No one can come to Me if ever the Father Who sends Me should not be drawing him, and I shall be raising him in the last day
Johns Account 6: 44, Concordant New Testament
If you have spent much time adhering to the teachings of the Christian religion, then you know that there is the process by which we are saved. That being that we accept Christ Jesus into our hearts. This is "The choice" which a believer makes to ensure that they are indeed saved. I made that choice relatively early in life. Most of my childhood years were spent going to church on Sundays and listening to one pulpit pounder or another give their rendition of what the scriptures said. But one thing was for certain, I needed to accept Jesus for myself in order to guarantee my spot in the Lords salvation. Or did I? In recent years, outside of the influence of the mainstream church, I have grown in my understanding not only of my own life in the Father, but that the choice which drew me unto Jesus had been made well before I was born. For not only is Jesus the Way the Truth and the Life, but He is THE way to God {Johns Account 14:6}. But was it I who came to Jesus, or did the Father Himself draw me unto Him? Jesus has spoken that no one can come to Him "If ever the Father Who sends me should not be drawing him" {Johns Account 6:44}. These are the very words of Jesus telling us that it is not we who come to Him, but the Father Who draws us unto Him. This kind of puts a new meaning to that all too familiar come to Jesus moment many of us have thought we have experienced. Did Saul have a come to Jesus moment on the road to Damascus? Or, as he later describes his own revelation of Christ in him, was it only "When it delights God" that Jesus was revealed unto him? {Paul to the Galatians 1:15-16}. Consider the circumstances of Sauls mission that day, he was on his way to Jerusalem in order to persecute the followers of Jesus, with the full blessing of the leaders of the Jewish church. So, his intention that day was not to come to Jesus, but to persecute Him. So, it's safe to say that for Saul this was never a come to Jesus moment. This was a draw Saul unto Jesus moment initiated by the Father.
For some time, I referred to Sauls encounter on the road to Damascus as his come to Jesus moment, I was in error on that account. For it is God Who drew him to the very one he had been persecuting. What followed is Sauls own revelation of Christ in him which he speaks of in Galatians {Paul to the Galatians 2:20}. In my thinking, this throws into question the entire church narrative that we are the ones who "come to Jesus" in order to achieve that free gift of salvation given unto us by the Father. That we are the ones who take that personal initiative to accept Christ into our hearts. This also denotes the fact that we indeed have that free will to make that choice, but that's a topic for another page. The truth is that we ourselves are not the ones who choose Jesus, for that decision has been made by the Father long before we were ever born. It is God Himself Who draws us unto Christ. It is God Who drew Paul unto his revelation of his life in Christ. I feel that at the base of this belief that we are the ones who choose and accept Jesus into our life is the error of the belief that we are indeed separated from God via sin. Nothing could be further from the truth. Jesus bled and died that we would no longer be slaves to sin {Paul to the Romans 6:6-11}. This in no way means that there is no longer sin in this world, only that we have died to that which once defined us {Paul to the Romans 6:1-2}. It is through Christ that our life is not apart from God, but through Him {Johns Account 14:20}. Knowing this, we can see that it is not we who come to Jesus, but the Father Who draws us to Him. Which is more a decision than a choice.
Jesus is saying to him, "I am the Way the Truth and the Life. No one is coming to the Father except through Me
Johns Account 14: 6, Concordant New Testament
~Scott~





