The Attributes of God
by Arthur W. Pink
The Grace of God
Grace is a perfection of the divine character which is
exercised only toward the elect. Neither in the Old Testament nor in the
New, is the grace of God ever mentioned in connection with mankind
generally, still less with the lower orders of His creatures. In this it is
distinguished from "mercy," for the mercy of God is "over all His works"
(Psalm 145:9). Grace is the sole source from which flows the goodwill, love,
and salvation of God unto His chosen people. This attribute of the divine
character was defined by Abraham Booth in his helpful book "The Reign of
Grace" thus: "It is the eternal and absolute free favor of God, manifested
in the bestowment of spiritual and eternal blessings to the guilty and the
unworthy."
Divine grace is the sovereign and saving favor of God
exercised in the bestowment of blessings upon those who have no merit in
them and for which no compensation is demanded from them. Nay, more; it is
the favor of God shown to those who not only have no positive deserts of
their own, but who are thoroughly ill-deserving and hell-deserving. It is
completely unmerited and unsought, and is altogether unattracted by anything
in or from or by the objects upon which it is bestowed. Grace can neither be
bought, earned, nor won by the creature. If it could be, it would cease to
be grace. When a thing is said to be of "grace," we mean that the recipient
has no claim upon it, that it was in nowise due him. It comes to him as pure
charity, and, at first, unasked and undesired.
The fullest exposition of the amazing grace of God is to
be found in the Epistles of the Apostle Paul. In his writings "grace" stands
in direct opposition to works and worthiness, all works and worthiness, of
whatever kind or degree. This is abundantly clear from Romans 11:6, "And if
by grace, then it is no longer by works; if it were, grace would no longer
be grace." Grace and works will no more unite than an acid and an alkali.
"By grace are you saved through faith; and that not of yourselves; it is the
gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast" (Eph 2:8,9). The
absolute favor of God can no more consist with human merit than oil and
water will fuse into one (see also Rom 4:4,5).
There are three principal CHARACTERISTICS of divine
grace.
First, it is eternal. Grace was planned before it
was exercised, purposed before it was imparted: "Who has saved us, and
called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to
His own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the
world began" (2 Tim 1:9).
Secondly, it is free, for none did ever purchase
it: "Being justified freely by His grace" (Rom 3:24).
Thirdly, it is sovereign, because God exercises it
toward and bestows it upon whom He pleases: "Even so might grace reign" (Rom
5:21). If grace "reigns" then it is on the throne, and the occupant of the
throne is sovereign. Hence "the throne of grace" (Heb 4:16).
Just because grace is unmerited favor, it must be
exercised in a sovereign manner. Therefore does the Lord declare, "I will be
gracious to whom I will be gracious" (Exo 33:19). Were God to show grace to
all of Adam's descendants, men would at once conclude that He was
righteously compelled to take them to heaven as a fit compensation for
allowing the human race to fall into sin. But the great God is under no
obligation to any of His creatures, least of all to those who are rebels
against Him.
Eternal life is a gift, therefore it can neither be
earned by good works, nor claimed as a right. Seeing that salvation is a
"gift," who has any right to tell God on whom He ought to bestow it? It is
not that the Giver ever refuses this gift to any who seek it wholeheartedly,
and according to the rules which He has prescribed. No! He refuses none who
come to Him empty-handed, and in the way of His appointing. But if out of a
world of impenitent and unbelieving rebels, God is determined to exercise
His sovereign right by choosing a limited number to be saved, who is
wronged? Is God obliged to force His gift on those who value it not? Is God
compelled to save those who are determined to go their own way?
But nothing more riles the natural man, and brings to the
surface his innate and inveterate enmity against God, than to press upon him
the eternality, the freeness, and the absolute sovereignty of divine grace.
That God should have formed His purpose from everlasting, without in any way
consulting the creature, is too abasing for the unbroken heart. That grace
cannot be earned or won by any efforts of man is too self-emptying for
self-righteousness. And that grace singles out whom it pleases to be its
favored object arouses hot protests from haughty rebels. The clay rises up
against the Potter and asks, "Why have You made me thus?" A lawless
insurrectionist dares to call into question the justice of divine
sovereignty.
The distinguishing grace of God is seen in saving those
people whom He has sovereignly singled out to be His high favorites. By
"distinguishing" we mean that grace discriminates, makes differences,
chooses some and passes by others. It was distinguishing grace which
selected Abraham from the midst of his idolatrous neighbors and made him
"the friend of God." It was distinguishing grace which saved "publicans and
sinners," but said of the religious Pharisees, "Let them alone" (Matt
15:14). Nowhere does the glory of God's free and sovereign grace shine more
conspicuously than in the unworthiness and unlikeliness of its objects.
Beautifully was this illustrated by James Hervey, (1751):
"Where sin has abounded, says the proclamation from the court of heaven,
grace does much more abound. Manasseh was a monster of barbarity, for
he caused his own children to pass through the fire, and filled Jerusalem
with innocent blood. Manasseh was an adept in iniquity, for he not only
multiplied, and to an extravagant degree, his own sacrilegious impieties,
but he poisoned the principles and perverted the manners of his subjects,
making them do worse than the most detestable of the heathen idolaters (see
2 Chron 33). Yet, through this superabundant grace he is humbled, he is
reformed, and becomes a child of forgiving love, an heir of immortal glory."
