Free Grace 12

July 24, 2015

Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God. The light and beams of grace do dispel the clouds of our sins. Not for our sakes, but for his Name’s sake he covereth our sins. It is God’s prerogative to free us from sin by grace, and to remove them far from us. “As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” {Ps.103:12} He only can remove sin against whom it is committed. He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up. John Simpson {Perfection of Justification, 1648} Obtained from Supralapsarian.com

Acts 2:36 “Therefore let all the house of Israel know for certain that God has made Him both Lord and Christ– this Jesus whom you crucified.” 37 Now when they heard this, they were pierced to the heart, and said to Peter and the rest of the apostles, “Brethren, what shall we do?” 38 Peter said to them, “Repent, and each of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. 39 “For the promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off, as many as the Lord our God will call to Himself.” 40 And with many other words he solemnly testified and kept on exhorting them, saying, “Be saved from this perverse generation!” 41 So then, those who had received his word were baptized; and that day there were added about three thousand souls.

In looking at Acts 2 we see that about three thousand souls were converted in one day. What was it that moved God to save them? Those who were converted were the Jews who had called for Jesus to be crucified. Peter spoke to them quite specifically and told them that they had crucified Jesus. In hearing this, they were pierced to the heart as only the Spirit can pierce in His work of conviction. This is quite an amazing text in that we can see what preceded saving grace (in one sense) in the conversion of these people.

We have to go back to the Gospels and see what these people did. When Pilate offered to turn Jesus loose, the people wanted Barabbas, who was a notorious criminal, turned loose instead of Jesus. It is true that they were “inspired” to this horrible crime by the religious leaders, but still they wanted a true criminal turned loose and Jesus (who had never sinned) put on the cross and suffer until He died. These were the hearts of the men and women that Christ saved.

While we are looking (in one sense) at what preceded grace in the context of men, in this context we can look at this in a different light as well. As the men and women were yelling to crucify Christ, some of them were on the heart of Christ and He died for them. Some that mocked Him while on the cross were saved by His work on that same cross. Some who laughed at Him and wished Him ill on that cross were pitied by Him as He wished the best for their soul and then accomplished what was best for their soul. It was grace that preceded grace rather than something good that could be found in men. We can find no good reason for God to show men grace as found in themselves, but we can find a very good reason that some men find grace. It is because that grace was purchased for them by Christ when they were clearly and obviously His enemies and they hated Him thoroughly.

It was grace that sought men out and it was grace that convicted them and gave them ears to hear. There was nothing in man that would move him to seek grace, but instead only grace can precede grace or the Gospel is not of grace alone. The promise of the Gospel is for helpless sinners who can do nothing to help themselves, while so many teach that the Gospel is for those who will help themselves by some act or actions. Oh no, the Gospel of grace alone knows of nothing that can precede saving grace but grace. If Christ did not purchase grace for sinners who were totally and completely unworthy of it and could do absolutely nothing to obtain it, then the cross of Christ is not all that saves sinners.

As we look at those who were saved on the Day of Pentecost, it should remind us of the Gospel of grace alone. There were people there who crucified Christ and surely nothing preceded grace in their case, but of course we must remember that if anyone else could be saved Christ had to die for them and so they put Christ on the cross as well. We must also remember that before we were converted there was nothing in our hearts but enmity toward the true God. Grace preceded grace and nothing in us preceded grace nor could it possibly precede grace or grace would no longer be grace. Behold the glory of the grace of God in its freeness to helpless sinners.

Free Grace 11

July 23, 2015

Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God. The light and beams of grace do dispel the clouds of our sins. Not for our sakes, but for his Name’s sake he covereth our sins. It is God’s prerogative to free us from sin by grace, and to remove them far from us. “As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” {Ps.103:12} He only can remove sin against whom it is committed. He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up. John Simpson {Perfection of Justification, 1648} Obtained from Supralapsarian.com.
Acts 9:1 Now Saul, still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord, went to the high priest, 2 and asked for letters from him to the synagogues at Damascus, so that if he found any belonging to the Way, both men and women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem. 3 As he was traveling, it happened that he was approaching Damascus, and suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him; 4 and he fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” 5 And he said, “Who are You, Lord?” And He said, “I am Jesus whom you are persecuting,

Phi 3:4 although I myself might have confidence even in the flesh. If anyone else has a mind to put confidence in the flesh, I far more: 5 circumcised the eighth day, of the nation of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; as to the Law, a Pharisee; 6 as to zeal, a persecutor of the church; as to the righteousness which is in the Law, found blameless.

