Sermon 18. Many Called, Few Chosen 
"Know ye not that they which run in a
race run all, but one receiveth the prize? So run, that ye may
obtain." 1 Cor. ix. 24.
[Note] {254} NOTHING is more clearly
brought out in Scripture, or more remarkable in itself than this, that
in every age, out of the whole number of persons blessed with the
means of grace, few only have duly availed them of this great benefit.
So certain, so uniform is the fact, that it is almost stated as a
doctrine. "Many are called, few are chosen." Again,
"Strive to enter in at the strait gate; for many, I say unto you,
shall seek to enter in, and shall not be able." And again,
"Wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to
destruction, and many there be which go in thereat … Strait is the
gate, and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life, and few there be
that find it." And St. Paul seems expressly to turn the
historical fact into a doctrine, when he says, by way of remark upon
his own day as compared with former ages of the Church, {255} "Even so
then, at this present time also," that is, as formerly,
"there is a remnant, according to the election of
grace." [Matt. xx. 16. Luke xiii. 24. Matt. vii. 13, 14. Rom. xi.
5.]
The word "remnant" is frequent with the prophets, from
whom St. Paul takes it. Isaiah, for instance, says, "Though the
number of the children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, a remnant
shall be saved." Jeremiah speaks of "the remnant of
Judah," and the "small number," to which a return was
promised. Ezekiel, too, declares that God "will leave a remnant,"
"that ye may have some," continues the divine oracle,
"that shall escape the sword among the nations, when ye shall be
scattered through the countries. And they that escape of you shall
remember Me among the nations, whither they shall be carried
captives." And so well understood was this, that the hope of good
men never reached beyond it. Neither the promise, on the one hand, nor
the hope, on the other, ever goes beyond the prospect of a remnant
being saved. Thus the consolation given to the Church in the Book of
Jeremiah is, that God "will not make a full end;" and
Ezra, confessing the sins of his people, expresses his dread lest
there should be "no remnant." [Rom. ix. 27. Jer. xliv.
28. Ezek. vi. 8, 9. Jer. xlvi. 28. Ezra ix. 14.] Thus Christ, His
Apostles, and His Prophets, all teach the same doctrine, that the
chosen are few, though many are called: that one gains the prize,
though many run the race.
This rule in God's dispensations is most abundantly and awfully
illustrated in their history. At the time of {256} the Flood, out of a whole
world, in spite of Adam's punishment, in spite of Enoch's preaching,
in spite of Noah's setting about the ark, eight only found acceptance
with God, and even one of these afterwards incurred a curse. When the
Israelites were brought out of Egypt by miracle, two only of the whole
generation entered the land of promise. Two tribes alone out of twelve
remained faithful at the time of the great schism, and continued in
possession of God's covenanted mercies. And when Christ came, the bulk
of His own people rejected Him, and His Church came but of the scanty
remnant, "as a root out of a dry ground."
Moreover, it is observable that Almighty God seems as if to
rejoice, and deigns to delight Himself in this small company who
adhere to Him, as if their fewness had in it something of excellence
and preciousness. "Fear not," he says, "little flock,
for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom."
"Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves."
"I pray not for the world, but for those whom Thou hast given
Me." In a like spirit, St. Paul says, "Whom He did foreknow,
He also did predestinate." And in the time of Elijah, "I
have reserved to Myself seven thousand men, who have not bowed the
knee to the image of Baal." And in the time of Moses, "The
Lord did not set His love upon you, nor choose you, because ye were
more in number than any people, for ye were the fewest of all
people." [Luke xii. 32. Matt. x. 16. John xvii. 9. Rom. viii. 29;
xi. 4. Deut. vii. 7.]
And it need scarcely be added, that the same {257} bountifulness on God's
part, the same ingratitude on the part of man, the same scarcity of
faith, sanctity, truth, and conscientiousness, have marked the course
of the Christian Dispensation, as well as of those former ones of
which the inspired volume is the record.
