Matthew 23:37 — Jesus's Lament Over Jerusalem
Arminians claim this verse proves Jesus wanted to save everyone but couldn't. But Jesus addressed two different groups. Once you distinguish them, the Arminian reading collapses.
The Verse in Full
Let's begin with the text that Arminians often cite as proof that God's will to save can be thwarted by human choice:
The key question for Arminians: Doesn't this prove that Jesus wanted to save everyone but their free will prevented it? But notice something critical in the grammar: "I" wanted to gather "your children," but "you" were not willing. Two different groups. This distinction demolishes the Arminian reading.
The Arminian Interpretation
The Arminian Claim
"Jesus explicitly states He wanted to gather Jerusalem's children—meaning He wanted to save them. But they were 'not willing.' Jesus's desire to save was thwarted by their resistance and free will. This is the smoking gun. God's power is limited by human choice. Jesus couldn't save those who refused His call. This verse definitively refutes Reformed predestination."
This argument sounds compelling at first. But it collapses when we read the verse with proper attention to context, grammar, and the larger structure of Matthew 23.
The Context That Changes Everything
Read what Jesus says immediately before verse 37:
Jesus is speaking directly to the scribes and Pharisees—the leaders of Jerusalem. Matthew 23 is entirely dedicated to seven woes pronounced against these religious authorities. This entire chapter is a condemnation of their hypocrisy and their blockade of the common people from the kingdom.
Who are "you" in verse 37? The scribes and Pharisees. The leaders Jesus has been addressing throughout the chapter.
Who are "your children"? The people of Jerusalem who were under the spiritual authority of these leaders.
The Two Groups: A Critical Distinction
Now read verse 37 with proper grammar in mind:
The subject of "wanting" is Jesus. The object of His gathering is the children (the people). The subject of "not willing" is the leaders ("you"). Two different subjects. Two different objects.
Jesus's statement is not about individuals thwarting God's will to save them. It's about the leaders blocking Jesus's ministry to the people.
The Pharisees as Gatekeepers
Why were the Pharisees "not willing"? Because their authority depended on keeping the people under their control. When Jesus came teaching a message that bypassed their authority and spoke directly to the common people's need for salvation, the Pharisees resisted. They opposed His ministry. They silenced His disciples. They locked "the kingdom of heaven" before men (verse 13).
The tragedy of Jerusalem was not that individuals could somehow thwart God's eternal decrees. The tragedy was that the leadership of God's people rejected their Messiah—and in doing so, positioned themselves to face judgment for covenant-breaking.
The Greek Text: Precision in Grammar
The Greek makes the grammatical distinction even clearer:
The Devastating Problem for Arminianism
Misidentifying the Subject and Object
The Arminian argument requires reading the verse as: "Jesus wanted to save YOU [all Jerusalem], but YOU were not willing [and your free will prevented it]."
But that's not what the verse says. It says: "Jesus wanted to gather YOUR CHILDREN [the people], but YOU [the leaders] were not willing."
Jesus never suggests His own will was thwarted. He states that the leaders' unwillingness prevented Him from carrying out His ministry to the people they led. This is about the external call being resisted, not about God's internal, effectual calling being overcome.
The Real Problem: Covenant Judgment
Notice what follows verse 37:
Jesus's statement is a prophecy of Jerusalem's destruction—not evidence of divine impotence. The judgment that falls on Jerusalem is exactly what a sovereign God would send upon a people who reject their Messiah and break covenant. This is redemptive history, not divine frustration.
If God's will had been thwarted, Jesus wouldn't be able to pronounce judgment. But He does—with absolute confidence that what He speaks will come to pass. Nine days later, Jerusalem's leaders engineer His crucifixion. Forty years later, Rome destroys Jerusalem. Every word of judgment is fulfilled perfectly.
What Matthew 23:37 Actually Teaches
So what does this verse reveal about God's sovereignty and human resistance? Five key insights:
Jesus addresses two groups: the leaders ("you") and the people ("your children"). The leaders' resistance prevented their own people from coming to Jesus. This is not about individual souls exercising free will against God's plan. It's about corporate, institutional resistance—the established authorities blocking the prophetic message.
Jesus could be externally resisted in His earthly ministry by those in positions of authority. But His sovereign purposes were not thwarted. The elect still came. The kingdom still advanced. The Holy Spirit still drew those whom the Father had given Him (John 6:37). External resistance ≠ overcoming God's decretive will.
This verse shows Jesus's tender heart for the people ("as a hen gathers her brood"). But it also shows divine justice—judgment falls on those who reject the Messiah. Both are expressions of God's sovereignty. Compassion and wrath are not contradictory; they're two sides of a holy God's character.
Jeremiah lamented over Jerusalem in similar terms (Jer. 13:27, 31:15-17). Jesus echoes Jeremiah's grief. He's the eschatological prophet weeping over Israel's covenant unfaithfulness. This is not about frustrated plans; it's about the tragedy of covenantal rebellion—which is exactly what a sovereign God predicts and judges.
Jesus immediately pronounces: "Your house is left to you desolate" (verse 38). Fulfilled exactly 40 years later. If God's will had been thwarted, this prophecy couldn't be made with such certainty. The fact that Jesus prophesies judgment—with complete confidence it will come to pass—proves His will is never thwarted. The judgment is the hammer that proves the decree.
The Cloud of Witnesses
Historic interpreters understood this verse in its proper context:
Further Reading on This Topic
- Return to Demolition Hub — Explore more Arminian proof texts demolished by exegesis
- The External and Effectual Call — How God's will operates in history and grace
- Chosen Before the Foundation of the World — God's election in Ephesians 1
- The Divine Decrees — How God's sovereign counsel comes to pass
- Why God Hardens Hearts — Pharaoh, Pharisees, and the doctrine of hardening
- Doesn't God Want All to Be Saved? — The difference between God's revealed and decretive will
Continue Your Journey
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Explore the distinction between God's will and desire—a key to understanding Matthew 23:37.
Verse Demolition Hub
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