The conversion of Saul (later Paul) is a great lesson to all who will think through it. In this great teaching we can easily see that there was nothing in Saul that preceded the grace of God. There was absolutely nothing in Saul that would move a thrice holy God to save a wretch like Saul and the only thing that could possibly move God to save a wretch like Saul was God Himself. Only God could move God to save Saul. There was also nothing that could prevent God from saving Saul if He so desired. The sin of Saul could not prevent God from saving Saul if Christ died for that sin and purchased a new heart for him. The unbelief of Saul was nothing that the resurrection power of Christ could not overcome.

We see in Saul absolutely nothing but a man who was proud in his own zeal and self-righteousness. We see in Saul an unbridled confidence in his flesh in terms of his bloodline and lineage. We see in Saul that all the proper rites had been done and he trusted in that as well. We see in Saul that he was a man who trusted that he was righteousness and even blameless according to the Law. We see in Saul that he was a man who persecuted the church and in doing so he was proud of his zeal for God and the orthodox religion he thought he had. This highly educated man was so zealous to keep the Law and protect his religion. This highly educated man had such zeal for the Law and the honor of God, yet in the eyes of God this man was a vile and wretched man who hated God. Saul spent his days hated and being hated by men (Titus 3:3) and his zeal was fueled and stoked by enmity toward the true God and the true Gospel.

In the conversion of Saul we can almost hear a “behold your God” to all who read about this conversion. We can see that Saul was reached with some truth in the murder of Stephen who stood firm and preached the Gospel as Saul was there. We can see that Saul was knocked to the ground by a God who had decided to convert this man for His own glory and not because of anything in Saul. God saved Saul be a free and sovereign grace because Saul was set against the Gospel with all of his will. He had no free-will in relation to the true and living God. It was the will of God that was set to save Saul by a free-grace and a sovereign grace. This conversion was indeed all to the glory of His grace and there was nothing in Saul that shared in the glory and beauty of God. The conversion of Saul was a glorious event in which grace shone brighter than the light which knocked Saul off of his donkey and make him bow to the true Lord. The living God had set His sights and intents upon Saul from all eternity and God was going to save that man and there was nothing that could prevent it, even Saul himself. God will be gracious to whom He will be gracious and He was gracious to Saul as He pleased. In other words, nothing preceded the grace of God in order to save Saul and nothing could prevent it. It was all for His glory and only His.

Free Grace 10

July 22, 2015

Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God. The light and beams of grace do dispel the clouds of our sins. Not for our sakes, but for his Name’s sake he covereth our sins. It is God’s prerogative to free us from sin by grace, and to remove them far from us. “As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” {Ps.103:12} He only can remove sin against whom it is committed. He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up. John Simpson {Perfection of Justification, 1648} Obtained from Supralapsarian.com
Isaiah 40:17 All the nations are as nothing before Him, They are regarded by Him as less than nothing and meaningless.

Acts 9:1 Now Saul, still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord, went to the high priest, 2 and asked for letters from him to the synagogues at Damascus, so that if he found any belonging to the Way, both men and women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem. 3 As he was traveling, it happened that he was approaching Damascus, and suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him; 4 and he fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” 5 And he said, “Who are You, Lord?” And He said, “I am Jesus whom you are persecuting,

The conversion of Saul is very instructive if the issue is pressed upon our souls. Why did God regenerate Saul? Was it because of anything good in Saul? Was it because of the religion of Saul? Was it because Saul was so very zealous for God as a Pharisee? Was it because Saul was born a Jew or of the right parents? Was it because Saul was blameless according to the Law? Was it because Saul was so educated in a religious system? Was it because Saul knew the Old Testament so well?

