GOD'S
SOVEREIGNTY IN THE SALVATION OF MEN
by Jonathan
Edwards
Romans 9:18
Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he
hardeneth.
The apostle, in the beginning of this chapter, expresses his great concern and sorrow of heart for
the nation of the Jews, who were rejected of God. This leads him to observe the difference which
God made by election between some of the Jews and others, and between the bulk of that people
and the Christian Gentiles. In speaking of this he enters into a more minute discussion of the
sovereignty of God in electing some to eternal life, and rejecting others, than is found in any other
part of the Bible; in the course of which he quotes several passages from the Old Testament,
confirming and illustrating this doctrine. In the ninth verse he refers us to what God said to
Abraham, showing his election of Isaac before Ishmael, "For this is the word of promise; At this
time will I come, and Sarah shall have a son": then to what God had said to Rebecca, showing his
election of Jacob before Esau; "The elder shall serve the younger": in the thirteenth verse, to a
passage from Malachi, "Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated"; in the fifteenth verse, to what
God said to Moses, "I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy; and I will have compassion on
whom I will have compassion: and the verse preceding the text, to what God says to Pharaoh,
"For the scripture saith unto Pharaoh, Even for this same purpose have I raised thee up, that I
might show my power in thee, and that my name might be declare throughout all the earth."; In
what the apostle says in the text, he seems to have respect especially to the two last-cited
passages: to what God said to Moses in the fifteenth verse, and to what he said to Pharaoh in the
verse immediately preceding. God said to Moses, "I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy."
To this the apostle refers in the former part of the text. and we know how often it is said of
Pharaoh, that God hardened his heart. And to this the apostle seems to have respect in the latter
part of the text; "and whom he will he hardeneth." We may observe in the text,
1. God's different dealing with men. He hath mercy on some, and hardeneth others. When
God is here spoken of as hardening some of the children of men, it is not to be understood that
God by any positive efficiency hardens any man's heart. There is no positive act in God, as though
he put forth any power to harden the heart. To suppose any such thing would be to make God the
immediate author of sin. God is said to harden men in two ways: by withholding the powerful
influences of his Spirit, without which their hearts will remain hardened, and grow harder and
harder; in this sense he hardens them, as he leaves them to hardness. And again, by ordering those
things in his providence which, through the abuse of their corruption, become the occasion of
their hardening. Thus God sends his word and ordinances to men which, by their abuse, prove an
occasion of their hardening. So the apostle said, that he was unto some "a savour of death unto
death." Go God is represented as sending Isaiah on this errand, to make the hearts of the people
fat, and to make their ears heavy, and to shut their eyes; lest they should see with their eyes, and
hear with their ears, and understand with their heart, and convert, and be healed. Isa. 6:10. Isaiah's
preaching was, in itself, of a contrary tendency, to make them better. But their abuse of it
rendered it an occasion of their hardening. As God is here said to harden men, so he is said to put
a lying spirit in the mouth of the false prophets. 2 Chron. 18:22. That is, he suffered a lying spirit
to enter into them. And thus he is said to have bid Shimei curse David. 2 Sam. 16:10. Not that he
properly commanded him; for it is contrary to God's commands. God expressly forbids cursing the
ruler of the people. Exod. 22:28. But he suffered corruption at that time so to work in Shimei,
and ordered that occasion of stilling it up, as a manifestation of his displeasure against David.
The foundation of his different dealing with mankind; viz. his sovereign will and pleasure. "He
hath mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth." This does not imply,
merely that God never shows mercy or denies it against his will, or that he is always willing to do
it when he does it. A willing subject or servant, when he obeys his lord's commands, may never do
any thing against his will, nothing but what he can do cheerfully and with delight; and yet he
cannot be said to do what he wills in the sense of the text. But the expression implies that it is
God's mere will and sovereign pleasure, which supremely orders this affair. It is the divine will
without restraint, or constraint, or obligation.
Doctrine.
God exercises sovereignty in the eternal salvation of men.
He not only is sovereign, and has a sovereign right to dispose and order in that affair; and he
not only might proceed in a sovereign way, if he would, and nobody could charge him with
exceeding his right; but he actually does so; he exercises the right which he has. In the following
discourse, I propose to show,
- What is God's sovereignty.
- What God's sovereignty in the salvation of men implies.
- That God actually doth exercise his sovereignty in this matter.
- The reason for this exercise.
- I would show what is God's sovereignty.
The sovereignty of God is his absolute, independent right of disposing of all creatures according
to his own pleasure. I will consider this definition by the parts of it.
