No Silly Race, Only Sovereign Grace: Chosen to Declare His Praises
Ephesians 1:22-23
"And he put all things under his feet and gave him as head over all things to the church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all."
Paul ends his prayer with the breathtaking revelation that the purpose behind Christ’s supreme exaltation is for the church. God the Father has put all things under Christ’s control, yet this cosmic authority isn’t abstract or distant; it’s directed to the church. Christ is given as Head over all things specifically for His body, you, me, and every believer united in Him. And obviously this is all well and good, but what stuck me deeply was the closing words, "the fullness of him who fills all in all." Saying, Christ, who fills the entire universe with His presence and power, finds His "fullness" expressed through His body, the church.
How does that make you feel?
Do you think of yourself as part of the fullness of Jesus Christ?
Do you want to be part of the fullness of Jesus Christ?
Christ fills all in all; nothing escapes His permeating rule, His life-giving presence, His completing work. He is the cosmic filler, the One in whom all things hold together and find their purpose.
Colossians 1:17
"And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together."
Jesus has chosen to manifest, express, and extend the visible, tangible fullness of who He is through us, His body. And thank God for that. But this should humble us in that the eternal Son, who needs nothing, delights to make His completeness shine forth through flawed, redeemed people like us. And we should grow in His purpose, fulfill what He is fulfilling, walk worthy of His glorious work.
Thank God, Peter said, that God established this awesome responsibility, this testimony of faith and the life in Christ that God chose to lead us into, according to His foreknowledge as His "special possession".
1 Peter 2:9-10
"But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy."
We aren’t random individuals; we are corporately chosen, royal, holy, possessed by God to showcase His transforming mercy. Once outsiders (not a people, without mercy), now insiders; forgiven, adopted, indwelt by the Spirit, to live as witnesses to His light in a dark world.
Why is it necessary that God predestined us? Why is His foreknowledge so important in the grand scheme of things?
Think about it in this way: this weekend is the beginning of the Winter Olympics. And at the same time we've got the NFL Super Bowl. So we've got a lot of opportunities this weekend to watch athleticism, excellence in sport, and competitiveness. Likewise we've also got a huge opportunity to gamble on the outcomes of these events. Especially convenient nowadays with gambling apps and such.
Now imagine you're God, all-knowing, having foreknowledge of every single winning situation in all these games. And for the sake of this point I'm trying to make, God is inclined to make a bet.
Let me ask you this: if you were God and you had this foresight, wouldn't you buy a ticket that wins?
I mean seriously. You wouldn't buy a ticket of losers would you?
No. You'd buy a stack of winning tickets.
He wouldn’t place bets on uncertainty. There's nothing in fact that He is uncertain of. With perfect foreknowledge, He’d align Himself only with certain victory. But here’s the breathtaking twist in Scripture. God doesn’t just know the winners, He ordains them, chooses them, and secures them in Christ before the foundation of the world to guarantee the triumph of His redeeming love.
Without this predestination grounded in His foreknowledge, our salvation would hang on every human whim, chance, or merit, making it fragile and uncertain. It would be like Monty Python’s "Silly Olympics" especially the sketch about the race known as, "100 yards for people with no sense of direction."
The starting pistol fires, the runners explode off the starting line…in every conceivable wrong direction, scattering wildly into the stands, the infield, anywhere but toward the finish line. One poor soul might accidentally stumble the right way and trip into the finish, but the whole thing is a pure farce. There's no direction, no guidance, no certain winner, just hilarious futility and an inevitable failure. That's mankind at his best. That’s the perfect picture of what human-centered salvation would look like without God’s predestination. If redemption hinged solely on our whims, fleeting choices, moral efforts, or "sense of direction" in our fallen world, we’d all scatter in confusion; some chasing shadows of self-righteousness, others veering into outright rebellion, most never reaching the goal. No one could reliably cross the finish line because our natural direction is away from God (Romans 3:12). It would be a cosmic comedy of errors, with eternal stakes.
But praise God!
He doesn’t leave us to that absurdity. In His perfect foreknowledge, He doesn’t just foresee the mess; He sovereignly intervenes to guarantee the triumph. He ordains the winners, choosing us in Christ before the foundation of the world. It’s not a gamble on uncertain runners; it’s the divine Coach who not only knows the exact path to victory but draws us, guides us, empowers us, and carries us across the line by His Spirit.
This is why predestination isn’t cold determinism; it’s the warm, loving assurance that our salvation isn’t fragile like a Monty Python race. It’s rock-solid because it’s rooted in God’s unchanging will and purpose. God has already declared the winners, bought the tickets, and ensured the finish line is crossed in glory.
Amen?
Praise God, Amen!