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Jusr received this sermon from 'John Piper@
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December 15, 2002
Unconditional Election And the Invincible Purpose of God
Romans 9:6-13
But it is not as though the word of God has failed. For they are not
all Israel who are descended from Israel; 7 nor are they all children
because they are Abraham's descendants, but: "THROUGH ISAAC YOUR
DESCENDANTS WILL BE NAMED." 8 That is, it is not the children of the
flesh who are children of God, but the children of the promise are
regarded as descendants. 9 For this is the word of promise: "AT THIS
TIME I WILL COME, AND SARAH SHALL HAVE A SON." 10 And not only this,
but there was Rebekah also, when she had conceived twins by one man,
our father Isaac; 11 for though the twins were not yet born and had
not done anything good or bad, so that God's purpose according to His
choice would stand, not because of works but because of Him who
calls, 12 it was said to her, "THE OLDER WILL SERVE THE YOUNGER." 13
Just as it is written, "JACOB I LOVED, BUT ESAU I HATED."
Our purpose today is limited and huge. We focus merely on verses 11
and 12: "Though the twins were not yet born and had not done anything
good or bad, so that God's purpose according to His choice would
stand, not because of works but because of Him who calls, 12 it was
said to her, `The older will serve the younger.'" Our aim is simply
to understand and apply to our lives the reason Paul gives for saying
to Rebekah, before Jacob and Esau were born or had done anything good
or bad, "The older will serve the younger."
Why did God do this? The answer is given part way into verse
11: ". . . so that God's purpose according to His choice would stand,
not because of works but because of Him who calls." That's the reason
for announcing Jacob's election before his birth. "So that God's
purpose according to election would stand, not because of works but
because of Him who calls." That's what we want to understand.
I exhort you to feel the weight of this sentence. When God tells us
why he does something as eternally fundamental as unconditional
election, he is giving us information about the nature of ultimate
Reality namely his Reality that is more foundational and more
important than all other human knowledge. Nothing is greater to know
under God than why he does his most fundamental acts. And here is one
of these massively important sentences. Why, God, do you do this
great work of unconditional election? Answer: "So that My purpose
according to election would stand, not because of works but because
of Me who calls."
My outline would look like this: First we will look a the
phrase "God's purpose according to election" and see what that phrase
means. Second, we will look at the phrase "not because of works" and
see what that adds to God's purpose. Third, we will look at the
phrase, "But because of him who calls."
I. "God's Purpose According to Election"
First, then, what does the phrase "God's purpose according to
election" mean? Literally the construction in the original is "the
according to election purpose." "According to election" is defining
the purpose. What purpose? "The according to election purpose." In
Romans 11:21 the same grammatical construction occurs in the
phrase, "the according to nature branches." All English versions
translate it "the natural branches." They turn "according to nature"
into an adjective. That's good English and gets the meaning right. So
here in Romans 9:11 we could do it like this: "The according to
election purpose" would be "the electing purpose."
In other words, the purpose of God is at least partly defined by
election. The purpose of God that would not be what it is, if there
were no election. The purpose that consists largely in election. But
what is it? How can we state God's purpose according to election
God's electing purpose?
Let's look at the three closest parallels in Paul's writing where he
used this word "purpose," and work our way back to verse 11.
Romans 8:28
Look first at Romans 8:28, "And we know that God causes all things to
work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called
according to His purpose." Here he says that God calls people to
himself but there is something behind that call, namely, God's
purpose, guiding whom and how he calls. We are called "according to
His purpose." So God's purpose has to do with guiding his saving
work, in this case his calling.
2 Timothy 1:9
Next, let's look at 2 Timothy 1:9. Here again he connects God's
calling his people to his purpose. "He saved us and called us with a
holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His own
purpose and grace which was granted us in Christ Jesus from all
eternity." Here we see four things:
First, God's purpose is eternal "from all eternity," he says. It
doesn't originate or respond to anything. It is eternal.
Second, God's purpose is related to Christ from all eternity. Christ
is not an afterthought. God's purpose was in him and through him from
all eternity.
Third, God's purpose is linked with grace. "According to his own
purpose and grace." It is a gracious purpose. It's a purpose to
exercise grace.
Fourth, the purpose of God rules out works as the basis of his saving
call: "He saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according
to our works, but according to is own purpose." His own purpose is
the basis of his call, not our works.
Ephesians 1:4-6, 11
The third parallel is in Ephesians 1, first in verse 11 and then
verses 4-6. Ephesians 1:11 says, "We have obtained an inheritance,
having been predestined according to His purpose who works all things
after the counsel of His will." Notice two things.
First, not just our calling but also our predestination is "according
to His purpose." So God's purpose governs his predestination.
Second, Paul says that it is a free and sovereign purpose, not
governed by anything outside of God. He says, "According to His
purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will." What's
the point of saying that this Purposer "works all things after the
counsel of his will"? The point is that he governs all things, and
that he does not base his governance ultimately on anything in man or
in nature, but only on himself. "He works all things after the
counsel of his will." We are not finally decisive in turning the will
of God; God alone is decisive.
The next verse (12) comes very close to defining God's purpose. It's
a continuation of verse 11 and tell us what the purpose is of him who
works all things after the counsel of his will, namely, "to the end
that we who were the first to hope in Christ would be to the praise
of His glory." In other words he does all his works to this end: that
we would "be to the praise of his glory." His purpose here is the
praise of his glory.
