Particular
Election by C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, March 22, 1857, By Pastor C. H.
Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
Therefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling and
election sure: for if you do these things, you shall never fall: For so an
entrance shall be ministered to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. (2Pe 1:10,11)
1. It is exceedingly desirable that in the hours of worship and in the house
of prayer our minds should be as much as possible divested of every worldly
thought. Although the business of the week will very naturally struggle with
us to encroach upon the Sabbath, it is our business to guard the Sabbath
from the intrusion of our worldly cares, as we would guard an oasis from the
overwhelming irruption of the sand. I have felt, however, that today we
should be surrounded with circumstances of peculiar difficulty in
endeavouring to bring our minds to spiritual matters; for of all times
perhaps the most unlikely for getting any good in the sanctuary, if that
depends upon mental abstraction, election times are the worst. So important
in the minds of most men are political matters, that very naturally after
the hurry of the week, combined with the engrossing pursuit of elections, we
are apt to bring the same thoughts and the same feelings into the house of
prayer, and speculate, perhaps, even in the place of worship, whether a
Conservative or a Liberal shall be returned for our borough, or whether for
the City of London there shall be returned Lord John Russell, Baron
Rothschild, or Mr. Currie. I thought, this morning, “Well, it is of no use
my trying to stop this great train in its progress. People are just now
going on at an express rate on these matters; I think I will be wise, and
instead of endeavouring to turn them off the line, I will turn the points,
so that they may still continue their pursuits with the same swiftness as
ever, but in a new direction. It shall be the same line; they shall still be
travelling in earnest towards election, but perhaps I may have some skill to
turn the points, so that they shall be enabled to consider election in a
rather different manner.”
2. When Mr. Whitfield was once solicited to use his influence at a general
election, he returned answer to his lordship who requested him, that he knew
very little about general elections, but that if his lordship took his
advice he would make his own particular “calling and election sure;” which
was a very proper remark. I would not, however, say to any people here
present, despise the privilege which you have as citizens. Far be it from me
to do it. When we become Christians we do not stop being Englishmen; when we
become professors of religion we do not cease to have the rights and
privileges which citizenship has bestowed upon us. Let us, whenever we shall
have the opportunity of using the right of voting, use it as in the sight of
Almighty God, knowing that for everything we shall be brought into account,
and for that among the rest, seeing that we are entrusted with it. And let
us remember that we are our own governors, to a great degree, and that if at
the next election we should choose wrong governors we shall have no one to
blame but ourselves, however wrongly they may afterwards act, unless we
exercise all prudence and prayer to Almighty God to direct our hearts to a
right choice in this matter. May God so help us, and may the result be for
his glory, however unexpected that result may be to any of us!
3. Having said so much, let me, then, turn the points, and draw you to a
consideration of your own particular calling and election, bidding you in
the words of the apostle, “the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your
calling and election sure: for if you do these things, you shall never fall:
For so an entrance shall be ministered to you abundantly into the
everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” We have here,
first of all, two fundamental points in religion—“calling and election;” we
have here, secondly, some good advice—“to make your calling and election
sure,” or, rather, to assure ourselves that we are called and elected; and
then, in the third place, we have some reasons given us why we should use
this diligence to be assured of our election—because, on the one hand, we
shall so be kept from falling, and on the other hand, we shall attain to “an
abundant entrance into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ.”
4. I. First of all, then, there are the TWO IMPORTANT MATTERS IN
RELIGION—secrets, both of them, to the world—only to be understood by those
who have been quickened by divine grace: “CALLING AND ELECTION.”