So clear is this, that persons who, from unwillingness to take the
narrow way, or from other like cause, have disputed it, have scarcely
anything left them to urge but certain false views or consequences,
which have been, or may be, entertained concerning the doctrine. And
as these misconceptions tend at once to prejudice the mind against it,
and to pervert its reception of it, I shall now examine one or two of
the objections to which it is exposed.
1. Now, first, it has often happened that, because the elect are
few, serious men have considered that this took place in consequence
of some fixed decree of God. They have thought that they were few,
because it was God's will that they should not be many. Now it is
doubtless a great mystery, why this man receives the truth and
practises it, and that man does not. We do not know how it comes to
pass; but surely we do not tend to solve it, by saying God has so
decreed it. If you say that God does absolutely choose the one and
reject the other, then that becomes the mystery. You do but throw it
back a step. It is as difficult to explain this absolute willing or
not willing, on the part of Almighty God, as to account for the
existence of free will in man. It is as inexplicable why God should
act differently towards this man and that, as it is why this man or
that should act differently towards God. On the other hand, we {258} are
solemnly assured in Scripture that God "hath no pleasure in the
death of the wicked;" that He is "not willing that any
should perish, but that all should come to repentance." [Ezek.
xxxiii. 11. 2 Pet. iii. 9.]
The doctrine, then, which is implied in the text, does not lead us
to any hard notions of God. He is a most loving Father still, though
few are chosen. His mercy is over all His works, and to no one does
the word of life come but with the intent that he may live. If the
many remain in unbelief, they "are not straitened" in God's
love, but they "are straitened in their own bowels." Man
will not be what by God's renewing and cooperating grace he might be.
It is man's doing, not God's will, that, while the visible Church is
large, the Church invisible is small.
2. But it may be said that this doctrine lies open to another
objection: that to believe that few only find the gate of life,
necessarily makes a man self-confident and uncharitable towards
others, whether he considers himself predestined to life or not. Every
one, it is said, will place himself on the safe side of the line, and,
of course, will place his friends with him; and all others he will
give over, as if they were to be classed among the many. Now the text,
and the verses which follow it, supply the readiest answer to this
objection. St. Paul speaks as if the Christian course were a race, in
which one only out of many could succeed. And what is the conclusion
he arrives at? "I keep under my body, and bring it into
subjection, lest that by any means when I have {259} preached to others, I
myself should be a castaway." You see how far the holy Apostle
was from security and self-satisfaction, though he, if any one, would
have had a right to feel easy about his state. And the exhortation he
gives his brethren is, "So run, that ye may obtain." Are
candidates for a prize confident, because only one can gain it? What
is the meaning then of asserting that "they which run in a
race" take it for granted that they are on the winning side?
And yet it is quite true that there are men who, in consequence of
holding the doctrine that the chosen are few, instead of exerting
themselves, become proud and careless. But then, let it be observed,
these persons hold another doctrine besides, which is the real cause
of their carnal security. They not merely think that Christ's flock is
small, but that every man can tell whether or no he belongs to it, and
that they do know that they themselves belong to it. Now, if a man
thinks he knows for certain that he shall be saved, of course he will
be much tempted to indulge in a carnal security, and to look down upon
others, and that, whether the true flock of Christ is large or small.
It is not the knowledge that the chosen are few which occasions
these bad feelings, but a man's private assurance that he is
chosen.
St. Paul tells us, that whom God "did foreknow He also did
predestinate," and "whom he did predestinate, them He also
called; and whom He called them He also justified; and whom He
justified, them He also glorified;" but he does not say that God
discloses this to the persons who are subjects of it. {260} He has deep and
eternal counsels, but they are secret ones; He has a decree, founded
on righteousness and truth, but it is not revealed. We know not, we
cannot know, whom God has chosen for salvation; and while we
understand this, and keep it before us, we shall not be puffed up
about ourselves, nor harsh and censorious towards others, though we
bear in mind ever so much that the gate of heaven is narrow, and few
there be that find it.
