Who Accepts Whom?
Daniel Chamberlin
"Are you a
Christian?" asks Bill. George confidently responds, "Of course I am;
I accepted Christ a long time ago."
How often have we heard an
exchange similar to this! And if you were Bill, perhaps you felt a bit uneasy
hearing this feather-light response. The problem is not so much that what
George said was wrong, as that he failed to say more.
Modern methods of evangelism have produced a glut of "George's" who
talk as if becoming a Christian were something of their own doing. It goes
something like this: "God has done all He can do, the next move (the
really decisive one) is up to you... Heaven or hellthe choice is yours."
By thus "accepting" Christ, man virtually becomes his own savior. Man
is in the driver's seat, and God becomes a mere spectator. Man becomes the sun
around which all else in the universe rotates.
Our present day situation was well summarized by Charles Haddon Spurgeon
(1834-1892) when he said,
Sometimes we are
inclined to think that a very great portion of modern revivalism has been more
a curse than a blessing, because it has led thousands to a kind of peace before
they have known their misery; restoring the prodigal to the Father's house, and
never making him say, "Father, I have sinned." How can he be healed
who is not sick? or he be satisfied with the bread of
life who is not hungry? The old-fashioned sense of sin is despised, and
consequently a religion is run up before the foundations are dug out.
Everything in this age is shallow. Deep-sea fishing is almost an extinct
business so far as men's souls are concerned. The consequence is that men leap
into religion, and then leap out again. Unhumbled they came to the church,
unhumbled they remained in it, and unhumbled they go from it.
You see, the reason George
failed to say so much that should have been said, is that he heard a
"gospel" that failed to say enough in the first place. Today, many
pulpits proclaim a God who is trying, in a largely unsuccessful way, to make Himself acceptable to man. In interests of
simplicity, the gospel has been over-reduced to the point of being trivialized.
But if a little truth is presented as if it were the whole truth, the result
will be confusion at best, and deception at worst. When Satan lured Eve with
the original temptation, some of what he said was true. (Compare Gen. 3:5 with
3:7,22.) Partial truth can be more dangerous than
total lies! Let us therefore take a look at the "other half" of
the gospel, which we cannot afford to omit.
The gospel of Jesus Christ is essentially God-centered, not man-centered. We
were created for His pleasurenot vice versa (Rev. 4:11). But through Adam,
sin has entered into the world, and has entirely corrupted the very heart and
nature of every man. Thus we are separated from God by an infinite span. God's
holiness and justice demand that our sin be punished. If your sin is not
punished, God is no longer holy. And if He is not holy, He is not God at all.
In our state of sin, we are not capable of paying for our sins, changing
ourselves, nor making peace with God. We are unacceptable
to Him. God accepteth no man's person (Gal. 2:6). If left
to our sinful selves, we are all headed for eternal damnation. The immeasurably
holy God will justly pour out His righteous wrath upon us. Our only hope is
that someone greater than us will do for us what we cannot do, and make us acceptable
to God.
But who can fully pay for our sins? Who can live perfectlywithout even one
sin to earn God's favor for us? Who can make us acceptable to God? The
Biblical answer is unmistakably clear: only God Himself can do all this. And
that, my friend, is precisely what He has done! Though under no obligation
whatsoever to do so, He has, in grace and mercy alone, out of the goodness of
His heart, made sinners acceptable to Himself.
How has God done such an unexpected, amazing thing as this? In
the Lord Jesus Christ. And He has done it in such a way that sinners are
delivered, and yet justice is maintained. The guilty one goes free, but the
standards of justice are not broken. Christ, the eternal Son of God, came into
this world and became a man, lived a life of sinless obedience to the Father,
and died the death which sinners deserve to die, fully satisfying the demands
of the law. In Christ Jesus, sinners are declared to be reconciled, accepted
by God. Thus we read, God hath made us accepted in the beloved (Eph.
1:6). In other words, God has made to be the objects of His grace all who are
in His beloved Son, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Accepting is God's prerogative, ultimately. Salvation is His act, His
initiative, His intervention in a hopeless case. Salvation is of the Lord
(Jonah 2:9). Salvation is not so much the sinner accepting God, as it is
God accepting the sinner who, in desperation, turns from sin and clings
to Christ. This is the gospel message which exalts God and rightly positions
Him in the driver's seat. This makes man the orbiting sphere around God.
