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R.C. Sproul
we need to understand the proper biblical doctrine of election, and we need to understand the proper biblical doctrine of salvation, because those two concepts are inseparably related.
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Theology is not merely theoretical. What you believe informs how you live. Right doctrine should lead to right living. Hello and welcome to the Thursday edition of Renewing youg Mind. Our feelings can deceive us because our feelings change. But the promise of God, the Word of God, remain the same. And today R.C. sproul examines the doctrines of election and assurance to help us grow in our assurance. Let's join Dr. Sproul now.
R.C. Sproul
We're going to continue now with our study of the question of the assurance of salvation. We've spent quite some time already examining false and counterfeit methods of assurance, and we've seen that one of the most critical problems that we face with respect to false assurance is having a false understanding of salvation and its requirements. And so now we're going to turn our attention to how can we actually gain a true and sound basis for our assurance of salvation. And I think the first place that we have to look again is at theology. Again, in our day and age, people tend to downplay the importance of theology. But when we examine Peter's charge that we be diligent in making our election and our calling sure in order that we might grow and produce the fruit of our sanctification, we see there in his thinking the close relationship that exists between election and assurance. Now we need to understand the proper biblical doctrine of election, and we need to understand the proper biblical doctrine of salvation. Because those two concepts are inseparably related, we can distinguish between election and and salvation, but we can never tear them apart. Now, some people think that after we are saved, that becomes the grounds of our election. So in a certain sense, salvation precedes election. Those who hold the view of election that we call a prescient view or a foreknowledged view of election are those who believe that God elects to salvation, those people whom he knows from eternity. From his perspective of foreknowledge, he looks down the corridor of time and he knows in advance who will respond positively to the offer of the Gospel and who will not. And on the basis of his prior knowledge of what people do in response to the Gospel is he makes his decree or decision of election. So when he sees people exercising faith and entering into a state of salvation, on that basis, he elects them. But that view of election I don't think is a biblical view. I don't think that it explains election. I think it fundamentally denies the biblical view of election. And unfortunately, it is a doctrine of election that in the final analysis, makes the deciding factor rooted and grounded in something that we do rather than purely on the grace and mercy of God. And I think people that take that view of election are of the same group, basically, that struggle inevitably with their assurance, because their assurance is tied to their performance, as it were. But as I understand the Scripture, election is unto salvation, so that if you are elect, you are saved. And if you are saved, that's the clearest sign that you are numbered among the elect. Let's state it another way. None of those who are saved are not elected, and none of those who are elect fail to be saved. Salvation flows out of election. So if I want to be sure of my salvation, the first thing I need to know is, am I numbered among the elect? So I see there in Peter's teaching why it is so important that I be diligent in making my calling and my election sure. Because if I'm sure about my being numbered among the elect, then I can be certain with respect to my salvation, not only today, but in the future as well. Because election is not simply to make salvation possible, but the purpose of God in election is to save the elect. And that purpose is not frustrated. Let me read a passage that's not usually mentioned in this regard, but one that I take great comfort in is found in the 17th chapter of the Gospel According to St. John, which is in the middle of Jesus high priestly prayer for his disciples and for those who believed after them. And this is a passage of great encouragement for the whole church of all time. But in verse 6, Jesus says in his prayer, I have manifested your name to the men whom you have given me out of the world they were yours, you gave them to me, and they have kept your word. Now they have known that all things which you have given me are from you. For I have given to them the words that you have given me, and they received them, and have known surely that I came forth from you, and they believed that you sent me. I pray for them. I do not pray for the world, but for Those whom you have given me, for they are yours, and all mine are yours. Yours are mine, and I am glorified in them. Now I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world. And I come to you, Holy Father, Keep through your name those whom you have given me, that they may be one as we are. While I was with them in the world, I kept them in your name. Those whom you gave me, I have kept. None of them is lost except the Son of perdition, that the Scripture may be fulfilled. Now, this idea that Jesus expresses in this prayer is that the Father gives the gifts of people of the redeemed to the Son, and all that the Father gives to the Son. Jesus says earlier in John's Gospel, come to Me, and all that come to him are kept by Him. And so this refers back to the elect who are the ones whom the Father gives to the Son, and the elect that the Father gives to the Son are preserved by the Son. The basis of our assurance is not to be a confidence in our ability to. To persevere. You