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The Whosoever Wills of the Bible
Rolfe Barnard

Rolfe P. Barnard (1904 - 1969). American Southern Baptist evangelist and Calvinist preacher born in Guntersville, Alabama. Raised in a Christian home, he rebelled, embracing atheism at 15 while at the University of Texas, leading an atheists’ club mocking the Bible. Converted in 1928 after teaching in Borger, Texas, where a church pressured him to preach, he surrendered to ministry. From the 1930s to 1960s, he traveled across the U.S. and Canada, preaching sovereign grace and repentance, often sparking revivals or controversy. Barnard delivered thousands of sermons, many at Thirteenth Street Baptist Church in Ashland, Kentucky, emphasizing God’s holiness and human depravity. He authored no major books but recorded hundreds of messages, preserved by Chapel Library. Married with at least one daughter, he lived modestly, focusing on itinerant evangelism. His bold style, rejecting “easy-believism,” influenced figures like Bruce Gerencser and shaped 20th-century Reformed Baptist thought.
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the preacher emphasizes the importance of continuously seeking and committing to Jesus Christ. He compares the concept of a mourner's bench to the idea of having a mourner's bench in one's heart, representing a constant expression of faith and growth in the Christian journey. The preacher emphasizes that every day, believers must recommit themselves to Christ and continually seek His grace. The sermon also highlights the significance of calling on the name of the Lord as a continuous act of faith, which characterizes those who believe in sovereign grace.
Sermon Transcription
...of the Bible, the whosoever wills of the Bible. Now somebody came to me after service last evening, and they didn't get my subject right. They thought I was going to preach on the fact that the scriptures teach that whosoever will may come to the Lord Jesus Christ. I said, no, no, I'm not going to do that, for the scriptures do not talk in that kind of language. No, I want to say three things from the scripture here tonight, three things that describe the whosoever wills of the word of God. Did you get what I said a minute ago? I think it is terribly important that we not make the Bible say what it does not say. That's just as bad as making it say less than it says, isn't it? Add to the Bible. For instance, last night, after doing my best to confine ourselves to what the scripture actually teaches about what they call predestination, it still wasn't clear. And somebody wanted to know if the Bible actually told that God predestined some to be damned, even though they wanted it to say. It is amazing how Satan has crowded our thinking and how we need to be a little scrupulous, almost to the point of just being too scrupulous to see to it that we stick closely to what the Bible actually says, not what somebody says it says, but what the Bible actually says. For instance, have you heard it said that the Bible says that whosoever will may come to Christ? Have you ever heard that? You have, haven't you? But the Bible don't say that. Now, that is the truth. That's so what the Bible don't say. That's so whosoever will may come to Christ. But the Bible don't use that kind of language. Do you get it? It just don't do it. I've had people say, Brother Barnum, the Bible says whosoever will may come. I say, no it don't. Well, you say, Brother Barnum, you're straining the gnat and swallowing the camel. I'm insisting these days that with so much controversy and much difference of opinion, and we're all trying to find out the truth, that we just confine ourselves to Bible language. If the Bible says a thing, let's say it and be able to quote it. But let's not coin an expression of ourselves, a form, a pattern, a theology of ourselves, in dealing with our own hearts or somebody else, and make the Bible say what it does not say. Now, what does the Bible say? Verse 17, this is what the Bible says. And the spirit and the bride say come. And let him that heareth say come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life fully. Now, of course, this is the verse from which we get what we hear down our way a lot, the wonderful whosoever will gospel. But this is what this passage teaches, that is what the Bible teaches. Tomorrow night we're going to try to show you. The most pessimistic text in the Bible is he will not come unto me. If it's left up to men, who will come? Nobody. And that verse, John 5, 40, slams the door and damns every human being this side of heaven or hell. Because if that's all there is to it, nobody will come. Nobody. If I left home most of these 39 years and lived in a suitcase, slept on different beds and ate different kinds of food all these years, and had nothing else to preach than a little emptiness of going up and down the line with some confidence in people, that they were nice folks and had handled the right way, they'd respond in the right way, I'd be a fool. But what