, O God, to me can pardon speak; Thy pow’r alone, 
O Son of God, can this sore bondage break” (LSB 567, 2, 5).  That’s grace 
alone!  And this grace alone is God’s idea, God’s promise, God’s doing, and 
God’s gift, which we receive in exchange of nothing!  The grace of God is not 
grace plus our intent, decision, effort, or work.  

Well, we now know what grace isn’t.  Our decision or works have nothing to do 
with His grace.  All right, that’s what grace isn’t--but what IS grace?  Grace 
is a promise from God to you and for you!  God’s grace is the promise of God 
the Father’s love--for you.  This grace is a promise of the Son’s full 
redemption from sin and death--for you.  And this grace is a promise of Holy 
Spirit’s presence in your life--for you.  

The Holy Spirit is not some impersonal force, like gravity.  Through the Holy 
Spirit, Your heavenly Father comforts you, bringing to you His blessing.  Your 
elder brother, Christ the Lord, sends the Holy Spirit, which is how He is makes 
His face to shine on you.  And this Comforter and Advocate, the Holy Spirit of 
Truth, works within you, so your God, the only true God, the Blessed Holy 
Trinity, gives you peace.  And that all this is true for you--and to you--is 
the work of the Holy Spirit!

The work of the Spirit is to bring you to Christ.  Every day, and every moment 
after the Spirit has begun living within you, He even brings you to “decide” 
for Christ, keeping you with Christ.  The Spirit comforts you with Christ.  And 
where the message from God’s Word is doing these things, there the Holy Spirit 
is at work.  And this work of the Spirit is grace alone!

Where the Gospel is proclaimed, where the Sacraments are given out, there the 
Holy Spirit is at work, which means that Jesus Christ is also there!  Through 
this work of the Holy Spirit, Christ comes to you in what He has chosen to use 
to bring you Himself: Word, water, bread and wine.  Sunday after Sunday, year 
after year, century after century, Christians hold on to Christ by the Spirit 
He has sent. 

Conclusion
The Spirit has called you by the Gospel.  He has turned on the light of faith 
within you with His gifts of Word and Sacrament.  He has kept you in the faith 
until this moment, even as He promises to finish this good work in you by 
keeping you in the faith until Christ returns on the Last Day.  

The Holy Spirit has gathered you with others by putting you in Christ’s Church 
in this place.  And you can spot where the Spirit is at work whenever you spot 
where Jesus has promised to be: in the preached word, in baptism, in the Lord’s 
Supper, and absolution.  That is how you receive and get God’s grace on this 
side of heaven.  Amen. 


--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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