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John 6:37, 44

Irresistable Grace

layers Part 8 of 9 menu_book More on John lightbulb 4 illustrations in this sermon

Pastor Albert N. Martin expounds on the doctrine of Irresistible Grace, the fourth point of Calvinism, primarily drawing from John 6:37, 44, John 10:16, and Acts 16:14. He defines it as the Holy Spirit's invincible work in the elect, overcoming their natural resistance and changing their hearts to willingly embrace Christ. Martin addresses common misunderstandings, such as the idea that God forces salvation against one's will, clarifying that God changes the will itself. The sermon emphasizes God's sovereignty in salvation and highlights that salvation is entirely by grace, leaving no room for human boasting.

Primary Texts

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John 6:37, 44 These verses are central to demonstrating that all whom the Father gives to Christ will come, and no one can come unless drawn by the Father, proving the irresistibility of God's grace.
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John 10:16 This passage highlights Jesus' declaration that he 'must bring' his other sheep, and they 'will listen to my voice,' underscoring the certainty of their conversion through divine action.
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Acts 16:14 The account of Lydia, where 'the Lord opened her heart,' serves as a clear biblical illustration of God's direct and effective intervention in conversion.

Outline 8 sections · 27 min

  1. Introduction to Irresistible Grace: Meaning and Misunderstandings 0:01
  2. Critique of Arminianism and the Biblical View of Irresistible Grace 4:06
  3. Addressing the Misunderstanding: Resistance is Ineffective 8:20
  4. Addressing the Misunderstanding: God Changes the Will, Not Forces It 12:32
  5. Scriptural Moorings: John 6 and the Certainty of Coming to Christ 16:52
  6. Scriptural Moorings: John 10 and Acts 16 Illustrate God's Effective Call 20:25
  7. The Message of Irresistible Grace: God's Sovereignty 22:46
  8. The Message of Irresistible Grace: All is Grace 24:46

Key Quotes

“The grace of God as it works in their hearts cannot be effectively resisted. God's grace will come out the winner. It is irresistible.”
“Our being saved is God's work from beginning to end. It is not as though God coaxes and woos us by his spirit, but it still remains up to us to actually make the decision. That places God's salvation at our mercy and not our salvation at God's mercy.”
“While the Arminians claim that people can actually and effectively resist the Spirit's operation and turn down the wonderful grace of Christ, we claim that no matter how strongly we may resist the Spirit's work, He wins out every time. His grace is invincible, unconquerable.”
“Can a Christian be a Christian against his will? So that when he comes to heaven he says really I didn't want to be here but God made me.”
“No one is a child of God against his will. The Lord changes a person's will to want to be his child.”
“God doesn't merely encourage and advise and coax. But he draws with his invincible irresistible grace. Those whom God draws cannot effectively resist the Spirit's work. That's the teaching of irresistible grace.”
“If it is finally up to us whether or not to admit the Lord into our hearts. Then we exercise greater jurisdiction in our salvation. Than the Lord himself does.”
“God may have wooed us and coaxed us and advised us. But it was still up to us to make the decision. We should be given some credit. And then it is not all grace anymore.”

Applications

All listeners

  • Recognize and be reminded of the sovereignty of God in salvation.
  • Be reminded that salvation is entirely by the grace of God, leaving no room for human credit.

A full transcript is available on the tab. 105 paragraphs, roughly 27 minutes.

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