The will of God is called his mere pleasure,
1. In opposition to any constraint.
Men may do things voluntarily, and yet there may be a degree of constraint. A man may be said
to do a thing voluntarily, that is, he himself does it; and, all things considered, he may choose to
do it; yet he may do it out of fear, and the thing in itself considered be irksome to him, and sorely
against his inclination. When men do things thus, they cannot be said to do them according to
their mere pleasure.
2. In opposition to its being under the will of another.
A servant may fulfil his master's commands, and may do it willingly, and cheerfully, and many
delight to do his master's will; yet when he does so, he does not do it of his own mere pleasure.
The saints do the will of God freely. They choose to do it; it is their meat and drink. Yet they do
not do it of their mere pleasure and arbitrary will, because their will is under the direction of a
superior will.
3. In opposition to any proper obligation.
A man may do a thing which he is obliged to do, very freely; but he cannot be said to act from his
own mere will and pleasure. He who acts from his own mere pleasure, is at full liberty; but he who
is under any proper obligation, is not at liberty, but is bound. Now the sovereignty of God
supposes, that he has a right to dispose of all his creatures according to his mere pleasure in the
sense explained. And his right is absolute and independent. Men may have a right to dispose of
some things according to their pleasure. But their right is not absolute and unlimited. Men may be
said to have a right to dispose of their own goods as they please. But their right is not absolute; it
has limits and bounds. They have a right to dispose of their own goods as they please, provided
they do not do it contrary to the law of the state to which they are subject, or contrary to the law
of God. Men's right to dispose of their things as they will, is not absolute, because it is not
independent. They have not an independent right to what they have, but in some things depend on
the community to which they belong, for the right they have; and in everything depend on God.
They receive all the right they have to any thing from God. But the sovereignty of God imports
that he has an absolute, and unlimited, and independent right of disposing of his creatures as he
will. I proceed to inquire,
- What God's sovereignty in the salvation of men implies.
I observe, it implies that God can either bestow salvation on any of the children of men, or refuse
it, without any prejudice to the glory of any of his attributes, except where he has been pleased to
declare, that he will or will not bestow it. It cannot be said absolutely, as the case now stands, that
God can, without any prejudice to the honour of any of his attributes, bestow salvation on any of
the children of men, or refuse it; because, concerning some, God has been pleased to declare
either that he will or that he will not bestow salvation on them; and thus to bind himself by his
own promise. And concerning some he has been pleased to declare, that he never will bestow
salvation upon them; viz. those who have committed the sin against the Holy Ghost. Hence, as the
case now stands, he is obliged. he cannot bestow salvation in one case, or refuse it in the other,
without prejudice to the honour of his truth. But God exercised his sovereignty in making these
declarations. God was not obliged to promise that he would save all who believe in Christ; nor
was he obliged to declare, that he who committed the sin against the Holy Ghost should never be
forgiven, But it pleased him so to declare. And had it not been so that God had been pleased to
oblige himself in these cases, he might still have either bestowed salvation, or refused it, without
prejudice to any of his attributes. If it would in itself be prejudicial to any of his attributes to
bestow or refuse salvation, then God would not in that matter act as absolutely sovereign.
Because it then ceases to be a merely arbitrary thing. It ceases to be a matter of absolute liberty,
and is become a matter of necessity or obligation. For God cannot do any thing to the prejudice of
any of his attributes, or contrary to what is in itself excellent and glorious.
Therefore,
1. God can, without prejudice to the glory of any of his attributes, bestow salvation on any of the
children of men, except on those who have committed the sin against the Holy Ghost. The case
was thus when man fell, and before God revealed his eternal purpose and plan for redeeming men
by Jesus Christ. It was probably looked upon by the angels as a thing utterly inconsistent with
God's attributes to save any of the children of men. It was utterly inconsistent with the honour of
the divine attributes to save any one of the fallen children of men, as they were in themselves. It
could not have been done had not God contrived a way consistent with the honour of his holiness,
majesty, justice, and truth. But since God in the gospel has revealed that nothing is too hard for
him to do, nothing beyond the reach of his power, and wisdom, and sufficiency; and since Christ
has wrought out the work of redemption, and fulfilled the law by obeying, there is none of
mankind whom he may not save without any prejudice to any of his attributes, excepting those
who have committed the sin against the Holy Ghost. And those he might have saved without
going contrary to any of his attributes, had he not been pleased to declare that he would not. It
was not because he could not have saved them consistently with his justice, and consistently with
his law, or because his attribute of mercy was not great enough, or the blood of Christ not
sufficient to cleanse from that sin. But it has pleased him for wise reasons to declare that that sin
shall never be forgiven in this world, or in the world to come. And so now it is contrary to God's
truth to save such. But otherwise there is no sinner, let him be ever so great, but God can save
him without prejudice to any attribute; if he has been a murderer, adulterer, or perjurer, or
idolater, or blasphemer, God may save him if he pleases, and in no respect injure his glory.
