And this is a matter of experience of every sinner that is saved by grace.
He that comes to Jesus experiences in this act of coming that drawing of the
marvelous and efficacious grace of God, and that, too, in such a way that
the latter is first and is the cause of the former. One that is saved will
surely acknowledge this. Never will a regenerated child of God present the
matter of his salvation as having had its initiative in him. Never will he
say that anything on his part preceded the operation of God's grace in him,
that he first willed to come, that he first accepted Christ and thereupon
Christ received him, that he first opened his heart and thereupon Christ entered
in. An unmistakable proof of this may be found in the prayer of the one that
is saved. Here all Arminianism, all boasting of free will in the matter of
salvation, is silenced. The reason is that in prayer one speaks to God. Before
men one may talk of coming to Jesus as if it were in the power of the sinner
to come, or to refuse to come. But as soon as one places himself before the
face of God all this is changed. Then all is attributed to divine grace. Before
the face of God there is no Arminianism. Or whoever heard anyone utter an
Arminian prayer like this: "I thank thee God, that Thou didst wait until it
pleased me to come, and that Thou didst knock until I was good enough to open
my heart for Thee, and that Thou gavest me grace when I decided to receive
it.?" Yet why should not a man express before the face of God what
he loudly and boldly proclaims to man? The simple answer is: because before
God we cannot lie! Hence, in prayer a saved sinner will attribute all to God
and none to self. He will cease speaking about the free will of man, and say:
"I thank Thee that Thy irresistible grace overpowered all my resistance, that
Thou didst open and enter into my heart, that Thou didst draw me that I might
come!" And this is the heart of the assurance and boldness of the sinner as
he comes to Jesus. The very fact that in his coming to Jesus the sinner experiences
the drawing of the Father is his guarantee that he will surely be received.
Through the prophet Jeremiah, Jehovah says to His people Israel: "Yea, I
have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with lovingkindness have
I drawn thee." Let us not overlook that the drawing of Jehovah is presented
here as act of God's lovingkindness or mercy; and, secondly, that this act
is rooted in, and a manifestation of the everlasting love of God to His people
(Jer.
31:3). And what is the result of this drawing of God's love? This, "that
the watchmen upon the mount Ephraim shall cry, Arise ye, and let us go up
to Zion unto the Lord our God" - Verse
6. The will to come to the God of our salvation is the fruit of the drawing
of God. To the murmuring multitude in Capernaum, who were about to depart
from Him, the Lord Jesus speaks the well known words: "No man can come to
me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up
at the last day. It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all taught
of God. Every man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the Father,
cometh unto me." Let us pause a moment to consider this important passage.
It teaches us first of all, that the drawing of God's grace is indispensable
to the coming of the sinner. Without this drawing by the Father it is impossible
for any man to come: No man can come, except the Father draw him.
And this does not mean of course, that a sinner may desire, may earnestly
long to come to Jesus, but that he is withheld by some constraining power,
but that he has neither the will nor the power to come. The coming and the
will to come are utterly dependent on the gracious drawing of the Father.
Secondly, this passage explains the drawing by the Father as a being taught
of God, the result of which is that a man hears and learns of the Father.
You readily understand, of course, that this does not refer to the outward
preaching of the Word by man. The outward preaching of the gospel by no means
causes the whole audience to hear and to learn of the Father, still less to
come to Christ. But the Lord here speaks of a being taught of God, of Christ,
of the things concerning salvation, and that results in the spiritual act
of coming to Christ. And, finally, let us note, too, that the fruit of this
drawing and divine teaching is sure and infallible, for "Every man therefore
that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me." - John
6:44, 45
Whosoever will may come! For every man that will come has been taught to
will and to come by the efficacious drawing power of the grace of God. He
will surely be received.
