Ephesians 1:1-14 · Spiritual Blessings in Christ
It’s God’s Will?
Ephesians 1:3-14
Sermon
by Scott Suskovic
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Harold is 81 years old and one day after worship he came up to me and said, "There is something I want you to preach on before too long. When I was eleven years old, my mother died. The good people at the church kept on telling me it was God's will for her to die. Do you think that it was God's will to take the life of a young boy's mom? Now that I'm getting older, I plan on seeing her again, soon. Before I do, I'd like to hear what you think about God's will."

That question and Paul's words in Ephesians 1 raise all sorts of questions. I bet before his mother died, the doctors worked hard on her for some time, using their very best medical knowledge. Were they working against God's will? I don't know the circumstances surrounding her death, but if it was a car accident — was God at the wheel? If it was cancer — did God send those renegade cells? If it was self-inflicted — did God lead her down that darkened pit of depression and hopelessness?

Do you see the dilemma? On the one side I can only assume those church folks were offering words of comfort to young Harold, "It's God's will." They wanted him to know that God is in control. This world is not governed by dumb luck, the stars, or chaos, but by a sovereign Lord who is overseeing every detail of our lives. Not a sparrow falls to the ground without his knowledge. Every hair on your head is counted. The psalm says that you were knit together in your mother's womb. Before a word is on your lips, God knows it. Every day of your life is recorded in his book, laid out before a single day ever passed. He chose you from the foundations of the earth. It's all God's will.

And for the most part those words of comfort work — until when? Until the mother of an eleven-year-old boy dies. Until that child runs out into the street. Until airplanes are flown into twin towers. And then ... and then we are left with even more questions. Questions about the goodness of God, questions about the power of God, questions about the existence of God. Is it God's will?

This is not merely the question of an eleven-year-old boy but during the Reformation, this was the key issue at stake. Do we have free will or is everything predestined? You come to terms with this, and you will understand the central teaching of the Bible, the reason for the Reformation, and the foundation by which this church stands or falls — justification by faith through grace. You miss this, and you will forever be stuck in a quagmire of unanswerable questions and dead ends.

Let's begin with a definition. Predestination. You hear two parts. "Pre" which means "beforehand" — as in a pregame warm up before the game or prehistoric, which means before there was any formal, written history.

The second part is "destination." It refers to where you are headed. When I go to the airport, they ask me, "What is your final destination?" I always say, "Heaven." And when the ticket agent doesn't think that's very clever, I softly say, "Minneapolis." But that's the meaning of the word, right? Destination: Where are you ultimately headed?

Now, put them together. Predestination means knowing beforehand where you are going to end up — before you even get there. It's not a word or idea I made up — nor did Luther or Calvin. It comes right out of the writings of Paul.

Long ago, even before he made the world, God loved us and chose us in Christ to be holy and without fault in his eyes. His unchanging plan has always been to adopt us into his own family ... God's secret plan has now been revealed to us ... for he chose us from the beginning, and all things happen just as he decided long ago.  — Ephesians 1:4-5, 9, 11 (paraphrase of NIV)

For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the first-born among many brethren. And those whom he predestined he also called; and those whom he called he also justified; and those whom he justified he also glorified. — Romans 8:29-30

Predestination. Knowing beforehand where you are going to end up — before you even get there. But does this mean that God foresees the future or does it mean that he forecauses the future. See the difference? Foreseeing is God simply knowing the future. Forecausing is God dictating the details of life in order to cause the future. This is what Luther called the core teaching and it comes down to one question, "Do we have free will or does everything happen according to God's will?"

Let's see how different branches have answered that question.

The Roman Catholic church would say, "A little." They teach that we are fallen, sinful creatures — but not totally. If we participate, even in the slightest bit, through good works, confession, giving, service, worship through free will — then God will reward with grace. God foresees the future but he isn't causing the future. That's up to people working in conjunction with God.

John Calvin, father of the Presbyterian church, said, "There is no free will." We are fallen, sinful creatures who cannot respond to God. God numbers our days, there are no accidents, everything happens according to God's purpose. God chooses some people to go to heaven and some people to go to hell through his divine election. God doesn't just know the future, he causes the future — thus we have no free will.

