No. 3479-61:469. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Evening, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
A Sermon Published On Thursday, October 7, 1915.
For by grace you are saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God. {Eph 2:8}
For other sermons on this text:
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1064, “Salvation All By Grace” 1055}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1609, “Faith: What Is It? How Can It Be Obtained?” 1609}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3479, “All of Grace” 3481}
Exposition on Eph 2; Mt 11:1-6 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3389, “Soul’s Awakening, The” 3391 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Eph 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2267, “Life from the Dead” 2268 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Eph 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2770, “Go in Peace” 2771 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Eph 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2841, “Prayer—Its Discouragements and Encouragements” 2842 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Eph 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3198, “What Christians Were and Are” 3199 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on Eph 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3474, “Blessings Many and Marvellous” 3476 @@ "Exposition"}
1. Of the things which I have spoken to you these many years, this is the sum. Within the circle of these words my theology is contained, so far as it refers to the salvation of men. I rejoice also to remember that those of my family who were ministers of Christ before me preached this doctrine, and none other. My father, who is still able to bear his personal testimony for his Lord, knows no other doctrine, neither did his father before him.
2. I am led to remember this by the fact that a somewhat exceptional circumstance, recorded in my memory, connects this text with myself and my grandfather. It is now long years ago. I was announced to preach in a certain country town in the Eastern Counties. It does not often happen to me to be late, for I feel that punctuality is one of those little virtues which may prevent great sins. But we have no control over railway delays, and breakdowns; and so it happened that I reached the appointed place considerably late. Like sensible people, they had begun their worship, and had proceeded as far as the sermon. As I neared the chapel, I perceived that someone was in the pulpit preaching, and who should the preacher be but my dear and venerable grandfather! He saw me as I came in at the front door and made my way up the aisle, and at once he said, “Here comes my grandson! He may preach the gospel better than I can, but he cannot preach a better gospel; can you, Charles?” As I made my way through the throng, I answered, “You can preach better than I can. Please go on.” But he would not agree to that. I must take the sermon, and so I did, going on with the subject then and there, just where he left off. “There,” he said, “I was preaching on ‘For by grace you are saved.’ I have been presenting the source and fountain-head of salvation; and I am now showing them the channel of it, through faith. Now you take it up, and go on.” I am so much at home with these glorious truths that I could not feel any difficulty in picking up from my grandfather the thread of his discourse, and joining my thread to it, so as to continue without a break.
3. Our agreement in the things of God made it easy for us to be joint-preachers of the same discourse. I went on with “through faith,” and then I proceeded to the next point, “and that not of yourselves.” On this I was explaining the weakness and inability of human nature, and the certainty that salvation could not be of ourselves, when I had my coat-tail pulled, and my well-beloved grandfather took his turn again. “When I spoke of our depraved human nature,” the good old man said, “I know most about that, dear friends”; and so he took up the parable, and for the next five minutes gave a solemn and humbling description of our lost state, the depravity of our nature, and the spiritual death under which we were found. When he had said his say in a very gracious manner, his grandson was allowed to go on again, to the dear old man’s great delight; for now and then he would say, in a gentle tone, “Good! Good!” Once he said, “Tell them that again, Charles,” and, of course, I did tell them that again. It was a happy exercise for me to take my share in bearing witness to truths of such vital importance, which are so deeply impressed on my heart. While announcing this text I seem to hear that dear voice, which has been so long lost to earth, saying to me, “TELL THEM THAT AGAIN.” I am not contradicting the testimony of forefathers who are now with God. If my grandfather could return to earth, he would find me where he left me, steadfast in the faith, and true to that form of doctrine which was once delivered to the saints.
4. I shall handle the text briefly, by way of making a few statements.
5. I. The first statement is clearly contained in the text:—THERE IS PRESENT SALVATION.
6. The apostle says, “You are saved.” Not “you shall be,” or “you may be”; but “you are saved.” He does not say, “You are partly saved,” nor “on the way to being saved,” nor “hopeful of salvation”; but “by grace you are saved.” Let us be as clear on this point as he was, and let us never rest until we know that we are saved. At this moment we are either saved or unsaved. That is clear. To which class do we belong? I hope that, by the witness of the Holy Spirit, we may be so assured of our safety as to sing, “The Lord is my strength and my song; he also is become my salvation.”