As we think on these things it may come to mind how Paul (formerly Saul) answered all of these questions in his epistles. But if God did not regenerate Saul because of those things, then He will not be moved to regenerate sinners in our day for similar things either. We must not think that Paul wrote about the Gospel and gave reasons why he was not saved and yet think we are okay for the same reasons that Paul was clearly not saved on account of. We must read Paul as the sent one of Christ, yes, but also as one who was converted and knew the things that he was not converted on account of.

Phi 3:4 although I myself might have confidence even in the flesh. If anyone else has a mind to put confidence in the flesh, I far more: 5 circumcised the eighth day, of the nation of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; as to the Law, a Pharisee; 6 as to zeal, a persecutor of the church; as to the righteousness which is in the Law, found blameless.

Saul had reason to be confident in the flesh more than anyone alive today. He said that he had far more reason for confidence in the flesh than those in his own day, so we can make the deduction that he would have even more reason to have more confidence than people today. If Saul and then Paul realized that he had nothing that could precede the grace of God, then no one has any reason to find hope that God will find a reason in them to move Him to show them grace. This is not simply a theological game for people to play; this is deadly serious and is eternally serious. All those who think that they can find something in them that will move God to show grace to them are not looking to grace alone and Christ alone for salvation.

The conversion of Saul should stand as a monument and a sign to all who think that they understand the Gospel. It should boom with a great and loud noise that no sinner has anything in him or her that will move God to save him or her. God saves by grace alone and for no other reason. God saves according to Himself and for no other reason. Yet while this is a warning to those who look for something in themselves to move God, this is also great hope for those who see nothing in themselves. Those who see nothing in themselves are those who should hope because they have eyes that have been illuminated by the Spirit. Oh poor and trembling sinner, Christ does not look to you for anything to save you, He only looks to Himself to save you. He is all a sinner must have. Nothing else.

Free Grace 9

July 21, 2015

Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God. The light and beams of grace do dispel the clouds of our sins. Not for our sakes, but for his Name’s sake he covereth our sins. It is God’s prerogative to free us from sin by grace, and to remove them far from us. “As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” {Ps.103:12} He only can remove sin against whom it is committed. He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up. John Simpson {Perfection of Justification, 1648} Obtained from Supralapsarian.com
Isaiah 40:17 All the nations are as nothing before Him, They are regarded by Him as less than nothing and meaningless.

Acts 9:1 Now Saul, still breathing threats and murder against the disciples of the Lord, went to the high priest, 2 and asked for letters from him to the synagogues at Damascus, so that if he found any belonging to the Way, both men and women, he might bring them bound to Jerusalem. 3 As he was traveling, it happened that he was approaching Damascus, and suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him; 4 and he fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting Me?” 5 And he said, “Who are You, Lord?” And He said, “I am Jesus whom you are persecuting,

In looking at the conversion of Saul (became Paul) we see the glory of free-grace and in doing so we see the only hope for sinners. The conversion story of Saul not only gives hope to unconverted sinners, it gives hope to converted sinners who have had their eyes opened to their sin and see themselves as so sinful that they have lost hope and mourn that they are without Christ. The conversion story of Saul should give hope to those who see nothing in themselves that would make them worthy of the least mercy of God and cannot see anything in themselves that makes them think that they are saved. Saul, who was later the apostle Paul, called himself the chief of sinners and said that he was shown mercy as the foremost of sinners so that the perfect patience of Christ would be seen in him as an example for those who would believe in Him for eternal life (I Timothy 1:15-16).

What merits did Saul obtain before he was converted? He was a very religious man, but in that he was persecuting Christ he was a very vile and wicked man. Saul was persecuting Christ by going after the body of Christ (the Church, the people of God) and killing some and putting others in prison. Saul was righteous in the eyes of men and in the eyes of very religious men, but in the eyes of God he was an unregenerate hater of God who was persecuting Christ. Saul had no merit in the eyes of God and there was nothing in him that would move God to save him based on himself.