keeps you creeping on is that you do not go preaching a whosoever will gospel, but you go preaching the gospel of God concerning his Son, the hearing of which men and women, some of them, are given faith to believe. And our confidence is in God. We go each place we go remembering that the Spirit of God will have to tell, even a man has sound in truth and is sound in the warfare. As the apostle Paul, he said, Now, don't be afraid, Paul, going over there. I have much people in that city. Isn't that a wonderful expression? I have much people over there. Your labor will not be in vain. There are some people over there that are going to hear the gospel and actually be able to hear it and close with it and savingly believe in the one of whom the gospel speaks. Now, that's our encouragement. Now, that'll do when you're not getting results, and it'll do when you are. And that I wouldn't take a million dollars for. Now, having labored the point that I'm not talking about the whosoever will gospel tonight, I want us to notice three things that this verse of scripture says about the whosoever will. Whosoever will, let him take the water of life free. In the first place, the whosoever wills of the word of God are men and women who thirst for sovereign, divine grace from God. Whoso is athirst, let him come. Whoso is athirst. That's the first thing about a whosoever will. I tell you who will take of the water of life freely, the fellow that's thirsty for the work of God's divine grace in his heart and in his soul. The invitation is to thirst the people. The instruction to thirst the people is to take. But the invitation to thirst the people is to come to the Lord Jesus, to come to the fountain of sovereign grace. Now, this grace that I'm talking about now, this water that men are to take freely, we're not left up to our own conjecture as to what it is. The first two verses of this last chapter of the Bible tell us that this thirst for sovereign grace, for the water of life, that this water of life is defined in verses 1 and 2, that it flows from the throne of God. He showed me verse 1. A pure river of water of life, clear as crystal. Where does it come from? Proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. That's where God's grace comes from, from his wonderful throne. The throne of God and the water hung on a cross. Here is a river full of water, and the water is full of life, and it flows from the throne of God. Yet they're scared for a break, and then a break, and a keep-on-breaking of this water that flows in a river out of the very throne of God, whoso with thirst let him come. Here is the water of life. It's flowing. It's deep as the heart of God. It's wide as the arms of the cross. That's plenty of it to spare. The scriptures will say that God, who is our, our, sweet, rich in mercy. You probably wouldn't exhaust it if you drank of it every day. That's plenty to spare. It's for the healing of the nations, this water of life. That's what the grace of God is pictured as being here. Here it is. It's proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. In the midst of the street of it, on either side of the river, there is a tree of life which bears twelve manner of fruits, and yieldeth her fruit every month, and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations. This water of life, then, that people are bidden to take if they're willing. And who's willing? People who are thirsty. This river, thank God, not just a stream, I've tried to exhaust some of the meaning of Paul's expression, but God, who is rich in mercy. But God, who is rich in mercy. What a wealthy he is. Plenty and to spare. He's this rich, there's just one verse of scripture that this little preacher knows about to kind of define how rich God is. I'll tell you one thing the Bible says, he's this rich. He's rich unto all who call on him. If every human being in the world, from Adam down to right now, would call on God and ask for this water that flows from the throne, he still has plenty of water to spare. It wouldn't exhaust. He's rich unto any and all who call on him. God's throne from which sovereign grace flows. Now, we need to camp here just a little while. You thirsty? All right. You thirsty enough to be willing? You still want a harvester? Or if the water was offered to you, you ready to take it? Ask the whosoever will. They're thirsty. Whosoever thirsts. Now, we must be planted beside this river of life, in this life. Here's where the rub comes. Our roots must be put down into that stream like trees in an arid land, thirsty for water. And that must happen in the here and the now. I tried to show you last night that the reason the doctrine of teaching of predestination is so false and so hated and so caricatured is not that men are ignorant of the heart of it, but they actually know. They won't admit that they understand what it means. They hate it. They try to get rid of it because it's the heart of the gospel and it means that salvation is a thing of holiness and that man's being saved in proportion as