5. By the word “calling” in Scripture, we understand two things—one, the
general call, which in the preaching of the gospel is given to every
creature under heaven, the second call (that which is here intended) is the
special call—which we call the effectual call, by which God secretly, in the
use of means, by the irresistible power of his Holy Spirit, calls out of
mankind a certain number, whom he himself has before elected, calling them
from their sins to become righteous, from their death in trespasses and sins
to become living spiritual men, and from their worldly pursuits to become
the lovers of Jesus Christ. The two callings differ very much. As Bunyan
puts it, very succinctly, “By his common call, he gives nothing; by his
special call, he always has something to give; he has also a brooding voice,
for those who are under his wing; and he has an outcry, to give the alarm
when he sees the enemy come.” What we have to obtain, as absolutely
necessary to our salvation, is a special calling, made in us, not to our
ears but to our hearts, not to our mere fleshly understanding, but to the
inner man, by the power of the Spirit. And then the other important thing is
election. As without calling there is no salvation, so without election
there is no calling. Holy Scripture teaches us that God has from the
beginning chosen us who are saved to holiness through Jesus Christ. We are
told that as many as are ordained to eternal life believe, and that their
believing is the effect of their being ordained to eternal life from before
all worlds. However much this may be disputed, as it frequently is, you must
first deny the authenticity and full inspiration of the Holy Scripture
before you can legitimately and truly deny it. And since, without a doubt, I
have many here who are members of the Episcopal church, allow me to say to
them what I have often said before, “You, of all men, are the most
inconsistent in the world, unless you believe the doctrine of election, for
if it is not taught in Scripture there is this one thing for an absolute
certainty, it is taught in your Articles.” Nothing can be more forcibly
expressed, nothing more definitely laid down, than the doctrine of
predestination in the Book of Common Prayer; although we are told what we
already know, that that doctrine is a high mystery, and is only to be
handled carefully by men who are enlightened. However, without a doubt, it
is the doctrine of Scripture, that those who are saved are saved because God
chose them to be saved, and are called as the effect of that first choice of
God. If any of you dispute this, I stand upon the authority of Holy
Scripture; aye, and if it would be necessary to appeal to tradition, which I
am sure it is not, and no Christian man would ever do it, yet I would take
you up on that point; for I can trace this doctrine through the lips of a
succession of holy men, from this present moment to the days of Calvin, from
there to Augustine, and from there on to Paul himself; and even to the lips
of the Lord Jesus Christ. The doctrine is, without a doubt, taught in
Scripture, and if men were not too proud to humble themselves under it, it
would universally be believed and received as being nothing but the obvious
truth. Why, sirs, do you not believe that God loves his children? and do you
not know that God is unchangeable? therefore, if he loves them now he must
always have loved them. Do you not believe that if men are saved, God saves
them? And if so, can you see any difficulty in admitting that because he
saves them there must have been a purpose to save them—a purpose which
existed before all worlds? Will you not grant me that? If you will not, I
must leave you to the Scriptures themselves; and if they will not convince
you on that point, then I must leave you unconvinced.
6. It will be asked however, why is calling here put before election seeing
election is eternal, and calling takes place in time? I reply, because
calling is first to us. The first thing which you and I can know is our
calling: we cannot tell whether we are elect until we feel that we are
called. We must, first of all, prove our calling, and then our election is
sure most certainly. “Moreover, whom he did predestinate, those he also
called: and whom he called, those he also justified: and whom he justified,
those he also glorified.” Calling comes first in our apprehension. We are by
God’s Spirit called from our evil estate, regenerated and made new
creatures, and then, looking backward, we behold ourselves as being most
assuredly elect because we were called.
7. Here, then, I think I have explained the text. There are the two things
which you and I are to prove to be sure to ourselves—whether we are called
and whether we are elected. And oh, dear friends, this is a matter about
which you and I should be very anxious. For consider what an honourable
thing it is to be elected. In this world it is thought a mighty thing to be
elected to the House of Parliament; but how much more honourable to be
elected to eternal life; to be elected to “the Church of the firstborn,
whose names are written in heaven;” to be elected to be a companion with
angels, to be a favourite of the living God, to dwell with the Most High,
among the fairest of the sons of light, nearest to the eternal throne!
Election in this world is only a short lived thing, but God’s election is
eternal. Let a man be elected to a seat in the House: seven years must be
the longest period that he can hold his election; but if you and I are
elected according to the Divine purpose, we shall hold our seats when the
daystar shall have ceased to burn, when the sun shall have grown dim with
age, and when the eternal hills shall have bowed themselves with weakness.
