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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries, Word
Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
God is omniscient. He
knows everything: everything possible, everything actual and all
creatures, of the past, the present, and the future. He is perfectly
acquainted with every detail in the life of every being in heaven, in
earth, and in hell. “He knoweth what is in the darkness” (Dan. 2:22).
Nothing escapes His notice, nothing can be hidden from Him, nothing is
forgotten by Him. Well may we say with the Psalmist, “Such knowledge is
too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain unto it” (Ps. 139:6).
His knowledge is perfect. He never errs, never changes, never overlooks
anything. “Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in His
sight: but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of Him with whom
we have to do” (Heb. 4:13). Yes, such is the God with whom “we
have to do”!
“Thou knowest my
downsitting and mine uprising, Thou understandest my thoughts afar off.
Thou compasses” my path and my Iying down, and art acquainted with all my
ways. For there is not a word in my tongue but, lo, O Lord, Thou knowest
it altogether” (Ps. 139:2–4). What a wondrous Being is the God of
Scripture! Each of His glorious attributes should render Him honorable in
our esteem. The apprehension of His omniscience ought to bow us in
adoration before Him. Yet how little do we meditate upon this Divine
perfection! Is it because the very thought of it fills us with uneasiness?
How solemn is this fact:
nothing can be concealed from God! “For I know the things that come into
your mind, every one of them” (Ezek. 11:5). Though He be invisible to
us, we are not so to Him. Neither the darkness of night, the closest
curtains, nor the deepest dungeon can hide any sinner from the eyes of
Omniscience. The trees of the garden were not able to conceal our first
parents. No human eye beheld Cain murder his brother, but his Maker
witnessed his crime. Sarah might laugh derisively in the seclusion of her
tent, yet was it heard by Jehovah. Achan stole a wedge of gold and
carefully hid it in the earth, but God brought it to light. David was at
much pains to cover up his wickedness, but not too much time had passed
until the all-seeing God sent one of His servants to say to him, “Thou
art the man!” And to writer and reader is also said, “Be sure your sin
will find you out” (Num. 32:23).
Men would strip Deity
of His omniscience if they could—what a proof that “the carnal mind is
enmity against God” (Rom. 8:7)! The wicked do as naturally hate this
Divine perfection as much as they are naturally compelled to acknowledge
it. They wish there might be no Witness of their sins, no Searcher of
their hearts, no Judge of their deeds. They seek to banish such a God from
their thoughts: “They consider not in their hearts that I remember all
their wickedness” (Hosea 7:2). How solemn is Ps. 90:8! Good reason
has every Christ-rejecter for trembling before it: “Thou hast set our
iniquities before Thee, our
secret
sins in the light of Thy countenance.”
But to the believer,
the fact of God’s omniscience is a truth fraught with much comfort. In
times of perplexity he says with Job, “But
He knoweth the
way that I take” (Job 23:10). It may be profoundly mysterious to me,
quite incomprehensible to my friends, but “He
knoweth”! In times of weariness and weakness believers assure themselves,
“He knoweth
our frame; He remembereth that we are dust” (Ps. 103:14). In times of
doubt and suspicion they appeal
to this very attribute, saying, “Search
me, O God, and know my heart: try me,
and know my thoughts: and see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead
me in the way everlasting” (Ps. 139:23, 24). In time of sad failure,
when our actions have belied our hearts, when our deeds have repudiated
our devotion, and the searching question comes to us, “Lovest thou Me?”,
we say, as Peter did, “Lord, Thou knowest
all
things; Thou knowest that I love Thee” (John 21:17).
Here is encouragement
to prayer. There is no cause for fearing that the petitions of the
righteous will not be heard, or that their sighs and tears shall escape
the notice of God, since He knows the thoughts and intents of the heart.
There is no danger of the individual saint being overlooked amidst the
multitude of supplicants who daily and hourly present their various
petitions, for an
infinite Mind is
as capable of paying the same attention to millions as if only one
individual were seeking its attention. So too the lack of appropriate
language, the inability to give expression to the deepest longing of the
soul, will not jeopardize our prayers, for “It shall come to pass, that
before they call, I will answer; and while they are yet speaking, I will
hear” (Isa. 65:24).
“Great is our Lord, and of
great power: His understanding is infinite” (Ps. 147:5). God not only
knows everything that has happened in the past in every part of His vast
dominion, and He is not only thoroughly acquainted with everything that is
now transpiring throughout the entire universe, but He is also perfectly
cognizant of every event, from the least to the greatest, that ever will
happen in the ages to come. God’s knowledge of the future is as complete
as is His knowledge of the past and the present, and that, because the
future depends entirely upon Himself. Were it in anyway possible for
something to occur apart from either the direct agency or permission of
God, then that something would be independent of Him, and He would at once
cease to be Supreme.
Now the Divine
knowledge of the future is not a mere abstraction, but something which is
inseparably connected with and accompanied by His purpose. God has Himself
designed whatsoever shall yet be, and what He has designed
must
be effectuated. As His most sure Word affirms, “He doeth according to His
will in the army of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth: and
none can
stay His hand” (Dan. 4:35). And again, “There are many devices in a
man’s heart; nevertheless the counsel of the Lord, that
shall
stand” (Prov. 19:21). The wisdom and power of God being alike infinite,
the accomplishment of whatever He hath purposed is absolutely guaranteed.
It is no more possible for the Divine counsels to fail in their execution
than it would be for the thrice holy God to lie.
Nothing relating to
the future is in anywise uncertain so far as the actualization of God’s
counsels are concerned. None of His decrees are left contingent either on
creatures or secondary causes. There is no future event which is only a
mere possibility, that is, something which may or may not come to pass: “Known
unto God are all
His works from the beginning” (Acts 15:18). Whatever God has decreed is
inexorably certain, for He is without variableness, or shadow of turning
(James 1:17). Therefore we are told at the very beginning of that book,
which unveils to us so much of the future, of “Things which must shortly
come to pass” (Rev. 1:1).
The perfect knowledge of
God is exemplified and illustrated in every prophecy recorded in His Word.
In the Old Testament are to be found scores of predictions concerning the
history of Israel, which were fulfilled to their minutes” detail,
centuries after they were made. In them too are scores more foretelling
the earthly career of Christ, and they too were accomplished literally and
perfectly. Such prophecies could only have been given by One who knew the
end from the beginning, and whose knowledge rested upon the unconditional
certainty of the accomplishment of everything foretold. In like manner,
both Old and New Testament contain many other announcements yet future,
and they too “must be fulfilled” (Luke 24:44), must because foretold
by Him who decreed them.
It should, however,
be pointed out that neither God’s knowledge nor His cognition of the
future, considered simply in themselves, are causative. Nothing has ever
come to pass, or ever will, merely because God knew it. The
cause
of all things is the will
of God. The man who really believes the Scriptures knows beforehand that
the seasons will continue to follow each other with unfailing regularity
to the end of earth’s history (Gen. 8:22), yet his knowledge is not the
cause of their succession. So God’s knowledge does not arise from things
because they are or will be, but because He has
ordained
them to be. God knew and foretold the crucifixion of His Son many hundreds
of years before He became incarnate, and this, because in the Divine
purpose, He was a Lamb slain from the foundation of the world: hence we
read of His being “delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge
of God” (Acts 2:23).
A word or two by way
of application. The infinite knowledge of God should fill us with
amazement. How far exalted above the wisest man is the Lord! None of us
knows what a day may bring forth, but all futurity is open to His
omniscient gaze. The infinite knowledge of God ought to fill us with holy awe.
Nothing we do, say, or even think, escapes the cognizance of Him with whom
we have to do: “The eyes of the Lord are in every place, beholding the
evil and the good” (Prov. 15:3). What a curb this would be unto us, did
we but meditate upon it more frequently! Instead of acting recklessly, we
should say with Hagar, “Thou God seest me” (Gen. 16:13). The
apprehension of God’s infinite knowledge should fill the Christian with
adoration.
The whole of my life stood open to His view from the beginning. He foresaw
my every fall, my every sin, my every backsliding; yet, nevertheless,
fixed His heart upon me. Oh, how the realization of this should bow me in
wonder and worship before Him!
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THE FOREKNOWLEDGE OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
What controversies have
been engendered by this subject in the past! But what truth of Holy
Scripture is there which has not been made the occasion of theological and
ecclesiastical battles? The deity of Christ, His virgin birth, His atoning
death, His second advent; the believer’s justification, sanctification,
security; the church, its organization, officers, discipline; baptism, the
I.ord’s supper, and a score of other precious truths might be mentioned.
Yet, the controversies which have been waged over them did not close the
mouths of God’s faithful servants; why, then, should we avoid the vexed
questions of God’s Foreknowledge, merely because there are some who will
charge him with inciting strife? Let others contend if they will, our duty
is to bear witness according to the light vouchsafed us.
There are two things
concerning the Foreknowledge of God about which many are in ignorance: the meaning
of the term, its Scriptural scope. Because this ignorance is so widesoread,
it is an easy matter for preachers and teachers to palm off perversions of
this subject, even upon the people of God. There is only one safeguard
against error, and that is to be es” tablished in the faith; and for
that, there has to be prayerful and diligent study, and a receiving with
meekness the engrafted Word of God. Only then are we fortified against the
attacks of those who assail us. There are those today who are misusing
this very truth in order to discredit and deny the absolute sovereignty of
God in the salvation of sinners. Just as higher critics are repudiating
the Divine inspiration of the Scriptures; evolutionists, the work of God
in creation; so some pseudo Bible teachers are perverting His
foreknowledge in order to set aside His unconditional election unto
eternal life.
When the solemn and blessed subject of
Divine foreordination is expounded, when God’s eternal choice of certain
ones to be conformed to the image of His Son is set forth, the Enemy sends
along some man to argue that election is based upon the foreknowledge of
God, and this “foreknowledge” is interpreted to mean that God foresaw
certain ones would be more pliable than others, that they would respond
more readily to the strivings of the Spirit, and that because God knew
they would believe, He, accordingly, predestinated them unto salvation.
But such a statement is radically wrong. It repudiates the truth of total
depravity, for it argues that there is something good in some men. It
takes away the independency of God, for it makes His decrees rest upon
what He discovers in the creature. It completely turns things upside down,
for in saying God foresaw certain sinners would believe in Christ, and
that because of this, He predestinated them unto salvation, is the very
reverse of the truth. Scripture affirms that God, in His high sovereignty,
singled out certain ones to be recipients of His distinguishing favors
(Acts 13:48), and therefore He determined to bestow upon them the gift
of faith. False theology makes God’s foreknowledge of our believing the
cause of His election to salvation; whereas, God’s election is the cause,
and our believing in Christ is the effect.
Let us pause and
define our terms. What is meant by “foreknowledge”? “To know
beforehand,” is the ready reply of many. But we must not jump to
conclusions, nor must we turn to Webster’s dictionary as the final court
of appeal, for it is not a matter of the etymology of the term employed.
What is needed is to find out how the word is
used
in Scripture. The Holy Spirit’s usage of an expression always defines its
meaning and scope. It is failure to apply this simple rule which is
responsible for so much confusion and error. So many people assume they
already know the signification of a certain word used in Scripture, and
then they are too lazy to test
their assumptions by means of a concordance. Let us amplify this point.
Take the word
“flesh.” Its meaning appears to be so obvious that many would regard it
as a waste of time to look up its various connections in Scripture. It is
hastily assumed that the word is synonymous with the physical body, and so
no inquiry is made. But, in fact, “flesh” in Scripture frequently
ineludes far more than what is corporeal; all that is embraced by the term
can only be ascertained by a diligent comparison of
every
occurrence of it and by a study of each separate context. Take the word
“world.” The average reader of the Bible imagines this word is the
equivalent for the human race, and consequently, many passages where the
term is found are wrongly interpreted. Take the word “immortality.”
Surely it
requires no study! Obviously it has reference to the indestructibility of
the soul. Ah, my reader, it is foolish and wrong to assume anything where
the Word of God is concerned. If the reader will take the trouble to
carefully examine each passage where “mortal” and “immortal” are
found, it will be seen that these words are never applied to the soul, but
always to the body.
Now what has just
been said on “flesh,” the “world,” “immortality,” applies with equal
force to the terms “know” and “foreknow.” Instead of imagining that
these words signify no more than a simple cognition, the different
passages in which they occur require to be carefully weighed. The word
“foreknowledge” is not found in the Old Testament. But “know” occurs
there frequently. When that term is used in connection with God, it often
signifies to regard
with favor, denoting
not mere cognition
but an affection
for the object in view. “I know
thee by name” (Ex. 33:17). “Ye have been rebellious against the Lord
from the day that I knew you”
(Deut. 9:24). “Before I formed thee in the belly I
knew thee” (Jer.
1:5). “They have made princes and I knew
it not”
(Host 8:4). “You only have I known
of all the families of the earth” (Amos 3:2). In these passages
“knew” signifies either loved
or appointed.
In like manner, the
word “know” is frequently used in the New Testament, in the same sense
as in the Old Testament. “Then will I profess unto them, I
never knew you”
(Matt. 7:23). “I am the good shepherd and
know My sheep and am
known of
Mine” (John 10:14). “If any man love God, the same is known of Him”
(1 Cor. 8:3). “The Lord knoweth
them that are His” (2 Tim. 2:19).
Now the word
“foreknowledge” as it is used in the New Testament is less ambiguous
than in its simple form “to know.” If every passage in which it occurs
is carefully studied, it will be discovered that it is a moot point
whether it ever has reference to the mere perception of events which are
yet to take place. The fact is that “foreknowledge” is never used in
Scripture in connection with events or actions; instead, it always has
reference to persons. It is persons God is said to “foreknow,” not the
actions of those persons. In proof of this we shall now quote each passage
where this expression is found.