Though persons have sinned long, have been obstinate, have committed heinous sins a thousand
times, even till they have grown old in sin, and have sinned under great aggravations: let the
aggravations be what they may; if they have sinned under ever so great light; if they have been
backsliders, and have sinned against ever so numerous and solemn warnings and strivings of the
spirit, and mercies of his common providence: though the danger of such is much greater than of
other sinners, yet God can save them if he pleases, for the sake of Christ, without any prejudice to
any of his attributes. He may have mercy on whom he will have mercy. He may have mercy on the
greatest of sinners, if he pleases, and the glory of none of his attributes will be in the least sullied.
Such is the sufficiency of the satisfaction and righteousness of Christ, that none of the divine
attributes stand in the way of the salvation of any of them.
Thus the glory of any attribute did not at all suffer by Christ's saving some of his
crucifiers.
1. God may save any of them without prejudice to the honour of his holiness. God is an infinitely
holy being. The heavens are not pure in his sight. He is of purer eyes than to behold evil, and
cannot look on iniquity. and if God should in any way countenance sin, and should not give
proper testimonies of is hatred of it, and displeasure at it, it would be a prejudice to the honour of
his holiness. But God can save the greatest sinner without giving the least countenance to sin. If
he saves one, who for a long time was stood out under the calls of the gospel, and has sinned
under dreadful aggravations; if he saves one who, against light, has been a pirate or blasphemer,
he may do it without giving any countenance to their wickedness; because his abhorrence of it and
displeasure against it have already sufficiently manifested in the sufferings of Christ. It was a
sufficient testimony of God's abhorrence against even the greatest wickedness, that Christ, the
eternal Son of God, died for it. Nothing can show God' infinite abhorrence of any wickedness
more than this. If the wicked man himself should be thrust into hell, and should endure the most
extreme torments which are ever suffered there, it would not be a greater manifestation of God's
abhorrence of it, than the sufferings of the Son of God for it.
2.God may save any of the children of men without prejudice to the honour of his majesty. If men
have affronted God, and that ever so much, if they have cast ever so much contempt on his
authority; yet God can save them, if he pleases, and the honour of his majesty not suffer in the
least. If God should save those who have affronted him, without satisfaction, the honour of his
majesty would suffer. For when contempt is cast upon infinite majesty, its honour suffers, and the
contempt leaves an obscurity upon the honour of the divine majesty, if the injury is not repaired.
But the sufferings of Christ do fully repair the injury. Let the contempt be ever so great, yet if so
honourable a person as Christ undertakes to be a Mediator for the offender, and in the mediation
suffer in his stead, it fully repairs the injury done to the majesty of heaven by the greatest
sinner.
3. God may save any sinner whatsoever consistently with his justice. The justice of God requires
the punishment of sin. God is the supreme Judge of the world, and he is to judge the world
according to the rules of justice. It is not the part of a judge to show favour to the person judged;
but he is to determine according to a rule of justice without departing to the right hand or left.
God does not show mercy as a judge, but as a sovereign. And therefore when mercy sought the
salvation of sinners, the inquiry was how to make the exercise of the mercy of God as a sovereign,
and of his strict justice as a judge, agree together. And this is doe by the sufferings of Christ, in
which sin is punished fully, and justice answered. Christ suffered enough for the punishment of the
sins of the greatest sinner that ever lived. so that God, when he judges, may act according to a
rule
of strict justice, and yet acquit the sinner, if he be in Christ. Justice cannot require any more for
any man's sins, than those sufferings of one of the persons in the Trinity, which Christ suffered.
Rom. 3:25, 26; "Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood; to
declare his righteousness, that he might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in
Christ."
4. God can save any sinner whatsoever, without any prejudice to the honour of his truth. God
passed his word, that sin should be punished with death, which is to be understood not only of the
first, but of the second death. God can save the greatest sinner consistently with his truth in this
threatening. for sin is punished in the sufferings of Christ, inasmuch as he is our surety, and so is
legally the same person, and sustained our guilt, and in his sufferings bore our punishment. It may
be objected, that God said, If thou eatest, thou shalt die; as though the same person that sinned
must suffer; and therefore why does not God's truth oblige him to that? I answer, that the word
then was not intended to be restrained to hem, that in his own person sinned, Adam probably
understood that his posterity were included, whether they sinned in their own person or not. If
they sinned in Adam, their surety, those words, "if thou eatest," meant, if thou eatest in thyself, or
in they surety. And therefore, the latter words, "thou shalt die," do also fairly allow of such a
construction as, thou shalt die in thyself, or in they surety. Isa. 42:21. "The Lord is well pleased
for his righteousness' sake, he will magnify the law and make it honourable."