the character of Christ is being reproduced in him. Now, with the present temper in the churches in our north and south, we can't possibly have a gospel that leads to men's holiness. That just won't square with what we want today, and so these truths are so hated. I have come to believe they're hated because men do understand them. They say all manner of foolish things about them, but they've been exposed to them. They understand that salvation is the making of a man holy. That's exactly what it is. We can't have this Sunday morning stuff we call Christianity America and keep these doctrines so that's all now. You can't have what we have down south, and you know better up here, called Christianity, giving things up lip service to a doctrine that talks about what salvation is. It's making men and women to be conformed to the image of God's dear son. And what I'm talking about tonight is thirst. Thirst for sovereign grace. What does that mean? Thirst. Intense need. There'd be anything on earth, doctors will tell us, as intense as a man's desire for water when he's thirsty. It's the most intense of all of the needs of the human body. You can do without food and a thousand other things, but you've got to have water. You've got to have water. And I've never experienced it, and I doubt you have. Only one time I had tomane poison, and they wouldn't give me any water for a day or two. And I convince you, if God saved me now, I would have sold my soul for a drink of water. I would have. If I'd have had a chance, I'd have bought a glass of water with my eternal soul. That's how intense it was. Now, you get intense about this business of wanting divine grace to flow from God into your soul. Of wanting those things that can only come to you as a gift from the hand of him who does so utterly in grace. Forgiveness is here. You've either got to work it out, or it must be given to you to become intense and desire in this life the forgiveness of sins and the planting of the germ of holiness within you. Whosoever thirsts, whosoever thirsts, let him come. Let him come. Not all men, or not whosoever wills of this type, are they. You see? For all men not thirsty for God's grace to do for them. And nobody would want God's grace to do anything for them until they were acutely sensitive of their ill-deserved and their ability to work out their own salvation. All men are not whosoever wills. Now, the invitation, of course. Whosoever thirsts, it's just as wide as you want to make it. Are you that stiff? Well, it's big enough to take you in. You're not that stiff, it leaves you out, but by your choice. By your choice. Is that fair? Whosoever thirsts, I will not widen it any more than that. I challenge you, there isn't an invitation in the Bible that's any wider than that. You hungry? There's bread for hungry people. You're not hungry? No bread offered you, but you make the decision yourself. You say, I don't need forgiveness. I don't want to be holy. I don't desire the work of God's grace. And the Son of Dead sure do that. And the Son of Dead sure does that. And you invite yourself out. You say, excuse me, please. You're not talking to me. But if by God's grace you say that's talking to you, I'm thirsty. I have a keen sense of my need. I'd love to be planted by the side of this river with the privilege of drinking it. Come unto me, says the Lord, if you're thirsty. And do what? Drink. Just keep on drinking. And just keep on drinking. And just keep on drinking. Now, if men were invited to money, or the love of sin, or the enticements of the world, it would be a different story. But not all are whosoever wills when invited to partake of God's grace. And so we insist that before men will thirst for God's divine work in their soul, two things ought to happen. First, they have to have a desire. It's got to come from somewhere. I invite you to work it up yourself if you think you can. If you think you can, I invite you to prostrate yourself before God's truth and cry out at God to open your heart and the eyes of your understanding. Give to your ear a hearing. Act to the gospel that you might attend on the things of eternity in your soul. Either a man can do it himself or he needs somebody to give him that which he cannot do. And up till now, nobody's ever been able to change his spots and change his nature. And unless God works the work of divine grace in your soul, you'll never be thirsty for God's grace to come your way. And that's the reason I say that salvation is in the way of seeking, seeking him until he does for you what only God can do. A desire must be worked in you. You can't do it yourself. You can cry out at God to do it in you. And a trust in that grace. Men do not thirst for God's power in their life as long as they trust in their own. And you will never, now hear me, you will never turn yourself over to Christ until you've got confidence in him, in his power. You haven't got any, but that's still your hypothesis. Faith is a confidence. Faith is confidence. Faith is confidence. Faith is what? Confidence. If