This He Gives You
There is always a catch. You’ve gotten the letters, phone calls and emails just as I have. There is always someone wanting to offer us something, but things are never as they seem. There is always a catch. You can have a wonderful vacation in Hawaii, but you’re responsible for paying for your own accommodations and it can only be at this or that overpriced hotel. You can get a free barbecue but first you need to sit through a three hour presentation on summer cottages. You can get a free iPod, but only if you first sign up for a high-fee bank account. People are always giving, but at the same time always taking. There’s always the catch.
I was thinking about this this morning when my iPod began playing Matthew Smith’s rendition of “Come, Ye Sinners,” a hymn written by Joseph Hart sometime in the mid eighteenth century (you can see it and hear a clip here). While there seem to be a couple of versions of it, the one Smith sings goes like this:
Come, ye sinners, poor and wretched,
Weak and wounded, sick and sore;
Jesus, ready, stands to save you,
Full of pity, joined with power.
He is able, He is able;
He is willing; doubt no more.
Come ye needy, come, and welcome,
God’s free bounty glorify;
True belief and true repentance,
Every grace that brings you nigh.
Without money, without money
Come to Jesus Christ and buy.
Come, ye weary, heavy laden,
Bruised and broken by the fall;
If you tarry ‘til you’re better,
You will never come at all.
Not the righteous, not the righteous;
Sinners Jesus came to call.
Let not conscience make you linger,
Nor of fitness fondly dream;
All the fitness He requires
Is to feel your need of Him.
This He gives you, this He gives you,
‘Tis the Spirit’s rising beam.
Lo! The Incarnate God, ascended;
Pleads the merit of His blood.
Venture on Him; venture wholly,
Let no other trust intrude.
None but Jesus, none but Jesus
Can do helpless sinners good.
I was gripped by a few of those lines. It occurred to me that the offer of salvation could easily be the greatest catch of all. Come to Jesus but only once you have tidied yourself up and dusted yourself off. Come to Jesus but only once you really feel you need Him. Come to Jesus when you are good and ready. But as Hart says, “If you tarry ‘til you’re better, You will never come at all. Not the righteous, not the righteous; Sinners Jesus came to call.”
So if God does not require that we improve ourselves before we come to Him, if He does not require prior righteousness, what is He after? Hart answers, “All the fitness He requires is to feel your need of Him.” In other words, we have to desire God and come to Him in repentance. But how can a sinner who is “poor and wretched, Weak and wounded, sick and sore” desire anything as holy and as good as God? Why would we ever feel our need of Him? We would never clean ourselves up and dust ourselves off enough to feel worthy of Him—worthy of entering His presence.
Ah, but God knows this and has provided for us. “All the fitness He requires is to feel your need of Him. This He gives you, this He gives you, ‘Tis the Spirit’s rising beam.” And how does He do this? Joseph Hart answers in another of his hymns, this one called “Free Grace.”
Free grace has paid for all my sin
Free grace, though it cost so much to Him
Free grace has freed even my will
Free grace to the end sustains me still.
God’s free grace frees the will. God changes the will so that it desires what is good. The restless soul suddenly and finally finds it rest in God. It turns to Him. And now we can say, with Hart:
It’s not for good deeds,
good tempers nor frames
From grace it proceeds,
and all is the Lamb’s
No goodness, no fitness
expects He from us
This I can well witness,
for none could be worse.
There’s no catch. It’s an offer of free grace. God asks much, but provides all that is needed. All that he requires he also provides. It’s really and truly free.





Comments (9) »
1. clyde
January 29, 2007
2:31 PM
amen. those are great songs, and these are great things to think about.
2. Josh
January 29, 2007
2:37 PM
“All that he requires he also provides. It’s really and truly free.”
Amen. Tim that reminder made my day. Thanks.
Josh “…the word of God is not bound.” —2 Timothy 2:9
3. Tim Challies
January 29, 2007
7:48 PM
Somewhat ironically, someone called just a few minutes ago to offer me a “free” vacation at a nearby resort. I didn’t bother waiting around for the fine print!
4. Jabbok
January 29, 2007
8:20 PM
A couple of weeks ago I gave a friend a copy of Loraine Boettner’s booklet “The Reformed Faith”. The friend was a lady who always sits in front of us at church. She has always seemed very studious in the Word and I thought she might be someone who would appreciate the truths found in this booklet.
Yesterday, at church, she handed me the booklet and said, “I guess I’m Arminian because I know that I made a decision to come to Christ on my own and I chose to place my faith in Him.”
You said, “But how can a sinner who is ‘poor and wretched, Weak and wounded, sick and sore’ desire anything as holy and as good as God?”
That’s an excellent point and I think anyone can see the contrast between that statement and the statement this lady made to me.
I’m a debtor to grace and had God not granted me repentance and faith I would still be in darkness. Thanks for reminding me.
5. donsands
January 29, 2007
8:45 PM
This post gives too much credit to God.
Actually this was a beautiful read. I look back and see all that happened in my life, and I can not miss the hand of merciful and loving Father that began to change my heart in 1984, and somewhere with a few months i believe I was born again. i may have been a Cornelias for a while, and i was an Arminian for a good while, but now i am a “flaming Calvinist”, as one of my best friends calls me. (I would never call myself that).
Grace all the way so far, and grace all the way home.
6. francisco
January 29, 2007
9:26 PM
Motivated by a famous blogger who listened to these songs in his Ipod, I decided to purchase ‘The valley of vision’. I can only say what a richness of grace revealed in those lyrics! Several of the CD’s songs have stuck in my mind. Like this one:
“Heavenly Father Beautiful Son Spirit of light and truth thank you for bringing sinners to come to you”
Yes, we come to Jesus but only because God has brought us to his feet first.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us!
7. yikesmom
January 30, 2007
12:21 AM
Thanks again Tim, this is one of my favorite hymns, we sing it at our church often. Since I am such a crybaby I can’t even get through that hymn without getting choked up. It is sometimes so hard to believe that He chose me, He chose to awaken in me my need for Him.
Can you do some more hymn blogging please? Maybe some that Indelible Grace changed the tune of?
8. The Highland Host
January 30, 2007
6:43 AM
Hart is without a doubt one of the greatest of all hymnwriters in the matter of Christian experience. It is therefore a great pity that so few of his hymns are included in most modern hymnbooks. ‘Great High Priest, we View Thee Stooping’, ‘Lamb of God, we Fall Before Thee’ (his conversion hymn, by the way), ‘A Man There is, a Real Man’. Hart was converted from a genuine antinomianism to true Christianity (which explains his insistence that ‘True religion’s more than notion’). Most of Hart’s hymns (although some are unfortunately mutilated) can be found in Gadsby’s Selection, published by Solid Ground or by Gospel Standard Publications.
9. steve s
January 30, 2007
2:05 PM
I have to give you credit here. I kind of was pushing a point in a previous entry. Really can’t figure out though if its the same person that wrote both :).