The Closet Calvinist Podcast
Episode 33 — Does Matthew 23:37 Refute Irresistible Grace? Description In Matthew 23:37, Jesus laments over Jerusalem: “How often would I have gathered your children together… and you were not willing.” Many point to this verse as proof that God’s saving will can be resisted and that grace ultimately depends on human decision. But does this passage actually refute the doctrine of Irresistible Grace? In this episode, we examine the context, the audience, and the language of the verse to see whether it contradicts sovereign grace—or confirms it. Matthew 23:37 (ESV) “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing!” * What Irresistible Grace actually teaches * Context: judgment on Israel’s religious leaders * Distinguishing “you” from “your children” * Human resistance vs. divine decree * Compassion and sovereignty held together Irresistible Grace does not teach that God forces people against their will. It teaches that when God regenerates a sinner, He changes the heart so that the sinner comes willingly. John 6:37 (ESV) “All that the Father gives me will come to me…” Psalm 110:3 (ESV) “Your people will offer themselves freely on the day of your power.” Grace liberates the will—it does not violate it. Jesus is addressing the scribes and Pharisees. Matthew 23:13 (ESV) “You shut the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces…” The leaders were actively preventing others from coming to Christ. In verse 37, the unwillingness belongs to those leaders (“you”), while “your children” refers to the people under their influence. Scripture never presents Jesus as failing to accomplish the Father’s saving plan. John 6:38–39 (ESV) “I have come down from heaven… that I should lose nothing of all that he has given me…” John 10:27–28 (ESV) “My sheep hear my voice… and they will never perish.” Christ successfully gathers all whom the Father gives Him. Matthew 23:37 shows genuine human resistance and culpability. Romans 8:7–8 (ESV) “The mind that is set on the flesh… does not submit to God’s law; indeed, it cannot.” Resistance highlights moral inability—it does not disprove sovereign grace. Jesus’ lament reveals true compassion without undermining divine sovereignty. Ezekiel 33:11 (ESV) “I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked…” Romans 9:18 (ESV) “So then he has mercy on whomever he wills…” God’s compassion is sincere, and His sovereign purposes stand firm. * Matthew 23 is a judgment passage, not a failed salvation attempt. * The unwillingness in the verse belongs to Jerusalem’s leaders. * Irresistible Grace teaches willing response after regeneration. * Christ does not fail to gather those given to Him. * Human responsibility and divine sovereignty coexist in Scripture. Matthew 23:37 does not teach that grace fails—it teaches that sinners resist. Irresistible Grace explains why some stop resisting. When God changes the heart, His sheep come freely and joyfully. Christ gathers every one the Father has given Him. Key PassageMain ThemesUnderstanding Irresistible GraceThe Immediate ContextChrist’s Will and the Father’s PurposeHuman Resistance Is RealCompassion and Sovereignty TogetherKey TakeawaysBottom Line
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