If we are chosen of God and precious, then we are chosen for ever, for God
does not change in the objects of his election. Those whom he has ordained
he has ordained to eternal life, “and they shall never perish, neither shall
any man pluck them out of his hand.” It is worth while to know ourselves to
be elect, for nothing in this world can make a man more happy or more
valiant than the knowledge of his election. “Nevertheless,” said Christ to
his apostles, “do not rejoice in this, but rather rejoice that your names
are written in heaven”—that being the sweetest comfort, the honeycomb that
drops with the most precious drops of all, the knowledge of our being chosen
by God. And this, too, beloved, makes a man valiant. When a man by diligence
has attained to the assurance of his election, you cannot make him a coward,
you can never make him cry craven even in the thickest battle, he holds the
standard fast and firm, and cleaves his foes with the scimitar of truth.
“Was not I ordained by God to be the standard bearer of this truth? I must,
I will stand by it, despite you all.” He says to every enemy, “Am I not a
chosen king? Can floods of water wash out the sacred unction from a king’s
bright brow? No, never! And if God has chosen me to be a king and a priest
to God for ever and ever, come what may or come what will—the lion’s teeth,
the fiery furnace, the spear, the rack, the stake, all these things are less
than nothing, seeing I am chosen by God to salvation.” It has been said that
the doctrine of necessity makes men weak. It is a lie. It may seem so in
theory, but in practice it has always been found to be the reverse. The men
who have believed in destiny, and have held fast and firm by it, have always
done the most valiant deeds. There is one point in which this is akin even
with Mohammed’s faith. The deeds that were done by him were chiefly done
from a firm confidence that God had ordained him to his work. Never had
Cromwell driven his foes before him if it had not been in the stern strength
of this almost omnipotent truth; and there shall scarcely be found a man
strong to do great and valiant deeds unless, confident in the God of
Providence, he looks upon the accidents of life as being steered by God, and
gives himself up to God’s firm predestination, to be borne along by the
current of his will, contrary to all the wills and all the wishes of the
world. “Therefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling
and election sure.”
8. II. Come, then, here is the second point GOOD ADVICE. “Make your calling
and election sure.” Not towards God, for they are sure to him: make them
sure to yourself. Be quite certain of them; be fully satisfied about them.
In many of our dissenting places of worship very great encouragement is held
out to doubting. A person comes before the pastor, and says, “Oh! sir, I am
so afraid I am not converted; I tremble lest I should not be a child of God.
Oh! I fear I am not one of the Lord’s elect.” The pastor will put out his
hands to him, and say, “Dear brother, you are all right so long as you can
doubt.” Now, I hold, that is altogether wrong. Scripture never says, “He who
doubts shall be saved,” but “He who believes.” It may be true that the man
is in a good state; it may be true that he needs a little comfort; but his
doubts are not good things, nor ought we to encourage him in his doubts. Our
business is to encourage him out of his doubts, and by the grace of God to
urge him to “give all diligence to make his calling and election sure,” not
to doubt it, but to be sure of it. Ah! I have heard some hypocritical
doubters say, “Oh! I have had such doubts whether I am the Lord’s,” and I
have thought to myself, “And so I have very great doubts about you.” I have
heard some say they do tremble so because they are afraid they are not the
Lord’s people; and the lazy fellows sit in their pews on the Sunday, and
just listen to the sermon; but they never think of giving diligence, they
never do good, perhaps are inconsistent in their lives, and then talk about
doubting. It is quite right they should doubt, it is well they should; and
if they did not doubt we might begin to doubt for them. Idle men have no
right to assurance. The Scripture says, “Give diligence to make your calling
and election sure.”
9. Full assurance is an excellent attainment. It is profitable for a man to
be certain in this life, and absolutely sure of his own calling and
election. But how can he be sure? Now, many of our more ignorant hearers
imagine that the only way they have of being assured of their election is by
some revelation, some dream, and some mystery. I have enjoyed very hearty
laughs at the expense of some people who have trusted in their visions.