I turn myself over to Christ, will everything be all right? Faith says yes. Faith is confidence. Yes sir. I don't have any power. He has. He has. I can't do it. He can. Faith is confidence. Who are they? Whosoever will. Number one, they're the ones who thirst. They're the ones who thirst. They're the ones who thirst. Whosoever wills. In the second place, they're the ones who take. They're the ones who take. Whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely. Thirst the people. When offered water, what do they do? They'll take it. They'll take it. All the alibis are gone. They'll take it. They thirst it. There's water. They take it. They don't sit and watch the stream go by. They take it. Let him take it. He's invited to take. He's commanded to take. And the whosoever wills do, brother. Thirst the people. Take water. When it's asked for the taking. The second thing the Bible says about the whosoever wills, they're the folks that take of the grace of God. You know, there's an active principle in that faith which lines us up or unites us with or relates us to the throne of God from which this grace fall, or proclaim. What is it? Hear it. It's a calling upon the name of the Lord. It's a calling upon the name of the Lord. That's what is the active part of saving faith. The whosoever wills of the Bible are not the folks who end their strength, you know. They do part of it and God does the other, like we've heard. But they're the thirsty ones and they're thirsty enough to take. They lay hold. They lay hold. Now, I've been preaching for 39 years and I still don't know how to handle the great paradoxes of the Bible so I don't try to. I know this. That faith is the great vital act of the soul in action of thee and all of the Lord Jesus Christ. I know that it's a gift of God but I also know that it's your act and there comes a time if you keep out of hell and if you gain some assurance of hell when there's a great vital act of your very own you reach out and do what this text states. You take. You take. You're explaining that? No, I can't explain it. I can't explain it. But I will tell you this, that God's not going to act for you. He enables you but he will not save for you. You're going to have to reach out and lay hold of Christ. Is that all right? Yes. Yes. Yes. But whosoever will to the Bible let him reach out and begin that thing that I call the active principle of saving faith. What is it? It's a calling upon the name of the Lord. Now I'm not talking so much about what we call a mourner's bench. I have no particular objection. I don't want to get in a straitjacket. The only thing with me is I go to a place and it's different everywhere you go. I go to different sections of the country. I go to different atmospheres. There's a way we do things here and that's what's going to act with me. As long as you don't tell me I've got to do it that way. In other words, I can see how God would bless you and your dumbness if he does me some. Just so you don't say that's the only way he works. See what I mean? Huh? That's the only way he works. And by the way, you can't get saved unless you do it this way. Now we just manage. We just manage. We just... So I'm not talking about as such. Although it's a lot better than nothing. It's better than nothing. I tell you what, I'm talking about a mourner's bench in your heart. I'm talking about an expression that describes the child of God in his birth and in his daily growth and walk. It's a calling on the name of the Lord. It's not a once-for-all proposition. I'm as certain as I'm alive and will speak the truth now. Everything in relation to your response to and commitment to Jesus Christ needs to be done over again tomorrow. Every commitment. You need to do it again tomorrow. Every act of the Christian life must be daily. The Bible knows nothing. The Bible repents for yesterday without today or believing yesterday and not believing today and clinging to Christ yesterday but not clinging to him today. Every expression in the New Testament where people are said to have eternal life or everlasting life is in connection with a word that's in the present participle case. It's he that believeth, he that continueth, he that abideth, he that obeyeth, and so forth and so on. It's a proposition of today. I made this statement. I think I'm right. You can have no assurance that you're a child of God if you have to go back to yesterday for evidence. You don't have evidence today. You don't have assurance today. Is that all right? Is that all right? Do you believe in it now? Well, I did yesterday. How about now? How about now? You're believing yesterday. How about today? It's a present proposition. It's a present tense proposition. You must be up to date in it. Every commitment needs to be recommitted. Every vow needs to be revowed. Repentance needs to be repeated. Prayers need to be repeated. Faith needs to be continuous. What am I talking about? One of the three things that Scripture says about the whosoever wills of the Bible is they take. They take. They