But surely, some would argue, that is going too far. Saul was a very religious man and followed the law stringently. Surely there was something in Saul that would have moved God to save him. Well, by nature Saul was a child of wrath. He was born dead in trespasses and sins and he was a child of the devil. All of the intents of his heart was wicked and that continually. All of his religion, therefore, was really a way of suppressing the truth of God in unrighteousness and so all of the religion of Paul was done in service of the idol of self rather than the living God. But again, what would have moved God to have saved a wretch like Paul?

As stated in the paragraph at the top, “He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up.” God saved Paul on the only basis that a sinner can be saved and that is the basis of Himself. God covers our sins by the blood of Christ and clothes us in the perfectly white linen robes of the righteousness of Christ for His own name’s sake. Here is the ground of confidence that we have before the living God. We are not saved because of our righteousness or merit, and we are not kept in His hands by our own works or goodness. We are saved by the free-grace of God which means that God saves sinners based on Himself and His own glory rather than anything found in the sinner. Oh here is hope for poor sinners. Here is hope for sinners who find nothing in themselves to hope in. Here is hope for sinners who see no merit and no righteousness in themselves. The hope is that God does not save them or keep them saved because of anything found in themselves, but because of His own glory. Sinners, look to Christ and to Christ alone for grace and by grace.

Being Turned Over to Sin 2

July 19, 2015

Rom 1:18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, 19 because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them…22 Professing to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures…25 For they exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever…28 and just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper 29 being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, 30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31 without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful; 32 and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them.

One of the most obvious ways (from the text) that God hardens hearts and turns men over to sin is when He hardens their hearts toward Himself and turns them over to various forms of humanism. The core aspect of sin is always in relation to God.
1. Men suppress the truth in unrighteousness, because that which is known about God is evident within them.
2. Men exchange the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man
3. Men exchange the truth of God for a lie, and worship and serve the creature rather than the Creator
4. Men do not see fit to acknowledge God any longer
5. Men are haters of God
6. Men approve the sinful practices of others even though God hates those practices

If we are to understand the human heart and how it responds to sin and how the heart of sin responds to sin, we must go beyond humanism and humanistic psychology and look at the biblical teaching on these things. On the one hand the human heart has the basic knowledge of God because Scripture teaches us that God makes Himself known to men and makes it evident. On the other hand, man is born a child of wrath, hates God, and is at enmity with Him. The conclusion, I would think, is quite self-evident. The knowledge of God that God has put in man is hated by the man and so he suppresses the truth of God.

The root of all kinds of sin in one sense is the love of man for money (greed), but man only loves money when he is suppressing the truth of God and wants the money to be independent of God, though he may not be fully cognizant of that fact. The issue of sin is that the unregenerate man is always suppressing the truth of God with enmity in his heart toward God. There is nothing that man can do that is not either out of love for God or out of enmity toward God. We are told by seemingly virtually everybody that man is free, but man is not free. His heart is bound in rebellion against God and unless God grants man a new heart each man will live in enmity toward God all of his days and then for all eternity.

Scripture also teaches us that “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Rom 3:23). This teaches us another aspect of sin is that part of the standard of God for man is that man is to do all he does for the glory of God. This is a standard that reaches the very heart of man in that this gets to the actions of man and the motives and intentions of the heart. The heart, however, that is at enmity with God will never bow to God and do all it does for His glory. It may be the case that an unregenerate heart may try to force itself and deceive itself that it is doing what it does for His glory, and this would be especially truth of the very religious person that was unregenerate. But it must be seen that in all that man does he either does what he does for the glory of God or for his own glory. There is no alternative even in the outward acts of kindness that man does toward others. Man can do outward acts that appear to be done for others, but man will do those outward acts out of love for himself, opinion of himself, and religious esteem for himself. They can also be acts of self-righteousness. The point, however, is when man does outward acts and does them out of love for himself, he is acting with enmity toward God. The living God sees this enmity in the heart and is perfectly just to turn that heart over to the sin that the heart desires.

Real Repentance 29

July 18, 2015

Matthew 3:7 But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming for baptism, he said to them, “You brood of vipers, who warned you to flee from the wrath to come? 8 “Therefore bear fruit in keeping with repentance; 9 and do not suppose that you can say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham for our father’; for I say to you that from these stones God is able to raise up children to Abraham.