The first occurrence
is in Acts 2:23. There we read, “Him being delivered by the determinate
counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have
crucified and slain.” If careful attention is paid to the wording of this
verse, it will be seen that the Apostle was not there speaking of God’s
foreknowledge of the
act of the
crucifixion, but of the Person
crucified: “Him (Christ) being delivered by,” etc.
The second occurrence
is in Rom. 8:29, 30. “For whom He did foreknow, He also did
predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the
Firstborn among many brethren. Moreover
whom He did
predestinate, them He also called,” etc. Weigh well the pronoun that is
used here. It is not what
He did foreknow, but whom
He did. It is not the surrendering of their wills nor the believing of
their hearts, but the persons
themselves that are here in view.
“God hath not cast away
His people which He foreknew” (Rom. 11:2). Once more the plain
reference is to persons, and to persons only.
The last mention is
in 1 Peter 1:2: “Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the
Father.” Who
are “elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father”? The
previous verse tells us: the reference is to the “strangers scattered” i.
e. the Diaspora, the Dispersion, the believing Jews. Thus, here too the
reference is to persons, and not to their foreseen acts.
Now in view of these
passages (and there are no more) what scri ptural ground is there for
anyone saying God “foreknew” the
acts of certain ones,
viz., their “repenting and believing,” and that because of those acts He
elected them unto salvation? The answer is, None whatever. Scripture
never
speaks of repentance and faith as being foreseen or foreknown by God.
Truly, He did
know from all eternity that certain ones
would repent and believe, yet this is
not what Scripture refers to as the object
of God’s “foreknowledge.” The word uniformly refers to God’s foreknowing
persons;
then let us “hold fast the form of sound words” (2Tim. 1:18).
Another thing to
which we desire to call particular attention is that the first two
passages quoted above show plainly and teach implicitly that God’s
“foreknowledge” is
not causative, that instead, something
else lies behind, precedes it, and that something is His own
sovereign decree.
Christ was “delivered by the (1)
determinate counsel and (2)
foreknowledge of God” (Acts 2:23). His “counsel” or decree was the
ground of His foreknowledge. So again in Rom. 8:29. That verse opens
with the word “for,” which tells us to look back to what immediately
precedes. What, then, does the previous verse say? This: “all things work
together for good to them … who are the called according to His purpose.”
Thus God’s “foreknowledge” is based upon
His “purpose” or decree (see Ps. 2:7).
God foreknows what will be
because He has decreed what shall be.
It is therefore a reversing of the order of Scripture, a putting of the
cart before the horse, to affirm that God elects because He foreknows
people. The truth is, He “foreknows” because He has
elected. This removes
the ground or cause of election from outside the creature, and places it
in God’s own sovereign will. God purposed in Himself to elect a certain
people, not because of anything good in them or from them, either actual
or foreseen, but solely out of His own mere pleasure. As to why He chose
the ones He did, we do not know, and can only say, “Even so, Father, for
so it seemed good in Thy sight.” The plain truth of Rom. 8:29 is that
God, before the foundation of the world, singled out certain sinners and
appointed them unto salvation (2 Thess. 2:13). This is clear from the
concluding words of the verse: “Predestinated to be conformed to the
image of His Son,” etc. God did not predestinate those whom He foreknew
were
“conformed,” but, on the contrary, those whom He “foreknew” (i. e.,
loved and elected) He predestinated “to
be conformed.”
Their conformity to Christ is not the cause, but the effect of God’s
foreknowledge and predestination.
God did not elect any
sinner because He foresaw that he would believe, for the simple but
sufficient reason that no sinner ever does believe until God gives him
faith; just as no man sees until God gives him sight. Sight is God’s gift,
seeing is the consequence of my using His gift. So faith is God’s gift
(Eph. 2:8, 9), believing is the consequence of my using His gift. If
it were true that God had elected certain ones to be saved
because
in due time they would believe, then that would make believing a
meritorious
act, and in that event the saved sinner
would have ground
for “boasting,” which Scripture emphatically denies: Eph. 2:9.
Surely God’s Word is
plain enough in teaching that believing is
not a
meritorious act. It affirms that Christians are a people “who have
believed through grace”
(Acts 18:27). If, then, they have believed “through grace,” there is
absolutely nothing meritorious about “believing,” and if nothing
meritorious, it could not be the ground or cause which moved God to choose
them. No; God’s choice proceeds not from anything in us, or anything from
us, but solely from His own sovereign pleasure. Moreover, in Rom. 11:5,
we read of “a remnant according to the election of grace.” There it is,
plain enough; election itself is of grace,
and grace is unmerited
favor, something for which we had no claim
upon God whatsoever.
It thus appears that it is highly
important for us to have clear and scriptural views of the
“foreknowledge” of God. The popular idea of Divine foreknowledge is not
only inadequate and erroeneous, but slanders the reality of God’s
attributes, bringing Him disgrace rather than the glory which is His due.
God not only knew the end from the beginning, but He planned, fixed,
predestinated everything from the beginning. And, as cause stands to
effect, so God’s purpose is the ground of His prescience. If then the
reader be a real Christian, he is so because God chose him in Christ
before the foundation of the world (Eph. 1:4), and chose not because He
foresaw you would
believe, but chose simply because it pleased Him to choose; chose you
notwithstanding your natural unbelief. This being so,
all the glory and
praise belongs alone to Him. You have no
ground for taking any
credit to yourself. You have “believed through grace” (Acts 18:27),
and that, because your very election was “of grace” (Rom. 11:5).
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THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
The sovereignty of God may
be defined as the exercise
of His supremacy—see preceding chapter. Being infinitely elevated above
the highest creature, He is the Most High, Lord of heaven and earth.
Subject to none, infiuenced by none, absolutely independent; God does as
He pleases, only as He pleases, always as He pleases. None can thwart Him,
none can hinder Him. So His own Word expressly declares: “My counsel
shall stand, and I will do
all My pleasure” (Isa. 46:10); “He doeth according to
His will in the army
of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay His
hand” (Dan. 4:35). Divine sovereignty means that God is God in fact, as
well as in name, that He is on the Throne of the universe, directing all
things, working all things “after the counsel of His own will” (Eph.
1:11).
Rightly did the late
Charles Haddon Spurgeon say in his sermon on Matt. 20:15,
There is no attribute
more comforting to His children than that of God’s Sovereignty. Under the
most adverse circumstances, in the most severe trials, they believe that
Sovereignty has ordained their afflictions, that Sovereignty overrrules
them, and that Sovereignty will sanctify them all. There is nothing for
which the children ought more earnestly to contend than the doctrine of
their Mas ter over all creation—the Kingship of God over all the works of
His own hands—the Throne of God and His right to sit upon that Throne. On
the other hand, there is no doctrine more hated by worldings, no truth of
which they have made such a football, as the great, stupendous, but yet
most certain doctrine of the Sovereignty of the infinite Jehovah. Men will
allow God to be everywhere except on His throne. They will allow Him to be
in His workshop to fashion worlds and make stars. They will allow Him to
be in His almonry to dispense His alms and bestow His bounties. They will
allow Him to sustain the earth and bear up the pillars thereof, or light
the lamps of heaven, or rule the waves of the ever-moving ocean; but when
God ascends His throne, His creatures then gnash their teeth. And we
proclaim an enthroned God, and
His right to do as He wills with His own, to dispose of His creatures as
He
thinks well, without consulting them in the matter; then it is that we are
hissed and execrated, and then it is that men turn a deaf ear to us, for
God on His throne is not the God they love. But it is God upon the throne
that we love to preach. It is God upon His throne whom we trust.
“Whatsoever the Lord
pleased, that did He in heaven, and in earth, in the seas, and all deep
places” (Ps. 135:6). Yes, dear reader, such is the imperial Potentate
revealed in Holy Writ. Unrivalled in majesty, unlimited in power,
unaffected by anything outside Himself. But we are living in a day when
even the most “orthodox” seem afraid to admit the proper Godhood of God.
They say that to press the sovereignty of God excludes human
responsibility, whereas human responsibility is based upon Divine
sovereignty, and is the product of it.
“But our God is in the
heavens: He hath done whatsoever He
hath pleased” (Ps. 115:3). He
sovereignly chose to place each of His
creatures on that particular footing which seemed good in His sight. He
created angels: some He placed on a conditional footing, others He gave an
immutable standing before Him (1 Tim. 5:21), making Christ their head
(Col. 2:10). Let it not be overlooked that the angels which sinned (2
Peter 2:5), were as much His creatures as the angels that sinned not. Yet
God foresaw they would
fall, nevertheless He placed them on a mutable, creature, conditional
footing, and suffered them to fall, though He was not the Author of their
sin.
So too, God
sovereignly placed
Adam in the garden of Eden upon a
conditional footing. Had He so pleased,
He could have placed him upon an unconditional footing; He could have
placed him on a footing as firm as that occupied by the unfallen angels,
He could have placed him upon a footing as sure and as immutable as that
which His saints have in Christ. But, instead, He chose to set him in Eden
on the basis of creature responsibility, so that he stood or fell
according as he measured up or failed to measure up to his
responsibility—obedience to his Maker. Adam stood accountable to God by
the law which his Creator had given him. Here was responsibility,
unimpaired responsibility, tested out under the most favorable conditions.
Now God did not place Adam
upon a footing of conditional, creature responsibility, because it was
right He should
so place him. No, it was right because God did it. God did not even give
creatures being because it was right for Him to do so, i. e., because He
was under any obligations to create; but it was right because He did so.
God is sovereign. His will is supreme. So far from God being under any law
of “right,” He is a law unto Himself, so that whatsoever
He does is right. And
woe be to the rebel that calls His sovereignty into question: “Woe unto
him that striveth with his Maker. Let the potsherd strive with the
potsherds of the earth. Shall the clay say to Him that fashioned it, What
makest Thou?” (Isa. 45:9).
Again, the Lord God
sovereignly placed Israel upon a
conditional footing. The 19th, 20th and
24th chapters of Exodus afford a clear and full proof of this. They were
placed under a covenant of works. God gave to them certain laws, and
promised to bless them as a nation if they obeyed and observed His
statutes.. But Israel were stiffnecked and uncircumcised in heart. They
rebelled against Jehovah, forsook His law, turned unto false gods,
apostatized. In consequence, Divine judgment fell upon them, they were
delivered into the hands of their enemies, dispersed abroad throughout the
earth, and remain under the heavy frown of God’s displeasure to this day.
It was God in the exercise
of His high sovereignty that placed Satan and his angels, Adam, and Israel
in their respective responsible
positions. But so far from His sovereignty taking away responsibility from
the creature, it was by the exercise thereof that He placed them on this
conditional footing, under such responsibilities as He thought proper; by
virtue of which sovereignty, He is seen to be God over all. Thus, there is
perfect harmony between the sovereignty of God and the responsibility of
the creature. Many have most foolishly said that it is quite impossible to
show where Divine sovereignty ends and creature accountability begins.
Here is
where creature responsibility begins: in the sovereign ordination of the
35. Creator. As to His
sovereignty, there is not and never will be any “end” to it!
Let us give further proofs
that the responsibility of the creature is based upon God’s sovereignty.
How many things are recorded in Scripture which were right because God
commanded
them, and which would not have been right had He not so commanded! What
right had Adam to “eat” of the trees of the Garden? The permission of
his Maker (Gen. 2:16), without which he would have been a thief! What
right had Israel to “borrow” of the Egyptians’ jewels and raiment (Ex.
12:35)? None, unless Jehovah had authorized it (Ex. 3:22). What right
had Israel to slay so many lambs for sacrifice? None, except that God
commanded it. What right had Israel to kill off all the Canaanites? None,
save as Jehovah had bidden them. What right has the husband to require
submission from his wife? None, unless God had appointed it. And so we
might go on. Human responsibility is based
upon Divine sovereignty.
Here absolute sovereignty
is also displayed. God placed His elect upon a
different footing
from Adam or Israel. He placed His elect upon an unconditional footing. In
the Everlasting Covenant Jesus Christ was appointed their Head, took their
responsibilities upon Himself, and wrought out a righteousness for them
which is perfect, indefeasible, eternal. Christ was placed upon a
conditional footing, for He was “made under the law, to redeem them that
were under the law,” only with this infinite difference: the others
failed; He did not and could not. And who
placed Christ upon that conditional footing? The Triune God. It was
sovereign will that appointed Him, sovereign love that sent Him, sovereign
authority that assigned Him His work.
Certain conditions were set
before the Mediator. He was to be made in the likeness of sin’s flesh; He
was to magnify the law and make it honorable; He was to bear all the sins
of all God’s people in His own body on the tree; He was to make full
atonement for them; He was to endure the outpoured wrath of God; He was to
die and be buried. On the fulfillment of those conditions He was promised
a reward: Isa. 53:10–12. He was to be the Firstborn among many brethren;
He was to have a people who should share His glory. Blessed be His name
forever, He fulfilled those conditions, and because He did so, the Father
stands pledged, on solemn oath, to preserve through time and bless
throughout eternity every one of those for whom His incarnate Son
mediated. Because He took their place, they now share His. His
righteousness is theirs, His standing before God is theirs, His life is
theirs. There is not a single condition for them to meet, not a single
responsibility for them to discharge in order to attain their eternal
bliss. “By one offering He hath perfected
forever them that are set apart” (Heb. 10:14).
Here then is the
sovereignty of God openly displayed before all, displayed in the
diferent ways
in which He has dealt with His creatures. Part of the angels, Adam,
Israel, were placed upon a conditional footing, continuance in blessing
being made dependent upon their
obedience and fidelity to God. But in sharp contrast from them, the
“little flock” (Luke 12:32), have been given an unconditional, an
immutable standing in God’s covenant, God’s counsels, God’s Son; their
blessing being made dependent upon what
Christ did for them. “The foundation of
God standeth sure, having this seal: The Lord knoweth them that are His”
(2 Tim. 2:19). The foundation on which God’s elect stand is a perfect
one: nothing can be added to it, nor anything taken from it (Eccl.