Behold that bitter and bloody persecutor, Saul,
when, breathing out threatenings and bent upon slaughter, he worried the
lambs and put to death the disciples of Jesus. The havoc he had committed,
the innocent families he had already ruined, were not sufficient to assuage
his vengeful spirit. They were only a taste, which, instead of glutting the
bloodhound, made him more closely pursue the track, and more eagerly pant
for destruction. He is still athirst for violence and murder. So eager and
insatiable is his thirst, that he even breathes out threatening and
slaughter (Acts 9:1). His words are spears and arrows, and his tongue a
sharp sword. It is as natural for him to harm the Christians, as to breathe
the air. Nay, they bled every hour in the purposes of his rancorous heart.
It is only owing to lack of power that every syllable he utters, every
breath he draws, does not deal out deaths, and cause some of the innocent
disciples to fall. Who, upon the principles of human judgment, would not
have pronounced him a vessel of wrath, destined to unavoidable damnation?
Nay, who would not have been ready to conclude that, if there were heavier
chains and a deeper dungeon in the world of woe, they must surely be
reserved for such an implacable enemy of true godliness? Yet, admire and
adore the inexhaustible treasures of grace—this Saul is admitted into the
holy fellowship of the prophets, is numbered with the noble army of martyrs
and makes a distinguished figure among the glorious company of the apostles.
The Corinthians were flagitious even to a proverb.
Some of them wallowed in such abominable vices, and habituated themselves to
such outrageous acts of injustice, as were a reproach to human nature. Yet
even these sons of violence and slaves of sensuality were washed,
sanctified, justified (1 Cor 6:9-11). "Washed," in the precious blood of a
dying Redeemer; "sanctified," by the powerful operations of the blessed
Spirit, "justified," through the infinitely tender mercies of a gracious
God. Those who were once the burden of the earth—are now the joy of heaven,
the delight of angels.
Now the grace of God is manifested in and by and through
the Lord Jesus Christ. "The law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came
by Jesus Christ" (John 1:17). This does not mean that God never exercised
grace toward any before His Son became incarnate; Genesis 6:8, Exodus 33:19,
etc., clearly show otherwise. But grace and truth were fully revealed and
perfectly exemplified when the Redeemer came to this earth, and died for His
people upon the cross. It is through Christ the Mediator alone that the
grace of God flows to His elect. "Much more the grace of God, and the gift
of grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ ... much more those who receive
abundance of grace, and of the gift of righteousness, shall reign in life by
one, Jesus Christ ... so might grace reign through righteousness unto
eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord" (Rom 5:15,17,21).
The grace of God is proclaimed in the Gospel (Acts
20:24), which is to the self-righteous Jew a "stumbling block," and to the
conceited and philosophizing Greek "foolishness." And why so? Because there
is nothing whatever in it that is adapted to the gratifying of the pride of
man. It announces that unless we are saved by grace, we cannot be saved at
all. It declares that apart from Christ, the unspeakable Gift of God's
grace, the state of every man is desperate, irremediable, hopeless. The
Gospel addresses men as guilty, condemned, perishing criminals. It declares
that the most chaste moralist is in the same terrible plight as is the most
voluptuous profligate; and the zealous professor, with all his religious
performances, is no better off than the most profane infidel.
The Gospel contemplates every descendant of Adam as a
fallen, polluted, hell-deserving and helpless sinner. The grace which the
Gospel publishes is his only hope. All stand before God convicted as
transgressors of His holy law, as guilty and condemned criminals, who are
not merely awaiting sentence, but the execution of the sentence already
passed upon them (John 3:18; Rom 3:19). To complain against the partiality
of grace is suicidal. If the sinner insists upon bare justice, then the Lake
of Fire must be his eternal portion. His only hope lies in bowing to the
sentence which divine justice has passed upon him, owning the absolute
righteousness of it, casting himself on the mercy of God, and stretching
forth empty hands to avail himself of the grace of God now made known to him
in the Gospel.
The Holy Spirit is the Communicator of grace,
therefore is He denominated "the Spirit of grace" (Zech 12:10). God the
Father is the Fountain of all grace, for He purposed in Himself the
everlasting covenant of redemption. God the Son is the only Channel
of grace. The Gospel is the Publisher of grace. The Spirit is the
Bestower. He is the One who applies the Gospel in saving power to the soul:
quickening the elect while spiritually dead, conquering their rebellious
wills, melting their hard hearts, opening their blind eyes, cleansing them
from the leprosy of sin. Thus we may say with the late G. S. Bishop: "Grace
is a provision for men who are so fallen that they cannot lift the axe of
justice, so corrupt that they cannot change their own natures, so averse to
God that they cannot turn to Him, so blind that they cannot see Him, so deaf
that they cannot hear Him, and so dead that He Himself must open their
graves and lift them into resurrection."