If my nature, heart, will, and affections must be changed, God must do it; for I can no more change them than I could make myself. (Thomas Adam, Private Thoughts on Religion)

While the quote from Adam above is a strike at all the religion of self and the will of self, it makes the point and makes it powerfully. Man is made in the first creation and he had nothing to do with that. Man did not choose his parents, did not choose to be born, and did not choose one thing about himself. Man did not choose how he looks, how tall he is, nor how heavily boned he is. Man did not choose his personality nor several things about his inner life as well. When it comes to man needing a new heart, there is no question that this is the work of God as well.

It is relatively easy for men to see the basics of how utterly incapable they were about their birth and how they came into the world. It is far harder, however, for men to recognize their utter nothingness before God and their utter inability in changing their nature, heart, will, and affections. This is part of the creation and no one can do this but God Himself. Man will argue and fight that he is free to change himself by a mere choice or act of the will, but this is simply impossible. This is a sovereign work of the Spirit and that is His work alone.

John 1:12 But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name, 13 who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

James 1:18 In the exercise of His will He brought us forth by the word of truth, so that we would be a kind of first fruits among His creatures.

In the two passages above the assertion of Adam is easily seen as true. The new birth is not the work of man, but instead it is in the exercise of His will that we are brought forth. It is not because of the parents or lineage of a person that one is born from above, but it is the will of God. It is not the will of any human flesh and not the will of any man, but instead the new birth happens only by the will of God. It should be clear from the very fact that a man cannot make himself so man cannot make a new self, but people want to deny that. But the texts of Scripture stand strong in their affirmations that God alone can give them new hearts.

True repentance and regeneration are not two completely different things in reality. When God changes the heart of a person, then the person turns from unbelief to belief and from the power of sin to the power of grace. While sinners are only too happy to settle for an external repentance and think that they have repented, those with new hearts will long to repent of sin more and more and in fact their sin is their greatest misery. A new heart gives men new tastes and new views of things, so that the sin that man once loved is now his greatest misery. It is a trial to the heart of man to find out that he still finds some delight in sin and has little sorrow for it, but he seeks the Lord to give him more sorrow in sin so that by tasting the bitterness of it he will learn to leave it alone. It is also a great trial to a sensitive soul that he loves the Lord so little, so he asks for the Lord to grant him a turning from love for the world and self to love the Lord with more and more of his being.

Real Repentance 28

July 17, 2015

Matthew 3:7 But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming for baptism, he said to them, “You brood of vipers, who warned you to flee from the wrath to come? 8 “Therefore bear fruit in keeping with repentance; 9 and do not suppose that you can say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham for our father’; for I say to you that from these stones God is able to raise up children to Abraham.

Pride is seeing the defects of others, and overlooking our own. Humility is seeing, feeling, and lamenting sin in ourselves; not only past, but present sin; not only actual sin, but the root of it in an evil nature, and all sin without disguise or extenuation, in all its guilt and malignity. (Thomas Adam, Private Thoughts on Religion)

No man is humbled or sincere with God, till he is willing to know the worst of himself. (Thomas Adam, Private Thoughts on Religion)

The statement or quote just above is a very tough statement for our hearts to deal with. We want to know just enough of ourselves to think of ourselves as sinful because we know that we are supposed to do so, but to want to know or at least to be willing to know the worst of ourselves is a much different thing. It may be that we can even desire to know bad things of ourselves so that we can boast before others what God has shown us, but that is still not a willingness to know the worst of ourselves. The heart has so many crevices and abysses to hide itself from ourselves that it takes a lot of light and digging to uncover the worst of ourselves as the heart wants to be hidden in the darkness. The depths of self-love and pride are beyond our understanding and we always want to protect self in ways that perhaps we don’t understand. The heart of man seems to always be in a self-defensive posture.

