Lead Someone to Christ

Question
Where in the New Testament does it tell us that we cannot lead a person to Christianity, that only the Holy Spirit can do that?
Answer
The Bible doesn't really teach that we can't lead a person to Christ or Christianity, but it does say that we can't convert them. That is, we are perfectly capable of being the means God uses to bring a person to faith and salvation. In fact, that is exactly what we do when someone believes the gospel we tell him or her. As Paul taught in Romans 10:14, this is why preachers are so necessary: "How then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without a preacher?" Of course, in saying this, Paul did not mean to imply that our preaching is sufficient in and of itself to affect the salvation and conversion of anyone. It is just one thing on the list that God uses to save people.

That brings me to the second issue: we can't convert people, only the Holy Spirit can do that. There are many arguments for why this is so, the most basic being that as fallen people we are "totally depraved." Our total depravity leaves us with no desire and no ability to receive the gospel in a saving way (for further reading, I have a series of articles on this subject in IIIM Magazine Online in the Theology section). Because you and I have no ability to cure anyone of this total depravity, we cannot convert them. Their conversion requires divine intervention to change their hearts and restore their moral ability. Many passages demonstrate this idea (e.g. Matt. 11:25-27; Acts 16:14; 1 Cor. 2:12-14; Phil. 2:12-13).

When the Bible speaks of this change of heart and renewal of moral ability, it sometimes refers to it by terms like "regeneration" or "born again." Because man is unable to receive the gospel in his fallen state, he needs to be regenerated before he can believe the gospel. Traditionally, the statement "regeneration precedes faith" has summarized this idea. This is the idea that, logically speaking, one must be enabled by God to believe the gospel before one can actually believe it. In actual experience, regeneration generally occurs simultaneously with belief, but it is the regeneration that enables the accompanying belief. We find this idea taught in such passages as John 3:5-8:
Jesus answered, 'Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Do not be amazed that I said to you, "You must be born again." The wind blows where it wishes and you hear the sound of it, but do not know where it comes from and where it is going; so is everyone who is born of the Spirit.'"


In this passage Jesus indicated that regeneration is rebirth. One implication of this is that just as we have no control over our initial, physical births, we similarly have no control over our spiritual births. Jesus highlights this point by comparing rebirth to the wind -- a comparison that is all the stronger since the same Greek word pneuma means both "spirit" and "wind." Specifically, Jesus says such things as:

"The wind blows where it wishes." The parallel to this in regeneration is that the Holy Spirit regenerates whom he wishes.

"You hear the sound of it." We see the effects of the Holy Spirit's regenerative work as people come to faith. When they believe the gospel, we know that the Holy Spirit has regenerated them.

"But [you] do not know where it comes from and where it is going." We don't know where the Spirit comes from or where he is going next. The point of this statement is that we don't know whom he will regenerate and whom he will not regenerate. This contradicts the idea that God regenerates people because they come to faith, which we might summarize as "faith precedes regeneration." In that scheme, the Spirit is entirely predictable in that he necessarily regenerates any person who first exercises saving faith. In that scheme, the Spirit's actions are contingent upon man's actions, and therefore are just as predictable as man's actions are. But as Jesus presents it, man's actions come in response to the Spirit's actions, and the Spirit's actions are unpredictable to us.

Nevertheless, the Bible does say that preaching the gospel is a useful means by which God saves sinners. As Paul put it, the gospel is "the power of God for salvation" (Rom. 1:16). We cannot be certain that God will save anyone to whom we tell the gospel, but we can be certain that he does use the means of preaching the gospel in the process of bringing people to faith. When the gospel is presented to an unbeliever, the Holy Spirit may (or may not) decide to regenerate that person to enable him/her to believe the gospel and be saved.


Answer by Ra McLaughlin

Ra McLaughlin is Vice President of Finance and Administration at Third Millennium Ministries.