3/23/1012
The last time ( a few weeks ago) I
stretched in the chemo-lounger for five hours taking in an infusion of
Rituximab in the peaceful haze that is part of that process, I got to musing
again on the sovereignty of God. I didn’t
have the energy to type these thoughts out on the keyboard so I jotted some things
down in a notebook. There are always a
few problems in doing that – they’re why I rough draft on the computer most
times. First problem – when will I
actually get back to it and transfer thoughts to electronics? (This also begs the question of will I really
remember what I was thinking at the time?) Second problem – what the heck did I
actually write – my penmanship is abysmal – ask anyone who tries to read my
shopping lists or a student who receives comments on a returned paper (I have
to reserve time to interpret for them what I’ve written – sometimes I actually
can read my own writing).
As far as I can
reconstruct here’s where I began –
Do I believe in
the sovereignty (def: supreme power and authority) of God?
There are many
moments in life where one who claims God’s sovereignty has to make sure they
have an answer to that question. Cancer
is one of those moments. There are many
more in any person’s life.
So, do I believe
in the sovereignty of God? Isaiah 40
repeats a marvelous phrase regarding God’s role in the universe: “Do you not
know? Have you not heard?”
Isaiah 40: 21 Do you
not know? Have you not heard?
Has it not been told you from the beginning?
Have you not understood since the earth was founded?
22
He sits enthroned above the circle of the earth, and its people are like
grasshoppers.
He stretches out the heavens like a canopy, and spreads them out
like a tent to live …. 27 Why do you complain, Jacob?
Why do you say, Israel,
“My way is hidden from the LORD; my cause is disregarded by my God”?
28
Do you not know? Have you not heard?
The LORD is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth.
He will
not grow tired or weary, and his understanding no one can fathom.
29 He
gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.
30
Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall;
31
but those who hope in the LORD will renew their strength.
They will soar on
wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be
faint.
The tone of the phrasing is interesting. The writer puts it out there – it’s just
plain incredulous to not believe in the sovereignty of God. “How did you miss this one folks?”
So let me answer the question straight
up. I believe in God’s sovereignty.
I just don’t fully (maybe not even close)
understand it.
There are all sorts of biblical imagery to
help me out. God as Creator, God as
sustainer, God as King, God as the Potter (while I’m but the clay) – these all
contribute to my understanding but each image comes with its reservation when a
person is in extremis.
We’ve got to be careful not to cherry pick
what we value about God and His sovereign workings.
Sovereignty by definition is sovereignty over
all. This is easier to accept when
things seem “good” but what about the bad and the ugly in our lives and
experience? It’s wrapped up in the
classic question of theodicy (def: the vindication of divine goodness and providence in view of the existence of
evil.) – a philosophical and theological nut with so many layers to
penetrate. (If you want to wade in these
waters may I recommend John G. Stackhouse, Jr.
(1998). Can God Be Trusted: Faith and the Challenge of Evil).
But, for the
purposes of this entry, let me pose a nub of what I don’t understand. When the bad and the ugly occur – what’s with
God. Here are the options on the
spectrum: God is the cause. God wills it. God allows it. God redeems or
rescues it. God has purpose in it that we do not/cannot “get” at this
juncture. God is somehow “surprised” by
it (He didn’t know it was coming as the “open theist” might argue). All of these and more are argued from
different theological traditions and biblical interpretations.
But, “Do you not
know? Have you not heard?” I don’t know which option applies to my
present situation although I’d rule out God being taken by surprise. I suspect there are a few levels going on and
that God the Potter can also be likened to God the “Grand Weaver” (credit to
Ravi Zacharias).
God seems to
allow us latitude somehow within His will.
Without the freedom and ability to choose where would we have a sense of
morality or ethics? All would be without
credit or blame. The good, the bad, and the ugly would all operate as
instructed. All would be broken to
order. There would really be nothing
free, nothing from which God could/would redeem us, nothing much to live for
either. God somehow has determined that
to let us go our way opens the path to winning us back to Himself. That process looks messy from our
perspectives.
Possibly the
biggest obstacle to accepting the sovereignty of God is our own myopia. When we somehow presume that God’s good
intentions for the universe must mean “good” in our personal lives we’re in a
collision course with confidence. There
exists the distinct possibility that it’s not all about me. If He is the potter and I am the clay – well
– is what He is forming about the form or about the whole potted collection? Sometimes the clay looks good, sometimes bad
or even ugly.
In Gethsemane and
later on the cross was Christ experiencing the good, the bad, or the ugly? Our present understanding now is that He was
doing the good but the experience was bad and ugly. The result, of course, is stunning!
We forget or
never realize that we’re temporarily stuck in the conflict phase of the great
story of Scripture and that the story’s hero is a God that is prodigal – a God
that allows freedom and yearns for reconciliation and a God who has granted us
that means of reconciliation in Christ.
He’s let us go, He beckons us back and He makes it possible that we’ll come.
In the long road
of eternity the good, the bad, and the ugly will all be processed. The long arm of justice will prevail because
it has been satisfied. All wounds will
be healed. All tears will be dried. The villains and the victims (we’re both, are
we not) who were quick to spot the bad and ugly will appreciate the infinitely greater
injustice done to Christ and begin to joyfully laugh at the marriage feast of
the Lamb.
In the great
reach of eternity I will, when someone recalls my present situation, say,
“Cancer, oh yeah, I remember that now.”
Today I want to
leave it behind and get on with life and love and ministry.
Then I might say,
“Thanks for bringing it to mind – I’d sort of forgotten – it’s always good to
remember one of life’s grace episodes.
The Potter did amazing things with His clay.”
So I take hope in
God’s sovereignty even though I don’t always get the hang of the mechanics of
it. The alternative to a sovereign God
is one that is not – not God or not sovereign and I find that pretty close to
unthinkable. The evidence of God’s grace
in my life and the lives of others I makes finding the alternative to a
sovereign God impossible.
So that, to the
best of my ability to recall and decipher my handwritten scratchings, is where
I was in the process a few weeks ago. I remember
a favorite tune that played during that chemo-lounger session. Fred Hammond’s All Things Are Working for
Me is a beaut. Lyrically it’s good
but you’ve got to try and get it audibly because Fred really speaks through
song. If in the U.S. you can try www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyHIzQvKhcE
Or there’s the
iTunes store – this one’s a keeper.
Falling
apart and tearing at the seams
Tribulation
lends a hand and squeezes all your hopes and dreams
You say you
retreat, you say you just can't win
Before you
let your circumstance tell you how the story ends
(God's
word) His word says you can stand,
He'll cover
you with His grace
Everything
you need is in your hand,
So lift up
your head and say
Chorus:
All things
are working for me, even things I can't see
Your ways
are so beyond me,
but You
said that you would let it be for my good,
so I'll
rest and just believe
Verse 2:
I know you
say you've got it bad right now,
Let me say
I know that feeling well,
To make
good plans for life and then watch them take a
downward
spin
Let me
encourage you while I encourage me
See the
raging rain and wind but He'll speak peace and it will come to an end
(The truth
is)The truth is He cannot lie,
I'm in His
hands and I'm on his mind,
promised me
He'd always be there,
so by faith
He will answer my prayer
Chorus
Bridge:
Many days
and nights I cried because I felt let down
But I won't
always receive good but a praise in my heart will remain
So with
tears in your eyes know sometimes it might get rough
but say
Lord I love you more and that is enough to know
All things
are working for me, even things I can't see
Your ways
are so beyond me,
but You
said that you would let it be for my good,
so I'll
rest and just believe
It’s time to take that rest.
1 comment:
Thanks again, Russ. Plenty here to think about.
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