take. Whosoever will, let him take of the water of life. Praise. What's taking? I don't know, but what the best Bible language for it is a calling on the name of the Lord. Now, this continuous calling Now, hear me, as I make a hard statement. This continuous calling characterized those who really believe in sovereign grace. The secret, unceasing calling out of the resources of one heart is the mark of a child of God. Did you get it? This unceasing, this continuous inside, in the secrets of your heart calling on, calling on, calling on the name of the Lord. That's the mark of a child of God and the lack of it is the mark of a man who believes but his faith is the same kind that James spoke of. It's a dead faith. It produces no work. For the believing child of God begins his work by a calling unceasingly on the name of the Lord. Now, by now, I've taught it all my life. We take the expression Romans 10, 13, Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. And so they said, Brother Bond, that means this. You get folks to come down the aisle and get down on their knees and get them to say, Lord, save me! For Jesus' sake, amen. And they began to hear salvation. But that isn't what this scripture is talking about. This is an incessant, this is a lifelong, this is an unceasing, this is continual calling upon, reaching out to, leaning upon, confidence in, surrender to the Lord Jesus Christ. I know what I'm doing. Whosoever shall call, whosoever shall call, that marks him. He's a caller. That's the mark of a child of God. He's going to be full of people. They got down on their knees, said a little prayer. Somebody said, Now let's get it. You're not saved by prayer, but you're not saved apart from it. For blessed God, this sovereign grace I'm talking about, will bring you prostrate before the Lord on your face, calling on the name of the Lord. Let me repeat it. You're not saved by prayer, you're saved by faith, but you're not saved apart from prayer. Brother, this thing will get serious. There's a calling on the name of the Lord. Somebody says, get down on your knees, Mr. Spurgeon. I've rarely ever prayed on his knees. Right. He never prayed with his eyes closed. Maybe sometime in the pulpit. He didn't do that. He lived a life, as far as we can find out, just sort of a state of prayer. He was always calling on the name of the Lord. Now, while you're working, and you're not conscious for the deep things that go on in your life, or in your subconscious, the child of God, he was calling on the name of the Lord all the time. Washing dishes, not conscious of it, calling on the name of the Lord. Prayer and calling, calling on the name of the Lord. Whoso shall call, that is the active principle of a faith that thinks of the Lord day by day. The whosoever wills, the fellow that takes. And then the last place, the third thing about the whosoever wills of the Bible, not only are they thirsty, not only do they take. I want to press that just a little more before I get off of it. Oh, they don't wait on anything. They don't wait for deeper conviction or deeper this or deeper that. They're thirsty enough and watered off the tap. Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted. A mourning that doesn't lead to being comforted of Christ is not Holy Spirit repentance. There's a comfort that follows New Testament Bible mourning, grieving over sin and seeking of the Lord. Seek ye of the Lord, while I may be found. In the days I shall seek me, with all thine heart I shall surely be found with thee. Here's the Bible language. But in the last place, the third thing about the whosoever wills of the Bible, they take the grace of God freely. Freely. I think maybe that could mean two things abundantly. Not just a sip, not Sunday morning proposition, not a thing apart from life, not a thing as a convenience of a church, of a town, or to have a chamber of commerce in the Quranic court, in the school, in the church. That's atmosphere. That's Americanism now. Not just as an appendage on life and things that are really important, but they take it with a great grasp. They don't spare. They take it freely. They take it freely. They take the grace of God abundantly, more than our necessary food. We thirst and take a sovereign grace calling on the name of the Lord. Then I think it could mean without price. Then let the thirst come, and whosoever will. Who are those that will? Well, the thirsty ones. What do they do? They take. They take freely. They take without price. You know, this water of life costs in two different senses. It costs the Son of God. I always hesitate. I don't know how to talk about this. I wouldn't be a sentimentalist or be maudlin. I've never been able to talk about the sufferings of Jesus Christ on the cross but one time in my ministry. I've never been able to teach it. I don't know. You're in mystery. I would not appeal to our senses that I could get people to cry if I told them about how the little girl sobbed her heart out because her little dolly got run over by the car or the little dog