This, I think, is very plain; yet it may be useful to enlarge upon
it. Let us take an illustration, not exact, but sufficient for the
purpose. Supposing we had to cast lots for some worldly benefit, a sum
of money, or some desirable post, or the like, and only three or four
out of a great number could succeed, how should we be affected
beforehand? Should we be at all led to speculate or judge who were to
be successful, who unsuccessful? And why not? Because it would be idle
to employ our thoughts about an event which nothing we saw before us,
nothing we could see, tended to discover to us; idle to attempt to
decide in a case where there were no means of deciding. For what any
of us could know, one man had as good a prospect as another. We should
feel as much as this, that a certain prize was destined for some out
of all of us; we should feel anxious and expectant, and that would be
the end of the matter. Now, as regards our heavenly prospects, the
decision indeed is not a matter of chance; God forbid!—but yet it is
as much hid from us as if it were. Nothing that we see, or think we
see, can enable us to decide about {261} the future. We do not know but
those who are the greatest sinners now, may repent, reform, and in
severity and austereness of life surpass ourselves; the last
oftentimes become the first. Nor do we know about ourselves, however
fair we seem, but we may fall away. We cannot compare ourselves with
others at all. All we know is, and a most awful thought it is, that
out of the whole number of those who have received the Christian
calling, out of ourselves and our friends, and all whom we see and
hear of in the intercourse of life, but a few are chosen; but a few
act up to their privileges. Now, considering the inscrutable darkness
in which the event lies, hid almost like the time of judgment in the
prescience of Almighty God, is this a thought to fill us with
confidence and pride, or is it not rather an exceedingly solemn and
dreadful thought? Should a prophet declare that out of a given number
of persons but a few would be alive this time next year, that the
greater part would die, should we, under any circumstances, feel
altogether easy, were our health ever so good in appearance, or were
there ever so many older persons than ourselves in the number
addressed? Should we not be made very anxious at every little
indisposition, or at every symptom of illness, or at every chance of
accident from without? Should we have much heart for speculating about
others?
And this surely is the real state of the case. Our means of judging
ourselves or others are so very insufficient, that they are
practically nothing; and it is our wisdom to let the attempt alone. We
may know about ourselves, that at present we are sincere and earnest,
{262} and so far in God's favour; we may be able to say that such and such
words or deeds are right or wrong in another; but how different is
this from having the capacity to decide absolutely about our or his
eternal doom! How different this from being able to take in the whole
compass of our lives, the whole range and complication of our
thoughts, words, deeds, habits, principles, and motives! How different
from being able to argue from what we see to what God knows, or from
discerning whether the divine seed has taken root in particular minds!
St. Paul himself, though conscious of nothing, says to the
Corinthians, "Yet am I not hereby justified, but He that judgeth
me is the Lord; therefore judge nothing before the time, until the
Lord come, who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness,
and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts." [1 Cor. iv.
5.] We cannot estimate the real value of anything which we or others
do; or how it stands in making up their or our final account in God's
sight. What is a sign of faith in one man, is not in another; what is
a great deed in one man, is not in another. The differences of
disposition, education, and guidance are so great, and make the
problem so intricate, that it would seem to be the height of madness
(were it not sometimes attempted by persons not mad) to attempt to
solve it. St. Paul says in one place that he has not
"attained." On the contrary, at the end of his life, after
fighting a good fight, then he says that "henceforth there was
laid up for him a crown of righteousness." [Phil. iii. 12. 2 Tim.
iv. 8.] Thus there was a point at which, and not before, his {263} salvation
was, practically speaking, secured. What happened in his case, may,
for what we know to the contrary, happen in ours also; and the point
at which victory is certain may vary in the case of every one of us.