3:14). Here, then, is the highest and grandest display of the absolute
sovereignty of God. Verily, He has “mercy on whom He will have mercy, and
whom He will He hardeneth” (Rom. 9:18).
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THE IMMUTABILITY OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
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IMMUTABILITY is one of the Divine perfections which is not
sufficiently pondered. It is one of the excellencies of the Creator which
distinguishes Him from all His creatures. God is perpetually the same:
subject to no change in His being, attributes, or determinations.
Therefore God is compared to a rock (Deut 32:4, etc.) which remains
immovable, when the entire ocean surrounding it is continually in a
fluctuating state; even so, though all creatures are subject to change,
God is immutable. Because God has no beginning and no ending, He can know
no change. He is everlastingly "the Father of lights, with whom is no
variableness, neither shadow of turning" (Jam 1:17).
First,
GOD IS IMMUTABLE IN HIS ESSENCE. His nature and being are
infinite, and so, subject to no mutations. There never was a time when He
was not; there never will come a time when He shall cease to be. God has
neither evolved, grown, nor improved. All that He is today, He has ever
been, and ever will be. "I am the LORD, I change not" (Mal 3:6) is His own
unqualified affirmation. He cannot change for the better, for He is
already perfect; and being perfect, He cannot change for the worse.
Altogether unaffected by anything out-side Himself, improvement or
deterioration is impossible. He is perpetually the same. He only can say,
"I AM THAT I AM" (Exo 3:14). He is altogether uninfluenced by the flight
of time. There is no wrinkle upon the brow of eternity. Therefore His
power can never diminish nor His glory ever fade.
Secondly, GOD IS IMMUTABLE IN HIS ATTRIBUTES. Whatever the
attributes of God were before the universe was called into existence, they
are precisely the same now, and will remain so for ever. Necessarily so;
for they are the very perfections, the essential qualities of His being.
Seniper ideni (always the same) is written across every one of
them. His power is unabated, His wisdom undiminished, His holiness
unsullied. The attributes of God can no more change than Deity can cease
to be. His veracity is immutable, for His Word is "for ever.. settled in
heaven" (Psa 119:89). His love is eternal: "I have loved thee with an
everlasting love" (Jer 31:3) and "Having loved His own which were in the
world, He loved them unto the end" (John 13:1). His mercy ceases not, for
it is "everlasting" (Psa 100:5).
Thirdly,
GOD IS IMMUTABLE IN HIS COUNSEL. His will never varies. Perhaps
some are ready to object that we ought to read the following: "And it
repented the LORD that He had made man" (Gen 6:6). Our first reply is,
Then do the Scriptures contradict themselves? No, that cannot be. Numbers
23:19 is plain enough: "God is not a man, that He should lie; neither the
son of man, that He should repent." So also in 1 Samuel 15:29, "The
Strength of Israel will not lie nor repent: for He is not a man, that He
should repent." The explanation is very simple. When speaking of Himself,
God frequently accommodates His language to our limited capacities. He
describes Himself as clothed with bodily members, as eyes, ears, hands,
etc. He speaks of Himself as "waking" (Psa 78:65), as "rising up
early" (Jer 7:13); yet He neither slumbers nor sleeps. When He institutes
a change in His dealings with men, He describes His course of
conduct as "repenting." Yes, God is immutable in His counsel. "The gifts
and calling of God are without repentance" (Rom 11:29). It must be
so, for "He is in one mind, and who can turn from Him? and what His soul
desireth, even that He doeth" (Job 23:13).
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Change and decay in
all around we see,
may He who changeth not abide with thee. |
God's
purpose never alters. One of two things causes a man to change his mind
and reverse his plans: want of foresight to anticipate everything, or lack
of power to execute them. But as God is both omniscient and omnipotent
there is never any need for Him to revise His decrees. No, "The counsel of
the LORD standeth for ever, the thoughts of His heart to all generations"
(Psa 33:11). Therefore do we read of "the immutability of His counsel"
(Heb 6:17).
Herein we
may perceive the infinite distance which separates the highest creature
from the Creator. Creaturehood and mutability are correlative terms. If
the creature was not mutable by nature, it would not be a creature; it
would be God. By nature we tend toward nothingness, since we came from
nothing. Nothing stays our annihilation but the will and sustaining power
of God. None can sustain himself a single moment. We are entirely
dependent on the Creator for every breath we draw. We gladly own with the
Psalmist, Thou "holdeth our soul in life" (Psa 66:9). The realization of
this ought to make us lie down under a sense of our own nothingness in the
presence of Him in Whom "we live, and move, and have our being" (Acts
17:28).
As fallen
creatures we are not only mutable, but everything in us is opposed
to God. As such we are "wandering stars" (Jude 13), out of our proper
orbit. "The wicked are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest"
(Isa 57:20). Fallen man is inconstant. The words of Jacob concerning
Reuben apply with full force to all of Adam's descendants: "unstable as
water" (Gen 49:4). Thus it is not only a mark of piety, but also the part
of wisdom to heed that injunction, "cease ye from man" (Isa 2:22).
No human being is to be depended on. "Put not your trust in princes, nor
in the son of man, in whom there is no help" (Psa 146:3). If I
disobey God, then I deserve to be deceived and disappointed by my fellows.
People who like you today may hate you tomorrow. The multitude who cried,
"Hosanna to the Son of David," speedily changed to "Away with Him, crucify
Him."
Herein is
SOLID COMFORT. Human nature cannot be relied upon; but God can!
However unstable I may be, however fickle my friends may prove, God
changes not. If He varied as we do, if He willed one thing today and
another tomorrow, if He were controlled by caprice, who could confide in
Him?
But, all
praise to His glorious name, He is ever the same. His purpose is fixed,
His will is stable, His word is sure. Here then is a rock on which
we may fix our feet, while the mighty torrent is sweeping away everything
around us. The permanence of God's character guarantees the fulfillment of
His promises: "For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed;
but My kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of
My peace be removed, saith the LORD that hath mercy on thee" (Isa 54:10).
Herein is
ENCOURAGEMENT TO PRAYER. "What comfort would it be to pray to a god
that, like the chameleon, changed color every moment? Who would put up a
petition to an earthly prince that was so mutable as to grant a petition
one day, and deny it another?" (Stephen Charnock, 1670). Should someone
ask, But what is the use of praying to One whose will is already fixed? We
answer, Because He so requires it. What blessings has God promised without
our seeking them? "If we ask any thing according to His will, He heareth
us" (1 John 5:14), and He has willed everything that is for His
child's good. To ask for anything contrary to His will is not prayer, but
rank rebellion.
Herein is
TERROR FOR THE WICKED. Those who defy Him, who break His laws, who
have no concern for His glory, but who live their lives as though He
existed not, must not suppose that, when at the last they shall cry to Him
for mercy, He will alter His will, revoke His word, and rescind His awful
threatenings. No, He has declared, "Therefore will I also deal in fury:
Mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity: and though they cry in
Mine ears with a loud voice, yet will I not hear them" (Eze 8:18). God
will not deny Himself to gratify their lusts. God is holy, unchangingly
so. Therefore God hates sin, eternally hates it. Hence the eternality
of the punishment of all who die in their sins.
"The
Divine immutability, like the cloud which interposed between the
Israelites and the Egyptian army, has a dark as well as a light side. It
insures the execution of His threatenings, as well as the performance of
His promises; and destroys the hope which the guilty fondly cherish, that
He will be all lenity to His frail and erring creatures, and that they
will be much more lightly dealt with than the declarations of His own Word
would lead us to expect. We oppose to these deceitful and presumptuous
speculations the solemn truth, that God is unchanging in veracity and
purpose, in faithfulness and justice (John Dick, 1850)."
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THE HOLINESS OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
Who shall not fear Thee,
O Lord, and glorify Thy name? for Thou only art holy” (Rev. 15:4). He
only is independently, infinitely, immutably holy. In Scripture He is
frequently styled “The Holy One”: He is so because the sum of all
moral excellency is found in Him. He is absolute Purity, unsullied even
by the shadow of sin. “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all”
(1 John 1:5). Holiness is the very excellency of the Divine nature:
the great God is “glorious in holiness” (Ex. 15:11). Therefore do we
read, “Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look
on iniquity” (Hab. 1:13). As God’s power is the opposite of the
native weakness of the creature, as His wisdom is in complete contrast
from the least defect of understanding or folly, so His holiness is the
very antithesis of all moral blemish or defilement. Of old God appointed
singers in Israel “that they should praise the beauty of holiness” (2
Chron. 20:21). “Power is God’s hand or arm, omniscience His eye, mercy
His bowels, eternity His duration, but holiness is His beauty” (Stephen
Charnock). It is this, supremely, which renders Him lovely to those who
are delivered from sin’s dominion.
“A chief emphasis is placed upon this
perfection of God:
God is oftener
styled Holy than Almighty, and set forth by this part of His dignity
more than by any other. This is more fixed on as an epithet to His name
than any other. You never find it expressed “His mighty name” or “His
wise name,” but His
great
name, and most of all, His holy
name. This is the greatest title of honour; in this latter doth the
majesty and venerableness of His name appear (Stephen Charnock).
This perfection, as
none other, is solemnly celebrated before the Throne of Heaven, the
seraphim crying, “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts ’ (Isa.
6:3). God Himself singles out this perfection, “Once have I sworn by
My holiness” (Ps. 89:35). God swears by His “holiness” because that
is a fuller
expression of Himself than anything else. Therefore are we exhorted,
“Sing unto the Lord, O ye saints of His, and give thanks at the
remembrance of His holiness” (Ps. 30:4). “This may be said to be a
transcendental attribute, that, as it were, runs through the rest, and
casts lustre upon them. It is an attribute of attributes” (John Howe,
1670). Thus we read of “the beauty
of the Lord” (Ps. 27:4), which is none other than “the beauty of
holiness” (Ps. 110:3).
As it seems to
challenge an excellency above all His other perfections, so it is the
glory of all the rest: as it is the glory of the Godhead, so it is the
glory of every perfection in the Godhead; as His power is the strength
of them, so His holiness is the beauty of them; as all would be weak
without almightiness to back them, so all would be uncomely without
holiness to adorn them. Should this be sullied, all the rest would lose
their honour; as at the same instant the sun should lose its light, it
would lose its heat, its strength, its generative and quickening virtue.
As sincerity is the lustre of every grace in a Christian, so is purity
the splendour of every attribute in the Godhead. His justice is a holy
justice, His wisdom a holy wisdom, His arm of power a “holy arm” (Ps.
98:1), His truth or
promise a “holy promise” (Ps.
105:42). His name,
which signifies all His attributes in conjunction, “is holy,” Ps.
103:1(Stephen Charnock).
God’s holiness is
manifested in His
works. “The
Lord is righteous in all His ways, and holy in all His works” (Ps.
145:17). Nothing but that which is excellent can proceed from Him.
Holiness is the rule of all His actions. At the beginning He pronounced
all that He made “very good” (Gen. 1:31), which He could not have
done had there been anything imperfect or unholy in them. Man was made
“upright” (Eccl. 7:29), in the image and likeness of his Creator.
The angels that fell were created holy, for we are told that they “kept
not their first habitation” (Jude 6). Of Satan it is written, “Thou
west perfect in thy ways from the day that thou west created, till
iniquity was found in thee” (Ezek. 28:15).
God’s holiness is
manifested in His
law. That law forbids sin in
all
of its modifications: in its most refined as well as its grossest forms,
the intent of the mind as well as the pollution of the body, the secret
desire as well as the overt act. Therefore do we read, “The law is
holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good” (Rom. 7:12). Yes,
“the commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes. The fear
of the Lord is clean, enduring forever: the judgments of the Lord are
true and righteous altogether” (Ps. 19:8, 9).
God’s holiness is
manifested at the
Cross.
Wondrously and yet most solemnly does the Atonement display God’s
infinite holiness and abhorrence of sin. How hateful must sin be to God
for Him to punish it to its utmost deserts when it was imputed to His
Son!
Not all the vials
of judgment that have or shall be poured out upon the wicked world, nor
the flaming furnace of a sinner’s conscience, nor the irreversible
sentence pronounced against the rebellious demons, nor the groans of the
damned creatures, give such a demonstration of God’s hatred of sin, as
the wrath of God let loose upon His Son. Never did Divine holiness
appear more beautiful and lovely than at the time our Saviour’s
countenance was most marred in the midst of His dying groans. This He
Himself acknowledges in Ps.
22:1. When God had
turned His smiling face from Him, and thrust His sharp knife into His
heart, which forced that terrible cry from Him, “My God, My God, why
hast Thou forsaken me?” He adores this perfection—”Thou art holy,” v.
3(Stephen
Charnock).
Because God is holy
He hates all sin.
He loves everything which is in conformity to His law, and loathes
everything which is contrary to it. His Word plainly declares, “The
froward is an abomination to the Lord” (Prov. 3:32). And again, “The
thoughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord” (Prov. 15:26).
It follows, therefore, that He must necessarily punish sin. Sin can no
more exist without demanding His punishment than without requiring His
hatred of it. God has often forgiven sinners, but He never forgives sin;
and the sinner is only forgiven on the ground of Another having borne
his punishment; for “without shedding of blood is no remission” (Heb.
9:22). Therefore we are told, “The Lord will take vengeance on His
adversaries, and He reserveth wrath for His enemies” (Nahum 1:2). For
one sin God banished our first parents from Eden. For one sin all the
posterity of Canaan, a son of Ham, fell under a curse which remains over
them to this day (Gen. 9:21). For one sin Moses was excluded from
Canaan, Elisha’s servant smitten with leprosy, Ananias and Sapphira cut
off out of the land of the living.