It is not “natural” for a soul to want to see itself in the blazing light of holiness, but the heart that loves holiness will have some desire to see itself as it is in order to repent of those sins. It is easy to maintain a comfortable religion while just dealing with sins that we think are normal and does not take much discomfort to actually stop the sin or even deal with the sin enough in the heart to deceive ourselves. But can a person really be sincere with God until that person is willing to know the worst of self? Adam is hitting on an important point that souls can so easily deceive themselves over. It is also an important point in that souls can keep themselves comfortable and deceived in an unconverted state. A truly repentant state or a state of a regenerate heart is one that will grow in its repentance because it wants to be holy as He is holy.

Each soul should ask itself in the light of Scripture as it prays to God. Do I really want to know the worst of myself? Do I really want to see and know the depths of sin in my heart? Do I really want to know the extent of blackness that remains in my heart? If not, I just want to remain in a state of deception in order to remain comfortable while holding self in high regard and without a true love for God and holiness. Until the Lord Himself has humbled our soul and made us sincere in our walk with God, we are not truly willing to know ourselves which is the same thing as knowing the worst thing about ourselves. This is a terrible condition to be in, though it must be admitted that a person can be comfortable in it.

The soul that longs for true holiness is a person that will long to know things about its own heart so that it may deal with sin as it is. The soul that longs for true holiness out of love for God will know from past experience how painful it is for the Lord to open up the blackness and vileness of its own heart, but it wants to walk with God and it wants to be free from the sin which binds it in ways it does not know at the moment. Oh the depths of the sin of our hearts and the depths of our self-love which constantly deceives us to that depths of sin!

When we see that we are sinners by nature and that we are sinners by practice we see ourselves with horror and agony of soul, but there is much more to come. We will constantly cry out as the tax collector did as he would not even look up, “’God, be merciful to me, the sinner!’” We will cry out with David for the Lord to know our hearts. We will begin to see things in ourselves that we have accused others of and despised others over. We will begin to see mass hypocrisy and religiosity in our own hearts. We will want to cover our mouths in order never to utter a word again when we see our mouths as an the outpouring of a cesspool of sin in the heart. We will be cast upon Christ for free-grace and we will not trust in our own self-wrought repentance of faith. We will want nothing but free-grace.

Being Turned Over to Sin 1

July 16, 2015

Rom 1:18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, 19 because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them…22 Professing to be wise, they became fools, 23 and exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals and crawling creatures…25 For they exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever…28 and just as they did not see fit to acknowledge God any longer, God gave them over to a depraved mind, to do those things which are not proper 29 being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, 30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31 without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful; 32 and although they know the ordinance of God, that those who practice such things are worthy of death, they not only do the same, but also give hearty approval to those who practice them.

One of the most obvious ways (from the text) that God hardens hearts and turns men over to sin is when He hardens their hearts toward Himself and turns them over to various forms of humanism. The core aspect of sin is always in relation to God.
1. Men suppress the truth in unrighteousness, because that which is known about God is evident within them.
2. Men exchange the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of corruptible man
3. Men exchange the truth of God for a lie, and worship and serve the creature rather than the Creator
4. Men do not see fit to acknowledge God any longer
5. Men are haters of God
6. Men approve the sinful practices of others even though God hates those practices

While selfishness and self-centeredness are seen as sinful, they are usually thought of as sinful because of how men treat other men. However, the height of the wickedness of selfishness is against God. The true nature and true wickedness of sin is that it is always against God in some way. The selfish heart refuses to have God as God and it prefers itself to God, which is idolatry. As the selfish heart pushes God away and suppresses the truth of God in unrighteousness, God hardens that heart and leaves it to itself. When God backs off or withdraws His presence, He is giving the person or the people that He is withdrawing from into a terrible judgment. Those people are given over into the hands of a fool or fools. Such is every person apart from the wisdom of God.

Every human being has the basic knowledge of God in them and cannot deny it apart from a long series of hardening. God has made Himself known to people and has made it evident to them. For men to deny the basic truths of God, they have to work long and hard to suppress that truth which is in every fiber of their beings. While it is not possible for man to wipe out every vestige of the knowledge of God in them, the wrath of God is poured out upon those who work to do so. The wrath of God in the passage above is to harden hearts and turn men over to sin. While it is shocking to human beings in the United States in our day to think of a God who is angry and has wrath, it is even more shocking that this God actually displays wrath.