know, we talk about the perseverance of the saints. And I believe that the saints do in fact persevere. But the reason why they persevere is because they are preserved. And so it's better to speak of the preservation of the saints than the perseverance of the saints. And so we hear in this chapter Jesus appeal to the Father that those who have been given to him may be kept. Now, when we look further at this whole relationship between election and salvation, we need to be concerned with what we call in theology. The Ordo Salutus was just a fancy way of describing what we say in English, the order of salvation. And when we talk about the order of salvation, we're talking about a sequence of things or actions or events that take place that are the discrete aspects of all that's involved in our salvation. But also, when we talk about the order of salvation, we're talking about what we call a logical order rather than a temporal order. Now, here's what I mean by that distinction. We say, and we believe that we are justified by faith alone. Now the question is, how long after we possess true saving faith are we justified? Is it five minutes, five months, five years, five seconds? No, we would say that justification and faith are coterminous with respect to time. The very moment we have true faith, in that same instant, God receives us and as justified people. But we still say that faith comes before justification, not justification before faith even though they occur at the same time. One precedes the other one logically, by a logical priority. Now, what we mean by logical priority is that since our justification depends upon and rests upon faith, faith is the prerequisite, the necessary condition that has to be present for justification to take place. So faith is logically necessary for just justification. It precedes justification not in time, but in terms of logical necessity. So when we're talking about the order of salvation, keep in mind that what we have in view here are distinctions with respect to prerequisites to logical necessities. Now, with that in mind, let's turn our attention briefly to the so called golden chain In Romans, chapter 8. In Romans 8 we have one of the most famous and beloved verses in all of the New Testament. In verse 28 we read and we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to his purpose. Now let me just pause for a second and say, notice that this promise that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are described here as the ones who are the called according to his purpose. So that's a special kind of calling. The Bible speaks about the call of the Gospel that goes out to everybody, what we call the outer call or the external call. And not everybody that hears the gospel with their ears, not everybody who hears the outer call is saved. But we also speak of the inner call, the call of God in the person, in the heart, that is a work of God, the Holy Spirit, which call is effectual, that is the call by which the Holy Spirit opens the ears of the believer and the eyes of the believer, the heart of the believer, working within us to bring about the purpose of God. So that this is just another phrase or another descriptive term for the elect. All of the elect receive this inner call. All of the elect receive the purposive call of God. And all who receive this inner call of God are numbered among the elect. And I think that becomes very clear in the verses that follow from this. Let's look at it. For whom he foreknew, he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son. Now Paul's talking here about the purposes of God with respect to salvation. And he begins by mentioning God's foreknowledge and those whom he foreknews, he predestined to what? What was the goal of the predestination? To be conformed to the image of Christ so that our election is in Christ. Now here comes in verse 29, what is called in Theology, the golden chain. I'm sorry, verse 30. Moreover, whom he predestined, these he also called. Whom he called, he also justified. Whom he justified, he also glorified. Now, this is an abbreviated version of what we call the order of salvation. There are other aspects to the order of salvation besides what are mentioned here. This hits the highlights. Notice that sanctification is not in this list. But what is in this list include the following items. First of all, foreknowledge. Second of all, predestination. Third, what calling. Fourth, justification. Fifth, glorification. Now, there is an order here that is a logical order that as follows. And it's very important to our understanding of assurance of salvation to grasp what is going on here in this order of salvation. It starts with foreknowledge. Now, the reason why that prescient view of election that I mentioned earlier is so popular is that because people come to this text and they say, wow, the first step is foreknowledge. Ha, ha. Therefore, that means that election or predestination is based upon something that God knows about people in advance. Now, the text doesn't say that. In fact, as Paul elaborates this in Romans 9, I think he precludes that possibility. But because foreknowledge is mentioned first, people make the assumption that it is on the basis of foreknowledge that predestination takes place. But from a reformed understanding of election, let's understand this, that people who are elect in God's decrees and according to God's purposes are not nameless ciphers. From all eternity, God elects Abraham. From all eternity, God elects Jacob. But for him to elect somebody, he has to have some idea of who it is he's electing. So obviously, foreknowledge must precede predestination, because God is predestinating somebody, people. And so he has to know those people before he predestines them. So obviously the first thing is foreknowledge. The second thing is predestination. But notice the elliptical structure of this passage. That