The same truth is repeated in another form in verse
65 of the same chapter of the gospel according to John: "And he said:
"Therefore said I unto you that no man can come unto me, except it were given
unto him of my Father." The same impossibility, the same utter incapability
of the natural man to come to Jesus is expressed here as in the forty-fourth
verse. How shall he come to Christ? Can the mere preaching of the gospel
persuade him? But the preaching of the gospel concerns spiritual things, and
he is natural, and "the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God: for they are foolishness to him: neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned." I
Cor. 2:14. Hence, it must be given unto him of the Father. The will and
the power to come to Jesus are gifts of grace. And therefore the Lord can
say triumphantly even in the face of the fact that the bread-seeking multitude
of Capernaum oppose Him. "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me;
and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out!" Verse
37.
But what is this drawing of the Father through which the sinner comes to
Christ?
Let me answer, first of all, in a general way, that it is a spiritual operation
of God's grace, through Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of Christ, by means
of the gospel, in our inmost hearts, whence are the issues of life, affecting
the entire man with mind and will and all his emotions and desires. We are
drawn by the Father, but that this drawing does not take place without Christ
as Mediator of our salvation, is plain from what the Lord declared shortly
before His death on the cross: "And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will
draw all (men) unto me." John
12:32. Through the cross the Lord was lifted up into the glory of the
resurrection, and into the height of His position at the right hand of God.
And as the Head of His Church He received the promise of the Spirit, in order
that by that Spirit He might draw all His own unto Him into glory. The Father
draws, and Christ draws also, not as if there were two separate operations,
but so, that the Father draws us through Jesus Christ as the Mediator of our
redemption.
And in this drawing, just as in the act of coming to Jesus, we may distinguish
four steps or elements. The first step one takes in coming to the Savior is
that of contrition, true sorrow after God; and corresponding to this true
sorrow over sin on the part of the sinner, is the divine act of conviction
of sin. The latter is the cause of the former. Only the man that is brought
under conviction of sin by the Spirit of Christ can come to true contrition
and penitence. The Father draws, the sinner comes: this means, therefore first
of all, that the Father convicts, the sinner repents. This must not be confused
with that other operation of God in the conscience of every sinner, whereby
He inscribes into his consciousness the sentence of his guilt and condemnation,
and causes him to assume the responsibility for it. Every man feels that he
is responsible before God for his sin. Not for a moment can he rid himself
of this sense of accountability. And every sinner is convinced that he stands
condemned in judgment before God. And this, too, is the work of God through
His Spirit. Even the Gentiles have the work of the law written in their hearts,
so that their conscience bear witness, Rom.
2:15; and the Spirit convicts the world of sin, because they believe not
on Christ, John
16:9. But this is a consciousness of sin that is characterized by nothing
but fear and terror, and that causes the sinner to flee from the face of Him
that sitteth on the throne, and to call to the mountains and the rocks to
cover him. The conviction of sin unto salvation, however, is principally different.
It is a conviction of love. And to be sure, the fruit also of this saving
conviction is that the sinner fears and trembles before the the majesty of
a righteous God, yet so, that he does not flee away, not attempt to hide himself,
but rather approaches Him in true sorrow that he has offended this Holy God,
and taking God's side in his own condemnation, he prays in the love of God,
even though it be with fear and trembling: "Search me, O God, and know my
heart: try me, and know my thoughts: and see if there be any wicked way in
me." Psalm
139:23,24. This saving conviction of sin is not the work of a preacher;
it is not the work of the sinner himself: it is the work of God's sovereign
grace alone. And without it, the sinner will never take the first step on
the way to Jesus. No man can come to Jesus except the Father draw him!
