This month we celebrate our 25th Anniversary - We Thank the Lord for You.

By God’s grace, Monergism has become the foremost global hub for Reformed literature.Over the past 25 years, it has served as the go-to destination for pastors, scholars, and lay Christians seeking sound, Christ-centered theology—all in one accessible, online space. We provide unparalleled access to timeless teachings and resources free of charge so that cost is never a barrier to building a rich Christian library.".

Last year alone, over 1 million new visitors accessed Monergism’s resources. From pastors preparing sermons in remote villages to new believers growing in faith, this ministry serves countless people worldwide who could never afford such a library on their own.

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Hope for the Wretched (Like Me)

by Herman Bavinck

Both for unbelievers and believers, the doctrine of election is a source of inexpressibly great comfort. If it were based on justice and merit, all would be lost. But now that election operates according to grace, there is hope even for the most wretched. If work and reward were the standard of admission into the kingdom of heaven, its gates would be opened for no one. Or if Pelagius’s doctrine were the standard, and the virtuous were chosen because of their virtue, and Pharisees because of their righteousness, wretched publicans would be shut out. Pelagianism has no pity. But to believe in and to confess election is to recognize even the most unworthy and degraded human being as a creature of God and an object of his eternal love. The purpose of election is not—as it is so often proclaimed—to turn off the many but to invite all to participate in the riches of God’s grace in Christ. No one has a right to believe that he or she is a reprobate, for everyone is sincerely and urgently called to believe in Christ with a view to salvation. No one can actually believe it, for one’s own life and all that makes it enjoyable is proof that God takes no delight in his death. No one really believes it, for that would be hell on earth. But election is a source of comfort and strength, of submissiveness and humility, of confidence and resolution. The salvation of human beings is firmly established in the gracious and omnipotent good pleasure of God.

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From Reformed Dogmatics Vol. 2: God and Creation John Bolt and John Vriend (Grand Rapids, MI; Baker Academic; 2004) p. 402.

 

Fri, 06/16/2017 - 14:45 -- john_hendryx

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