Institutes of the Christian Religion (Vol. 2 of 2)
CHAPTER XXII.01
Testimonies Of Scripture In Confirmation Of This Doctrine - Reading 01
CHAPTER XXII.
TESTIMONIES OF SCRIPTURE IN CONFIRMATION OF THIS DOCTRINE.
All the positions we have advanced are controverted by many,
especially the gratuitous election of believers, which nevertheless
cannot be shaken. It is a notion commonly entertained,
that God, foreseeing what would be the respective merits of
every individual, makes a correspondent distinction between
different persons; that he adopts as his children such as he
foreknows will be deserving of his grace, and devotes to the
damnation of death others, whose dispositions he sees will be
inclined to wickedness and impiety. Thus they not only
obscure election by covering it with the veil of foreknowledge,
but pretend that it originates in another cause. Nor is
this commonly received notion the opinion of the vulgar only,
for it has had great advocates in all ages; which I candidly
confess, that no one may cherish a confidence of injuring our
cause by opposing us with their names. For the truth of God
on this point is too certain to be shaken, too clear to be overthrown
by the authority of men. Others, neither acquainted
with the Scripture, nor deserving of any attention, oppose the
sound doctrine with extreme presumption and intolerable effrontery.
God’s sovereign election of some, and preterition of
others, they make the subject of formal accusation against
him. But if this is the known fact, what will they gain by
quarrelling with God? We teach nothing but what experience
has proved, that God has always been at liberty to bestow his
grace on whom he chooses. I will not inquire how the posterity
of Abraham excelled other nations, unless it was by that
favour, the cause of which can only be found in God. Let them
answer why they are men, and not oxen or asses: when it was
in God’s power to create them dogs, he formed them after his
own image. Will they allow the brute animals to expostulate
with God respecting their condition, as though the distinction
were unjust? Their enjoyment of a privilege which they have
acquired by no merits, is certainly no more reasonable than
God’s various distribution of his favours according to the measure
of his judgment. If they make a transition to persons
where the inequality is more offensive to them, the example
of Christ at least ought to deter them from carelessly prating
concerning this sublime mystery. A mortal man is conceived
of the seed of David: to the merit of what virtues will they
ascribe his being made, even in the womb, the Head of angels,
the only begotten Son of God, the Image and Glory of the
Father, the Light, Righteousness, and Salvation of the world?
It is judiciously remarked by Augustine, that there is the
brightest example of gratuitous election in the Head of the
Church himself, that it may not perplex us in the members;
that he did not become the Son of God by leading a righteous
life, but was gratuitously invested with this high honour, that
he might afterwards render others partakers of the gifts bestowed
upon him. If any one inquire, why others are not all
that he was, or why we are all at such a vast distance from
him,—why we are all corrupt, and he purity itself,—he will
betray both folly and impudence. But if they persist in the
wish to deprive God of the uncontrollable right of choosing
and rejecting, let them also take away what is given to Christ.
Now, it is of importance to attend to what the Scripture declares
respecting every individual. Paul’s assertion, that we
were “chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world,” [463] [464] [465]
II. To render the proof more complete, it will be useful to notice all the clauses of that passage, which, taken in connection, leave no room for doubt. By the appellation of the elect, or chosen, he certainly designates believers, as he soon after declares: wherefore it is corrupting the term by a shameful fiction to restrict it to the age in which the gospel was published. By saying that they were elected before the creation of the world, he precludes every consideration of merit. For what could be the reason for discrimination between those who yet had no existence, and whose condition was afterward to be the same in Adam? Now, if they are chosen in Christ, it follows, not only that each individual is chosen out of himself, but also that some are separated from others; for it is evident, that all are not members of Christ. The next clause, stating them to have been “chosen that they might be holy,” fully refutes the error which derives election from foreknowledge; since Paul, on the contrary, declares that all the virtue discovered in men is the effect of election. If any inquiry be made after a superior cause, Paul replies, that God thus “predestinated,” and that it was “according to the good pleasure of his will.” This overturns any means of election which men imagine in themselves; for all the benefits conferred by God for the spiritual life, he represents as flowing from this one source, that God elected whom he would, and, before they were born, laid up in reserve for them the grace with which he determined to favor them.
III. Wherever this decree of God reigns, there can be no
consideration of any works. The antithesis, indeed, is not pursued
here; but it must be understood, as it is amplified by the
same writer in another place: “Who hath called us with a
holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his
own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus,
before the world began.” [466] [467] [468] [469]