Unregenerate
sinners cannot conceive of God’s holiness, much less begin to believe in
it. Many, then, presume that God’s character is one-sided, that His
merciful disposition will override everything else, and thus there is no
cause for much alarm. “Thou thoughtest that I was altogether as
thyself” (Ps. 50:21) is God’s charge against them. They think only of
a “god” patterned after their own evil hearts. Hence their continuance
in a course of mad folly. Such is the holiness ascribed to the Divine
nature and character in the Scriptures that it clearly demonstrates
their superhuman origin. The character attributed to the “gods” of the
ancients and of modern non-Christians is the very reverse of that
immaculate purity which pertains to the true God. An ineffably holy God,
who has the utmost abhorrence of all sin, was never invented by any of
Adam’s fallen descendants! The fact is that nothing makes more manifest
the terrible depravity of man’s heart and his enmity against the living
God than to have set before him One who is infinitely and immutably
holy. His own idea of
sin
is practically limited to what the world calls “crime.” Anything short
of that man palliates as “defects,” “mistakes,” “infirmities,”
etc. And even where sin is owned at all, excuses and justifications are
made for it.
The “god” which
the vast majority of professing Christians “love” is looked upon very
much like an indulgent old man, who himself has no relish for folly, but
leniently winks at the “indiscretions” of youth. But the Word says,
“Thou hatest all
workers of iniquity” (Ps. 5:5). And again, “God is angry with the
wicked every day” (Ps. 7:11). But men refuse to believe in
this
God, and gnash their teeth when His hatred of sin is faithfully pressed
upon their attention. No, sinful man was no more likely to devise a holy
God than to create the Lake of fire in which he will be tormented for
ever and ever.
Because God is holy,
acceptance with Him on the ground of creature-doings is utterly
impossible. A fallen creature could sooner create a world than produce
that which would meet the approval of infinite Purity. Can darkness
dwell with Light? Can the Immaculate One take pleasure in “filthy
rags” (Isa. 64:6)? The best that sinful man brings forth is defiled.
A corrupt tree cannot bear good fruit. God would deny Himself, vilify
His perfections, were He to account as righteous and holy that which is
not so in itself; and nothing is so which has the least stain upon it
contrary to the nature of God. But blessed be His name, that which His
holiness demanded His grace has provided in Christ Jesus our Lord. Every
poor sinner who has fled to Him for refuge stands “accepted in the
Beloved” (Eph. 1:6). Hallelujah.
Because God is holy
the utmost reverence becomes our approaches unto Him. “God is greatly
to be feared in the assembly of the saints, and to be had in reverence
of all about Him” (Ps. 89:7). Then “Exalt ye the Lord our God, and
worship at His footstool; He is holy” (Ps. 99:5). Yes, “at His footstool,”
in the lowest posture of humility, prostrate before Him. When Moses
would approach unto the burning bush, God said, “put off thy shoes from
off thy feet” (Ex. 3:5). He is to be served “with fear” (Ps.
2:11). Of Israel His demand was, “I will be sanctified in them that
come nigh Me, and before all the people I will be glorified” (Lev.
10:3). The more our hearts are awed by His ineffable holiness, the more
acceptable will be our approaches unto Him.
Because God is holy
we should desire to be conformed to Him. His command is, “Be ye holy,
for I am holy” (1 Peter 1:16). We are not bidden to be omnipotent or
omniscient as God is, but we are to be holy, and that “in
all
manner of deportment” (1 Peter 1:15).
This is the prime
way of honouring God. We do not so glorify God by elevated admirations,
or eloquent expressions, or pompous services of Him, as when we aspire
to a conversing with Him with unstained spirits, and live to Him in
living like
Him (Stephen Charnock).
Then as God alone
is the Source and Fount of holiness, let us earnestly seek holiness from
Him; let our daily prayer be that He may “sanctify us
wholly;
and our whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Thess. 5:23)
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THE POWER OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
We cannot have a right
conception of God unless we think of Him as all-powerful, as well as
all-wise. He who cannot do what he will and perform all his pleasure
cannot be God. As God hath a will to resolve what He deems good, so has He
power to execute His will.
The power of God is that
ability and strength whereby He can bring to pass whatsoever He pleases,
whatsoever His infinite wisdom may direct, and whatsoever the infinite
purity of His will may resolve.… As holiness is the beauty of all God’s
attributes, so power is that which gives life and action to all the
perfections of the Divine nature. How vain would be the eternal counsels,
if power did not step in to execute them. Without power His mercy would be
but feeble pity, His promises an empty sound, His threatenings a mere
scarecrow. God’s power is like Himself: infinite, eternal,
incomprehensible; it can neither be checked, restrained, nor frustrated by
the creature (Stephen Charnock).
“God hath spoken once;
twice have I heard this, that power belongeth unto God” (Ps. 62:11).
“God hath spoken once”: nothing more is necessary! Heaven and earth
shall pass away, but His word abideth forever. “God hath spoken once”:
how befitting His Divine majesty! We poor mortals may speak often and yet
fail to be heard. He speaks but once and the thunder of His power is heard
on a thousand hills. “The Lord also thundered in the heavens, and the
Highest gave His voice; hailstones and coals of fire. Yea, He sent out His
arrows, and scattered them; and He shot out lightnings, and discomfited
them. Then the channels of waters were seen and the foundations of the
world were discovered at Thy rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of the breath of
Thy nostrils” (Ps. 18:13–15).
“God hath spoken once”:
behold His unchanging authority. “For who in the heavens can be compared
unto the Lord? who among the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the
Lord?” (Ps. 89:6). “And all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed
as nothing:
and He doeth according to His will in the army of heaven, and among the
inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay His hand, or say unto Him,
What doest Thou?” (Dan. 4:35). This was openly displayed when God
became incarnate and tabernacled among men. To the leper He said, “I
will, be thou clean, and immediately
his leprosy was cleansed” (Matt. 8:3). To one who had lain in the grave
four days He cried, “Lazarus, come forth,” and the dead came forth. The
stormy wind and the angry wave were hushed at a single word from Him. A
legion of demons could not resist His authoritative command.
“Power
belongeth unto God,”
and to Him alone. Not a creature in the entire universe has an atom of
power save what God delegates. But God’s power is not acquired, nor does
it depend upon any recognition by any other authority. It belongs to Him
inherently.
God’s power is like
Himself, self-existent, self-sustained. The mightiest of men cannot add so
much as a shadow of increased power to the Omnipotent One. He sits on no
buttressed throne and leans on no assisting arm. His court is not
maintained by His courtiers, not does it borrow its splendor from His
creatures. He is Himself the great central source and Originator of all
power (C. H. Spurgeon). Not only does all creation bear witness to the
great power of God, but also to his entire independency of all created
things. Listen to His own challenge: “Where west thou when I laid the
foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding. Who hath
laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line
upon it? Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened or who laid the
cornerstone thereof?” (Job
38:4–6). How completely
is the pride of man laid in the dust!
Power is also used as a
name of God, “the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power” (Mark
14:62), that is, at the right hand of God. God and power are so
inseparable that they are reciprocated. As His essence is immense, not to
be confined in place; as it is eternal, not to be measured in time; so it
is almighty, not to be limited in regard of action (Stephen Charnock).
“Lo, these are parts of
His ways: but how little a portion is heard of Him? but the thunder of His
power who can understand? (Job 26:14). Who is able to count all the
monuments of His power? Even that which is displayed of His might in the
visible creation is utterly beyond our powers of comprehension, still less
are we able to conceive of omnipotence itself. There is infinitely more
power lodged in the nature of God than is expressed in all His works.
“Parts of His ways” we
behold in creation, providence, redemption, but only a “little part” of
His
might is seen in them. Remarkably is this brought out in Hab. 3:4: “and
there
was the hiding of His power.” It is scarcely possible to imagine anything
more grandiloquent than the imagery of this whole chapter, yet nothing in
it surpasses the nobility of this statement. The prophet (in vision)
beheld the mighty God scattering the hills and overturning the mountains,
which one would think afforded an amazing demonstration of His power. Nay,
says our verse, that
is rather the “hiding” than the displaying of
His power. What is
meant? This: so inconceivable, so immense, so uncontrollable is the power
of Deity, that the fearful convulsions which He works in nature conceal
more than they reveal of His infinite might!
It is very beautiful to
link together the following passages: “He walketh upon the waves of the
sea” (Job 9:8), which expresses God’s uncontrollable power. “He
walketh in the circuit of Heaven” (Job 22:14), which tells of the
immensity of His presence. “He walketh upon the wings of the wind” (Ps.
104:3), whidl signifies the amazing swiftness of His operations. This
last expression is very remarkable. It is not that “He flieth,” or “runneth,”
but that He “walketh” and that, on the very “wings of the wind”—on the
most impetuous of the elements, tossed into utmost rage, and sweeping
along with almost inconceivable rapidity, yet they are
under His feet,
beneath His perfect control!
Let us now consider God’s
power in creation.
“The heavens are Thine, the earth also is Thine, as for the world and the
fulness thereof, Thou has founded them. The north and the south Thou hast
created them” (Ps. 89:11, 12). Before man can work he must have both
tools and materials, but God began with nothing, and by His word alone out
of nothing made all things. The intellect cannot grasp it. God “spake and
it was done, He commanded and it stood fast” (Ps. 33:9). Primeval
matter heard His voice. “God said, Let there be … and it
was so” (Gen.
1:7). Well may we exclaim, “Thou hast a mighty arm: strong is Thy hand,
high is Thy right hand” (Ps. 89:13).
Who, that looks
upward to the midnight sky; and, with an eye of reason, beholds its
rolling wonders; who can forbear enquiring, Of
what
were their mighty orbs formed?
Amazing to relate, they were produced without materials. They sprung from
emptiness itself. The stately fabric of universal nature emerged out of
nothing.
What instruments were used by the Supreme Architect to fash ion the parts
with such exquisite niceness, and give so beautiful a polish to the whole?
How was it all connected into one finely-proportioned and nobly finished
structure? A bare fist
accomplished all. Let them be,
said God. He added no more; and at once the marvelous edifice arose,
adorned with every beauty, displaying innumerable perfections, and
declaring amidst enraptured seraphs its great Creator’s praise. “By the
word
of the Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath
of His mouth,” Ps.
33:6(James Hervey, 1789).
Consider God’s power
in preservation.
No creature has power to preserve itself. “Can the rush grow up without
mire? can the flag grow up without water?” (Job 8:11). Both man and
beast would perish if there were not herbs for food, and herbs would
wither and die if the earth were not refreshed with fruitful showers.
Therefore is God called the Preserver of “man and beast” (Ps. 36:6).
He “upholdeth all things by the word of His power” (Heb. 1:3). What a
marvel of Divine power is the prenatal life of every human being! That an
infant can live at all, and for so many months, in such cramped and filthy
quarters, and that without breathing, is unaccountable without the power
of God. Truly He “holdeth our soul in life” (Ps. 66:9).
The preservation of the
earth from the violence of the sea is another plain instance of God’s
might. How is that raging element kept pent within those limits wherein He
first lodged it, continuing its channel, without overflowing the earth and
dashing in pieces the lower part of the creation? The natural situation of
the water is to be above the earth, because it is lighter, and to be
immediately under the air, because it isheavier. Who restrains the natural
quality of it? Certainly man does not, and cannot. It is the fiat of its
Creator which alone bridles it: “Hitherto shalt thou come, but no
further: and here shall thy proud waves be stayed” (Job 38:11). What a
standing monument of the power of God is the preservation of the world!
Consider God’s power
in government.
Take His restraining of the malice of Satan. “The devil, as a roaring
lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour” (1 Peter 5:8). He is
filled with hatred against God, and with fiendish enmity against men,
particularly the saints. He that envied Adam in paradise envies us the
pleasure of enjoying any of God’s blessings. If Satan could satisfy his
own will, he would treat all the same way he treated Job: he would send
fire from heaven on the fruits of the earth, destroy the cattle, cause a
wind to overthrow our houses, and cover our bodies with boils. But, little
as men may realize it, God bridles him to a large extent, prevents him
from carrying out his evil designs, and confines him within
His ordinations.
So too God restrains the
natural corruption of men. He suffers flagrant and superfluous
outbreakings of sin to show what fearful havoc has been wrought by man’s
apostasy from his Maker, but who can conceive the frightful lengths to
which men would go were God to remove His curbing hand? “Their mouth is
full of cursing and bitterness, their feet are swift to shed blood”
(Rom. 3:14, 15). This is the nature of every descendant of Adam. Then
what unbridled licentiousness and headstrong folly would triumph in the
world, if the power of God did not interpose to lock down the floodgates
of it! See Ps. 93:3, 4.
Consider God’s power
in judgment.
When He smites, none can resist Him: see Ezek. 22:14. Who could resist
the awesome and terrible power of God’s wrath demonstrated in tthe deluge
of Noah? With the exception of Noah and his family, the entire human race,
impotent and frail before the storms of His anger, were swept away in
astounding torrents from the deep. A shower of fire and brimstone from
heaven, and the cities of the plain were exterminated. Pharaoh and all his
hosts were impotent when God blew upon them at the Red Sea. What a
terrific word is that in Rom. 9:22: “What if God, willing to show His
wrath, and to make His power known, endured with much longsuffering the
vessels of wrath fitted to destruction.” God is going to display His
mighty power upon the reprobate not merely by incarcerating them in
Gehenna, but by supernaturally preserving their bodies as well as souls
amid the eternal burnings of the Lake of Fire.
