Christ Pursues Worshippers (4:1-15)
Introduction
Introduction
Christ purposefully and persistently yet graciously pursues relationships.
Christ is eternally satisfying.
Life, spiritual life, is a gift, wholly a gift; it is given according to the good-will and purpose of God. If the Lord gives the new life to some and not to others, he is perfectly free to do as he wills with his own. Gifts are not regulated according to the law of debts. If God owes to any man eternal life, he shall have it, for God will be debtor to no man; but he oweth nothing to sinful man but wrath; and if he chooseth according to his good pleasure to give a new and spiritual life to his chosen, none shall dare to question him, or say unto him,
If this day I tremble lest I have it not, let me learn the way by which this life must come to me if it come at all. Certainly not by my own strivings and strugglings in the way of merit, for it is represented not as a reward, but as a gift; certainly not by any power of my own apart from God, for it is spoken of as coming from Jesus Christ, and not as growing out of human nature. What, then, had I better do than make a solemn appeal to the mercy of God?
If the Lord should refuse the living water to me, I could not complain, but his name is love, and I know that he has made a promise that whosoever believeth in Christ shall not perish, but have everlasting life. Let me come as an undeserving sinner, then, this day, and appeal to the bounty of God, and ask him for his name’s sake, and for his mercy’s sake, to have pity upon me.