Who Makes You Different?

We are all different. A multitude of differences separate each individual from another. We can be pretty or ugly, rich or poor, black or white, smart or dumb, loved or hated or somewhere in between in most given categories.

Of the prideful Corinthians Paul asked the following:

"For who maketh thee to differ from another? and what hast thou that thou didst not receive? now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it?"
(I Corinthians 4:7).

Allow me to paraphrase and restate these three questions, centering specifically in regard to salvation:
  • Who makes you different from the next person - in regard to salvation?
  • What do you have - in regard to salvation - that you did not receive from God?
  • If whatever you have - in regard to salvation - you did receive from God, why are you proud and boastful as if you didn’t receive it from God?
The answers to these questions in order are God, nothing, and duhhh, I’m in sin. But consider each question and answer more specifically.
  • Who makes you different from the next person - in regard to salvation?
Christians will not likely have a problem with this question until it comes to their salvation. It is okay that God is God and does what he does until he messes with their self-possessed “free will” to choose God. At that point there must be something in them that makes them different from another. There is something good they produce that is not received from God. Thus they stand before God because they used that which is inherently good in them to choose him. They played the decisive role in their salvation. God made them different from another in a multitude of ways. But in regard to their desire or ability to choose him, God does nothing but leave them to themselves.

How can this be?

It cannot, for this is contrary to the teaching of scripture.

Consider the testimony of the Bible concerning man:

…the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth … (Genesis 8:21). But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags… (Isaiah 64:6). The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked… (Jeremiah 17:9). … There is none righteous, no, not one…there is none that seeketh after God…there is none that doeth good, no, not one (Romans 3:10-12).

Because of man’s fallen, anti-God nature he can do nothing to commend himself to God nor does he even have the desire to so do. But one will say that God gives equal grace to all so that man then has the desire and ability to choose God. Not true. But considering that it were true the problem still remains. What is in one man that he will improve this grace and be saved that is not in another man so that he will not?

It is not in sinful man to make himself different. Rather, it is the God who declared that there be “...a remnant according to the election of grace” (Romans 11:5). Grace by its very nature is freely given and not earned. Grace results in the praise of God’s glory for in it alone God “...hath made us accepted in the beloved” (Ephesians 1:6). There is no other basis for the election. It is this grace that gives birth to election. Grace - freely given - not earned.

Where do we find this marvelous grace-based election? Again it is certainly not found in puny humans who are captivated by the will of the devil and in need of the gift of repentance from God (II Timothy 2:25,26). It is not an election that is some convoluted doctrine that teaches that a god who was living in gross ignorance looked out into the future one day and saw some people liked him and so he elected them to salvation. A thousand times, NO!

This election is God’s choice of his people in Christ in eternity past (Ephesians 1:4). It is found where all that is righteous and pure and good and lovely and true is found. It is found in “...the good pleasure of his will” (Ephesians 1:5), “...the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself” (Ephesians 1:9). Glory to God. He is the only one who makes anyone different in any respect to another.
  • What do you have - in regard to salvation - that you did not receive from God?
Any Christian will believe that food, covering and life itself come from God. But what about faith, repentance and the whole of salvation?

Many will say that God has provided the salvation but man must provide the repentance and belief. He must turn and trust Christ. But does man have the capability to do so? John 3:27 states, “…A man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven.” Are there some exceptions to this rule, namely faith and repentance? If a man can produce them himself then he has no need of it from heaven. If he can turn himself and believe then he has generated goodness in himself in spite of scripture cited above that teach that none can do good, not even one.

Yet we have seen in II Timothy 2:25 that God must give repentance so that one can acknowledge the truth. Elsewhere we see that it is God working through Christ “…to bless you, in turning away every one of you from his iniquities” (Acts 3:26) and “…to give repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins” (Acts 5:31).

Likewise, faith is the means through which we are saved by grace. It is not of ourselves but rather the gift of God (Ephesians 2:8,9). Paul makes it clear to the Philippians that their faith was a gift of God just as was their suffering (Philippians 1:29).

Be it understood that man is not the center of this great salvation. It is the relationship and communion between God the Father and God the Son that results in salvation for man. The elect Christian is a gift of God the Father to the Son. Jesus gives eternal life to as many as the Father gives him (John 17:2,3).

The truth of the elect being a gift of God the Father to God the Son is expressed not only throughout John 17 but is referred to elsewhere by John. A theme in chapter 6 is that God has given to Christ a people. Those people will come to him. Christ comes to do the will of his Father. “And this is the Father's will which hath sent me, that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the last day” (John 6:39). Those who come to Christ come because they are given to him by the Father. They are “…born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God” (John 1:13).

