John Reeves presents a Reformed exposition of the doctrine of predestination, establishing it as a foundational biblical teaching grounded in God's eternal sovereign purpose. The sermon demonstrates predestination's scriptural basis through key passages in Romans 8:29-30, Ephesians 1:5 and 1:11, emphasizing that God operates according to a deliberate, predetermined counsel rather than arbitrary chance. Reeves defines predestination as "the decree of God whereby he hath for his own glory foreordained whatever comes to pass," and supports this definition with extensive scriptural evidence from Matthew 25:34, 2 Timothy 1:9, Revelation 17:8, Acts 13:48, and Proverbs 16:4, demonstrating the doctrine's pervasive biblical testimony. The sermon's practical significance lies in correcting four critical misrepresentations: (1) predestination is not stoic fatalism that removes human responsibility; (2) it does not guarantee salvation apart from the necessary means of grace (hearing the gospel, belief, repentance, and perseverance); (3) God's predestination of the reprobate's condemnation is not arbitrary but grounded in their willful unbelief; and (4) predestination is God's sovereign determination of what must come to pass, not merely foreknowledge of what would occur. This teaching establishes the compatibility of divine sovereignty with human responsibility, a central concern of Reformed theology.
“God does not just hang things out there, folks, and let willy-nilly take its course. Everything our God has purposed is coming to be right now as it always has been, as it always will be.”
“The basis of our faith is the Word of God and the Word of God alone. We do not believe the doctrine of predestination because it is logical or reasonable or a reasonable part of theological system, though it is both.”
“God has predestinated the use of specific means for the accomplishment of his purposes, and the use of those means is as necessary and as certain as the end itself.”
“Salvation is always set before us in the Bible as being God's fault and God's work alone. Damnation is always set before us in the Bible as being man's fault and man's work alone.”
The Bible teaches that predestination is God's eternal purpose in choosing individuals for salvation.
Romans 8:29-30, Ephesians 1:5
Predestination is affirmed throughout Scripture as a foundational doctrine of divine sovereignty.
Matthew 25:34, 2 Timothy 1:9, Acts 13:48
Predestination reassures Christians of God's sovereignty and purpose in salvation.
Romans 8:28-30
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