Really, if you had passed among so many shades of ignorant professing
Christians as I have; and had to resolve so many doubts and fears, you would
be so infinitely sick of dreams and visions that you would say, as soon as a
person began to speak about them, “Now, do just hold your tongue.” “Sir,”
said a woman, “I saw blue lights in the front parlour when I was in prayer,
and I thought I saw the Saviour in the corner, and I said to myself I am
safe.” (Mr. Spurgeon here narrated a remarkable story of a poor woman who
was possessed with a singular delusion.) And yet there are tens of thousands
of people in every part of the country, and members too of Christian bodies,
who have no better ground for their belief that they are called and elected,
than some vision equally ridiculous, or the equally absurd hearing of a
voice. A young woman came to me some time ago; she wanted to join the
church, and when I asked her how she knew herself to be converted, she said
she was down at the bottom of the garden, and she thought she heard a voice,
and she thought she saw something up in the clouds that said to her
so-and-so. “Well,” I said to her, “that thing may have been the means of
doing good for you, but if you put any trust in it, it is all over with
you.” A dream, aye, and a vision, may often bring men to Christ; I have
known many who have been brought to him by them, beyond a doubt, though it
has been mysterious to me how it was; but when men bring these forward as a
proof of their conversion, there is the mistake, because you may see fifty
thousand dreams and fifty thousand visions, and you may be a fool for all
that, and all the bigger sinner for having seen them. There is better
evidence to be had than all this: “Give diligence to make your calling and
election sure.”
10. “How, then,” says one, “am I to make my calling and election sure?” Why,
thus:—If you would get out of a doubting state, get out of an idle state; if
you would get out of a trembling state, get out of an indifferent lukewarm
state; for lukewarmness and doubting, and laziness and trembling, very
naturally go hand in hand. If you would enjoy the eminent grace of the full
assurance of faith under the blessed Spirit’s influence and assistance, do
what the Scripture tells you—“Give diligence to make your calling and
election sure.” In what shall you be diligent? Note how the Scripture has
given us a list. Be diligent in your faith. Take care that your faith is of
the right kind—that it is not a creed, but a credence—that it is not a mere
belief of doctrine, but a reception of doctrine into your heart, and the
practical light of the doctrine in your soul. Take care that your faith
results from necessity—that you believe in Christ because you have nothing
else to believe in. Take care it is simple faith, hanging alone on Christ,
without any other dependence but Jesus Christ and him crucified. And when
you have given diligence about that, give diligence next to your courage.
Labour to get virtue; plead with God that he would give you the face of a
lion, that you may never be afraid of any enemy, however much he may jeer or
threaten you, but that you may with a consciousness of right, go on, boldly
trusting in God. And having, by the help of the Holy Spirit, obtained that,
study well the Scriptures, and get knowledge; for a knowledge of doctrine
will tend very much to confirm your faith. Try to understand God’s Word; get
a sensible, spiritual idea about it. Get, if you can, a system of divinity
out of God’s Bible. Put the doctrines together. Get real, theological
knowledge, founded upon the infallible word. Get a knowledge of that science
which is most despised, but which is the most necessary of all, the science
of Christ and of him crucified, and of the great doctrines of grace. And
when you have done this, “Add to your knowledge temperance.” Take heed to
your body: be temperate there. Take heed to your soul: be temperate there.