is, there are things unstated that are clearly implied. And what goes on in here is that those whom he foreknew that he also predestinate those whom he predestinate that he also called those whom he called, that he also justified those whom he justified, that he also glorified. What is clearly understood here is that all who are in the category of the foreknown are predestined. Now, again, God's foreknowledge in General includes all people, not just the elect. But here he's speaking about that foreknowledge that he has of his elect. Because all whom he foreknows, in the sense that he foreknows them here, are predestined. And all who are predestined what are called. Now, the critical point is this. Don't miss it. All who are called are justified. So if all who are called are justified, this can't possibly refer to the external call, it has to refer to the internal call. Because all who receive this particular call receive justification. Just as all who are justified receive are glorified. So if I want to know if I am glorified, if I'm going to be glorified, if I'm going to be saved, in the final analysis, if I can determine whether I'm justified, I know I'm going to be glorified. If I'm justified. Now I have nothing to worry about that he who has begun a good work in me is going to finish it to the end. And we'll look further at that in our next lecture. But now we want to ask the question, who, where calling fits in to my assurance? If this calling has reference to the operation of the Holy Ghost on the soul that prepares us for faith and justification, then if I know that I have been called, then I know that I'm elect. Well, how do I know if I'm called? Well, let's go quickly to Ephesians 2. Chapter 2 of Ephesians begins in verse 1 with these and you, he made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sin, in which you once walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the Spirit, who now works in the sons of disobedience, among whom we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others. But God, who is rich in mercy because of his great love with which he loved us even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ. By grace you have been saved, raised us up together, made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come he might show the exceeding riches of his grace and his kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. For by grace you have been saved through faith. And that. And the antecedent of that is faith, is not of yourselves. It's the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast. For we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus for good works which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them. In this brief summary, what Paul is focusing on is the work of the Holy Spirit that he describes in terms of quickening, which means being made alive, which we understand in theological categories to refer to our rebirth, to our regeneration. That which Jesus told Nicodemus was a prerequisite for anyone even seeing the kingdom, let alone entering the kingdom of God. And that is tied to this internal calling. And so my basic question as I seek assurance is this. Am I a regenerate person? If I am a regenerate person, then I know I'm numbered among the elect. Because without election, this work of the Holy Ghost will never take place in your soul. So all who are elect will become, at some point in this life, regenerate of the Holy Spirit, and all who are regenerated are numbered among the elect. So if you can be sure of your regeneration, you can be sure of your election. If you're sure of your election, you're sure of your salvation. Now, again, what is critical is that we understand what regeneration is. There is massive confusion out there in the Christian world about the nature of regeneration. And people who call themselves evangelicals in America walk around believing very, very different things about what happens to a person in the case of the Holy Spirit's quickening them or regenerating them from spiritual death to spiritual life. And that's why, again, I say having a sound doctrine of regeneration is critical to having the full assurance of our state of grace and our relationship to God. And so in our next and final session, I want to look at the work of God, the Holy Spirit in our lives as the most important foundation for our ever achievement, genuine assurance of salvation.
Host
That was R.C. sproul on the theological foundation of gaining true assurance of our salvation. Thanks for joining us for Renewing youg Mind. One of the most frequent questions we're asked is, can I be sure that I'm saved? Dr. Sproul answers that question in his complete series, the Assurance of Salvation. We'll send it to you on DVD and unlock digital access to the messages as well as the study guide. When you give a donation in support of renewing Your Mind at renewingyourmind.org we'll also send you Dr. Joel Beeke's series Assurance of Faith. So that's two series on DVD and digital access to both. When you donate at renewingyourmind.org or when you call us at 800-435-4343 but this resource offer does end tomorrow, so we hope to hear from you soon. Tomorrow. Dr. Sproul concludes this series as he looks to the source of true assurance. Don't miss Friday's episode here on Renewing youg Mind,
R.C. Sproul
Sam.
In this episode of Renewing Your Mind, Dr. R.C. Sproul dives deep into the theological foundation for gaining genuine assurance of salvation. He explores the doctrines of election and assurance, clarifying common misconceptions and providing scriptural insight to help believers understand their standing in Christ. The central theme is how understanding God's sovereignty in salvation, particularly the doctrines of election and regeneration, leads to a true and lasting assurance, as opposed to a fleeting or counterfeit confidence rooted in personal performance.