Or, again, let us recur to the Apostle's words in the text:
"Know ye not," he says, "that they which run in a race
run all, but one receiveth the prize? So run, that ye may
obtain." When a number of persons are contending for a prize,
since one alone can obtain it, it is plain that no one, from what he
knows about himself, can conclude anything concerning his own success;
because, even be he ever so likely in himself, yet another may be more
likely. The event is utterly and totally hid from him, unless he be
very well acquainted with his rivals. Now here, again, the
illustration used is not altogether parallel. In the prize which we
run for, praised be God, there is no such rivalry of one against
another; there is no restriction; and if all did their duty, all would
succeed. Yet the effect is the same as regards our knowledge, as if
only one could succeed; I mean, we do not know the standard by
which God will judge us. Nothing that we are can assure us that we
shall answer to what He expects of us; for we do not know what that
is; what we are can but cheer us and give us hopes and good spirits.
In contending for the prize, it is of no use to be second best. He who
comes second, as little gains it as he who comes last. And so in
striving to enter in at the strait gate, unless we rise to that which
God requires of us, unless we attain, no matter how near we once were
{264} to attaining;—after all, it has come to this, that we have not
attained. This thought will surely ever keep us from dwelling on our
own proficiency, whatever it is; rather it will lead us, with the
great Apostle, to "follow after, if that we may apprehend that
for which we are apprehended of Christ Jesus." It is not till
life is over, when we have lived in the fear of God consistently, when
death has put its seal upon us, and cut us off from the chance of
falling, that others, surveying us, and observing our consistency and
perseverance in well-doing, will humbly trust that we are in St.
Paul's case, to whom, after "finishing his course," it was
revealed that "a crown of righteousness was laid up for
him."
The doctrine, then, that few are chosen though many be called,
properly understood, has no tendency whatever to make us fancy
ourselves secure and others reprobate. We cannot see the heart, we can
but judge from externals, from words and deeds, professions and
habits. But these will not save us, unless we persevere in them to the
end; and they are no evidence that we shall be saved, except so far as
they suggest hope that we shall persevere. They are but a beginning;
they tell for nothing till they are completed. Till we have done all,
we have done nothing; we have but a prospect, not possession. If we
ultimately do attain, every good thing we shall have done will have
tended to that attainment, as a race tends to a goal; but, unless we
attain, it will not have so tended; and, therefore, from no good thing
which we do can we argue that we are sure to attain. {265}
3. One other misconception of this doctrine shall be mentioned, and
then I will conclude. It may be said, then, that the belief that true
Christians are few leads men to isolate themselves in their own
opinions, to withdraw from the multitude, to adopt new and extravagant
views, and to be singular in their conduct, as if what the many held
and did could not be right. This may sometimes be the case; but I
would have it remarked, that if true Christians are few, they must in
a certain sense be singular. Singularity indeed is no proof that we
are right in our opinions, or are Christ's chosen, because there are a
great many ways of being singular, and all cannot be right. And
persons are often, as is objected, singular, from love of being so,
from conceit, or desire to excite remark; and therefore it does not
follow that even those who profess the views of Christ's true
servants, are themselves in their number. But, on the other hand,
neither does it follow, because men are singular in their opinions,
that they are wrong, nor, because other opinions are generally
received in their day, that therefore these are right. If the
multitude of men are ever in the broad way "that leadeth to
destruction," there is no ground for maintaining that, in order
to be right in our religious views, we must agree with the many;
rather, if such as persons are, their opinions are also, it would seem
to be certain that those opinions which are popular will ever be
mistaken and dangerous as being popular opinions. Those who serve God
faithfully must ever look to be accounted, in their generation,
singular, intemperate, and extreme. They are not so; they must guard
against becoming so; if they are so, {266} they are equally wrong as the
many, however they may in other respects, differ from them; but still
it is no proof that they are so, because the many call them so. It is
no proof that they are so, because others take it for granted that
they are, pass their doctrines over, put their arguments aside without
a word,—treat them gravely, or are vexed about them, or impatient
with them, or ridicule them, or fiercely oppose them. No; there are
numberless clouds which flit over the sky, there are numberless gusts
which agitate the air to and fro: as many, as violent, as
far-spreading, as fleeting, as uncertain, as changing, are the clouds
and the gales of human opinion; as suddenly, as impetuously, as
fruitlessly, do they assail those whose mind is stayed on God. They
come and they go; they have no life in them, nor abidance. They agree
together in nothing but in this, in threatening like clouds, and
sweeping like gusts of wind. They are the voice of the many; they have
the strength of the world, and they are directed against the few.