Well may all
tremble before such a
Godl To treat with impudence One who can crush us more easily than we can
a moth, is a suicidal policy. To openly defy Him who is clothed with
omnipotence, who can rend us in pieces or cast us into Hell any moment He
pleases, is the very height of insanity. To put it on its lowest ground,
it is but the part of wisdom to heed His command, “Kiss the Son, lest He
be angry, and ye perish from the way, when His wrath is kindled but a
little” (Ps. 2:12).
Well may the enlightened
soul adore
such a God! The wondrous and infinite perfections of such a Being call for
fervent worship. If men of might and renown claim the admiration of the
world, how much more should the power of the Almighty fill us with
wonderment and homage. “Who is like unto Thee, O Lord, among the gods,
who is like Thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing
wonders?” (Ex. 15:11).
Well may the saint
trust such a
God! He is worthy of implicit confidence. Nothing is too hard for Him. If
God were stinted in might and had a limit to His strength we might well
despair. But seeing that He is dothed with omnipotence, no prayer is too
hard for Him to answer, no need too great for Him to supply, no passion
too strong for Him to subdue; no temptation too powerful for Him to
deliver from, no misery too deep for Him to relieve. “The Lord is the
strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” (Ps. 27:1). “Now unto
Him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or
think, according to the power that worketh in us, unto Him be glory in the
church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen”
(Eph. 3:20, 21)
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THE FAITHFULNESS OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
Unfaithfulness is one of
the most outstanding sins of these evil days. In the business world, a
man’s word is no longer his bond. In the social world, marital infidelity
abounds on every hand, the sacred bonds of wedlock being broken with as
little regard as the discarding of an old garment. In the ecclesiastical
realm, thousands who have solemnly covenanted to preach the truth make no
scruple to attack and deny it. Nor can reader or writer claim complete
immunity from this fearful sin: in how many ways have we been unfaithful
to Christ, and to the light and privileges which God has entrusted to us!
How refreshing, then, how unspeakably blessed, to lift our eyes above this
scene of ruin, and behold One who is faithful, faithful in all things,
faithful at all times.
“Know therefore that
the Lord Thy God, He is God, the
faithful God”
(Deut. 7:9). This quality is essential to His being, without it He would
not be God. For God to be unfaithful would be to act contrary to His
nature, which were impossible: “If we believe not, yet He abideth
faithful; He cannot deny Himself” (2 Tim. 2:13). Faithfulness is one of
the glorious perfections of His being. He is as it were dothed with it:
“O Lord God of hosts, who is a strong Lord like unto Thee? or to Thy
faithfulness round about
Thee?” (Ps. 89:8). So too when God became incarnate it was said,
“Righteousness shall be the girdle of His loins, and faithfulness the
girdle of His reins” (Isa. 11:5).
What a word is that
in Ps. 36:5, “Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens; and Thy
faithfulness unto the clouds.” Far above all finite comprehension is the
unchanging faithfulness of God. Everything about God is great, vast,
incomparable. He never forgets, never fails, never falters, never forfeits
His word. To every declaration of promise or prophecy the Lord has exactly
adhered, every engagement of covenant or threatening He will make good,
for “God is not a man, that He should lie; neither the son of man, that
He should repent: hath He said, and shall He not do it? or hath He spoken,
and shall He not make it good?” (Num. 23:19). Therefore does the
believer exclaim, “His compassions fail not, they are new every morning: great
is Thy faithfulness” (Lam. 3:22, 23).
Scripture abounds in
illustrations of God’s faithfulness. I`lore than four thousand years ago
He said, “While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and
heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease” (Gen.
8:22). Every year that comes furnishes a fresh witness to God’s
fulfillment of this promise. In Gen. 15:13 we find that Jehovah declared
unto Abraham, “Thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs,
and shall serve them...But in the fourth generation they shall come hither
again” (vv. 13–16). Centuries ran their weary course. Abraham’s
descendants groaned amid the brick-kilns of Egypt. Had God forgotten His
promise? No, indeed. Read Ex. 12:41, “And it came to pass at the end of
the four hundred and thirty years, even the selfsame day it came to pass,
that all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt.” Through
Isaiah the Lord declared, “Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a
son, and shall call His name Immanuel” (7:14). Again centuries passed,
but “When the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth His Son, made
of a woman” (Gal. 4:4).
God is true. His Word
of Promise is sure. In all His relations with His people God is faithful.
He may be safely relied upon. No one ever yet really trusted Him in vain.
We find this precious truth expressed almost everywhere in the Scriptures,
for His people need to know that faithfulness is an essential part of the
Divine character. This is the basis of our confidence in Him. But it is
one thing to accept the faithfulness of God as a Divine truth, it is quite
another to act upon
it. God has given us many “exceeding
great and precious promises,” but are we really counting on His
fulfillment of them? Are we actually
expecting Him to do for us all that He
has said? Are we resting with implicit assurance on these words, “He is
faithful
that promised” (Heb. 10:23)?
There are seasons in
the lives of all when it is not easy, no not even for Christians, to
believe that God is faithful. Our faith is sorely tried, our eyes bedimmed
with tears, and we can no longer trace the outworkings of His love. Our
ears are distracted with the noises of the world, harassed by the
atheistic whisperings of Satan, and we can no longer hear the sweet
accents of His still small voice. Cherished plans have been thwarted,
friends on whom we relied have failed us, a professed brother or sister in
Christ has betrayed us. We are staggered. We sought to be faithful to God,
and now a dark cloud hides Him from us. We find it difficult, yea,
impossible, for carnal reason to harmonize His frowning providence with
His gracious promises. Ah, faltering soul, severely tried fellow pilgrim,
seek grace to heed Isa. 50:10, “Who is among you that feareth the Lord,
that obeyeth the voice of His servant, that walketh in darkness and hath
no light? Iet him trust in the name of the Lord, and
stay upon his God.”
When you are tempted
to doubt the faithfulness of God, cry out, “Get thee hence, Satan.”
Though you cannot now harmonize God’s mysterious dealings with the avowals
of His love, wait on Him for more light. In His own good time He will make
it plain to you. “What I do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know
hereafter” (John 13:7). The sequel will yet demonstrate that God has
neither forsaken nor deceived His child. “And therefore will the Lord
wait that He may be gracious unto you, and therefore will He be exalted,
that He may have mercy upon you: for the Lord is a God of judgment:
blessed are all they
that wait for Him”
(Isa. 30:18).
“Judge not the Lord by
feeble sense,
But trust Him for His
grace,
Behind a frowning
providence
Ye fearful saints, fresh
courage take,
The clouds ye so much
dread,
Are rich with mercy, and
shall
Break In blessing o’er your
head.”
“Thy testimonies which
Thou hast commanded are righteous and very faithful” (Ps. 119:138). God
has not only told us the best, but He has not withheld the worst. He has
faithfully described the ruin which the Fall has effected. He has
faithfully diagnosed the terrible state which sin has produced. He has
faithfully made known his firmly established hatred of evil, and that He
must punish the same. He has faithfully warned us that He is “a consuming
fire” (Heb. 12:29). Not only does His Word abound in illustrations of
His fidelity in fulfilling His promises, but it also records numerous
examples of His faithfulness in making good His threatenings. Every stage
of Israel’s history exemplifies that solemn fact. So it was with
individuals:Pharaoh, Korah, Achan and a host of others are so many proofs.
And thus it will be with you, my reader: unless you have fled or do flee
to Christ for refuge, the everlasting burning of the Lake of Fire will be
your sure and certain portion. God is faithful.
God is faithful in preserving
His people. “God is faithful, by whom ye are called unto the fellowship
of His Son” (1 Cor. 1:9). In the previous verse promise was made that
God would confirm unto the end His own people. The Apostle’s confidence in
the absolute security of believers was founded not on the strength of
their resolutions or ability to persevere, but on the veracity of Him that
cannot lie. Since God has promised to His Son a certain people for His
inheritance, to deliver them from sin and condemnation, and to make them
participants of eternal life in glory, it is certain that He will not
allow any of them to perish.
God is faithful in disciplining
His people. He is faithful in what He withholds, no less than in what He
gives. He is faithful in sending sorrow as well as in giving joy. The
faithfulness of God is a truth to be confessed by us not only when we are
at ease, but also when we are smarting under the sharpest rebuke. Nor must
this confession be merely of our mouths, but of our hearts, too. When God
smites us with the rod of chastisement, it is faithfulness which wields
it. To acknowledge this means that we humble ourselves before Him, own
that we fully deserve His correction, and instead of murmuring, thank Him
for it. God never afflicts without a reason. “For
this cause
many are weak and sickly among you” (1 Cor. 11:30), says Paul,
illustrating this principle. When His rod falls upon us let us say with
Daniel, “O Lord, righteousness belongeth unto Thee, but unto us confusion
of faces” (9:7).
“I know, O Lord,
that Thy judgments are right, and that Thou
in faithfulness
hast afflicted me” (Ps. 119:75). Trouble and affliction are not only
consistent with God’s love pledged in the everlasting covenant, but they
are parts of the administration of the same. God is not only faithful
notwithstanding afflictions, but faithful in sending them. “Then will I
visit their transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes:
Thy lovingkindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer My
faithfulness to fail” (Ps. 89:32, 33). Chastening is not only
reconcilable with God’s lovingkindness, but it is the effect and
expression of it. It would much quieten the minds of God’s people if they
would remember that His covenant love binds Him to lay on them seasonable
correction. Afflictions are necessary for us: “In their affliction they
will seek Me early” (Host 5:15).
God is faithful in glorifying
His people. “Faithful is He which calleth you, who also will do” (1Thess. 5:24). The immediate reference here is to the saints being
“preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.” God
deals with us not on the ground of our merits (for we have none), but for
His own great name’s sake. God is constant to Himself and to His own
purpose of grace: “whom He called … them He also glorified” (Rom.
8:30). God gives a full demonstration of the constancy of His everlasting
goodness toward His elect by effectually calling them out of darkness into
His marvelous light, and this should fully assure them of the certain
continuance of it. “The foundation of God
standeth sure”
(2 Tim. 2:19). Paul was resting on the faithfulness of God when he said,
“I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded that He is able to keep
that which I have committed unto Him against that day” (2 Tim. 1:12).
The apprehension of
this blessed truth will
preserve us from worry.
To be full of care, to view our situation with dark forebodings, to
anticipate the morrow with sad anxiety, is to reflect poorly upon the
faithfulness of God. He who has cared for His child through all the years
will not forsake him in old age. He who has heard your prayers in the past
will not refuse to supply your need in the present emergency. Rest on Job
5:19, “He shall
deliver thee in six troubles: yea, in seven there shall no evil touch
thee.”
The apprehension of
this blessed truth will
check our murmurings.
The Lord knows what is best for each one of us, and one effect of resting
on this truth will be the silencing of our petulant complainings. God is
greatly honored when, under trial and chastening, we have good thoughts of
Him, vindicate His wisdom and justice, and recognize His love in His very
rebukes.
The apprehension of
this blessed truth will beget increasing
confidence in God.
“Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the
keeping of their souls to Him in well doing, as unto a faithful Creator”
(1 Peter 4:19). When we trustfully resign ourselves, and all our affairs
into God’s hands, fully persuaded of His love and faithfulness, the sooner
shall we be satisfied with His providences and realize that “He doeth
all
things well.”
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THE GOODNESS OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
“The goodness of God
endureth continually” (Ps. 52:1). The “goodness” of God refers to the
perfection of His nature: “God is light, and in Him is
no
darkness at all” (1 John 1:5) There is such an absolute perfection in
God’s nature and being that nothing is wanting to it or defective in it,
and nothing can be added to it to make it better.
He is originally good, good
of Himself, which nothing else is; for all creatures are good only by
participation and communication from God. He is essentially good, not only
good, but goodness itself: the creature’s good is a superadded quality, in
God it is His essence. He is infinitely good; the creature’s good is but a
drop, but in God there is an infinite ocean or gathering together of good.
He is eternally and immutably good, for He cannot be less good than He is;
as there can be no addition made to Him, so no subtraction from Him
(Thomas Manton).
God is
summum bonum,
the highest good.
God is not only the
Greatest of all beings, but the Best. All the goodness there is in any
creature has been imparted from the Creator, but
God’s
goodness is not derived from anything, for it is the essence of His
eternal nature. As God is infinite in power from all eternity, before
there was any display thereof, or any act of omnipotency put forth, so He
was eternally good before there was any communication of His bounty, or
any creature to whom it might be imparted. Thus, the first manifestation
of this Divine perfection was in giving being to all things. “Thou art
good, and doest
good” (Ps. 119:68). God has in Himself an infinite and inexhaustible
treasure of all blessedness, enough to fill all things.
All that emanates
from God—His decrees, His creation, His laws, His providences—cannot be
otherwise than good: as it is written, “And God saw everything that He
had made, and, behold, it was
very good” (Gen.
1:31). Thus, the “goodness” of God is
seen, first, in
creation. The more closely the creature is studied, the more the
beneficence of its Creator becomes apparent. Take the highest of God’s
earthly creatures, man. Abundant reason has he to say with the Psalmist,
“I will praise Thee, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: marvelous
are Thy works, and that my soul knoweth right well” (139:14).
Everything about the structure of our bodies attests the goodness of their
Maker. How suited the hands to perform their allotted work! How good of
the Lord to appoint leep to refresh the wearied body! How benevolent His
provision to give to the eyes lids and brows for their protection! And so
we might continue indefinitely.
Nor is the goodness of the
Creator confined to man; it is exercised toward all His creatures. “The
eyes of all wait upon Thee; and Thou givest them their meat in due season.
Thou openest Thine hand, and satisfiest the desire of every living thing”
(Ps. 145:15, 16). Whole volumes might be written, yea have been, to
amplify this fact. Whether it be the birds of the air, the beasts of the
forest, or the fish in the sea, abundant provision has been made to supply
their every need. God “giveth food to all flesh, for His mercy endureth
forever” (Ps. 136:25). Truly, “The earth is full of the goodness of
the Lord” (Ps. 33:5).