But, God may refuse salvation to any sinner whatsoever, without prejudice to the honour of any
of his attributes.
There is no person whatever in a natural condition, upon whom God may not refuse to bestow
salvation without prejudice to any part of his glory. Let a natural person be wise or unwise, of a
good or ill natural temper, of mean or honourable parentage, whether born of wicked or ungodly
parents; let him be a moral or immoral person, whatever good he may have done, however
religious he has been, how many prayers soever he has made, and whatever pains he has taken
that he may be saved; whatever concern and distress he may have for fear he shall be damned; or
whatever circumstances he may be in; God can deny him salvation without the least
disparagement to any of his perfections. His glory will not in any instance be the least obscured by
it.
1. God may deny salvation to any natural person without any injury to the honour of his
righteousness. If he does so, there is no injustice nor unfairness in it. There is no natural man
living, let his case be what it will, but God may deny him salvation, and cast him down to hell, and
yet not be chargeable with the least unrighteous or unfair dealing in any respect whatsoever. This
is evident, because they all have deserved hell: and it is no injustice for a proper judge to inflict on
any man what he deserves. And as he has deserved condemnation, so he has never done any thing
to remove the liability, or to atone for the sin. He never has done any thing whereby he has laid
any obligations on God not to punish him as he deserved.
2. God may deny salvation to any unconverted person whatever without any prejudice to the
honour of his goodness. Sinners are sometimes ready to flatter themselves, that though it may not
be contrary to the justice of God to condemn them, yet it will not consist with the glory of his
mercy. They think it will be dishonourable to God's mercy to cast them into hell, and have no pity
or compassion upon them. They think it will be very hard and severe, and not becoming a God of
infinite grace and tender compassion. But God can deny salvation to any natural person without
any disparagement to his mercy and goodness. That, which is not contrary to God's justice, is not
contrary to his mercy. If damnation be justice, then mercy may choose its own object. They
mistake the nature of the mercy of God, who think that it is an attribute, which, in some cases, is
contrary to justice. Nay, God's mercy is illustrated by it, as in the twenty-third verse of the
context. "That he might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy, which he had
afore prepared unto glory."
3. It is in no way prejudicial to the honour of God's faithfulness. For God has in no way obliged
himself to any natural man by his word to bestow salvation upon him. Men in a natural condition
are not the children of promise; but lie open to the curse of the law, which would not be the case
if they had any promise to lay hold of.
- God does actually exercise his sovereignty in men's salvation.
We shall show how he exercises this right in several particulars.
1. In calling one people or nation, and giving them the means of grace, and leaving others without
them. According to the divine appointment, salvation is bestowed in connexion with the means of
grace. God may sometimes make use of very unlikely means, and bestow salvation on men who
are under very great disadvantages; but he does not bestow grace wholly without any means. But
God exercises his sovereignty in bestowing those means. All mankind are by nature in like
circumstances towards God. yet God greatly distinguished some from others by the means and
advantages which he bestows upon them. The savages, who live in the remote parts of this
continent, and are under the grossest heathenish darkness, as well as the inhabitants of Africa, are
naturally in exactly similar circumstances towards God with us in this land. They are no more
alienated or estranged from God in their natures than we; and God has no more to charge them
with. And yet what a vast difference has God made between us and them! In this he has exercised
his sovereignty. He did this of old, when he chose but one people, to make them his covenant
people, and to give them the means of grace, and left all others, and gave them over to heathenish
darkness and the tyranny of the devil, to perish from generation to generation for many hundreds
of years. The earth in that time was peopled with many great and mighty nations. There were the
Egyptians, a people famed for their wisdom. There were also the Assyrians and Chaldeans, who
were great, and wise, and powerful nations. There were the Persians, who by their strength and
policy subdued a great part of the world. There were the renowned nations of the Greeks and
romans, who were famed over the whole world for their excellent civil governments, for their
wisdom and skill in the arts of peace and war, and who by their military prowess in their turns
subdued and reigned over the world. Those were rejected. God did not choose them for his
people, but left them for many ages under gross heathenish darkness, to perish for lack of vision;
and chose one only people, the posterity of Jacob, to be his own people, and to give them the
means of grace. Psal. 147:19,20. "He showeth his word unto Jacob, his statutes and his judgments
unto Israel. He hath not dealt so with any nation; and as for his judgments, they have not known
them." This nation were a small, inconsiderable people in comparison with many other people.