The second step the sinner takes in coming to Jesus is that of recognition,
whereby the sinner beholds Christ as the God of His salvation, as the fulness
of His own emptiness, the righteousness that is able to blot out his own unrighteousness,
the life that overcomes his death. And corresponding to this act of spiritual
recognition on the sinner's part, is God's act of spiritual illumination,
whereby He reveals His Son unto the sinner. When He convicts a man of sin,
He does not leave him in the despair of his condemnation: He shows him Jesus
in all the fulness of His salvation. This spiritual illumination is not the
same as that natural enlightenment whereby the sinner knows all about Christ,
even recognizes and acknowledges to an extent by his natural powers the beauty
of Christ as the best of men, as one that was deeply God-conscious, as a great
teacher and wonderful example; but he does not behold Him as the righteousness
of God, and the cross is foolishness to him. The Christ of the Scriptures
he crucifies afresh. Modernism in all its manifestations is a good illustration
of this. The natural man does not understand the things of the Spirit; "they
are foolishness to him, neither can he know them, because they are spiritually
discerned." I
Cor. 2:14. Nor does the mere preaching of the gospel give him this spiritual
knowledge of Christ. The Lord Jesus, reviewing the result of His own preaching
gives thanks to the Father that He had hid these things from the wise and
prudent, and revealed them unto babes, Matt.
11:25; and He emphasizes that no man knoweth the Father, save the Son,
and to whomsoever the Son will reveal Him, Matt.
11:27. But when the Father draws us, He reveals unto us Jesus in all His
power of salvation. He so illumines our understanding that we behold Him as
the One that is desirable above all things, as the One we need as our Redeemer
and Deliverer from sin and death. He opens our eyes so that we behold Him
in all the riches of His grace, in all the fulness of His righteousness and
life. He opens our ears, so that we hear the Word of the cross as a power
of God unto salvation. The drawing power of God causes us to seek Him as the
beautiful Savior, the God of our salvation!
However, the Father, through the Spirit of Christ, not only affects our understanding,
so that we discern the Savior spiritually, He also wonderfully operates by
the same Spirit upon our will and our desires, so that we long for Him, and
desire to possess Him. This longing or aspiration, we said in another connection,
is the third step in the sinner's coming to Christ. And corresponding to this
yearning for Christ is the third element in the drawing of the Father, which
we may call allurement or attraction. The natural man is not attracted by
the Christ and His righteousness. He is carnal, and minds carnal things. The
carnal mind is enmity against God. His will is perverse, and all his desires
are impure. He does not hunger and thirst after righteousness. Nor can mere
preaching of the gospel create such a desire after righteousness and the forgiveness
of sin. But when the Father draws, and by the power of His grace marvelously
operates upon the will of the sinner, He changes that will, turns it completely
around, instills into the heart new desires, so that the sinner longs for
righteousness, for the remission of sin, for fellowship with the living God,
for His love and mercy. And as he beholds Christ as the only way unto the
Father, he yearns with a strong desire to possess Him, and to be able to say:
"My Jesus, I love Thee; I know Thou art mine!"
And so, it is also due to the drawing power of the Father, through the Spirit
of Christ, that the sinner finally takes the last step to come to Jesus, that
of appropriation. Corresponding to this act on the sinner's part is the operation
of God's grace, which the Scripture calls sealing. For we are "sealed with
the Holy Spirit of promise." Ephesians
1:13. It is by the Spirit of Christ, the Spirit of promise, that the promise
of God, the promise of redemption, of rest, of satisfaction, of forgiveness,
of righteousness and life, is given unto us personally, so that we are assured
that this promise of God is for us. It is by this Spirit that the love of
God, i.e. not our love to Him, but His love to us, revealed in the death of
His Son, is shed abroad in our hearts, so that we are confident that Christ
died for us, and that not only unto others, but also unto us personally, He
gives remission of sin and life everlasting. And so we are assured that Christ
is ours, and that we may appropriate Him and all His benefits unto ourselves,
and we are bold to confess with the Heidelberg Catechism, question one, that
it is our only comfort in life and death, that we are not our own, but belong
to our faithful Savior Jesus Christ!
Thus we understand why it is so absolutely sure that "whosoever will may
come." In the will to come and the coming the sinner experiences the drawing
power of God's grace. God convicts him of sin, and he repents; God enlightens
him by His Spirit, and he beholds Christ in all His beauty of salvation; God
allures and attracts, and he longs for the God of his salvation; God seals
him, and he appropriates the Christ and all His benefits. How then could he
ever be cast out? They that thus come to Jesus shall never be ashamed!