got its leg broken. I would not approach the sufferings of Christ from that standpoint. I don't have to. One time in my whole ministry I was able to talk about the sufferings of Christ on the cross in a God-honoring way. One time in 39 years. Although I'm not able to talk about it, I make a mess when I try. It costs the Son of God the agony of separation from God. No man can even quote rightly, much less enter in to the terrible terrible agony of that cry My God my God, why hast thou forsaken me because the Son of God this river of water of life flowed from the throne of God was opened up out of the wounded side of the Lord of God. And there is a sense in which it costs the person who receives it not as a price to purchase it for it's without money or without price but in another sense it costs you all that you have and all you are to receive it. You do not buy a wife and yet in time you forsake all to gain one. You cannot purchase a drink of this life-giving water as a price to be paid. But I'm very badly fooled if the New Testament don't teach that in the obtaining of this water you have to lose your own life. And from here on out you're not your own. You've been bought with a price. Everything you are and everything you have is not yours. It's His. In that sense with all the warnings that the Lord faithfully gives to men and women of something of what was involved in setting out to walk with the Lord it can be said that while you cannot buy with a price the obtaining of it will cost you everything you have. These are the three things that the Bible says about the whosoever wills of this day or any other day. They're thirsty people. Men and women by God's grace have been brought to see the truth a little bit about themselves and our need for God's grace to do for them what they cannot do for themselves. They come and take and to take freely at the cost of the life laid down of the Son of God and at the cost in that sense of all they have and are. Are you one of the whosoever will deeply, deeply sensitive of your need of divine grace? Take. Take. Lay hold. Lay hold. Freely. Largely. Abundantly. At the cost of everything. And if you've not already done so find out how this congregation does. I do not know their method but request permission to walk an aisle or meet with somebody or do something. When that has been accomplished say, I wish this church to baptize me. Why do you want me baptized? Because it's the seal and the sign of my faith. Thursday I came and took freely. Freely. And the work's done. And I want the world to have my confession of what God's done for me. The New Testament says the way we make our public profession of faith is in the act of baptism. There ought to be people searching our churches out in any way you have. God help us not to be happy if the Lord's day passes and somebody doesn't come. And say, I want this church to baptize me. What do you want me baptized for? Well, bless God. I owe it all to Him that He made me thirsty. I got to where I wasn't so happy to be in rebellion. I got to where some sense of the fact that I'm dying. And now it's on to the side, the other side of death, there's judgment. And I became somewhat sensible of the fact that I couldn't remedy the situation myself. Being thirsty, I heeded the invitation. Whose soul's the father? Let him come. Come where? To this great river of life. That's Christ, of course. It flowed from the throne of God. And I took praise God I took to Him be the glory I took freely. Now I can sing hallelujah to God. I've believed on the Son. I'm saved by the blood of the crucified ones. And I want to put on His uniform and wear the sign and seal of that covenant and tell the world there's a trophy of the sovereign grace of God almighty through the blood of Jesus Christ. You do that for the glory of God and the safety of your soul. May the Lord do that for somebody here tonight. If that needs to be done, let us stand. Do you have a word, Brother Pastor?
The Whosoever Wills of the Bible
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Rolfe P. Barnard (1904 - 1969). American Southern Baptist evangelist and Calvinist preacher born in Guntersville, Alabama. Raised in a Christian home, he rebelled, embracing atheism at 15 while at the University of Texas, leading an atheists’ club mocking the Bible. Converted in 1928 after teaching in Borger, Texas, where a church pressured him to preach, he surrendered to ministry. From the 1930s to 1960s, he traveled across the U.S. and Canada, preaching sovereign grace and repentance, often sparking revivals or controversy. Barnard delivered thousands of sermons, many at Thirteenth Street Baptist Church in Ashland, Kentucky, emphasizing God’s holiness and human depravity. He authored no major books but recorded hundreds of messages, preserved by Chapel Library. Married with at least one daughter, he lived modestly, focusing on itinerant evangelism. His bold style, rejecting “easy-believism,” influenced figures like Bruce Gerencser and shaped 20th-century Reformed Baptist thought.