Deut. 7:7. "The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor chose you, because ye were more in
number than any people; for ye were the fewest of all people." So neither was it for their
righteousness; for they had no more of that than other people. Deut. 9:6. "Understand therefore,
that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possess it for thy righteousness; for thou
art a stiff-necked people." God gives them to understand, that it was from no other cause but his
free electing love, that he chose them to be his people. The reason is given why God loved them;
it was because he loved them. Deut. 7:8. Which is as much as to say, it was agreeable to his
sovereign pleasure, to set his love upon you.
God also showed his sovereignty in choosing that people, when other nations were rejected, who
came of the same progenitors. Thus the children of Isaac were chosen, when the posterity of
Ishmael and other sons of Abraham were rejected. So the children of Jacob were chosen, when
the posterity of Esau were rejected: as the apostle observes in the seventh verse, "Neither because
they are the seed of Abraham, are they all children; but in Isaac shall thy seed be called:" and again
in verses 10, 11, 12, 13. "And not only this; but when Rebekah also had conceived by one, even
by our father Isaac; the children moreover being not yet born, neither having done any good or
evil, that the promise of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of him that
calleth; it was said unto her, 'The elder shall serve the younger. As it is written, Jacob have I
loved, but Esau have I hated.'" The apostle has not respect merely to the election of the persons of
Isaac and Jacob before Ishmael and Esau; but of their posterity. In the passage, already quoted
from Malachi, God has respect to the nations, which were the posterity of Esau and Jacob; Mal.
1:2,3. "I have loved you, saith the Lord. Yet ye say, Wherein hast thou loved us? Was not Esau
Jacob's brother? saith the Lord: yet I loved Jacob; and I hated Esau, and laid his mountains and his
heritage wast for the dragons of the wilderness." God showed his sovereignty, when Christ came,
in rejecting the Jews, and calling the Gentiles. God rejected that nation who were the children of
Abraham according to the flesh, and had been his peculiar people for so many ages, and who
alone possessed the one true God, and chose idolatrous heathen before them, and called them to
be his people. When the Messiah came, who was born of their nation, and whom they so much
expected, he rejected them. He came to his own, and his own received him not. John 1:11. When
the glorious dispensation of the gospel came, God passed by the Jews, and called those who had
been heathens, to enjoy the privileges of it. They were broken off, that the Gentiles might be
grafted on. Rom. 11:17. She is not called beloved, that was not beloved. And more are the
children of the desolate, than the children of the married wife. Isa. 54:1. The natural children of
Abraham are rejected, and God raises up children to Abraham of stones. That nation, which was
so honoured of God, have now been for many ages rejected, and remain dispersed all over the
world, a remarkable monument of divine vengeance. And now God greatly distinguished some
Gentile nations from others, and all according to his sovereign pleasure.
2. God exercises his sovereignty in the advantages he bestows upon particular persons. All need
salvation alike, and all are, naturally, alike undeserving of it; but he gives some vastly greater
advantages for salvation than others. To some he assigns their place in pious and religious
families, where they may be well instructed and educated, and have religious parents to dedicate
them to God, and put up many prayers for them. God places some under a more powerful
ministry than others, and in places where there are more of the outpourings of the Spirit of god. to
some he gives much more of the strivings and the awakening influences of the spirit, than to
others, It is according to his mere sovereign pleasure.
3. God exercises his sovereignty in sometimes bestowing salvation upon the low and mean, and
denying it to the wise and great. Christ in his sovereignty passes by the gates of princes and
nobles, and enters some cottage and dwells there, and has communion with its obscure
inhabitants. God in his sovereignty withheld salvation from the rich man, who fared sumptuously
every day, and bestowed it on poor Lazarus, who sat begging at his gate. God in this way pours
contempt on princes, and on all their glittering splendour. So God sometimes passes by wise men,
men of great understanding, learned and great scholars, and bestows salvation on others of weak
understanding, who only comprehend some of the plainer parts of Scripture, and the fundamental
principles of the Christian religion. Yea, there seem to be fewer great men called, than others. and
God in ordering it thus manifests his sovereignty. 1 Cor. 1:26,27,28. "For ye see your calling,
brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are
called. But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath
chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; and base things of
the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to
bring to nought things that are."
4. In bestowing salvation on some who have had few advantages. God sometimes will bless weak
means for producing astonishing effects, when more excellent means are not succeeded. God
sometimes will withhold salvation from those who are the children of very pious parents, and
bestow it on others, who have been brought up in wicked families. Thus we read of a good Abijah
in the family of Jeroboam, and of a godly Hezekiah, the son of wicked Ahaz, and of a godly
Josiah, the son of a wicked Amon. But on the contrary, of a wicked Amnon and Absalom, the
sons of holy David, and that vile Manasseh, the son of a good Hezekiah. Sometimes some, who
have had eminent means of grace, are rejected, and left to perish, and others, under far less
advantages, are saved. Thus scribes and Pharisees, who had so much light and knowledge of the
Scriptures, were mostly rejected, and the poor ignorant publicans saved. The greater part of
those, among whom Christ was much conversant, and who heard him preach, and saw him work
miracles from day to day, were left; and the woman of Samaria was taken, and many other
Samaritans at the same time, who only heard Christ preach, as he occasionally passed through
their city. So the woman of Canaan was taken, who was not of the country of the Jews, and but
once saw Jesus Christ. So the Jews, who had seen and heard Christ, and saw his miracles, and
with whom the apostles laboured so much, were not saved. But the Gentiles, many of them, who,
as it were, but transiently heard the glad tidings of salvation, embraced them, and were
converted.