The Necessity of Sound Theology
Dr. Sproul emphasizes that assurance of salvation is only secure when built on a correct understanding of the doctrines of election and salvation.
"We need to understand the proper biblical doctrine of election, and we need to understand the proper biblical doctrine of salvation, because those two concepts are inseparably related." (01:25, R.C. Sproul)
False Views Lead to Unstable Assurance
Many experience anxiety or uncertainty regarding salvation because they have embraced a view of election or salvation that makes assurance dependent on their own actions or feelings rather than on God's sovereign grace.
"...those who hold the view of election that we call a prescient view or a foreknowledge view of election ... struggle inevitably with their assurance, because their assurance is tied to their performance..." (03:55, R.C. Sproul)
Biblical Election Is the Foundation
Assurance is found not in our ability to persevere, but in the reality that God's electing purpose is effective and unchangeable.
"If I am sure about my being numbered among the elect, then I can be certain with respect to my salvation, not only today, but in the future as well." (07:42, R.C. Sproul)
John 17 as a Source of Comfort
Dr. Sproul turns to Jesus' prayer in John 17, highlighting how Christ intercedes specifically for those given to Him by the Father, praying for their preservation.
"The Father gives the gifts of people of the redeemed to the Son, and all that the Father gives to the Son... are kept by Him." (10:03, R.C. Sproul)
Preservation Over Perseverance
The believer's security lies not in personal resolve, but in Christ's promise and power to keep those given to Him.
"It's better to speak of the preservation of the saints than the perseverance of the saints." (12:02, R.C. Sproul)
Logical, Not Temporal Order
Sproul clarifies that the steps in salvation (calling, faith, justification, glorification) are logically, rather than temporally, ordered.
"We still say that faith comes before justification, not justification before faith, even though they occur at the same time." (14:20, R.C. Sproul)
Romans 8 and the “Golden Chain”
Working through Romans 8:28-30, Sproul identifies the unbreakable sequence in God’s saving work: foreknowledge, predestination, calling, justification, and glorification.
"All whom he foreknows, in the sense that he foreknows them here, are predestined... all who are predestined are called... all who are called are justified... all who are justified are glorified." (18:51, R.C. Sproul)
Effectual Calling
The “call” leading to justification is the internal, effectual call by the Holy Spirit, guaranteeing the fulfillment of God’s saving purpose.
"All who receive this particular call receive justification." (20:33, R.C. Sproul)
Ephesians 2 and Spiritual Life
Sproul underscores that regeneration—being made alive together with Christ—happens solely by God’s grace, not human effort. This spiritual rebirth is fundamental to assurance.
"Am I a regenerate person? If I am a regenerate person, then I know I am numbered among the elect. Because without election, this work of the Holy Ghost will never take place in your soul." (22:28, R.C. Sproul)
Assurance Flows from Understanding Regeneration
Many Christians have misunderstandings about regeneration, yet this doctrine is a critical link to having true assurance.
"Having a sound doctrine of regeneration is critical to having the full assurance of our state of grace and our relationship to God." (23:58, R.C. Sproul)
Summary of the Assurace Chain
If you are regenerate, you are elect; if you are elect, you are saved—your assurance is built on what God has done, not what you do.
On Assurance Rooted in God’s Action, Not Ours:
"The basis of our assurance is not to be a confidence in our ability to persevere... The reason why they [the saints] persevere is because they are preserved." (11:50, R.C. Sproul)
On the Unbreakable Order of Salvation:
"If I can determine whether I'm justified, I know I'm going to be glorified... Now I have nothing to worry about, that he who has begun a good work in me is going to finish it to the end." (21:11, R.C. Sproul)
Memorable Summary on Regeneration, Election, and Assurance:
"All who are elect will become, at some point in this life, regenerate of the Holy Spirit, and all who are regenerated are numbered among the elect. So if you can be sure of your regeneration, you can be sure of your election. If you're sure of your election, you're sure of your salvation." (23:15, R.C. Sproul)
In this thought-provoking episode, Dr. Sproul provides a clear, Scripture-saturated pathway for Christians struggling with questions of assurance. The key to certainty is grasping the biblical doctrines of election and regeneration—the golden chain set forth by God, not dependent on our own merit or persistence, but entirely rooted in His gracious action. Assurance is nurtured not by inward speculation or changing feelings, but by recognizing the unbreakable link between being called, justified, and ultimately glorified by God.