Thus the salvation of the believer is not in any repentance or faith or anything else found in himself. His salvation is in God and God has given him not only eternal life but the means to attain it as well. Repentance and faith are gifts so that the believer may fulfill the commands of God and gain the ultimate gift of salvation, God himself.

So pause, empty yourself and think. Let there be no good thing you have that you hold in the face of God and say, “This good and righteous deed, object or thought is created solely by me. There is good that you, God, are not to be credited with because this good originates with me.”

Jesus is "...the author and finisher of our faith..." (Hebrews 12;2). "Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth…" (James 1:18). “…Salvation is of the LORD” (Jonah 2:9). All of it. You have nothing you have not received from God.
  • If whatever you have - in regard to salvation - you did receive from God, why are you proud and boastful as if you didn’t receive it from God?
Thus far, I have concluded that it is God who makes one different from another and no one has anything that he has not received from God. In this light Paul’s final question in this verse to the Corinthians and for us as well is this: Why do you live in such pride and defraud God of his glory by claiming what he has given you, you produced yourself? The “why” question. “…why dost thou glory…?” This is the question asked in order to reprove the proud and turn them to humility.

With pride the glory due to God is seized and claimed for self. “I did it. It was in me to turn from my sins. My own faith brought me to Christ. I did it.” Such words rob God of the exaltation due only to him.

With humility we are able to give all glory to God. We claim the authorship of nothing for ourselves… except our sin. The God of our salvation granted us not only the salvation, but the means to obtaining the salvation. All glory is his. So let this writer and the few who read these words and the multitude of the elect who do not, relentlessly pursue humility. And, if having found it, recognize that they have it solely by grace. With an overflowing and thankful heart give glory to God for humility is also a gift, since:

"Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning" (James 1:17).




God The All - A Prayer

A few months ago a friend sent us a copy of the book, The Valley of Vision - A Collection of Puritan Prayers & Devotions. It contains a few hundred prayers written by, obviously, Puritans. I was glad to get it. It is far superior to most of the stuff I get in the mail.

In the preface I found a definition of prayer written by the editor, Arthur Bennett. I’m always interested in seeing someone’s definition (or description) of a Biblical term. He says, “… prayer is communion with a transcendent and immanent God who on the ground of his nature and attributes calls forth all the powers of the redeemed soul in acts of total adoration and dedication.” Think about that for awhile. Prayer is communion (fellowship, intimate connection) with a transcendent (superior, completely other, outside of all, supreme) and immanent (internal, abiding everywhere) God who on the ground of his nature (essence, form, that which one is) and attributes (characteristics, assets, qualities) calls forth all the powers of the redeemed soul ( Bless the LORD, O my soul: and all that is within me…” [Ps. 103:1]). in acts of total adoration (deeply loving, cherishing) and dedication (devotion, commitment).

Getting on with the story, I came to the second prayer and got stuck. Gladly, this is the kind of book you can pick up and put down at various times. And that is what I have been doing. I pick it up and deal a little with the second prayer and put it down. That has now happened several times.

Why can’t I move on? First, it is just that good. I like it. It is food. It is real prayer. Secondly, and this is likely the real hang-up, it coincides a lot with what I have learned from reading John Piper. The supremacy of God and the joy therein is the substance of the prayer.

For both your and my benefit and enjoyment I have reproduced this prayer below. Following it I have reproduced it again and added a few of the thoughts I have when meditating on it. If in God’s good providence you desire a copy of the book for yourself, click http://www.banneroftruth.org/pages/item_detail.php?4461


GOD THE ALL

O GOD WHOSE WILL CONQUERS ALL,
There is no comfort in anything
apart from enjoying thee
and being engaged in thy service;
Thou art All in all, and all enjoyments are what to me
thou makest them, and no more.
I am well pleased with thy will, whatever it is,
or should be in all respects,
And if thou bidst me decide for myself in any affair
I would choose to refer all to thee.
for thou art infinitely wise and cannot do amiss,
as I am in danger of doing.
I rejoice to think that all things are at thy disposal,
and it delights me to leave them there.
Then prayer turns wholly into praise,
and all I can do is to adore and bless thee.
What shall I give thee for all thy benefits?
I am in a strait betwixt two, knowing not what to do;
I long to make some return, but have nothing to offer,
and can only rejoice that thou doest all,
that none in heaven or on earth shares thy honour;
I can of myself do nothing to glorify thy blessed name,
but I can through grace cheerfully surrender soul and body to
thee,
I know that thou art the author and finisher of faith,
that the whole work of redemption is thine alone,
that every good work or thought found in me
is the effect of thy power and grace,
that thy sole motive of working in me to will and to do
is for thy good pleasure.
O God, it is amazing that men can talk so much
about man’s creaturely power and goodness,
when, if thou didst not hold us back every moment,
we should be devils incarnate.
This, by bitter experience, thou hast taught me concerning myself.