In grace, the emphasis is not on the recipient, but on the Giver!
My friend, is this
the gospel of your salvation? Are you still thinking in terms of what you have
done, or are you depending entirely on what God's Son has done?
I can almost hear someone saying, "But how about my decision? Didn't I
have to do something? Didn't I at least have to decide, and desire to be
saved?"
I will let Mr. Spurgeon give an answer from his autobiography:
When I was coming to
Christ, I thought I was doing it all myself, and though I sought the Lord
earnestly, I had no idea the Lord was seeking me. I do not think the young
convert is at first aware of this. I can recall the very day and hour when
first I received those truths in my own soulwhen they were, as John Bunyan
says, burnt into my heart as with a hot iron; and I can recollect how I felt
that I had grown on a sudden from a babe into a manthat I had made progress
in Scriptural knowledge, through having found, once for all, the clue to the
truth of God. One week-night, when I was sitting in the house of God, I was not
thinking much about the preacher's sermon, for I did not believe it. The
thought struck me, "How did you come to be a Christian?" I sought the
Lord. "But how did you come to seek the Lord?" The truth flashed
across my mind in a momentI should not have sought Him unless there had been
some previous influence in my mind to make me seek Him. "I prayed,"
thought I, but then I asked myself, "How came I to pray?" I was
induced to pray by reading the Scriptures. "How came I to read the
Scriptures?" I did read them, but what led me to do so? Then, in a moment,
I saw that God was at the bottom of it all, and that He was the Author of my
faith, and so the whole doctrine of grace opened up to me, and from that
doctrine, I have not departed to this day, and I desire to make this my
constant confession, "I ascribe my change wholly to God."
An anonymous hymn-writer
put it this way:
I sought the Lord, and
afterward I knew
He moved my soul to seek Him, seeking me;
It was not I that found, O Savior true,
No, I was found, was found of Thee.
Thou didst reach forth
Thy hand and mine enfold;
I walked and sank not on the storm-vexed sea;
'Twas not so much that I on Thee took hold,
As Thou, dear Lord, on me, on me.
I find, I walk, I love;
but O, the whole
Of love is but my answer, Lord, to Thee!
For Thou wert long before-hand with my soul;
Always, always Thou lovedst me.
Yes, in conversion I do
desire Christ, and I do make a choice; but even all that is His work of grace
in me. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and
to do of His good pleasure (Phil.
Therefore we must not depend on our decision. We must not depend on our
depending, nor trust in our trusting, nor look to our looking. We look not to
our accepting of Christ, but to Christ Himself.
But is all this really taught in the Bible? Undoubtedly.
The whole point of the Old Testament sacrificial system was to (symbolically)
make the offerer acceptable to God. We frequently read statements such
as this from the Old Testament, And he shall
put his hand upon the head of the burnt offering; and it shall be accepted
for him to make atonement for him (Lev. 1:4).
Again the New Testament approach is that it is God who makes believers to be accepted
in the beloved (Eph. 1:6). God is the One who must be satisfied. The
atonement by Christ terminates on God. He made [Christ the Son] to be
sin for us (2Cor.
Likewise, when we look at the word "receive" we are again
brought face to face with the reality that it is ultimately God who does the receiving.
This the Scriptures often affirm. For example, the psalmist was comforted by
knowing He shall receive me. (Ps. 49:15). The Pharisees
complained against Christ that This man receiveth
sinners, and eateth with them (Lk. 15:2). Paul taught the Romans that
Christ also received us to the glory of God (
In fact, man is opposed to God and His truth, unless and until God changes his
sinful heart: A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven (Jn.
Is there nothing to be said for a repentant sinner receiving Christ? Of course. That well-known verse in John 1 which says as
many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of
God, even to them that believe on his name (v. 12), is a precious truth
indeed; yet the next verse states clearly that this receiving of Christ
was only possible by the enabling grace of God: Which were born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God (v.
13).
My dear friend, the point is simply this: If you love God, it is only because
He previously loved you! We love him, because he first loved us (1Jn.
Has this humbling truth gripped your soul? Do you see that you are an unworthy
sinner whose only way of acceptance with God is that you be found in
Christ?
Has God accepted you?
Please do not misunderstand me. It is true that you must come to Christ and receive
salvation. This good news of Christ Jesus coming into the world to save sinners
is truly worthy of all acceptation (1Tim.