7. II. On this I will not linger, but pass on to note the next point. A PRESENT SALVATION MUST BE THROUGH GRACE.
8. If we can say of any man, or of any set of people, “You are saved,” we shall have to preface it with the words “by grace.” There is no other present salvation except what begins and ends with grace. As far as I know, I do not think that anyone in the whole wide world pretends to preach or to possess a present salvation, except those who believe salvation to be all of grace. No one in the Church of Rome claims to be saved now—completely and eternally saved. Such a profession would be heretical. A few Catholics may hope to enter heaven when they die, but most of them have the miserable prospect of purgatory before their eyes. We see constant requests for prayers for departed souls, and this would not be if those souls were saved, and glorified with their Saviour. Masses for the repose of the soul indicate the incompleteness of the salvation which Rome has to offer. Well may it be so, since Papal salvation is by works, and even if salvation by good works were possible, no man can ever be sure that he has performed enough of them to secure his salvation.
9. Among those who dwell around us, we find many who are as altogether strangers to the doctrine of grace, and those never dream of present salvation. Possibly they trust that they may be saved when they die; they half hope that, after years of watchful holiness, they may, perhaps, be saved at last; but, to be saved now, and to know that they are saved, is quite beyond them, and they think it is presumption.
10. There can be no present salvation unless it is on this basis—“By grace you are saved.” It is a very exceptional thing that no one has risen up to preach a present salvation by works. I suppose it would be too absurd. The works being unfinished, the salvation would be incomplete; or, the salvation being complete, the main motive of the legalist would be gone.
11. Salvation must be by grace. If man is lost by sin, how can he be saved except through the grace of God? If he has sinned, he is condemned; and how can he, by himself, reverse that condemnation? Suppose that he should keep the law all the rest of his life, he will then only have done what he was always bound to have done, and he will still be an unprofitable servant. What is to become of the past? How can old sins be blotted out? How can the old ruin be retrieved? According to Scripture, and according to common sense, salvation can only be through the free favour of God.
12. Salvation in the present tense must be by the free favour of God. People may contend for salvation by works, but you will not hear anyone support his own argument by saying, “I am myself saved by what I have done.” That would be an overflow of wickedness to which few men would go. Pride could hardly surround itself with such extravagant boasting. No, if we are saved, it must be by the free favour of God. No one professes to be an example of the opposite view.
13. Salvation to be complete must be by free favour. The saints, when they come to die, never conclude their lives by hoping in their good works. Those who have lived the most holy and useful lives invariably look to free grace in their final moments. I have stood by the bedside of a godly man who renounced any confidence whatever in his own prayers, or repentance, or religiousness. I have heard eminently holy men quoting in death the words, “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.” In fact, the nearer men come to heaven, and the more prepared they are for it, the more simple is their trust in the merit of the Lord Jesus, and the more intensely do they abhor all trust in themselves. If this is the case in our last moments, when the conflict is almost over, much more ought we to feel it to be so while we are in the thick of the fight. If a man is completely saved in this present time of warfare, how can it be except by grace? While he has to mourn over sin that dwells in him, while he has to confess innumerable shortcomings and transgressions, while sin is mixed with all he does, how can he believe that he is completely saved unless it is by the free favour of God?
14. Paul speaks of this salvation as belonging to the Ephesians, “By grace you are saved.” The Ephesians had been given to sorcery and works of divination. So they had made a covenant with the powers of darkness. Now if such as these were saved, it must be by grace alone. So it is with us also: our original condition and character render it certain that, if saved at all, we must owe it to the free favour of God. I know it is so in my own case; and I believe the same rule holds good in the rest of believers.
15. III. This is clear enough, and so I advance to the next observation:—PRESENT SALVATION BY GRACE MUST BE THROUGH FAITH.