Do not be drunk with pride; do not be lifted up with self-confidence. Be
temperate. Do not be harsh towards your friends, nor bitter toward your
enemies. Get temperance of lip, temperance of life, temperance of heart,
temperance of thought. Do not be passionate: do not be carried away by every
wind of doctrine. Get temperance, and then add to it by God’s Holy Spirit
patience; ask him to give you that patience which endures affliction, which,
when it is tried, shall come forth as gold. Array yourself with patience,
that you may not murmur in your sicknesses; that you may not curse God in
your losses, nor be depressed in your afflictions. Pray, without ceasing,
until the Holy Ghost has nerved you with patience to endure to the end. And
when you have that, get godliness. Godliness is something more than
religion. The most religious men may be the most godless men, and sometimes
a godly man may seem to be irreligious. Let me just explain that seeming
paradox. A real religious man is a man who sighs after sacraments, attends
churches and chapels, and is outwardly good, but does not go any farther. A
godly man is a man who does not look so much to the dress as to the person:
he does not look to the outward form, but to the inward and spiritual grace,
he is a godly man, as well as attentive to religion. Some men, however, are
godly, and to a great extent despise form; they may be godly, without some
degree of religion; but a man cannot be fully righteous without being godly
in the true meaning of each of these words, though not in the general common
sense and meaning of them. Add to your patience an eye to God; live in his
sight; dwell close to him; seek for fellowship with him; and you have
obtained godliness. And then to that add brotherly love. Be loving towards
all the members of Christ’s church; have a love to all the saints, of every
denomination. And then add to that charity, which opens its arms to all men,
and loves them; and when you have obtained all these, then you will know
your calling and election, and just in proportion as you practise these
heavenly rules of life, in this heavenly manner, you will come to know that
you are called and that you are elect. But by no other means can you attain
to a knowledge of that, except by the witness of the Spirit, bearing witness
with your spirit that you are born of God, and then witnessing in your
conscience that you are not what you were, but are a new man in Christ
Jesus, and are therefore called and therefore elected.
11. A man over there says he is elect. He gets drunk. Aye, you are elect by
the devil, sir; that is about your only election. Another man says, “Blessed
be God, I do not care about evidences a bit; I am not so legal as you are!”
No, I dare say you are not; but you have no great reason to bless God about
it, for, my dear friend, unless you have these evidences of a new birth take
heed to yourself. “God is not mocked: whatever a man sows, that shall he
also reap.” “Well,” says another, “but I think that doctrine of election is
a very licentious doctrine.” Think on as long as you please; but please to
bear me witness that as I have preached it today there is nothing licentious
about it. Very likely you are licentious, and you would make the doctrine
licentious, if you believed it; but “to the pure all things are pure.” He
who receives God’s truth in his heart does not often pervert it and turn
aside from it to wicked ways. No man, let me repeat, has any right to
believe himself elect of God, unless he has been renewed by God; no man has
any right to believe himself called, unless his life is in the main
consistent with his vocation, and he walks worthy of that to which he is
called. Away with an election that lets you live in sin! Away with it! away
with it! That was never the design of God’s Word; and it never was the
doctrine of Calvinists either. Though we have been lied against and our
teachings perverted, we have always stood by this—that good works, though
they do not procure nor in any degree merit salvation, yet they are the
necessary evidences of salvation; and unless they are in men the soul is
still dead, uncalled and unrenewed. The nearer you live to Christ, the more
you imitate him, the more your life is conformed to him, and the more simply
you hang upon him by faith, the more certain you may be of your election in
Christ and of your calling by his Holy Spirit. May the Holy One of Israel
give you the sweet assurance of grace, by affording you “tokens for good” in
the graces which he enables you to display.
12. III. And now I shall close up by giving you THE APOSTLE’S REASONS WHY
YOU SHOULD MAKE YOUR CALLING AND ELECTION SURE.
13. I put in one of my own to begin with. It is because, as I have said, it
will make you so happy. Men who doubt their calling and election cannot be
full of joy; but the happiest saints are those who know and believe it. You
know our friends say this is a howling wilderness, and you know my reply to
it is, that they make all the howling themselves: there would not be much
howling, if they were to look up a little more and look down a little less,
for by faith they would make it blossom like the rose, and give to it the
excellence and glory of Carmel and Sharon. But why they howl so much is
because they do not believe. Our happiness and our faith are to a great
degree proportionate; they are Siamese twins to the Christian; they must
flourish or decay together.
When I can say my God is mine,
Then I can all my griefs resign;
Can tread the world beneath my feet,
And all that earth calls good or great.
But ah
When gloomy doubts prevail,
I fear to call him mine;
The streams of comfort seem to fail,
And all my hopes decline.
Only faith can make a Christian lead a happy life.