It is even more pointed in verses 4-6. Follow the purpose statements
up to their highest point in verse 6: "Just as He chose us in Him
before the foundation of the world, that we would be holy and
blameless before Him. In love 5 He predestined us to adoption as sons
through Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the kind intention of
His will [probably another way of referring to his purpose], 6 to the
praise of the glory of His grace, which He freely bestowed on us in
the Beloved." There it is again. God's purpose is to bring about the
praise of the glory of his grace. All election, all predestination,
all calling, and all redemption is according to this purpose for
the praise of the glory of his grace.
What Is God's "Purpose"?
Now back to Romans 9:11. God performs the unconditional election of
Jacob over Esau "so that his purpose according to election would
stand." From all we have seen so far, as well as the context of this
paragraph, I would state the purpose like this: God's purpose is to
be known and enjoyed and praised (or if you like alliteration: to be
seen and savored and sung) as infinitely glorious in his free and
sovereign grace. This is the purpose that governs all the works of
God. He elects, predestines, calls, redeems, justifies, sanctifies,
and glorifies to this end for this purpose: to be seen and savored
and sung as infinitely glorious in his free and sovereign grace.
But "infinitely glorious" I mean perfectly beautiful and immeasurably
great.
By "free" I mean the final reason for all events in the universe is
in himself and not another. The decisive influence of all that
happens in the world is God's. He works all things, not just some
things, after the counsel of his own will. He alone in all the
universe has the freedom of ultimate self-determination.
By "sovereign" I mean that nothing can thwart what he wants most to
do.
God's purpose is to be known and enjoyed and praised as infinitely
glorious in his free and sovereign grace. And this purpose
is "according to election" it is an electing purpose because if
God did not elect unconditionally he would not be free, he would not
be sovereign, and he would not be glorious.
Not free, because then men would determine their own election, not
God. He would be bound (not free) to conform to their own self-
determination.
Not sovereign, because instead of doing successfully what he wants
most, he would be thwarted again and again by self-determining man.
Not glorious, because God's absolute freedom and sovereignty are the
essence of the glory of his grace.
II. "Not Because of Works"
To show that last point, Paul makes a negation and an affirmation at
the end of verse 11: ". . . so that God's purpose according to
election would stand, not because of works but because of Him who
calls."
Let's take the negation first. God chose Jacob over Esau "not because
of works." This adds something important to the first part of verse
11 where Paul says, "though the twins were not yet born and had not
done anything good or bad." Those words stress that God chose Jacob
before birth and before virtue or vice. But now Paul goes farther and
says that this choice was not "on the basis of works." Here the time
is not the point. The foundation is the point. God did not choose
Jacob because of works he had already done. Nor did he choose him
because of works that he would do later.
In other words, here Paul is ruling out foreseen good deeds that
Jacob will do, and foreseen evil deeds that Esau will do. And he is
saying: my election is not based on deeds in any way: not deeds
already done, not deeds undone and foreknown, and not deeds undone
and not foreknown. My election is free. That is my glory. Therefore,
my purpose accords with that kind of election, because my purpose is
to be known and enjoyed and praised as infinitely glorious in my free
and sovereign grace.
Finally, consider the affirmation at the end of verse 11. Why does
Paul say, ". . . so that God's purpose according to election would
stand, not because of works but because of Him who calls"? This is
striking. Paul's ordinary contrast with works is faith. In 9:32 he
says, "Because they did not pursue it by faith, but as if it were
based on works." In 3:28 he says, "A man is justified by faith apart
from works." In Galatians 2:16 he says, "A man is not justified by
the works of the Law but through faith." When we hear Paul say, "Not
by works" we naturally expect him to also say, "but by faith."
III. "But Because of Him Who Calls"
But that is not what he says here. He says, "not because of works but
because of Him who calls." Why? Because faith is a condition of
justification, but it is not a condition of election. Election is
unconditional. But justification is conditional. Before we can be
justified we must believe on Jesus Christ. But before we can believe
on Jesus Christ we must be chosen and called. God does not choose us
because we will believe. He chooses us so that we will believe.
Notice carefully how Paul says it. "God's purpose according to
election will stand . . . because of Him who calls." Notice it does
not say: his purpose stands because of his calling. It says because
of HIM who calls. God will one day call his elect. But his election
is not based on that calling. It is based on himself and his free and
sovereign will to call.
So to paraphrase the verse: "God's electing purpose will stand not
because of any foreseen deeds, and not because of any foreseen faith;
but simply because of him because of God." The ultimate ground of
God's election is God. This is simply another way of saying: for God
to be God he must be free and sovereign. This is his glory. This is
what it means to be God.
The Application to Our Lives
There is more to see. So much more to see. But for now the
application to our lives is clear. If the purpose of God flowing
from the very essence of what it means to be God is that he be
known and enjoyed and praised as infinitely glorious in his free and
sovereign grace, then the meaning of our existence is clear. We exist
to know and enjoy and praise and display the glory of God's free and
sovereign grace. We exist to see and savor and sing and spread a
passion for the glory of God's grace.
And underneath this meaning for our lives is the massive assurance:
This purpose will stand. And all who are in Christ by faith will
stand in it. So spend yourself for this great purpose while you live.
All the elect in Christ prevail, God's purpose stands, it cannot fail