Secure in God’s Unbreakable Grip
Romans 8:33
"Who shall bring any charge against God's elect? It is God who justifies."
In Christian theology, the term "elect" (from the Greek eklektos, meaning "chosen" ) generally refers to those human individuals or groups whom God has selected for salvation, eternal life, or a specific purpose in His redemptive plan. And so in this biblical context "elect" generally means, "chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father" (1 Peter 1:1-2). However, its precise meaning and implications vary significantly between theological traditions, particularly Calvinism and Arminianism, which are at the heart of most of these debates.
The "election" is rooted in God’s eternal plan or decree, but its location and nature depend on the viewpoint of the person.
In Calvinism, it’s in God’s sovereign will before creation. He actively elects and predestines specific people, making salvation certain for them. In strict Calvinism, it's accurate to say, "no human will is involved". Human will does play a role, in responding to God, but only because God first regenerates that elect person, thus enabling them to believe. And I can stand in agreement with that take, because I know The Holy Spirit enables us to believe and understand God's will so that we can receive the gift of faith.
In Arminianism, it’s in God’s foreknowledge of the universe He creates. He knows the outcomes in advance of our free choices without forcing them on us, so election affirms rather than causes those choices. I can also stand in agreement with this position. I don't need to say that God the Father has predestined some and not others. But just the same, the tension is real. And I think we can sweat these details a bit too much and too often. And I feel that way because these debates typically veer off into the weeds and miss the points that the apostles were making in scripture.
Both sides affirm God’s omniscience (He knows all, including the unelect or damned), but they differ on whether foreknowledge implies predestination. But what Paul is doing is assuring believers that no accusation can stand against "God’s elect" because God Himself is the one who justifies them. This isn't meant to be used to win debates over theological views among Christian sects, this is meant to provide a sense of security for the believing community in a pagan or secular society. The security here is profound. No one, not even Satan (the "accuser" in Revelation 12:10), can successfully charge or condemn those whom God has already declared righteous (predestined) through Christ.
I guess you might say my point of view is what is often described as monergistic (God alone working) regeneration preceding faith, rather than synergistic (God and human will cooperating from the start). However, from my experience there is a moment of sudden conversion on my part. A decision to no longer resist the inevitable.
This regeneration is instantaneous and sovereign. And it happens entirely by God’s initiative, without any prior cooperation from the human will. I did not try at all to cooperate prior to my conversion.
Oh sure, I was playing around at religion. Maybe paying attention to the surface value of many Christian traditions. But absolutely, I was not converted to submitting, or subscribing even, to Christ's will for my life.
A Calvinist would say, "you didn’t cooperate prior to conversion because you couldn’t", to which I would say, "based upon my experience, I'd have to agree, in fact, my inner man struggles daily with that cooperation".
In my unregenerate state, I was spiritually dead and unable to please God or submit to His law (Romans 8:7-8). It's just true. And the reality is that the daily struggle of the "inner man" to cooperate; is precisely what Paul wrestles with in Romans 7:14-25. I can still remember that "ah ha!" moment when I first read and understood what the apostle was saying there. And you know what that moment was? That was The Holy Spirit doing the work of election.
That "ah ha!" moment when Romans 7 suddenly made sense, when the words leaped off the page and gripped my heart, wasn’t just intellectual insight. It was the Holy Spirit illuminating the truth, bearing witness with my spirit that I was indeed a child of God (Romans 8:16), and then applying the reality of regeneration to my understanding. In that instant, the Spirit was doing far more than helping me grasp a difficult passage of words on a page; He was confirming His prior work of making me alive in Christ.
Before that moment, even if I had read Romans 7 a hundred times, it might have remained confusing, distant, or merely academic. And in fact that is exactly what happened. But when the Spirit opened my eyes, the struggle Paul described became my struggle, and more importantly, the deliverance Paul celebrated in Christ became your deliverance.
A similar and timely instance occurred in my reading of the gospels. Specifically, Luke 7:36-50. Jesus is dining at the home of Simon the Pharisee. A woman "who was a sinner" (traditionally understood as a prostitute) comes in, weeping, washes Jesus’s feet with her tears, dries them with her hair, and anoints them with costly ointment.
Simon is scandalized...If this man were a prophet, he would know what sort of woman this is.
Jesus responds with the parable of the two debtors:
One owed 500 denarii, the other 50; neither could pay, so the creditor forgave them both. "Which will love him more?" Jesus asks.
Simon answers, "The one for whom he forgave more."
Then Jesus turns to the woman and says to Simon:
"Do you see this woman? I entered your house; you gave me no water for my feet, but she has wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair…Therefore I tell you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But he who is forgiven little, loves little."