5. God exercises his sovereignty in calling some to salvation, who have been very heinously
wicked, and leaving others, who have been moral and religious persons. The Pharisees were a
very strict sect among the Jews. Their religion was extraordinary. Luke 18:11. They were not as
other men, extortioners, unjust, or adulterers. There was their morality. They fasted twice a week,
and gave tithes of all that they possessed. There was their religion. But yet they were mostly
rejected, and the publicans, harlots, and openly vicious sort of people, entered into the kingdom of
God before them. Matt. 21:31. The apostle describes his righteousness while a Pharisee. Philip.
3:6. "Touching the righteousness which is of the law, blameless." The rich young man, who came
kneeling to Christ, saying, Good Master, what shall I do, that I may have eternal life, was a moral
person. When Christ bade him keep the commandments, he said, and in his own view with
sincerity, "All these have I kept from my youth up." He had obviously been brought up in a good
family, and was a youth of such amiable manners and correct deportment, that it is said, "Jesus
beholding him, loved him." Still he was left; while the thief, that was crucified with Christ, was
chosen and called, even on the cross. God sometimes shows his sovereignty by showing mercy to
the chief of sinners, on those who have been murderers, and profaners, and blasphemers. and even
when they are old, some are called at the eleventh hour. God sometimes shows the sovereignty of
his grace by showing mercy to some, who have spent most of their lives in the service of Satan,
and have little left to spend in the service of God.
6. In saving some of those who seek salvation, and not others.
Some who seek salvation, as we know both from Scripture and observation, are soon converted;
while others seek a long time, and do not obtain at last. God helps some over the mountains and
difficulties which are in the way; he subdues Satan, and delivers them from his temptations: but
others are ruined by the temptations with which they meet. Some are never thoroughly awakened;
while to others God is pleased to give thorough convictions. Some are left to backsliding hearts;
others God causes to hold out to the end. some are brought off from a confidence in their own
righteousness; others never get over that obstruction in their way, as long as they live. And some
are converted and saved, who never had so great strivings as some who, notwithstanding,
perish.
- I come now to give the reasons, why God does thus exercise his sovereignty in the eternal
salvation of the children of men.
1. It is agreeable to God's design in the creation of the universe to exercise every attribute, and
thus to manifest the glory of each of them. God's design in the creation was to glorify himself, or
to make a discovery of the essential glory of his nature. It was fit that infinite glory should shine
forth; and it was God's original design to make a manifestation of his glory, as it is. Not that it
was his design to manifest all his glory to the apprehension of creatures; for it is impossible that
the minds of creatures should comprehend it. But it was his design to make a true manifestation of
his glory, such as should represent every attribute. If God glorified one attribute, and not another,
such manifestation of his glory would be defective; and the representation would not be complete.
If all God's attributes are not manifested, the glory of none of them is manifested as it is: for the
divine attributes reflect glory on one another. Thus if God's wisdom be manifested, and not his
holiness, the glory of his wisdom would not be manifested as it is; for one part of the glory of the
attribute of divine wisdom. The glory of his holiness would not be manifested as it is; for one
thing which belongs to the glory of God's holiness is, that it is a wise holiness. So it is with respect
to the attributes of mercy and justice. The glory of God's mercy does not appear as it is, unless it
is manifested as a just mercy, or as a mercy consistent with justice. and so with respect to God's
sovereignty, it reflects glory on all his other attributes. It is part of the glory of God's mercy, that
it is sovereign mercy. So all the attributes of God reflect glory on one another. The glory of one
attribute cannot be manifested, as it is, without the manifestation of another. One attribute is
defective without another, and therefore the manifestation will be defective. Hence it was the will
of God to manifest all his attributes. The declarative glory of God in Scripture is often called
God's name because it declares his nature. But if his name does not signify his nature as it is, or
does not declare any attribute, it is not a true name. The sovereignty of God is one of his
attributes, and a part of his glory. the glory of God eminently appears in his absolute sovereignty
over all creatures, great and small. If the glory of a prince be his power and dominion, then the
glory of God is his absolute sovereignty. Herein appear God's infinite greatness and highness
above all creatures. therefore it is the will of God to manifest his sovereignty. and his sovereignty,
like his other attributes, is manifested in the exercises of it. He glorifies his power in the exercise
of power. He glorifies his mercy in the exercise of mercy. So he glorifies his sovereignty in the
exercise of sovereignty.
