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How Men Come To Christ
by C.H. SPURGEON
“No man can come to Me, except the
Father which hath sent Me draw him:
and I will raise him up at the last day” — John 6:44
How
then does the Father draw men? Arminian preachers generally say that God draws
men by the preaching of the gospel. Very true; the
preaching of the gospel is the instrument of drawing men, but there must be
something more than this. Let me ask to whom did
Christ address these words? Why, to the people of Capernaum, where He had often
preached, where He had
uttered mournfully and plaintively the woes of the law and the invitations of
the gospel. In that city He had done many mighty
works and worked many miracles. In fact, such teaching and such miraculous
attestation had He given them, that He
declared that Tyre and Sidon would have repented long ago in sackcloth and
ashes, if they had been blessed with such
privileges. Now, if the preaching of
Christ Himself did not avail to the enabling these men to come to Christ, it
cannot be possible that all that was
intended by the drawing of the Father was simply preaching. No, brethren, you
must note again, He does not say no man can
come except the minister draw him, but except the Father draw
him. Now there is such a thing as being drawn by the
gospel, and drawn by the minister, without being drawn by God. Clearly, it is a
divine drawing that is meant, a
drawing by the Most High God—the First Person of the most glorious Trinity
sending out the Third Person the Holy Spirit,
to induce men to come to Christ.
Another person turns around
and says with a sneer, “Then do you think that Christ drags men to Himself,
seeing that they are unwilling?” I
remember meeting once with a man who said to me, “Sir, you preach that Christ
takes people by the hair of their heads and
drags them to Himself.” I asked him whether he could refer to the date of the
sermon wherein I preached that extra-ordinary
doctrine, for if he could, I should be very much obliged. However, he could not.
But said I, while Christ does not drag
people to Himself by the hair of their heads, I believe that He draws them by
the heart quite as powerfully as your caricature
would suggest.
Mark that in the Father's
drawing there is no compulsion whatever; Christ never compelled any man to come
to Him against his will. If a man be
unwilling to be saved, Christ does not save him against his will. How, then,
does the Holy Spirit draw him? Why, by
making him willing. It is true he does not use “moral suasion”; He knows a
nearer method of reaching the heart. He goes
to the secret fountain of the heart, and He knows how, by some mysterious
operation, to turn the will in an opposite
direction, so that, as Ralph Erskine paradoxically puts it, the man is saved
“with full consent against his will”; that is,
against his old will he is saved. But he is saved with full consent, for he is
made willing in the day of God's power. Do not
imagine that any man will go to heaven kicking and struggling all the way
against the hand that draws him. Do not
conceive that any man will be plunged in the bath of a Saviour's blood while he
is striving to run away from the Saviour. Oh,
no. It is quite true that first of all man is unwilling to be saved. When the
Holy Spirit hath put His influence into the heart,
the test is fulfilled: “Draw me and I will run after Thee” (Song 1:4). We follow
on while He draws us, glad to obey the
voice which once we had despised.
But the gist of the matter
lies in the turning of the will. How that is done no flesh knoweth; it is one of
those mysteries that is clearly
perceived as a fact, but the cause of which no tongue can tell, and no heart can
guess. The apparent way, however, in
which the Holy Spirit operates, we can tell you. The first thing the Holy Spirit
does when He comes into a man's heart is
this: He finds him with a very good opinion of himself. “Why,” says the man, “I
don't want to come to Christ. I have as
good a righteousness as anybody can desire. I feel I can walk into heaven on my
own rights.” The Holy Spirit lays bare his
heart, lets him see the loathsome cancer that is there eating away his life,
uncovers to him all the blackness and
defilement of that sink of hell, the human heart, and then the man stands
aghast. “I never thought I was like this. Oh! Those sins
I thought were little, have swelled out to an immense stature. What I thought
was a molehill has grown into a mountain; it
was but the hyssop on the wall before, but now it has become a cedar of Lebanon.
Oh,” saith the man within himself,
“I will try and reform; I will do good deeds enough to wash these black deeds
out.” Then comes the Holy Spirit and
shows him that he cannot do this, takes away all his fancied power and strength,
so that the man falls down on his knees
in agony, and cries, “Oh! Once I thought I could save myself by my good works,
but now I find that, `Could my tears forever flow,
Could my zeal no respite know, All for sin could not atone, Thou must save and
Thou alone.'“
Then the heart sinks, and the
man is ready to despair. And saith he, “I never can be saved. Nothing can save
me.” Then comes the Holy Spirit
and shows the sinner the cross of Christ, gives him eyes anointed with heavenly
eye salve, and says, “Look to yonder cross,
that Man died to save sinners; you feel that you are a sinner; He died to save
you.” And He enables the heart to believe,
and to come to Christ. And when it comes to Christ, by this sweet drawing of the
Spirit, it finds “the peace of God,
which passeth all understanding, which keeps his heart and mind through Christ
Jesus” (Phil 4:7). Now, you will plainly
perceive that all this may be done without any compulsion. Man is as much drawn
willingly, as if he were not drawn at
all; and he comes to Christ with full consent, with as full a consent as if no
secret influence had ever been exercised in his
heart. But that influence must be exercised, or else there never has been and
there never will be, any man who either can or
will come to the Lord Jesus Christ.
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