16. A present salvation must be through grace, and salvation by grace must be through faith. You cannot get a hold of salvation by grace by any other means than by faith. This live coal from off the altar needs the golden tongs of faith with which to carry it. I suppose that it might have been possible, if God had so willed it, that salvation might have been through works, and yet by grace; for if Adam had perfectly obeyed the law of God, still he would only have done what he was bound to do; and so, if God should have rewarded him, the reward itself must have been according to grace, since the Creator owes nothing to the creature. This would have been a very difficult system to work under, while the object of it was perfection; but in our case it would not work at all. Salvation in our case means deliverance from guilt and ruin, and this could not have been laid hold of by a measure of good works, since we are not in a condition to perform any. Suppose I had to preach that you as sinners must do certain works, and then you would be saved; and suppose that you could perform them; such a salvation would not then have been seen to be altogether of grace; it would have soon appeared to be of debt. Understood in such a way, it would have come to you in some measure as the reward of work done, and its whole aspect would have been changed. Salvation by grace can only be gripped by the hand of faith: the attempt to lay hold on it by the doing of certain acts of law would cause the grace to evaporate. “Therefore, it is by faith that it might be by grace.” “If by grace, then it is no more by works: otherwise grace is no more grace. But if it is by works, then it is no more grace: otherwise work is no more work.”
17. Some try to lay hold on salvation by grace through the use of ceremonies; but it will not do. You are christened, confirmed, and caused to receive “the holy sacrament” from priestly hands, or you are baptized, join the church, sit at the Lord’s table: does this bring you salvation? I ask you, “Do you have salvation?” You dare not say, “Yes.” If you did claim salvation of a kind, yet I am sure it would not be in your minds salvation by grace.
18. Again, you cannot lay hold on salvation by grace through your feelings. The hand of faith is constructed for the grasping of a present salvation by grace, but feeling is not adapted for that purpose. If you go around saying, “I must feel that I am saved. I must feel so much sorrow and so much joy, or else I will not admit that I am saved,” you will find that this method will not suffice. As well might you hope to see with your ear, or taste with your eye, or hear with your nose, as to believe by feeling: it is the wrong organ. After you have believed, you can enjoy salvation by feeling its heavenly influences; but to dream of getting a grasp of it by your own feelings is as foolish as to attempt to bear away the sunlight in the palm of your hand, or the breath of heaven between the lashes of your eyes. There is an essential absurdity in the whole affair.
19. Moreover, the evidence yielded by feeling is extremely fickle. When your feelings are peaceful and delightful, they are soon broken in on, and become restless and melancholy. The most fickle of elements, the most feeble of creatures, the most contemptible of circumstances, may sink or raise our spirits: experienced men come to think less and less of their present emotions as they reflect on the little reliance which can be safely placed on them. Faith receives the statement of God concerning his way of gracious pardon, and so it brings salvation to the man believing; but feeling, warming under passionate appeals, yielding itself deliriously to a hope which it dares not examine, whirling around and around in a kind of dervish {a} dance of excitement which has become necessary for its own sustaining, is all a stir, like the troubled sea which cannot rest. From its boilings and ragings, feeling is apt to drop to lukewarmness, despondency, despair, and all the kindred evils. Feelings are a set of cloudy, windy phenomena which cannot be trusted in reference to the eternal verities of God.
20. IV. We now go a step further:—SALVATION BY GRACE, THROUGH FAITH, IS NOT OF OURSELVES. The salvation, and the faith, and the whole gracious work together, are not of ourselves.
21. First, they are not of our former deservings: they are not the reward of former good endeavours. No unregenerate person has lived so well that God is bound to give him further grace, and to bestow on him eternal life; otherwise it would no longer be by grace, but by debt. Salvation is given to us, not earned by us. Our first life is always a wandering away from God, and our new life of return to God is always a work of undeserved mercy, bestowed on those who greatly need, but never deserve it.
22. It is not of ourselves in the further sense, that it is not out of our original excellence. Salvation comes from above; it is never developed from within. Can eternal life be developed from the bare ribs of death. Some dare to tell us that faith in Christ, and the new birth, are only the development of good things that lay hidden in us by nature; but in this, like their father, they speak consistent with his character. Sirs, if an heir of wrath is left to be developed, he will become more and more fit for the place prepared for the devil and his angels! You may take the unregenerate man, and educate him to the highest decree; but he remains, and must for ever remain, dead in sin, unless a higher power shall come in to save him from himself. Grace brings into the heart an entirely foreign element. It does not improve and perpetuate; it kills and makes alive. There is no continuity between the state of nature and the state of grace: the one is darkness, and the other is light; the one is death, and the other is life. Grace, when it comes to us, is like a firebrand dropped into the sea, where it would certainly be quenched if it were not of such a miraculous quality that it baffles the flood waters, and sets up its reign of fire and light even in the depths.