2. The more excellent the creature is over whom God is sovereign, and the greater the matter in
which he so appears, the more glorious is his sovereignty. The sovereignty of God in his being
sovereign over men, is more glorious than in his being sovereign over the inferior creatures. And
his sovereignty over angels is yet more glorious that his sovereignty over men. for the nobler the
creature is, still the greater and higher doth God appear in his sovereignty over it. It is a greater
honour to a man to have dominion over men, that over beasts; and a still greater honour to have
dominion over princes, nobles, and kings, than over ordinary men. so the glory of God's
sovereignty appears in that he is sovereign over the souls of men, who are so noble and excellent
creatures. God therefore will exercise his sovereignty over them. and the further the dominion of
any one extends over another, the greater will be the honour. If a man has dominion over another
only in some instances, he is not therein so much exalted, as in having absolute dominion over is
life, and fortune, and all he has. So God's sovereignty over men appears glorious, that it extends
to every thing which concerns them. he may dispose of them with respect to all that concerns
them, according to his own pleasure. His sovereignty appears glorious, that it reaches their most
important affairs, even the eternal state and condition of the souls of men. Herein it appears that
the sovereignty of God is without bounds or limits, in that it reaches to an affair of such infinite
importance. God, therefore, as it is his design to manifest his own glory, will and does exercise his
sovereignty towards men, over their souls and bodies, even in this most important matter of their
eternal salvation. He has mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he
hardens.
APPLICATION
1. Hence we learn how absolutely we are dependent on God in this great matter of the eternal
salvation of our souls. We are dependent not only on his wisdom to contrive a way to accomplish
it, and on his power to bring it to pass, but we are dependent on his mere will and pleasure in the
affair. We depend on the sovereign will of God for every thing belonging to it, from the
foundation to the top-stone. It was of the sovereign pleasure of God. that he contrived a way to
save any of mankind, and gave us Jesus Christ, his only-begotten Son, to be our Redeemer. Why
did he look on us, and send us a Saviour, and not the fallen angels? It was from the sovereign
pleasure of God. It was of his sovereign pleasure what means to appoint. His giving us the bible,
and the ordinances of religion, is of his sovereign grace. His giving those means to us rather than
to others, his giving the awakening influences of his spirit, and his bestowing saving grace, are all
of his sovereign pleasure. When he says, "let there be light in the soul of such an one," it is a word
of infinite power and sovereign grace.
2. Let us with the greatest humility adore the awful and absolute sovereignty of God. As we have
just shown, it is an eminent attribute of the Divine Being, that he is sovereign over such excellent
beings as the souls of men, and that in every respect, even in that of their eternal salvation. The
infinite greatness of God, and his exaltation above us, appears in nothing more, than in his
sovereignty. It is spoken of in Scripture as a great part of his glory. Deut. 32:39. "See now that I,
even U, am he, and there is no God with me. I kill, and I make alive; I wwound and I heal; neither
is there any that can deliver out of my hand." Psal. 115:3. "Our God is in the heavens; he hath
done whatsoever he pleased." Daniel 4:34, 35. "Whose dominion is an everlasting dominion, and
his kingdom is from generation to generation. and all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as
nothing; and he doeth according to his will in the armies of heaven, and among the inhabitants of
the earth; and none can stay his hand. or say unto him, What doest thou?" Our Lord Jesus Christ
praised and glorified the Father for the exercise of his sovereignty in the salvation of men. Matt.
11:25, 26. "I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things
from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so, Father, for so it seemed
good in thy sight." Let us therefore give God the glory of his sovereignty, as adoring him, whose
sovereign will orders all things, beholding ourselves as nothing in comparison with hi. Dominion
and sovereignty require humble reverence and honour in the subject. The absolute, universal, and
unlimited sovereignty of God requires, that we should adore him with all possible humility and
reverence. It is impossible that we should go to excess in lowliness and reverence of that Being,
wo may dispose of us to all eternity, as he pleases.