The goodness of God
is seen in the variety of natural pleasures which He has provided for His
creatures. God might have been pleased to satisfy our hunger without the
food being pleasing to our palates—how His benevolence appears in the
varied flavors which He has given to meats, vegetables, and fruits! God
has not only given us senses, but also that which gratifies them; and this
too reveals His goodness. The earth might have been as fertile as it is
without its surface being so delightfully variegated. Our physical lives
could have been sustained without beautiful flowers to regale our eyes
with their colors, and our nostrils with their sweet perfumes. We might
have walked the fields without our ears being saluted by the music of the
birds. Whence, then, this loveliness, this charm, so freely diffused over
the face of nature? Verily, “The
tender mercies of the
Lord are over all
His works” (Ps. 145:9).
The goodness of God is seen
in that when man transgressed the law of His Creator a dispensation of
unmixed wrath did not at once commence. Well might God have deprived His
fallen creatures of every blessing, every comfort, every pleasure.
Instead, He ushered in a regime of a mixed nature, of mercy and judgment.
This is very wonderful if it be duly considered, and the more thoroughly
that regime be examined the more will it appear that “mercy rejoiceth
against judgment” (James 2:13). Notwithstanding all the evils which
attend our fallen state, the balance of good greatly preponderates. With
comparatively rare exceptions, men and women experience a far greater
number of days of health than they do of sickness and pain. There is much
more creature-happiness than creature-misery in the world. Even our
sorrows admit of considerable alleviation, and God has given to the human
mind a pliability which adapts itself to circumstances and makes the most
of them.
Nor can the
benevolence of God be justly called into question because there is
suffering and sorrow in the world. If man
sins against
the goodness of God, if he despises “the riches of His goodness and
forbearance and longsuffering,” and after the hardness and impenitency of
his heart treasures” up unto himself wrath against the day of wrath
(Rom. 9:5), who is to blame but himself? Would God be “good” if He
punished not those who ill-use His blessings, abuse His benevolence, and
trample His mercies beneath their feet? It will be no reflection upon
God’s goodness, but rather the brightest exemplification of it, when He
shall rid the earth of those who have broken His laws, defied His
authority, mocked His messengers, scorned His Son, and persecuted those
for whom He died.
The goodness of God
appeared most illustriously when He sent forth His Son “made of woman,
made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might
receive the adoption of sons” (Gal. 4:4, 5). Then it was that a
multitude of the heavenly host praised their Maker and said, “Glory to
God in the highest and on earth peace,
goodwill toward men”
(Luke 2:14). Yes, in the Gospel the “grace(which
word in Greek conveys the idea of
benevolence or
goodness) of God that
bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men” (Titus 2:11). Nor can
God’s benevolence be called into question because He has not made every
sinful creature to be a subject of His redemptive grace. He did not bestow
it upon the fallen angels. Had God left all to perish it would have been
no reflection on His goodness.
To any who would challenge this statement we will remind him of our Lord’s
sovereign prerogative: “Is it not lawful for Me to do what I will with
Mine own? Is thine eye evil, because I am good?” (Matt. 20:15).
“O that men would praise
the Lord for His goodness, and for His wonderful works to the children of
men” (Ps. 107:8). God’s great benevolence justly requires gratitutde.
Yet, the goodness of God is so constantly and abundantly manifested to
humanity that it is often taken for granted, and lightly esteemed. In the
daily course of events, God’s goodness is evident everywhere, experienced
by all always. Corrupt souls mistake the constancy of God’s goodness for
monotony, and come to think of His goodness as a natural human right.
“Despises” thou the riches of His goodness?” (Rom. 2:4). His goodness
is “despised” when it is not improved as a means to lead men to
repentance, but, on the contrary, serves to harden them from the
supposition that God entirely overlooks their sin.
The goodness of God is the
life of the believer’s trust. It is this excellency in God which most
appeals to our hearts. Because His goodness endureth forever, we ought
never to be discouraged: “The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of
trouble, and He knoweth them that trust in Him” (Nahum 1:7).
When others behave
badly to us, it should only stir us up the more heartily to give thanks
unto the Lord, because He is good; and when we ourselves are conscious
that we are far from being good, we should only the more reverently bless
Him that He
is good. We must never tolerate an instant’s unbelief as to the goodness
of the Lord; whatever else may be questioned, this is absolutely certain,
that Jehovah is good; His dispensations may vary, but His nature is always
the same (C. H. Spurgeon).
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THE PATIENCE OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
Far less has been written
upon this than the other excellencies of the Divine character. Not a few
of those who have expatiated at length upon the Divine attributes have
passed over the patience of God without any comment. It is not easy to
suggest a reason for this, for surely the longsuffering of God is as mucll
one of the Divine perfections as is His wisdom power, or holiness, and as
much to be admired and revered by us. True, the actual term will not be
found in a concordance as frequently as the others, but the glory of this
grace itself shines forth on almost every page of Scripture. Certain it is
lhat we lose much if we do not frequently meditate upon the patience of
God and earnestly pray that our hearts and ways may be more completely
conformed thereto.
Most probably the
principal reason why so many writers have failed to give us anything,
separately, upon the patience of God was because of the difficulty of
distinguishing this attribute from the Divine goodness and mercy,
particularly the latter. God’s longsuffering is mentioned in conjunction
with His grace and mercy again and again, as may be seen by consulting
Ex. 34:6, Num. 14:18, Ps. 86:15, etc. That the
patience
of God is really a display of His mercy,
that it is indeed one way in which it is frequently manifested, cannot be
denied. But that patience and mercy are one and the same excellency, and
are not to be separated, we cannot concede. It may not be easy to
discriminate between them, nevertheless, Scripture fully warrants us in
affirming some things about the one which we cannot about the other.
Stephen Charnock, the
Puritan, defines God’s patience, in part, thus:
It is part of the
Divine goodness and mercy, yet differs from both. God being the greatest
goodness, hath the greatest mildness; mildness is always the companion of
true goodness, and the greater the goodness, the greater the mildness. Who
so holy as Christ, and who so meek? God’s slowness to anger is a
branch...from His mercy: “The Lord is full of compassion, slow to anger”
(Ps.
145:8). It differs from
mercy in the formal consideration of the object: mercy respects the
creature as miserable, patience respects the creature as criminal; mercy
pities him in his misery, and patience bears with the sin which engendered
the misery, and is giving birth to more.
Personally, we would define
the Divine patience as that power of control which God exercises over
Himself, causing Him to bear with the wicked and forebear so long in
punishing them. In Nahum 1:3 we read, “The Lord is slow to anger and
great in power,” upon which Mr. Charnock said,
Men that are great in
the world are quick in passion, and are not so ready to forgive an injury,
or bear with an offender, as one of a meaner rank. It is a want of power
over that man’s self that makes him do unbecoming things upon a
provocation. A prince that can bridle his passions is a king over himself
as well as over his subjects. God is slow to anger
because
great in power. He has no less power over Himself than over His creatures.
It is at the above point,
we think, that God’s patience is most clearly distinguished from His
mercy. Though the creature is benefitted thereby, the patience of God
chiefly respects Himself, a restraint placed upon His acts by His will;
whereas His mercy terminates wholly upon the creature. The patience of God
is that excellency which causes Him to sustain great injuries without
immediately avenging Himself. He has a power of patience as well as a
power of justice. Thus the Hebrew word for the Divine longsuffering is
rendered “slow to anger” in Nehemiah 9:17, Ps. 103:8, etc. Not that
there are any passions in the Divine nature, but that God’s wisdom and
will is pleased to act with that stateliness and sobriety which is
becoming to His exalted majesty.
In support of our
definition above let us point out that it was to this excellency in the
Divine character that Moses appealed, when Israel sinned so grievously at
Kadesh-Barnea, and there provoked Jehovah so sorely. Unto His servant the
Lord said, “I will smite them with the pestilence and disinherit them.”
Then it was that the mediator Moses, as a type of the Christ to come,
pleaded, “I beseech Thee, let
the power of my Lord
be great according as Thou hast spoken, saying, The Lord is
longsuffering,”
etc. (Num. 14:17). Thus, His “longsuffering” is His “power” of
self-restraint.
Again, in Rom. 9:22
we read, “What if God, willing to show His wrath, and to make His
power
known, endured with much longsuffering
the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction.…?” Were God to immediately
break these reprobate vessels into pieces, His power of self-control would
not so eminently appear; by bearing with their wickedness and forebearing
punishment so long, the power of His patience is gloriously demonstrated.
True, the wicked interpret His longsuffering quite differently—”Because
sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the
heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil” (Eccl.
8:11)—but the anointed eye adores what they abuse.
“The God of
patience” (Rom. 15:5) is one of the Divine titles. Deity is thus
denominated, first, because God is both the Author and Object of the grace
of patience in the saint. Secondly, because this is what He is in Himself:
patience is one of His perfections. Thirdly, as a pattern for us: “Put on
therefore, as the
elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels
of mercy, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness,
longsuffering”
(Col. 3:12). And again, “Be ye therefore followers (emulators) of God,
as dear children” (Eph. 5:2). When tempted to be disgusted at the
dullness of another, or to be revenged on one who has wronged you, call to
remembrance God’s infinite patience and longsuffering with yourself.
The patience of God
is manifested
in His dealings with sinners. How strikingly was it displayed toward the
antediluvians. When mankind was universally degenerate, and all flesh had
corrupted its way, God did not destroy them till He had forewarned them.
He “waited” (1 Peter 3:20), probably no less than one hundred and
twenty years (Gen. 6:3), during which time Noah was a “preacher of
righteousness” (2 Peter 2:5). So, later, when the Gentiles not only
worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, but also
committed the vilest abominations contrary even to the dictates of nature
(Rom. 1:19–26) and thereby filled up the measure of their iniquity, yet,
instead of drawing His sword for the extermination of such rebels, God
“suffered all nations to walk in their own ways,” and gave them “rain
from heaven and fruitful seasons” (Acts 14:16, 17).
Marvelously was God’s
patience exercised and manifested toward
Israel.
First, He “suffered their manners” for forty years in the wilderness
(Acts 13:18). Later, when they had entered Canaan, but followed the evil
customs of the nations around them, and turned to idolatry, though God
chastened them sorely, He did not utterly destroy them, but in their
distress, raised up deliverers for them. When their iniquity was raised to
such a height that none but a God of infinite patience could have borne
them, He spared them many years before He allowed them to be carried down
into Babylon. Finally, when their rebellion against Him reached its climax
by crucifying His Son, He waited forty years ere He sent the Romans
against them, and that, only after they had judged themselves “unworthy
of eternal life” (Acts 13:46).
How wondrous is God’s
patience with the world today. On every side people are sinning with a
high hand. The Divine law is trampled under foot and God Himself openly
despised. It is truly amazing that He does not instantly strike dead those
who so brazenly defy Him. Why does He not suddenly cut off the haughty
infidel and blatant blasphemer, as He did Ananias and Sapphira? Why does
He not cause the earth to open its mouth and devour the persecutors of his
people, so that, like Dathan and Abiram, they shall go down alive into the
Pit? And what of apostate Christendom, where every possible form of sin is
now tolerated and practiced under cover of the holy name of Christ? Why
does not the righteous wrath of Heaven make an end of such abominations?
Only one answer is possible: because God bears with “much
longsuflering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction.”
And what of the
writer and the reader? Let us review our own lives. It is not long since we
followed a multitude to do evil, had no concern for God’s glory, and lived
only to gratify self. How patiently He bore with our vile conduct! And now
that grace has snatched us as brands from the burning, giving us a place
in God’s family, and has begotten us unto an eternal inheritance in glory,
how miserably we requite Him. How shallow our gratitude, how tardy our
obedience, how frequent our backslidings! One reason why God suffers the
flesh to remain in the believer is that He may exhibit His “longsuffering
to usward”
(2 Peter 3:9). Since this Divine attribute is manifested only in this
world, God takes advantage to display it toward “His own.”
May our
meditation upon this Divine excellency soften our hearts, make our
consciences tender, and may we learn in the school of holy experience the
“patience of saints,” namely, submission to the Divine will and
continuance in well doing. Let us earnestly seek grace to emulate this
Divine excellency. “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is
in heaven is perfect” (Matt. 5:48). In the immediate context of this verse
Christ exhorts us to love our enemies, bless them that curse us, do good
to them that hate us. God bears long with the wicked notwithstanding, the
multitude of their sins, and shall we desire to be revenged because of a
single injury?
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THE MERCY OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
“O give thanks unto the
Lord: for He is good, for His mercy endureth forever” (Ps. 136:1). For
this perfection of the Divine character God is greatly to be praised.
Three times over in as many verses does the Psalmist here call upon the
saints to give thanks unto the Lord for this adorable attribute. And
surely this is the least that can be asked for from those who have been
recipients of such bounty. When we contemplate the characteristics of this
Divine excellency, we cannot do otherwise than bless God for it. His mercy
is “great” (1 Kings 3:6), “plenteous” (Ps. 86:5), “tender”
(Luke 1:78), “abundant” (1 Peter 1:3); it is “from everlasting to
everlasting upon them that fear Him” (Ps. 103:17). Well may we say with
the Psalmist, “I will sing aloud of Thy mercy” (59:16).
“I will make all My
goodness pass before thee, and I will proclaim the name of the Lord before
thee; and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy
on whom I will show mercy” (Ex. 33:19). Wherein differs the “mercy”
of God from His “grace”? The mercy of God has its spring in the Divine
goodness. The first issue of God’s goodness is His benignity or bounty, by
which He gives liberally to His creatures as creatures; thus has He given
being and life to all things. The second issue of God’s goodness is His
mercy, which denotes the ready inclination of God to relieve the misery of
fallen creatures. Thus, “mercy” presupposes
sin.