And then a Dutch Pastor named Jacob Arminius, a student of Calvin, preached this to his congregation. They thought, "Without free will, the cards are already dealt, the final chapter is already written. I might as well eat, drink, and be merry because God has already chosen me for heaven or hell. I'm a drunk because I'm destined to be a drunk. I'm an adulterer because I'm destined to be an adulterer." Such fatalism didn't make sense to Arminius so he taught we have free will to accept, decide, and choose Jesus Christ as our Savior. From this group we have the Baptists, Assembly of God, and Pentecostals.

Luther said that when it comes to our day-to-day living — getting a job, finding a spouse, studying for a test, there is complete free will. You are a liar because you chose to lie. You are an adulterer because you chose to cheat. On this horizontal level, this day-to-day living, God is not causing the details. Oh, he foresees them; he knows the choices you will make. But he doesn't cause them. There is free will in how you choose to live.

But in our relationship with God, in our final destination, in matters of heaven and hell, Luther taught that there is no free will. Luther called it a bound will because deep within this heart lives a rebel who is spitting apple into the face of God. Deep within this heart lives a rebel who wants to be free from the confines of God. Deep within this heart lives a rebel who, when asked to make a choice or a decision about Jesus, this rebel made it loud and clear, "Kill him, crucify him."

Sin is not simply lying, cheating, and stealing that we could overcome if we just tried harder. Sin is a condition, a state of fallenness. I am in bondage to sin and cannot free myself. The good I want to do, I don't do. The bad things I don't want to do, that's what I end up doing. This will is rebellious by nature, it is bound by sin. Luther taught the third article of the creed by saying, "I cannot by my own understanding or effort believe in Jesus Christ as my Lord or come to him." It is the work of the Holy Spirit.

The only hope I have is Jesus who rescues me from death by paying the price for sin and choosing us, as Paul writes in Ephesians 1. This does not mean that God directs and causes every detail of our lives. Much of what happens grieves the very heart of God. But predestination is about where we are headed. Where will we spend eternity? More importantly, how will you get there? Will your salvation come from your own rebellious hands spitting apple into the face of God, chanting with the crowds, "crucify him," or from a grace-filled God who, as Paul said, "chose us from the beginning, before the world began, and called us as his own." Do you see why Luther said this is the key issue of the Reformation? You grasp this and suddenly justification through faith by God's grace makes sense.

I know it's confusing. In fact, while Luther thought this was the core teaching, he didn't talk about it much because people misunderstood it. They ask dead-end questions, fall into fatalism, and say dumb things to an eleven-year-old at his mother's funeral. For Luther, predestination was always meant to be a source of comfort not fatalism. God knit you together in your mother's womb. He knows your lying down and your getting up. He goes to prepare a place for you and when that time is right, he will come back personally and take you to himself. You see? Sovereign grace.

In chapter 2 of Rick Warren's book, The Purpose-Driven Life, he says that nothing is an accident, nothing happens outside of God's plan. All the details of your life have been scripted from the foundations of the earth. God has a plan, a purpose for your life.1 This is straight, God-caused predestination to the extreme. God not only foreknows what will happen but God is causing it to happen. Trouble is, later on in the book, Warren switches gears and talks about the need for each one of us to make a decision to believe in Jesus. You stand at a fork in the road. It could go either way. Choose to follow him. Start obeying him today. It's all up to you. And you have to ask, what happened to the sovereign plan of God where there are no accidents? Warren writes out of the Arminian branch of the Reformation.

In many ways, Warren's book is great. But here, Luther teaches just the opposite. Not every detail of our daily lives is dictated by God or a part of his divine plan. We live in a fallen world in which planes are flown into towers, wars rage on for years, children are struck by cars, and, yes, Harold, sometimes eleven-year-old boys have to grow up without a mom. I hate that. And I can only imagine that God does, too. But he promises us his presence, his strength, his comfort to make it through. He also promises more than that. He promises that there will come a day, and you have his word on this, there will come a day when he will make all things new. He will wipe away every tear from your eye, erase every doubt from your mind, turn darkness into light, and he will once and for all, destroy death — that final enemy. "And those whom he predestined he also calls; and those whom he called he also justifies; and those whom he justifies he also glorifies" (Romans 8:30). Do not be afraid, Harold, for ours is a sure and certain hope. Only believe because we know how the story ends. The kingdom is ours forever. Amen.


1. Rick Warren, The Purpose-Driven Life (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2002).

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany: Maybe Today, by Scott Suskovic