3. Those who are in a state of salvation are to attribute it to sovereign grace alone, and to give all
the praise to him, who maketh them to differ from others. Godliness is no cause for glorying,
except it be in God. 1 Cor. 1:29, 30, 31. "That no flesh should glory in his presence. But of him
are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification,
and redemption. that, according as it is written, he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." Such
are not, by any means, in any degree to attribute their godliness, their safe and happy state and
condition, to any natural difference between them and other men, or to any strength or
righteousness of their own. They have no reason to exalt themselves in the least degree; but God
is the being whom they should exalt. they should exalt God the Father, who chose them rather
than others, if they think they can see any cause out of God, they are greatly mistaken. They
should exalt God the Son, who bore their names on his heart, when he came into the world, and
hung on the cross, and in whom alone they have righteousness and strength. They should exalt
God the Holy Ghost, who of sovereign grace has called them out of darkness into marvellous
light; who has by his own immediate and free operation, led them into an understanding of the evil
and danger of sin, and brought them off from their own righteousness, and opened their eyes to
discover the glory of God, and the wonderful riches of God in Jesus Christ, and has sanctified
them, and made them new creatures. When they hear of the wickedness of others, or look upon
vicious persons, they should think how wicked they once were, and how much they provoked
God, and how they deserved for ever to be left by him to perish in sin, and that it is only sovereign
grace which has made the difference. 1 Cor. 6:10. Many sorts of sinners are there enumerated;
fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, effeminate, abusers of themselves with mankind. and then in the
eleventh verse, the apostle tells them, "Such were some of you; but ye are washed, but ye are
sanctified, but ye are justified, in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the spirit of our God." The
people of God have the greater cause of thankfulness, more reason to love God, who hath
bestowed such great and unspeakable mercy upon them of his mere sovereign pleasure.
4. Hence we learn what cause we have to admire the grace of God, that he should condescend to
become bound to us by covenant; that he, who is naturally supreme in his dominion over us, who
is our absolute proprietor, and may do with us as he pleases, and is under no obligation to us; that
he should, as it were, relinquish his absolute freedom and should cease to be merely sovereign in
his dispensations towards believers, when once they have believed in Christ, and should, for their
more abundant consolation, become bound. so that they can challenge salvation of this sovereign;
they can demand it through Christ, as a debt. and it would be prejudicial to the glory of God's
attributes, to deny it to them; it would be contrary to his justice and faithfulness. What wonderful
condescension is it in such a Being, thus to become bound to us, worms of the dust, for our
consolation! He bound himself by his word, his promise. But he was not satisfied with that; but
that we might have stronger consolation still, he hath bound himself by his oath. Heb. 6:13, etc.
"For when God made promise to Abraham, because he could swear by no greater, he sware by
himself, saying, Surely blessing I will bless thee, and multiplying I will multiply thee. And so, after
he had patiently endured, he obtained the promise. for men verily swear by the greater; and an
oath for confirmation is to them an end of all strife. Wherein God, willing more abundantly to
show unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel, confirmed it by an oath; that by
two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong
consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us. Which hope we
have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and stedfast, and which entereth into that within the veil;
whither the forerunner is for us entered, even Jesus, made high priest for ever after the order of
Melchisedec."
Let us, therefore, labour to submit to the sovereignty of God. God insists, that his sovereignty be
acknowledged by us, and that even in this great matter, a matter which so nearly and infinitely
concerns us, as our own eternal salvation. This is the stumbling-block on which thousands fall and
perish; and if we go on contending with God about his sovereignty, it will be our eternal ruin. It is
absolutely necessary that we should submit to God, as our absolute sovereign, and the sovereign
over our souls; as one who may have mercy on whom he will have mercy, and harden whom he
will.
5. And lastly.
We may make use of this doctrine to guard those who seek salvation from two opposite extremes
- presumption and discouragement. Do not presume upon the mercy of God, and so encourage
yourself in sin. Many hear that God's mercy is infinite, and therefore think, that if they delay
seeking salvation for the present, and seek it hereafter, that God will bestow his grace upon them.
But consider, that though God's grace is sufficient, yet he is sovereign, and will use his own
pleasure whether he will save you or not. If you put off salvation till hereafter, salvation will not
be in your power. It will be as a sovereign God pleases, whether you shall obtain it or not. Seeing,
therefore, that in this affair you are so absolutely dependent on God, it is best to follow his
direction in seeking it, which is to hear his voice to-day: "To-day if ye will hear his voice, harden
not your heart." Beware also of discouragement. Take heed of despairing thoughts, because you
are a great sinner, because you have persevered so long in sin, have backslidden, and resisted the
Holy Ghost. Remember that, let your case be what it may, and you ever so great a sinner, if you
have not committed the sin against the Holy ghost, God can bestow mercy upon you without the
least prejudice to the honour of his holiness, which you have offended, or to the honour of his
majesty, which you have insulted, or of is justice, which you have made your enemy, or of his
truth, or of any of his attributes. Let you be what sinner you may, God can, if he pleases, greatly
glorify himself in your salvation.
END OF ARTICLE
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