KenH
Well-Known Member
A doctrine is not true because I believe it or because you believe it, it is true only if God says it! I do not ask whether you believe what I preach, perhaps you do not. But I ask you to search the Scriptures and determine whether these things be so. I am not afraid to submit my belief in God's immutable sovereignty, man's total fall and ruin, God's elective grace, Christ's effectual atonement, the Spirit's invincible call, and the perseverance of the sheep to the word of God.
We say Amen to this word, and while this message is limited, the sovereignty of God is not. The scriptures tell us that he is sovereign over all. By himself He created this universe, fashioning it according to His own purpose. This includes man and all God's dealings with him.
He is over the nations, creating them, and has destroyed them according to His will. Nebuchadnezzar, an absolute monarch, when boasting of his self-made kingdom rather than give God the glory, was reduced to a near animal. After his understanding returned, he gave testimony to God as over all. God raises up kingdoms and puts them down.
He is sovereign in salvation, having chosen His people, sending His Son to die for them, and then calling them out of the world. He gives them eternal life, and they shall never perish under His guarding hand.
Many Christians have doubts about God's sovereignty. Yet there is one aspect of the Christian life where they profess, maybe unknowingly, that God is sovereign. They may say, as many do, "God has done all He can do, now the rest is up to you." How contradictory! They may stand on their feet and deny this blessed, comforting, enabling doctrine, but when they bend the knees in prayer, asking God to save, do they not realize they are calling on a sovereign God, who only has the right and the ability to save? Are they not asking their limited God to go beyond His limitation? The question is, If God has done all that He can do, why pray to Him? But we pray knowing He is the only one who can do what man cannot otherwise do. This power belongs to God, and not man.
- Henry Mahan
Source: The Sovereignty of God (mountainretreatorg.net)
We say Amen to this word, and while this message is limited, the sovereignty of God is not. The scriptures tell us that he is sovereign over all. By himself He created this universe, fashioning it according to His own purpose. This includes man and all God's dealings with him.
He is over the nations, creating them, and has destroyed them according to His will. Nebuchadnezzar, an absolute monarch, when boasting of his self-made kingdom rather than give God the glory, was reduced to a near animal. After his understanding returned, he gave testimony to God as over all. God raises up kingdoms and puts them down.
He is sovereign in salvation, having chosen His people, sending His Son to die for them, and then calling them out of the world. He gives them eternal life, and they shall never perish under His guarding hand.
Many Christians have doubts about God's sovereignty. Yet there is one aspect of the Christian life where they profess, maybe unknowingly, that God is sovereign. They may say, as many do, "God has done all He can do, now the rest is up to you." How contradictory! They may stand on their feet and deny this blessed, comforting, enabling doctrine, but when they bend the knees in prayer, asking God to save, do they not realize they are calling on a sovereign God, who only has the right and the ability to save? Are they not asking their limited God to go beyond His limitation? The question is, If God has done all that He can do, why pray to Him? But we pray knowing He is the only one who can do what man cannot otherwise do. This power belongs to God, and not man.
- Henry Mahan
Source: The Sovereignty of God (mountainretreatorg.net)