14. But now for Peter’s reasons. First, because “if you do these things you
shall never fall.” “Perhaps,” one says, “in attention to election we may
forget our daily walk, and like the old philosopher who looked up to the
stars we may walk on and tumble into the ditch!” “No, no,” Peter says, “if
you take care of your calling and election, you shall not trip; but, with
your eyes up there, looking for your calling and election, God will take
care of your feet, and you shall never fall.” Is it not very notable, that,
in many churches and chapels, you do not often hear a sermon about today; it
is always either about old eternity, or else about the millennium; either
about what God did before men was made, or else about what God will do when
all are dead and buried? It is a pity that they do not tell us something
about what we are to do today, now, in our daily walk and conversation!
Peter removes this difficulty. He says, “This point is a practical point;
for you can only answer your election for yourself by taking care of your
practice; and while you are so taking care of your practice and assuring
yourself of your election, you are doing the best possible thing to keep you
from falling.” And is it not desirable that a true Christian should be kept
from falling? Mark the difference between falling and falling away. The true
believer can never fall away and perish; but he may fall and injure himself.
He shall not fall and break his neck; but a broken leg is bad enough,
without a broken neck. “Though he falls he shall not be utterly cast down;”
but that is no reason why he should dash himself against a stone. His desire
is, that day by day he may grow more holy; that hour by hour he may be more
thoroughly renewed, until conformed to the image of Christ, he may enter
into bliss eternal. If, then, you take care of your calling and election,
you are doing the best thing in the world to prevent yourself from falling;
for in so doing you shall never fall.
15. And now, the other reason, and then I shall have almost concluded. “For
so an entrance shall be ministered to you abundantly into the everlasting
kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.” An “abundant entrance” has
sometimes been illustrated in this way. You see that ship. After a long
voyage, it has neared the haven, but is much damaged, the sails are rent to
ribbons, and it is in such a forlorn condition that it cannot sail up to the
harbour: a steam tug is pulling it in with the greatest possible difficulty.
That is like the righteous being “scarcely saved.” But do you see that other
ship? It has made a prosperous voyage and now, laden to the water’s edge,
with the sails all up and with the white canvass filled with the wind, it
rides into the harbour joyously and nobly. That is an “abundant entrance;”
and if you and I are helped by God’s Spirit to add to our faith virtue, and
so on, we shall have at the last “an abundant entrance into the kingdom of
our Lord Jesus Christ.” There is a man who is a Christian; but, alas! there
are many inconsistencies in his life for which he has to mourn. He lies
there, dying on his bed. The thought of his past life rushes upon him. He
cries, “Oh Lord, have mercy upon me, a sinner,” and the prayer is answered;
his faith is in Christ, and he shall be saved. But oh! what griefs he has
upon his bed. “Oh, if I had served my God better! And these children of
mine—if I had only trained them up better, ‘in the nurture and admonition of
the Lord!’ I am saved,” he says; “but alas, alas! though it is a great
salvation, I cannot enjoy it yet. I am dying in gloom, and clouds, and
darkness. I trust, I hope I shall be gathered to my fathers, but I have no
works to follow me—or very few indeed; for though I am saved, I am only just
saved—saved "so as by fire."” Here is another one; he too is dying. Ask him
what his dependence is: he tells you, “I rest in no one else except Jesus.”
But mark him as he looks back on his past life. “In such a place,” he says,
“I preached the gospel, and God helped me.” And though with no pride about
him—he will not congratulate himself upon what he has done—yet he does lift
his hands to heaven, and he blesses God that throughout a long life he has
been able to keep his garments white; that he has served his Master; and
now, like a shock of grain fully ripe, he is about to be gathered into his
Master’s garner. Listen to him! It is not the feeble lisp of the trembler;
but with “victory, victory, victory!” for his dying shout, he shuts his
eyes, and dies like a warrior in his glory. That is the “abundant entrance.”
Now, the man that “gives diligence to make his calling and election sure,”
shall ensure for himself “an abundant entrance into the kingdom of our Lord
Jesus Christ.”
16. What a terrible picture is hinted at in these words of the
apostle—“Saved so as by fire!” Let me try and present it to you. The man has
come to the edge of Jordan; the time has arrived for him to die. He is a
believer—just a believer; but his life has not been what he could wish; not
all that he now desires that it had been. And now stern death comes to him,
and he has to take his first step into the Jordan. Judge his horror, when
the flames surround his foot. He treads upon the hot sand of the stream; and
the next step he takes, with his hair almost on end, with his eye fixed on
heaven on the other side of the shore, his face is yet marked with horror.
