Hurricane Irene caused a lot of destruction. As she pummeled the east coast, an article appeared on the CNN website – “My Take: God no longer in the whirlwind” (August 28). Here’s a portion...
“As I am riding out Hurricane Irene on Cape Cod, I cannot help thinking about how differently New Englanders in colonial times interpreted these natural disasters. While we speak of the eye of the hurricane, they were ever mindful of the eye of God, who was watching over them… Psalm 107:25 reads: “For he commanded and raised the stormy wind, which lifted up the waves of the sea.” Today, the overwhelming majority of Americans—including the overwhelming majority of American Christians—believe that when God has something to say He speaks in less dramatic ways… The overwhelming majority of Americans believe in God. But their God no longer acts out his fury as in Bible days. Our storms have not yet been tamed. But our God has.”
Most professing Christians have tamed God, because they believe in a form of deism. The central tenet of deism (1700s) was this: having created the universe, God withdrew from it. Today, many people have adopted a similar view. They believe in God, but they don’t believe He’s involved in events. They believe in God, but they don’t believe He makes any demands on them. He’s present, when needed. And He exists for the purpose of fostering their sense of personal peace and happiness.
For those who hold to such a view of God, the notion of His involvement in a hurricane is reprehensible. It doesn’t have any place in their worldview. If I affirm that God loves everyone and seeks to foster their personal peace and happiness, then I can’t believe God caused Hurricane Irene. If God didn’t cause it, then I must re-think the idea that God is all-powerful. In short, I must limit His power, limit His authority, and limit His sovereignty.
People end up doing just that, because they make two crucial mistakes concerning God’s love. (1) They think God’s love is sentimental. Sentimental love is indulgent, lenient, non-judgmental, and non-committal. God is nice. He smiles upon us. He’s happy with us. He wants us to be happy. (2) They think God’s love is unconditional. In other words, He doesn’t make any demands of us. Because of His unconditional love for us, He accepts us just the way we are.
Because of this false concept of God’s sentimental and unconditional love, people surrender God’s absolute sovereignty, God’s absolute authority, and God’s absolute power. What’s the result? They tame God. “The god of this twentieth century no more resembles the Supreme Sovereign of Scripture than does the dim flickering of a candle resemble the glory of the midday sun” (A. W. Pink).
With all that said, I want to look at 1 Timothy 6:15–16. And I want to note four truths concerning the Supreme Sovereign of Scripture.
(1) God is the incomparable King
God is the “the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kinds and Lord of lords.” That means He’s without equal. “Who in the skies is comparable to the LORD? Who among the sons of the mighty is like the LORD?” (Ps. 89:6).
(2) God is the immortal King
God is beyond time. He doesn’t have a beginning or ending. He’s eternal, because He’s immortal. He has life in Himself. His life isn’t derived from anything or dependent upon anything. Because He’s immortal, He’s unchangeable. What He was yesterday, He is today. What He is today, He will be tomorrow. There aren’t any factors and processes inside or outside God that cause Him to change in any way. That means His power is perfect. That means His wisdom is perfect. That means His goodness is perfect.
(3) God is the invisible King
God is Spirit. He doesn’t have any spatial limitations. “He is in the world, yet not confined to it. He is out of the world, yet not debarred from it. He is above the world, yet not elevated by it. He is below the world, yet not depressed by it” (Augustine). (1) God isn’t mixed with the heavens and the earth. He fills the heavens and the earth with His essence. There’s no place that’s deprived of His presence. (2) God isn’t limited to heaven and earth. He’s infinite and, therefore, He’s above everything. He created the universe; therefore, the universe can’t contain Him.
(4) God is the unapproachable King
Paul tells us that God “dwells in unapproachable light.” That is the splendor of His holiness. We can’t approach this Light. We can’t look at this Light. As A. W. Tozer notes, “Before the uncreated fire of God’s holiness, angels veil their faces.” There isn’t any creature that can behold the resplendent glory of God’s holiness. “It is he who sits above the circle of the earth, and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers” (Isa. 40:22).
Quotable: “[Their view of God] is the figment of human imagination, an invention of mushy sentimentality… millions manufacture a god out of their own carnal mind. In reality, they are but atheists, for there is no other possible alternative between an absolutely supreme God and no God at all” (A. W. Pink).
1 comments:
God continues to lovingly convict me through words of His, such as these. May all of us who undervalue Christ and overvalue created things be enabled by the Holy Spirit to repent, and to renew our minds and hearts to the glory of God and love toward each other and our enemies.
My wife and I are new/old members of GCC, having attended 2002-2007 and the past four Sundays. We look forward to meeting you and your family. We were in China with GCC people in 2004, and on our return flight there were 21 adopted babies, 20 being girls. May God bless Emma and lovingly draw her into His family.
Striving for godliness, Bruce and Marti London
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