And to her Jesus says: "Your sins are forgiven…Your faith has saved you; go in peace."
The woman didn’t love in order to be forgiven; she loved because she had already grasped, by faith, that this Man could and would forgive her. Her extravagant devotion was the fruit of grace already at work in her heart.
These aren’t just stories to me; they’re portraits of what happened in the moments when God made me alive.
I was the adulterous woman (man in my case), literally deserving judgment, yet met with mercy. I was the sinful woman at His feet, once far off, now drawn near by grace, pouring out love because I've been forgiven an infinite debt. That’s the Spirit’s ongoing work of election, continually opening my eyes to see more of Christ’s beauty and my own salvation more clearly.
All this I've been saying is describing the regeneration of the human soul by the Holy Spirit. It is the sovereign, monergistic act of God making a new creation. The Spirit giving eyes to see, ears to hear, and a heart to receive what could not and would not be received before. It's being "born again" or "born from above" (John 3:3, 7-8).
It's a secret, sovereign work of God, like the wind. You hear its sound, but you don’t know where it comes from or where it goes. The effectual (inward, irresistible) call, distinct from the outward call of the gospel that many hear and reject. You cannot learn it in seminary or Sunday school Bible study classes. It's God's work; God removing the heart of stone and giving you a new heart of flesh (Ezekiel 36:26-27).
This is the turning point, and is entirely God’s initiative. It is not triggered by human decision, moral effort, religious interest, or even desperation. I didn’t cooperate to make it happen, and I couldn’t have. It happened to me because God, in eternity past, chose me in Christ (Ephesians 1:4-5) and, in time, applied that election through the Spirit’s regenerating work.
Some hear the same gospel I heard, read the same passages, even grew up in church...yet it never "clicks." The words remain external; the beauty of Christ stays hidden.
Why?
1 Corinthians 2:14
"The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned"
Think about that. Many heard Jesus teach in person and walked away unmoved or even hostile towards him.
So God is unjust?
No. All deserve condemnation; none deserve grace.
The fact that He extends mercy at all to any is pure kindness. We don’t know why God chooses one and not another. His reasons are hidden in His perfect wisdom and justice. What we do know is that everyone who sincerely calls on the name of the Lord will be saved (Romans 10:13), and no one who comes to Jesus will be cast out (John 6:37).
The gospel is to be preached to all, and the offer is genuine to all; because God ordains not only the end (who is saved) but also the means (the preaching of the gospel and the Spirit’s application of it to the elect). When God sovereignly decides to save one of His elect, the Holy Spirit applies that salvation in such a powerful and effective way that the person will respond with repentance and faith. I can't explain it beyond that except to say again, on my own I never would have made that decision.
Jesus said it plain and simple:
John 6:44�"No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him. And I will raise him up on the last day."
Do I feel coerced?
No, I feel drawn, awakened, and blessed.
Think of it like this:
Before regeneration, a person in a dark room hates the light and wants to stay in darkness (John 3:19–20).
At regeneration, God turns on the light and gives the person new eyes. Now they love the light and gladly walk into it.
The grace is irresistible because it changes the heart first, so that the response of faith is willing and genuine. Many people hear the outward call of the gospel ("Come to Jesus" ) and resist or ignore it. But the call must still go out because God has predestined that it should. The outward call of the gospel, the general proclamation "Come to Jesus," "Repent and believe," "Whoever will may come", must go out to all people without exception. It is sincere, it is commanded, and it is the ordained means by which God uses to bring His elect to faith and salvation.
And that hope of salvation is eternally fulfilled already.
John 10:27–29�Jesus says: "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father’s hand."
That's the triple divine assurance and protection. Jesus’ hand and the Father’s hand, sealed by The Holy Spirit.
Nothing and no one can ever undo what God has done in saving His elect. That promise is as secure as the One who made it.
Closing Prayer:
Heavenly Father,
Who shall bring any charge against Your elect? It is You who justifies. Thank You for choosing us in Christ before the foundation of the world, for drawing us by Your sovereign grace when we could not and would not come on our own. Thank You for the Holy Spirit’s irresistible work—opening blind eyes, softening hearts of stone, and making us alive when we were dead in sin.
Keep us, Lord, in the mighty hands of the Son and the Father, sealed forever by Your Spirit. Let no accusation, no doubt, no power in heaven or earth ever separate us from Your love. Hold us fast until the day we see You face to face.
We rest in Your unbreakable grip, trusting not our hold on You, but Your hold on us.
In the name of Jesus Christ, our Savior and Shepherd, Amen.