He takes another step, and he is all bathing in fire. Another step, and he
is up to his very waist in flames—“saved, so as by fire.” A strong hand has
grasped him, that drags him onward through the stream. But how dreadful must
be the death even of the Christian, when he is saved “so as by fire!” There
on the river’s brink, astonished he looks back and sees the liquid flames,
through which he has been called to walk, as a consequence of his
indifference in this life. Saved he is—thanks to God; and his heaven shall
be great, and his crown shall be golden, and his harp shall be sweet, and
his hymns shall be eternal, and his bliss unfading;—but his dying moment,
the last article of death, is blackened by sin; and he was saved “so as by
fire!” Mark the other man; he too has to die. He has often feared death. He
dips the first foot in Jordan; and his body trembles, his pulse waxes faint,
and even his eyes are almost closed, his lips can scarcely speak, but still
he says, “Jesus, you are with me, you are with me, passing through the
stream!” He takes another step, and the waters now begin to refresh him. He
dips his hand and tastes the stream, and tells those who are watching him in
tears, that to die is blessed. “The stream is sweet,” he says, “it is not
bitter: it is blessed to die.” Then he takes another step, and when he is
almost submerged in the stream, and lost to vision, he says—
And when you hear my eye strings break,
How sweet my minutes roll!—
A mortal paleness on my cheek
But glory in my soul!
That is the “abundant entrance” of the man who has manfully served his
God—who, by divine grace, has had a path unclouded and serene—who, by
diligence, has “made his calling and election sure;” and therefore, as a
reward, not of debt, but of grace, has entered heaven with higher honours
and with greater ease than others equally saved, but not saved in so
splendid a manner.
17. Just one thought more. It is said that the entrance is to be “ministered
to us.” That gives me a sweet hint that, I find, is dwelt upon by Doddridge.
Christ will open the gates of heaven; but the heavenly train of virtues—the
works which follow us—will go up with us and minister an entrance to us. I
sometimes think, if God should enable me to live and die for the good of
these congregations, so that many of them shall be saved, how sweet it will
be to enter heaven, and when I shall come there, to have an entrance
ministered to me, not by Christ alone, but by some of you for whom I have
ministered. One shall meet me at the gate, and say, “Minister you were the
cause of my salvation!” And another, and another, and another, shall all
exclaim the same. When Whitfield entered heaven—that highly honoured servant
of the Lord—I think I can see the hosts rushing to the gate to meet him.
There are thousands there who have been brought to God by him. Oh how they
open wide the gates; and how they praise God that he has been the means of
bringing them to heaven; and how do they minister to him an abundant
entrance? There will be some of you, perhaps, in heaven, with starless
crowns: for you never did good to your fellow creatures; you never were the
means of saving souls; you are to have crowns without stars. But “they who
turn many to righteousness,” shall “shine as the stars, for ever and ever;”
and an entrance shall be abundantly ministered to them. I do want to get a
heavy crown in heaven—not to wear, but to have all the more costly gift to
give to Christ. And you ought to desire the same, that you may have all the
more honours, and so have the more to cast at his feet, with—“Not to us, but
to your name, oh Christ, be the glory!” “Rather, brethren, give all
diligence to make your calling and election sure.”
18. And now, to conclude. There are some of you with whom this text has
nothing to do. You cannot “make your calling and election sure;” for you
have not been called; and you have no right to believe that you are elected,
if you have never been called. To such of you, let me say, do not ask
whether you are elected first, but ask whether you are called. And go to
God’s house, and bend your knee in prayer; and may God, in his infinite
mercy, call you! And mark this—if any of you can say—
Nothing in my hands I bring,
Simply to your cross I cling;
if any of you, abjuring your self-righteousness, can now come to Christ and
take him to be your all in all; you are called, you are elect. “Make your
calling and election sure,” and go on your way rejoicing! May God bless you;
and to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, be glory for evermore!
Amen.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/05/27/particular-election