What is a vital point in the pouring out of the wrath of God, however, is that unregenerate men do not see this wrath being poured out. They don’t see this wrath and since they are getting what they think that they want, they don’t even mind this wrath at the moment. It is so important to read this text and see that God pours out His anger and wrath against all ungodliness and unrighteousness men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness. This is to say that day after day God pours out His wrath on individuals and groups, though indeed as that wrath is poured out people are also blinded to the fact that God is pouring out wrath. As people and groups of people go on suppressing the truth of God in unrighteousness, they are turned over to more and more sin and they are blinded to that wrath more and more.

What is going on in the United States today is that the wrath of God is being poured out upon us. I am not sure how it can be denied that hearts are growing harder toward God (hardened by Him) and people are simply blind to what is going on. Some are getting richer and it seems that all are getting bolder and more comforted in their sin, which is to say that God is blinding people to His wrath that is upon them. We are in desperate and troubling times.

Free Grace 8

July 15, 2015

Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God. The light and beams of grace do dispel the clouds of our sins. Not for our sakes, but for his Name’s sake he covereth our sins. It is God’s prerogative to free us from sin by grace, and to remove them far from us. “As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” {Ps.103:12} He only can remove sin against whom it is committed. He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up. John Simpson {Perfection of Justification, 1648} Obtained from Supralapsarian.com
Isaiah 40:17 All the nations are as nothing before Him, They are regarded by Him as less than nothing and meaningless.

The vastness of God and the fullness of God are in stark contrast with the smallness and emptiness of man. The sin of man is directly against God which means that the sin of man is far greater than he can imagine. God created man holy and good, yet man has fallen into unholiness and evil. God created the soul with light and beauty, yet man fell and the soul became darkness and deformed. The soul of man is now deformed both morally and intellectually, though the two are so related that one cannot be deformed in one without being deformed in the other.

The fall and sin has taken the soul as it came from the hand of God and has changed it to where it is thought of in terms of physical maladies and diseases. The soul is said to be crippled, by which it refers to its utter inability to do what it was created to do much as a person which is struck down with some malady cannot walk as the body was created to do. The soul is said to be diseased when it is full of sin which makes its comparison to leprosy and other diseases of the body. A diseased body in the Old Testament meant that one was unclean, as then as now a person can have diseases of the soul which makes it unclean to be in the presence of God. As with leprosy, sin is contagious and has terrible effects on others and can be passed on to them with terrible results.

The fallen soul is pictured as having problems much as the body has with its senses when diseases take over. The soul is said to be blind. The soul is said to be deaf and cannot hear. The soul is said to be in such a state that its odor is like that of an open grace. The soul is said to have tastes that are foul. The soul is said to be apart from God and cannot sense His presence. What we must understand by all of these pictures is that the soul has nothing in it that can precede grace. There is nothing in the soul that is anything but against God and is fighting God with enmity and hatred. The soul has absolutely and utterly nothing in it but what would repel a holy God.

So we are left with a being that is beneath nothing, which is to say that it has sinned and it is worse than nothing. It is not at level zero which is to have done nothing good or bad, but instead the soul is by nature worthy of the wrath and anger of God and even more the soul is sinning against God in all that it is, thinks, desires, or does. All the motivations of the soul are not out of love for God but are out of love for self. All the intentions of the soul are for self rather than love for God. There is not only nothing good in the soul, but there is nothing but sin in the soul. The soul, once again, has nothing that would move God to save it, but even more it has done nothing but sin against the God with enmity and hatred in all it does.

The soul is left in the hands of Divine grace. There is nothing in the soul that would move a holy, holy, holy God to save it, but instead the sinfulness of the soul is repulsive to such a thrice holy Being. Yet the statement above is that nothing can prevent the grace of God. Oh how this is good news to vile sinners who see themselves as what they really are. They know that their wills are not free from depravity and they don’t want to be free from grace. They look to Christ alone who can save them despite of who they are. Because God saves sinners for the sake of His own name and out of love for Himself He can save sinners and nothing can prevent His saving sinners if He is pleased to do so. The motivations and intents of God are perfectly pure and holy, so it must be His own glory and name that moves Him. But when He is moved by Himself to save sinners, there is nothing that can hold Him back or prevent Him. Oh poor sinner, look to Christ as your all. If you look to self you will see nothing that would motivate God to save or sanctify you. Look to Christ and you will see Him who for His name’s sake alone can move God to save you and sanctify you. Oh what hope there is for sinners who die to self and simply look to Christ by grace alone and for grace alone.