Though it may not be
easy at the first consideration to perceive a real difference between the
grace and the mercy of God, it helps us thereto if we carefully ponder His
dealings with the unfallen angels. He has never exercised mercy toward
them, for they have never stood in any need thereof, not having sinned or
come beneath the effects of the curse. Yet, they certainly are the objects
of God’s free and sovereign grace. First, because of His
election
of them from out of the whole angelic race (1 Tim. 5:21). Secondly, and
in consequence of their election, because of His
preservation of them
from apostacy, when Satan rebelled and dragged down with him one-third of
the celestial hosts (Rev. 12:4). Thirdly, in making Christ their
Head(Col.
2:10; 1 Peter 3:22), whereby they are eternally secured in the holy
condition in which they were created. Fourthly, because of the exalted
position
which has been assigned them: to live in God’s immediate presence (Dan.
7:10), to serve Him constantly in His heavenly temple, to receive
honorable commissions from Him (Heb. 1:14). This is abundant
grace
toward them; but “mercy” it is not.
In endeavoring to
study the mercy of God as it is set forth in Scripture, a threefold
distinction needs to be made, if the Word of Truth is to be “rightly
divided” thereon. First, there is a general mercy of God, which is
extended not only to all men, believers and unbelievers alike, but also to
the entire creation: “His tender mercies are over
all
His works” (Ps. 145:9); “He giveth to all life, and breath, and all
things” (Acts 17:25). God has pity upon the brute creation in their
needs, and supplies them with suitable provision. Secondly, there is a
special
mercy of God, which is exercised toward the children of men, helping and
succoring them, notwithstantling their sins. To them also He communicates
all the necessities of life: “for He maketh His sun to rise on the evil
and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust” (Matt.
5:45). Thirdly, there is a sovereign
mercy which is reserved for the heirs of salvation, which is communicated
to them in a covenant way, through the Mediator.
Following out a
little further the difference between the second and third distinctions
pointed out above, it is important to note that the mercies which God
bestows on the wicked are solely of a
temporal nature; that
is to say, they are confined strictly to this present life. There will be
no mercy extended to them beyond the grave: “It is a people of no
understanding: therefore He that made them will not have mercy on them,
and He that formed them will show them no favour” (Isa. 27:11). But at
this point a difficulty may suggest itself to some of our readers, namely,
Does not Scripture affirm that “His mercy endureth forever” (Ps.
136:1)? Two things need to be pointed out in that connection. God can
never cease to be merciful, for this is a quality of the Divine essence
(Ps. 116:5); but the exercise
of His mercy is regulated by His sovereign will. This must be so, for
there is nothing outside Himself which obliges Him to act; if there were,
that “something” would be supreme,
and God would cease to be God.
It is pure sovereign
grace which alone determines the exercise of Divine mercy. God expressly
affirms this fact in Rom. 9:15, “For He saith to Moses, I will have
mercy on whom I will have mercy.” It is not the wretchedness of the
creature which causes Him to show mercy, for God is not influenced by
things outside of Himself as we are. If God were inHuenced by the abject
misery of leprous sinners, He would cleanse and save
all
of them. But He does not. Why? Simply because it is not His pleasure and
purpose so to do. Still less is it the merits of the creatures which
causes Him to bestow mercies upon them, for it is a contradiction in terms
to speak of meriting
”mercy.” “Not
by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy.
He saved us” (Titus 3:5)—the one standing in direct antithesis to the
other. Nor is it the merit of Christ which moves God to bestow mercies on
His elect: that would be substituting the effect for the cause. It is
“through” or because of the tender mercy of our God that Christ was sent
here to His people (Luke 1:78). The merits of Christ make it possible
for God to righteously
bestow spiritual mercies on His elect, justice having been fully satisfied
by the Suretyl No, mercy arises solely
from God’s imperial pleasure.
Again, though it be
true, blessedly and gloriously true, that God’s mercy “endureth
forever,” yet we must observe carefully the objects
to whom
His “mercy” is shown. Even the casting of the reprobate into the Lake of
Fire is an act of mercy.
The punishment of the wicked is to be contemplated from a threefold
viewpoint. From God’s side, it is an act of
justice, vindicating
His honor. The mercy of God is never shown to the prejudice of His
holiness and righteousness. From their side, it is an act of
equity, when they are
made to suffer the due reward of their iniquities. But from the standpoint
of the redeemed, the punishment of the wicked is an act of unspeakable
mercy.
How dreadful would it be if the present order of things, when the children
of God are obliged to live in the midst of the children of the Devil,
should continue forever! Heaven would at once cease to be heaven if the
ears of the saints still heard the blasphemous and filthy language of the
reprobate. What a mercy that in the New Jerusalem “there shall in nowise
enter into it any thing that defileth, neither worketh abomination”
(Rev. 21:27)!
Lest the reader might
think in the last paragraph we have been drawing upon our imagination, let
us appeal to Holy Scripture in support of what has been said. In Ps.
143:12 we find David praying, “And of Thy
mercy cut off
mine enemies, and destroy all them that afflict my soul: for I am Thy
servant.” Again; in Ps. 136:15 we read that God “overthrew Pharaoh and
his hosts in the Red Sea: for
His mercy
endureth forever.” It was an act of vengeance upon Pharaoh and his hosts,
but it was an act of “mercy” unto the Israelites. Again, in Rev.
19:1–3 we read, “I heard a great voice of much people in heaven, saying,
Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honour, and power, unto the Lord our
God: for
true and righteous are His judgments: for He hath
judged the great
whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath
avenged the
blood of His servants at her hand. And again they said,
Alleluia.
And her smoke rose up forever and ever.”
How many there are
who say, I do not believe that God will ever cast me into Hell; He is too
merciful. What vain presumption! Such a hope is a viper, which if
cherished in their bosoms will sting them to death. God is a God of
justice as well as mercy, and He has expressly declared that He will “by
no means clear the guilty” (Ex. 34:7). Yea, He has said, “The wicked shall
be turned into hell, all the nations that forget God” (Ps. 9:17). As
well might men reason thus: I do not believe that if filth be allowed to
accumulate and sewage become stagnant and people deprive themselves of
fresh air, that a merciful God will let them fall a prey to a deadly
fever. The fact is that those who neglect the laws of health are carried
away by disease, notwithstanding God’s mercy. Equally true is it that
those who neglect the laws of spiritual health shall forever suffer the
Second Death.
Unspeakably solemn is
it to see so many
abusing this
Divine perfection. They continue to despise God’s authority, trample upon
His laws, continue in sin, and yet presume upon His mercy. But God will
not be unjust to Himself. God shows mercy to the truly penitent, but not
to the impenitent (Luke 13:3). To continue in sin and yet reckon upon
Divine mercy remitting punishment is diabolical. It is saying, “Let us do
evil that good may come,” and of all such it is written that their
“damnation is just” (Rom. 3:8). Presumption shall most certainly be
disappointed; read carefully Deut. 29:18–20. Christ is the spiritual
Mercyseat, and all who despise and reject His Lordship shall “perish from
the way, when His wrath is kindled but a little” (Ps. 2:12).
But let our final thought
be of God’s spiritual mercies unto His own people. “Thy mercy is great
unto the heavens” (Ps. 57:10). The riches thereof transcend our
loftiest thought. “For as the heaven is high above the earth, so great is
His mercy toward them that fear Him” (Ps. 103:11). None can measure it.
The elect are designated “vessels of mercy” (Rom. 9:23). It is mercy
that quickened them when they were dead in sins (Eph. 2:4, 5). It is
mercy that saves them (Titus 3:5). It is His abundant mercy which begat
them unto an eternal inheritance (1 Peter 1:3). Time would fail us to
tell of His preserving, sustaining, pardoning, supplying mercy. Unto His
own, God is “the Father of mercies” (2 Cor. 1:3).
“When all Thy mercies, O
my God,
Transported with the view
I’m lost,
In wonder, love, and
praise.”
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THE LOVE OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
There are three
things told us in Scripture concerning the
nature
of God. First, “God is spirit” (John 4:24). In the Greek there is no
indefinite article, and to say “God is a spirit” is most objectionable,
for it places Him in a class with others. God is “spirit” in the highest
sense. Because He is “spirit” He is incorporeal, having no visible
substance. Had God a tangible body, He would not be omnipresent, He would
be limited to one place; because He is “spirit” He fills heaven and
earth. Secondly, “God is light” (1 John 1:5), which is the opposite of
darkness. In Scripture “darkness” stands for sin, evil, death, and
“light” for holiness, goodness, life. “God is light” means that He is
the sum of all excellency. Thirdly, “God is love” (1 John 4:8). It is
not simply that God “loves,” but that He is Love itself. Love is not
merely one of His attributes, but His very nature.
There are many today who
talk about the love of God, who are total strangers to the God of love.
Divine love is often reduced in our day to a sort of gushy sentimentality,
a good-natured and liberal indulgence, a weak and soft emotion patterned
after human feeling. But such a notion is erroneous; we must seek recourse
in defining God’s love from the revelation of the Scriptures. That there
is urgent need for this is apparent not only from the ignorance which so
generally prevails, but also the low state of spirituality which is now so
sadly evident everywhere among professing Christians. How little real love
there is for God. One chief reason for this is because our hearts are so
little occupied with His wondrous love for His people. The better we are
acquainted with His love—its character, fulness, blessedness—the more will
our hearts be drawn out in love to Him.
1.
The love of God is uninfluenced.
By this we mean, there was nothing whatever in the objects of His love to
call it into exercise, nothing in the creature to attract or prompt it.
The love which one creature has for another is because of something in the
object; but the love of God is free, spontaneous, uncaused. The only
reason why God loves any is found in His own sovereign will: “The Lord
did not set His love upon you, nor choose you because ye were more in
number than any people; for ye were the fewest of all people: but
because the
Lord loved thee” (Deut. 7:7, 8). God has loved His people from
everlasting, and therefore nothing about the creature can be the cause of
what is found in God from eternity. He loves
from
Himself: “according to His own purpose” (2 Tim. 1:9).
“We love Him,
because He first loved us” (1 John 4:19). God did not love us because
we loved Him, but He loved us before we had a particle of love for Him.
Had God loved us in return for ours, then it would not be spontaneous on
His part; but because He loved us when we were loveless, it is clear that
His love was uninfluenced. It is highly important, if God is to be honored
and the heart of His child established, that we should be quite clear upon
this precious truth. God’s love for me and for each of “His own” was
entirely unmoved by anything in us. What was there in me to attract the
heart of God? Absolutely nothing. But, to the contrary, there was
everything to repel Him, everything calculated to make Him loathe
me—sinful, depraved, a mass of corruption, with “no
good thing” in me.
“What was there in me that
could merit esteem.
Or give the Creator
delight?
“Twas even so, Father, I
ever must sing,
Because it seemed good in
Thy sight.”
2.
It is eternal.
This of necessity. God Himself is eternal, and God is love; therefore, as
God Himself had no beginning, His love had none. Granted that such a
concept far transcends the grasp of our feeble minds, nevertheless, where
we cannot comprehend we can bow in adoring worship. How clear is the
testimony of Jer. 31:3, “I have loved thee with an everlasting
love,.therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee.” How blessed to
know that the great and holy God loved His people before heaven and earth
were called into existence, that He had set His heart upon them from all
eternity. Clear proof is this that His love is spontaneous, for He loved
them endless ages before they had any being.
The same precious
truth is set forth in Eph. 1:4,5: “According as He hath chosen us in
Him before
the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame
before Him. In love
having predestinated us.” What praise should this evoke from each of His
children! How tranquilizing for the heart: since God’s love toward me had
no beginning, it can have no ending! Since it is true that “from
everlasting to everlasting” He is God, and since God is “love,” then it
is equally true that “from everlasting to
everlasting” He loves His people.
3.
It is sovereign.
This also is self-evident. God Himself is sovereign, under obligations to
none, a law unto Himself, acting always according to His own imperial
pleasure. Since God is sovereign, and since He is love, it necessarily
follows tllat His love is sovereign. Because God is God, He does as He
pleases; because God is love, He loves whom He pleases. Such is His own
express affirmation: “Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated” (Rom.
9:13). There was no more reason in Jacob why he should be the object of
Divine love than there was in Esau. They both had the same parents, and
were born at the same time, being twins; yet God loved the one and hated
the otherl Why? Because it pleased Him to do so.
The sovereignty of
God’s love necessarily follows from the fact that it is uninfluenced by
anything in the creature. Thus, to affirm that the cause of His love lies
in God Himself is only another way of saying, He loves whom He pleases.
For a moment, assume the opposite. Suppose God’s love were regulated by
anything else than His will: in such a case He would love by rule, and
loving by rule He would be under a law of love, and then so far from being
free, God would Himself be
ruled by law.
“In love having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus
Christ to Himself, according to”—what? Some excellency which He foresaw
in them? No! What then? “According to the good pleasure of His will”
(Eph. 1:4, 5).
4.
It is infinite.
Everything about God is infinite. His
essence fills heaven and earth. His
wisdom
is illimitable, for He knows everything of the past, present, and future.
His power
is unbounded, for there is nothing too hard for Him. So His love is
without limit. There is a depth to it which none can fathom; there is a
height to it which none can scale; there is a length and breadth to it
which defies measurement, by any creature-standard. Beautifully is this
intimated in Eph. 2:4: “But God, who is rich in mercy, for His
great
love wherewith He loved us”: the word “great” there is parallel with
the “God so loved” of John 3:16. It tells us that the love of God is
so transcendent it cannot be estimated.
No tongue can fully
express the infinitude of God’s love, or any mind comprehend it: it “passeth
knowledge” (Eph.
