Seeking a Revival Culture. Allen M. Baker

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Seeking a Revival Culture - Allen M. Baker

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_3389225c-1c60-53a3-b076-723282cb8ffd">6. David Beale, “Lessons Learned From the Fall of Harvard”, study paper, Bob Jones University.

      Election

      Just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before Him in love,

      Ephesians 1:4

      What, you may ask, has this history to do with the doctrine of election? It illustrates a powerful application of the doctrine. First, what does Paul mean, “just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world”? Here and also in Deuteronomy 7 and 10, John 6, and Romans 8 and 9 we are told that the sovereign God of grace, for His own praise and glory and not for anything He finds in us, chose a specific number of people out of all those in the world to be His. Furthermore, He did this before time, in eternity past. The Greek word translated “chosen” literally means called out of. This election is unconditional, meaning God did not look down the corridors of time to see if we would choose Him or if we would be faithful to Him. He chose us not based at all on anything we could offer Him. We are told on three occasions in Ephesians 1:4–14 that God’s mighty work of election, predestination, adoption, and redemption is to the praise of the glory of His grace, according to the kind intention of His will.

      Here’s a practical application you can make to the doctrine of election—why are you a Christian? Why are your neighbors, your friends, or other family members not Christians while you are? Is it because you are smarter than they, more inclined toward faith, more moral? Not hardly. You are a Christian simply because God chose you to be one. He decided to bestow mercy upon you in eternity past. To put it another way, God in His foreknowledge has known you and loved you as long as He has existed, forever. Here’s another application, drawn from my story of Knox and Queen Mary. I often tell the people in our church that due to these great doctrines of grace—the fact that God chose you in Christ, that He predestined you, that He adopted you into His family, that the Lord Jesus shed His blood for you—you can and should learn to argue from the greater down to the lesser. In other words, if God has done this mighty work in you, and if this is the most important issue in your life (and surely it is), then does it not naturally follow that God can and will take care of your lesser needs?

      Perhaps the most vital and important reason that John Knox could be so bold, and so courageous was that he knew he belonged to Christ, that God had chosen him, that God had a purpose for his life, and that no matter what happened to him, he knew Christ was his and he was Christ’s. When you know the love of the Father, when you know He has always loved you, when you know that He is sovereign in absolutely everything, that nothing escapes His notice, that He foreordains whatsoever comes to pass, and that no one can thwart His plans, then you can and should live with absolute calmness and peace: fearing no one, and falling to no one’s intimidation or flattery. Knox did. By God’s grace he cultivated a revival culture in Scotland, and we can too in our day. Do you believe this? Are you ready to seek God for it? This is the revival life the western church so desperately needs.

      Predestination

      He predestined us to adoption as sons through Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the kind intention of His will.

      Ephesians 1:5

      What does this controversy have to do with you and the doctrine of predestination? Paul builds on his statement in Ephesians 1:4 where he says that we were chosen by God before the foundation of the world. The ground of our election is the predestinating work of God, the foreordination of all things, meaning that God developed an overarching plan in eternity past. The center of that plan is the salvation of a specific number of people. He predestined the elect to adoption as His own sons and daughters. The idea of adoption as we know it today (that adopted children have the same rights, privileges, and obligations as natural children) was a concept foreign to the Hebrew mind of Paul’s day. However it was quite common in the Roman world. Thus a true believer in Jesus Christ, as an adopted son or daughter of God, has an inheritance waiting for him in heaven that is far more glorious

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