Free Grace 7

July 14, 2015

Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God. The light and beams of grace do dispel the clouds of our sins. Not for our sakes, but for his Name’s sake he covereth our sins. It is God’s prerogative to free us from sin by grace, and to remove them far from us. “As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” {Ps.103:12} He only can remove sin against whom it is committed. He only can cast sin into the depths of the sea, who hath an ocean of grace in himself, in which he swalloweth them up. John Simpson {Perfection of Justification, 1648} Obtained from Supralapsarian.com
Isaiah 40:17 All the nations are as nothing before Him, They are regarded by Him as less than nothing and meaningless.

The comfort that a poor sinner comes to when s/he arrives at the utter end of all trust in the worth of self and the merits that self can possibly obtain is beyond measure. Until sinners arrive at that utter end of all trust in self sinners will trust in themselves to some measure or degree. The heart of man is in a constant war to trust in self to some degree or even just a little bit, but note that the heart of man knows that it must not trust in self for all. But how deceptive it is for man to think that he must trust in self just a little, though indeed that is not how the heart would lie to self about it, but when a person trusts in self just a little a person is trusting in self as the trigger of the whole event.

The heart of man is constantly clinging to something or someone to obtain the slightest bit of something that will move God to save him. This is part of the horror of Arminian theology. It tells men that it is up to them to make a choice, pray a prayer, or to do something so that God will save them. This is what is so repulsive to those who strongly protest Arminian theology and practice. “Nothing in man doth precede or prevent the grace of God” is the statement of theology on which grace alone rests. God does not look to man for anything to move Him to show grace. There is nothing in man that precedes grace but sin and that is nothing to move God in a positive way. The Arminian doctrine of free-will teaches us that the will is free of depravity and of grace enough to where the will is free. That means that there is something in man that precedes grace. As long as it is taught that there is something in man that man needs to do in order to receive grace, that teaching is not biblical and denies grace alone.

When the Scriptures teach that “All the nations are as nothing before Him, They are regarded by Him as less than nothing and meaningless,” this destroys the hope of any sinner to find something in self that precedes grace. If all the nations are regarded by Him as less than nothing, then not only is there nothing to be found in any single sinner that is pleasing to God or will move God, but there are things that are less than nothing that are found. The sinner must be broken from any hope or trust in himself by the teaching ministry of Christ that he may look to Christ alone for His grace alone. The sinner cannot look to Christ alone if the sinner looks to himself to make a choice or to pray a prayer in order to move God to save him or her. Until the sinner sees self as nothing and even less than nothing, the sinner will always be looking to self for something.

The Scriptures are remarkable clear on this subject though man has muddied the waters. God saves for His name’s sake alone and there is nothing in man that can move Him since He is only self-moved. As long as man is trusting in self for even some little something, then man is not trusting in God to save himself in accordance with God’s grace alone or salvation for the sake of God’s name and glory alone. Unregenerate man has sinned against God by having a nature that is opposed to God and is at enmity with God as well as his deeds are opposed to God in every way. Even if man had never sinned, God would not owe man anything as man can never bring God to a point where God is obligated to man. Even apart from sin, could man ever have done anything good apart from receiving it first from God? So at his best man was utterly dependant upon God for all good that he would do. But now that man has sinned, man is less than nothing since nothing has never had a being to sin. Being a sinner is far worse than man can realize at any point, but the unbeliever’s sin is upon him and blinds him as well. Oh how sinners should give up all hope in themselves, their merits, and their worth. They will only be saved by grace alone and that for the sake of His name alone. Looking to themselves for any part of that is a terrible pride and is greatly opposed to the Gospel of grace alone. Nothing can possibly precede the grace of God.