3:19). The most extensive
ideas that a finite mind can frame about Divine love, are infinitely below
its true
nature. The heaven is not so far above the earth as the goodness of God is
beyond the most raised conceptions which we are able to form of it. It is
an ocean
which swells higher than all the mountains of opposition in such as are
the objects of it. It is a fountain
from which flows all necessary good to all those who are interested in it
(John Brine, 1743).
5.
It is immutable.
As with God Himself there is “no variableness, neither shadow of
turning” (James 1:17), so His love knows neither change nor diminution.
The worm Jacob supplies a forceful example of this: “Jacob have I
loved,” declared Jehovah, and despite all his unbelief and waywardness,
He never ceased to love him. John 13:1 furnishes another beautiful
illustration. That very night one of the apostles would say, “Show us the
Father”; another would deny Him with cursings; all of them would be
scandalized by and forsake Him. Nevertheless, “having loved His own which
were in the world, He loved them unto the
end.” The Divine
love is subject to no vicissitudes. Divine love is “strong as death.…many
waters cannot quench it” (Song 8:6, 7). Nothing can separate from it
(Rom. 8:35–39).
“His love no end nor
measure knows,
No change can turn its
course,
Eternally the same it flows
From one eternal source.”
6.
It is holy.
God’s love is not regulated by caprice, passion, or sentiment, but by
principle. Just as His grace reigns not at the expense of it, but
“through righteousness” (Rom. 5:21), so His love never conflicts with
His holiness. “God is light” (1 John 1:5) is mentioned
before “God is
love” (1 John 4:8). God’s love does not arise from a sentimental
disposition, nor from softness. His divine ardor is not gushiness..
Scripture declares that “whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth, and
scourgeth every son whom He receiveth” (Heb. 12:6). God will not wink
at sin, even in His own people. His love is
pure,
unmixed with any maudlin sentimentality.
7.
It is gracious.
The love and favor of God are inseparable. This is clearly brought out in
Rom. 8:32–39. What that love is, from which there can be no
“separation,” is easily perceived from the design and scope of the
immediate context: it is that goodwill and grace of God which determined
Him to give His Son for sinners. That love was the impulsive power of
Christ’s incarnation: “God so loved the world that He gave His only
begotten Son” (John 3:16). Christ died not in order to make God love
us, but because He did love His people. Calvary is the supreme
demonstration of Divine love. Whenever you are tempted to doubt the love
of God, Christian reader, go back to Calvary.
Here then is abundant
cause for trust and patience under Divine affliction. Christ was beloved
of the Father, yet
He was not exempted from poverty,
disgrace, and persecution. He
hungered and thirsted. Thus, it was not
incompatible with God’s love
for Christ when He permitted men to spit upon and smite Him. Then let no
Christian call into question God’s love when he is brought under painful
afflictions and trials. God did not enrich Christ on earth with temporal
prosperity, for “He had not where to lay His head.” But He
did give Him the
Spirit “without measure” (John 3:34). Learn then that
spiritual
blessings are the principal gifts of Divine love. How blessed to know that
when the world hates us, God loves us!
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THE WRATH OF GOD
from A. W. Pink -The Attributes of God |
It is sad indeed to find so
many professing Christians who appear to regard the wrath of God as
something for which they need to make an apology, or who at least wish
there were no such thing. While some would not go so far as to openly
admit that they consider it a blemish on the Divine character, yet they
are far from regarding it with delight; they like to ignore it, relegating
the doctrine out the back shute of their minds, harboring the delusion
that His wrath is inconsistent with His goodness. , and they rarely hear
it mentioned without a secret resentment rising up in their hearts against
it. Even with those who are more sober in their judgment, not a few seem
to imagine that there is a severity about the Divine wrath that makes it
too terrifying to form a theme for profitable contemplation.
Yes, many there are who
turn away from a vision of God’s wrath as though they were called to look
upon some blotch in the Divine character or some blot upon the Divine
government. But what saith the Scriptures? As we turn to them we find that
God has made no attempt to conceal the facts concerning His wrath. He is
not ashamed to make it known that vengeance and fury belong unto Him. His
own challenge is, “See now that I, even I, am He, and there is no god
with Me: I kill, and I make alive; I wound, and I heal; neither is there
any that can deliver out of My hand. For I lift up My hand to heaven, and
say, I live forever. If I whet My glittering sword, and Mine hand take
hold on judgment; I will render vengeance to Mine enemies, and will reward
them that hate Me” (Deut. 32:39–41). A study of the concordance will
show that there are more references in Scripture to the anger, fury, and
wrath of God, than there are to His love and tenderness. Because God is
holy, He hates all sin; and because He hates all sin, His anger burns
against the sinner (Ps. 7:11).
Now the wrath of God
is as much a Divine perfection as is His faithfulness, power, or mercy. It must be so,
for there is no blemish whatever, not the slightest defect in the
character of God; yet there would be
if “wrath” were absent from Himl Indifference to sin is a moral blemish,
and he who hates it not is a moral leper. How could He who is the Sum of
all excellency look with equal satisfaction upon virtue and vice, wisdom
and folly? How could He who is infinitely holy disregard sin and refuse to
manifest His “severity” (Rom. 9:22) toward it? How could He, who
delights only in that which is pure and lovely, not loathe and hate that
which is impure and vile? The very nature of God makes Hell as real a
necessity, as imperatively and eternally requisite, as Heaven is. Not only
is there no imperfection in God, but there is no perfection in Him that is
less perfect than another.
The wrath of God is His
eternal detestation of all unrighteousness. It is the displeasure and
indignation of Divine equity against evil. It is the holiness of God
stirred into activity against sin. It is the moving cause of that just
sentence which He passes upon evildoers. God is angry against sin because
it is a rebelling against His authority, a wrong done to His inviolable
sovereignty. Insurrectionists against God’s government shall be made to
know that God is the Lord. They shall be made to feel how great that
Majesty is which they despise, and how dreadful is that threatened wrath
which they so little regarded. Not that God’s anger is a malignant and
malicious retaliation, inflicting injury for the sake of it, or in return
for injury received. No, though God will vindicate His dominion as the
Governor of the universe, He will not be vindictive.
That Divine wrath is
one of the perfections of God is not only evident from the considerations
presented above, but is also clearly established by the express
declarations of His own Word. “For the wrath of God is revealed
from heaven”
(Rom. 1:18). Robert Haldane comments on this verse as follows:
It was revealed when the
sentence of death was first pronounced, the earth cursed, and man driven
out of the earthly paradise, and afterwards by such examples of punishment
as those of the Deluge, and the destruction of the Cities of the Plain by
fire from heaven, but especially by the reign of death throughout the
world. It was proclaimed in the curse of the law on every transgression,
and was intimated in the institution of sacrifice, and in all the services
of the Mosaic dispensation. In the eighth chapter of this epistle, the
Apostle calls the attention of believers to the fact that the whole
creation has become subject to vanity, and groaneth and travaileth
together in pain. The same creation which declares that there is a God,
and publishes His glory, also proves that He is the Enemy of sin and the
Avenger of the crimes of men.… But above all, the wrath of God was
revealed from heaven when the Son of God came down to manifest the Divine
character, and when that wrath was displayed in His sufferings and death,
in a manner more awful than by all the tokens God had before given of His
displeasure against sin. Besides this, the future and eternal punishment
of the wicked is now declared in terms more solemn and explicit than
formerly. Under the new dispensation, there are two revelations given from
heaven, one of wrath, the other of grace.
Again, that the wrath
of God is a Divine perfection is plainly demonstrated by what we read in
Ps. 95:11: “Unto whom I sware in My wrath.” There are two occasions of
God’s “swearing”: in making promises (Gen. 22:16); and in pronouncing
judgments (Deut. 1:34f). In the former, He swears in mercy to His
children; in the latter, He swears to deprive a wicked generation of its
inheritance because of murmuring and unbelief. An oath is for solemn
confirmation (Heb. 6:16). In Ge 22:16 God says, “By
Myself
have I sworn.” In Ps. 89:35 He declares, “Once have I sworn by My
holiness.”
While in Ps. 95:11 He affirms, “I swear in
My wrath.” Thus the
great Jehovah Himself appeals to His “wrath” as a perfection equal to
His ”holiness”: He swears by the one as much as by the other! Again, as
in Christ “dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily” (Col. 2:9),
and as all the Divine perfections are illustriously displayed by Him
(John 1:18), therefore do we read of “the
wrath
of the Lamb” (Rev. 6:16).
The wrath of God is a
perfection of the Divine character upon which we need to frequently
meditate. First, that our hearts may be duly impressed by God’s
detestation of sin. We are ever prone to regard sin lightly, to gloss over
its hideousness, to make excuses for it. But the more we study and ponder
God’s abhorrence of sin and His frightful vengeance upon it, the more
likely are we also to realize theheinousness of sin. Secondly, to beget a
true fear in our souls for God: “Let us have grace whereby we may serve
God acceptably with reverence and godly fear: for our God is a consuming
fire” (Heb. 12:28, 29). We cannot serve Him “acceptably” unless
there is due “reverence” for His awful Majesty and “godly fear” of His
righteous anger; and these are best promoted by frequently calling to mind
that “our God is a consuming fire.” Tllirdly, to draw out our souls in
fervent praise for our having been delivered
from
“the wrath to come” (1 Thess. 1:10)
Our readiness or our
reluctancy to
meditate upon the wrath of God becomes a
sure test of our hearts’ true attitude toward Him. If we do not truly
rejoice in God, for what He is in Himself, and that because of all the
perfections which are eternally resident in Him, then how dwelleth
the love of God
in us? Each of us needs to be most prayerfully on his guard against
devising an image of God in our thoughts which is patterned after our own
evil inclinations. Of old the Lord complained, “Thou thoughtest that I
was altogether as thyself” (Ps. 50:21). If we rejoice not “at the
remembrance of His holiness”
(Ps. 97:12), if we rejoice not to know that in a soon-coming Day God
will make a most glorious display of His
wrath by taking
vengeance upon all who now oppose Him, it is proof positive that our
hearts are not in subjection to Him, that we are yet in our sins, and that
we are on the way to the everlasting burnings.
“Rejoice,
O ye nations (Gentiles) His people, for He will avenge the blood of His
servants, and will render vengeance to His adversaries” (Deut. 32:43).
And again we read, “I heard a great voice of much people in heaven,
saying, Alleluia; Salvation, and glory, and honour, and power, unto the
Lord our God: For
true and righteous are His judgments: for He hath judged the great whore,
which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath avenged the
blood of His servents at her hand. And again they said, Alleluia” (Rev.
19:1–3). Great will be the rejoicing of the saints in that day when the
Lord shall vindicate His majesty, exercise His awful dominion, magnify His
justice, and overthrow the proud rebels who have dared to defy Him.
“If thou Lord,
shouldest mark (impute) iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?” (Ps.
130:3). Well may each of us ask this question, for it is written, “the
ungodly shall not stand in the judgment” (Ps. 1:5). How sorely was Christ’s
soul exercised with thoughts of God’s marking the iniquities of His people
when they were upon Himl He was “amazed and very heavy” (Mark 14:33).
His awful agony, His bloody sweat, His strong cries and supplications
(Heb. 5:7), His reiterated prayers (“If it be possible, let this cup
pass from Me”), His last dreadful cry (“My God, My God, why hast Thou
forsaken Me?”) all manifest what fearful apprehensions He had of
what it was for
God to “mark iniquities.” Well may poor sinners cry out, “Lord
who
shall stand,” when the Son of God Himself so trembled beneath the weight
of His wrathl If thou, my reader, hast not “fled for refuge” to Christ,
the only Savior, “how wilt thou do in the swelling of the Jordan?”
(Jer. 12:5).
When I consider how the
goodness of God is abused by the greatest part of mankind, I cannot but be
of his mind that said, The greatest miracle in the world is God’s patience
and bounty to an ungrateful world. If a prince hath an enemy got into one
of his towns, he doth not send them in provision, but lays close siege to
the place, and doth what he can to starve them. But the great God, that
could wink all His enemies into destruction, bears with them, and is at
daily cost to maintain them. Well may He command us to bless them that
curse us, who Himself does good to the evil and unthankful. But think not,
sinners, that you shall escape thus; God’s mill goes slow, but grinds
small; the more admirable His patience and bounty now is, the more
dreadful and unsupportable will that fury be which ariseth out of His
abused goodness. Nothing smoother than the sea, yet when stirred into a
tempest, nothing rageth more. Nothing so sweet as the patience and
goodness of God, and nothing so terrible as His wrath when it takes fire
(William Gurnall, 1660).
Then “flee,” my
reader, flee to Christ; “flee
from the wrath to
come” (Matt. 3:7) ere it be too late. Do not, we earnestly beseech you,
suppose that this message is intended for somebody else. It is
to you! Do not be
contented by thinking
you have
already fled to Christ. Make certain!
Beg the Lord to search your heart and show you yourself.
A Word to
Preachers.
Brethren, do we in our sermons preach on this solemn subject as much as we
ought? The Old Testament prophets frequently told their hearers that their
wicked lives provoked the Holy One of Israel, and that they were
treasuring up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath. And conditions
in the world are no better now than they were them Nothing is so
calculated to arouse the careless and cause carnal professors to search
their hearts, as to enlarge upon the fact that “God is angry with the
wicked every day” (Ps. 7:11). The forerunner of Christ warned his
hearers to “flee from the wrath to come” (Matt. 3:7). The Savior bade
His auditors, “Fear Him, which after He hath killed, hath power to cast
into Hell; yea, I say unto you, Fear Him” (Luke 12:5). The Apostle Paul
said, “Knowing therefore the terror
of the Lord, we persuade men” (2 Cor. 5:11). Faithfulness demands that
we speak as plainly about Hell as about Heaven.
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