23. Salvation by grace, through faith, is not of ourselves in the sense of being the result of our own power. We are bound to view salvation as being as surely a divine act as creation, or providence, or resurrection. At every point of the process of salvation, this word is appropriate—“not of yourselves.” From the first desire after it to the full reception of it by faith, it is always from the Lord alone, and not from ourselves. The man believes, but that belief is only one result among many of the implantation of divine life within the man’s soul by God himself.
24. So even the very will to be saved by grace is not of ourselves, but is the gift of God. There lies the stress of the question. A man ought to believe in Jesus: it is his duty to receive him whom God has presented to be a propitiation for sins. But man will not believe in Jesus; he prefers anything to faith in his Redeemer. Unless the Spirit of God convinces the judgment, and constrains the will, man has no heart to believe in Jesus to eternal life. I ask any saved man to look back on his own conversion, and explain how it came about. You turned to Christ, and believed in his name: these were your own acts and deeds. But what caused you to turn like this? What sacred force turned you from sin to righteousness? Do you attribute this exceptional renewal to the existence of something better in you than has been yet discovered in your unconverted neighbour? No, you confess that you might have been what he now is if it had not been that there was a potent something which touched the spring of your will, enlightened your understanding, and guided you to the foot of the cross. Gratefully we confess the fact; it must be so. Salvation by grace, through faith, is not of ourselves, and none of us will dream of taking any honour for ourselves from our conversion, or from any gracious effect which has flowed from the first divine cause.
25. V. Last of all:—“BY GRACE YOU ARE SAVED THROUGH FAITH AND THAT NOT OF OURSELVES: IT IS THE GIFT OF GOD.”
26. Salvation may be called Theodora, or God’s gift: and each saved soul may be surnamed Dorothea, which is another form of the same expression. Multiply your phrases, and expand your expositions; but salvation truly traced to its well-head is all contained in the gift unspeakable, the free, unmeasured blessing of love.
27. Salvation is the gift of God, in opposition to a wage. When a man pays another his wage, he does what is right, and no one dreams of praising him for it. But we praise God for salvation because it is not the payment of debt, but the gift of grace. No man enters eternal life on earth, or in heaven, as his due: it is the gift of God. We say, “Nothing is freer than a gift.” Salvation is so purely, so absolutely a gift of God, that nothing can be more free. God gives it because he chooses to give it, according to that grand text which has made many a man bite his lip in wrath, “I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion.” You are all guilty and condemned, and the Great King pardons whomever he wishes from among you. This is his royal prerogative. He saves in infinite sovereignty of grace.
28. Salvation is the gift of God: that is to say completely so, in opposition to the notion of growth. Salvation is not a natural production from within: it is brought from a foreign zone, and planted within the heart by heavenly hands. Salvation is in its entirety a gift from God. If you will have it, there it is, complete. Will you have it as a perfect gift, “No; I will produce it in my own workshop.” You cannot forge a work so rare and costly, on which even Jesus spent his life’s blood. Here is a garment without seam, woven from the top throughout. It will cover you and make you glorious. Will you have it? “No; I will sit at the loom, and I will weave a garment of my own!” Proud fool that you are! You spin cobwebs. You weave a dream. Oh! that you would freely take what Christ on the cross declared to be finished.
29. It is the gift of God: that is, it is eternally secure as opposed to the gifts of men, which soon pass away. “Not as the world gives, do I give to you,” says our Lord Jesus. If my Lord Jesus gives you salvation at this moment, you have it, and you have it for ever. He will never take it back again; and if he does not take it from you, who can? If he saves you now through faith, you are saved—so saved that you shall never perish, neither shall any snatch you out of his hand. May it be so with every one of us! Amen.
{a} Dervish: A Muslim friar, who has taken vows of poverty and austere life. OED.
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