Their argument, the sole argument in their behalf, is their prevalence
at the moment; not that they existed yesterday, not that they will
exist tomorrow; not that they base themselves on reason, or ancient
belief, but that they are merely what every one now takes for granted,
or, perhaps, supposes to be in Scripture, and therefore not to be
disputed:—not that they have most voices through long periods, but
that they happen to be most numerously professed in the passing hour.
On the other hand, divine truth is ever one and the same; it changes
not, any more than its Author: it stands to reason, then, that those
{267} who uphold it must ever be exposed to the charge of singularity,
either for this or for that portion of it, in a world which is ever
varying.
What a most awful view does human society present to those who
would survey it religiously! Go where you will, you find persons with
their own standards of right and wrong, yet each different from each.
Thus everywhere you find both a witness that there is a standard, and
yet an evidence everywhere that that standard is lost. Go where you
will, you find in each separate circle certain persons held in esteem
as patterns of what men should be; each sect and party has its
Doctors, its Confessors, and its Saints. And in all parties you will
find so many men possessed of good points of character, if not
exemplary in their lives, that to judge by appearances, you do not
know why the chosen should not be many instead of few. Your very
perplexity in reconciling the surface of things with our Lord's
announcements, the very temptation you lie under to explain away the
plain words of Scripture, shows you that your standard of good and
evil, and the standard of all around you, must be very different from
God's standard. It shows you, that if the chosen are few, there must
be some particular belief necessary, or some particular line of
conduct, or something else different from what the world supposes, in
order to account for this solemn declaration. It suggests to you that
perchance there must be a certain perfection, completeness,
consistency, entireness of obedience, for a man to be chosen, which
most men miss in one point or another. It suggests to you that there
is a great difference between {268} being a hearer of the word and a doer; a
well-wisher of the truth, or an approver of good men or good actions,
and a faithful servant of the truth. It suggests to you that it is one
thing to be in earnest, another and higher to be "rooted and
grounded in love." It suggests to you the exceeding dangerousness
of single sins, or particular bad habits. It suggests to you the peril
of riches, cares of this life, station, and credit.
Of course we must not press the words of Scripture; we do not know
the exact meaning of the word "chosen;" we do not know what is
meant by being saved "so as by fire;" we do not know what is
meant by "few." But still the few can never mean the many;
and to be called without being chosen cannot but be a misery. We know
that the man, in the parable, who came to the feast without a wedding
garment, was "cast into outer darkness." [Matt. xxii. 13.]
Let us then set at nought the judgment of the many, whether about
truth and falsehood, or about ourselves, and let us go by the judgment
of that line of Saints, from the Apostles' times downwards, who were
ever spoken against in their generation, ever honoured afterwards,—singular
in each point of time as it came, but continuous and the same in the
line of their history,—ever protesting against the many, ever
agreeing with each other. And, in proportion as we attain to their
judgment of things, let us pray God to make it live in us; so that at
the Last Day, when all veils are removed, we may be found among those
who are inwardly what they seem outwardly,—who with Enoch, and Noah,
and Abraham, and Moses, and Joshua, {269} and Caleb, and Phineas, and
Samuel, and Elijah, and Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, and the Baptist, and
St. Paul, have "borne and had patience, and for His Name-sake
laboured and not fainted," watched in all things, done the work
of an Evangelist, fought a good fight, finished their course, kept the
faith.
Top | Contents | Works
| Home
Note
Septuagesima.
Return to text
Top | Contents | Works
| Home
Newman Reader Works of John Henry Newman
Copyright © 2007 by The National Institute for Newman Studies. All rights reserved.
|