GOD THE ALL

O GOD WHOSE WILL CONQUERS ALL,
A proper statement of free will, it is God who has it, not man.
“… My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure” (Is. 46:10).
There is no comfort in anything
apart from enjoying thee
and being engaged in thy service;
The ultimate goal - the enjoyment and service of God himself.
Thou art All in all, and all enjoyments are what to me
thou makest them, and no more.
All that is seeks its consummation in God. All enjoyments given by God are pleasurable but cannot be an end in themselves. They are merely shadows of the enjoyment of God alone and thus remind us of and point to the enjoyment of him.
I am well pleased with thy will, whatever it is,
or should be in all respects,
“… Thy will be done…“ (Matt. 6:10). What a blessing to be content with whatever God chooses to do.
And if thou bidst me decide for myself in any affair
I would choose to refer all to thee.
for thou art infinitely wise and cannot do amiss,
as I am in danger of doing.
God knows me better than I know myself. Thus his decisions concerning me are wiser than my own. It is impossible for him to foul up. It is natural for me to foul up. The understanding that God is all-knowing and all-powerful makes it wise to defer all decisions to him. And if there is no apparent guidance from God, it is comforting to know that “A man's heart deviseth his way: but the LORD directeth his steps” (Prov. 16:9).
I rejoice to think that all things are at thy disposal,
and it delights me to leave them there.
Here is a joy - knowing that God is doing what he wills with his creation and a delight - thinking, “That’s how it should be.” This is a joy and a delight that easily ends in the proper place - God.
Then prayer turns wholly into praise,
and all I can do is to adore and bless thee.
I see this as the climax to this prayer. When one’s heart is satisfied with God and his actions, content that God is doing all things well, the heart has nowhere else to go but to praise and adoration. One enters into the place where we will happily spend eternity - the ecstasy of the worship of God.
What shall I give thee for all thy benefits?
I am in a strait betwixt two, knowing not what to do;
I long to make some return, but have nothing to offer,
and can only rejoice that thou doest all,
that none in heaven or on earth shares thy honour;
I can of myself do nothing to glorify thy blessed name,
but I can through grace cheerfully surrender soul and body to
thee,
How can God be paid for all he has done? He can’t. And if there were a price demanded, one has nothing anyway. All is of grace. Everything being of grace leaves one with nothing but joy in and adoration of God. And if joy and adoration are all one has, then it is clear that it is a gift of God. The Father adores the Son and Jesus likewise delights in His Father. To be placed in between the two of them and experience and become a part of the mutual admiration of the Father and the Son is the greatest gift. It is also the only way for one to give to God, yet its author is God himself and of a necessity must be.
I know that thou art the author and finisher of faith,
that the whole work of redemption is thine alone,
that every good work or thought found in me
is the effect of thy power and grace,
that thy sole motive of working in me to will and to do
is for thy good pleasure.
Faith is a gift of God. He authors it and finishes it. He begins it and he ends it. Likewise redemption is solitarily his work. It had to be, for “As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one: There is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God” (Rom. 3:10,11). If a truly good work is found in someone, it is of an origin not found in this world system or in the person himself. It is rather a miracle. It is of grace and the power of God. It is God working his will, doing what pleases him. This takes us back to the beginning of this prayer - “O GOD WHOSE WILL CONQUERS ALL….”
O God, it is amazing that men can talk so much
about man’s creaturely power and goodness,
when, if thou didst not hold us back every moment,
we should be devils incarnate.
God grants a common grace to man so that man does much less evil than he is capable of doing. Yet man is clueless and of course ungrateful for this mercy. To the contrary he praises himself and others (others who will repay him for his praise). Men bestow honor on men and not on God. What a horrendous development, a dreadful, incomprehensible sin.
This, by bitter experience, thou hast taught me concerning myself.
Yes. Father, restrain me at all times - especially on the freeway. …No, everywhere…… just be merciful to me a sinner.