Chapter Twelve-The Judgment of God

God's Tests, Chapter 12

He is the Lord our God; His judgments are in all the earth (Ps. 105:7).

God’s judgment is certainly not the most popular sermon topic. Who loves to preach about God punishing the disobedient? Who loves to listen to such a sermon? Very few. Yet the fact remains that the Bible records hundreds of occasions when God’s judgment fell on deserving people. We shouldn’t hide our heads in the sand to this truth. And of course, God’s judgment usually only falls after considerable long suffering on His part. So anytime we focus on His judgment, we can also stand amazed at His prior mercy.

The Old Testament, of course, begins with an example of God’s judgment, when Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden of Eden. Had the world’s first couple heard a modern sermon about how God never punishes people because He is love, they would have rolled their eyeballs.

God revealed Himself as a God of judgment even before He punished Adam and Eve. When Satan rebelled, he was cast out of heaven (see Ezek. 28:12-19, Is. 14:12-17). Jesus Himself said that He watched Satan “fall from heaven like lightning” (Luke 10:18). The message is clear: Sin provokes God’s wrath.

The Bible not only begins with an incident of God’s judgment; it also ends with God’s judgment. The book of Revelation is chock full of His judgments, and its final chapter concludes with a warning of the same:

I testify to everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book; if anyone adds to them, God shall add to him the plagues which are written in this book; and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part from the tree of life and from the holy city, which are written in this book (Rev. 22:18-19).

Take note that passage didn’t say, “They’ll open the door to the devil if they add to this book because God is love and He would never harm anyone.” No, Scripture said, “God shall add to him the plagues which are written in this book.”

Certainly God is love (1 John 4:8). And because He is love, He must punish injustice. If God is unconcerned when one of the objects of His love is harmed by another, He isn’t loving at all. His love predicates His justice and His judgment.

Rather than listen to some TV preacher tell us what God is like, let’s read how God describes Himself to Moses in Exodus 34:6-7:

Then the Lord passed by in front of him and proclaimed: “The Lord, the Lord God, compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in lovingkindness and truth; who keeps lovingkindness for thousands, who forgives iniquity, transgression and sin; yet He will by no means leave the guilty unpunished, visiting the iniquity of fathers on the children and on the grandchildren to the third and fourth generations” (Ex. 34:6-7, emphasis added).

God loves everyone—to the degree that He gives sinners extraordinary time to repent of their sins. He is slow to anger. When His mercy is refused, however, His wrath falls. The author of the book of Hebrews wrote, “It is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the living God” (Heb. 10:31).

We just read from Exodus 34 about God “visiting the iniquity of fathers on the children and on the grandchildren to the third and fourth generation.” Does that mean, as some claim, that God punishes people for their parents’ or grandparents’ sins?

No, that would be unjust, and God plainly stated that He would never do such a thing in Ezekiel 18:19-20:

Yet you say, “Why should the son not bear the punishment for the father’s iniquity?” When a son has practiced justice and righteousness, and has observed all My statutes and done them, he shall surely live. The person who sins will die. The son will not bear the punishment for the father’s iniquity, not will the father bear the punishment for the son’s iniquity; the righteousness of the righteous will be upon himself, and the wickedness of the wicked will be upon himself (Ezek. 18:19-20, emphasis added).

So what did God mean when He said that He would visit the iniquity of fathers on the children and on the grandchildren? Most likely, He meant that He will hold parents responsible (at least in part) for the sins that their children learned from them and that they consequently practice, and He will even hold them partly responsible for such sins committed all the way down through four generations. And that would be just. Jesus Himself said, “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to stumble, it is better for him that a heavy millstone be hung around his neck, and that he be drowned in the depth of the sea” (Matt. 18:6). That gives us a good idea of how God views those who influence children to sin. He holds them accountable.

The Great Judge

If we wanted to, we could look at hundreds of examples in the Bible of God’s judgment upon people and nations. In addition, we could look at hundreds of warnings of God’s judgment upon people, nations, and the entire world. Of the sixty-six books in the Bible, I can only find five (all very short books) that don’t mention or in some way intimate something about the judgment of God.

So why is so much of the church today ignoring and downplaying the subject of God’s judgment? Surely we’re far from what the Bible teaches when we say that the reason there are earthquakes, famines, plagues, and so on is because Satan is the god of this world, and God would like to stop him but He can’t. The Bible, in both the Old and New Testaments, clearly states that all those things, often called “natural disasters,” may occur as a result of God’s judgment. They are, in fact, not natural disasters but supernatural disasters.

God is a God of wrath as well as love. It was the God of love who opened the windows of heaven and flooded the earth until every human being was drowned except Noah and his family. It was the loving God who rained fire and brimstone down upon the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, wiping out the entire population except Lot and his family. It was the loving God who killed all the first-born in Egypt before the exodus of Israel. It was the loving God who commanded Israel to take Canaan’s land by conquest and kill every man, woman, and child who lived there. It was the loving God who sent an angel who killed 185,000 Assyrian troops in one night as recorded in 2 Kings 19:35. And the list goes on and on and on.

In the New Testament, God has not changed. He is still a God of judgment. Jesus died suffering God’s judgment—not for His sins, because He didn’t have any—but as a substitute, bearing God’s wrath in our place. Understanding God’s judgment is essential if we are to understand what Christ did for us on the cross.

Ananias and Sapphira both fell dead during a church gathering as a result of God’s judgment upon them for “lying to the Holy Spirit” (Acts 5:3).

Herod died as a result of God’s judgment, when an angel of the Lord struck him for failing to give God glory (see Acts 12:20-23).

Paul wrote of God’s judgment that had come upon the Jews who were hindering the spread of the gospel in his first letter to the Thessalonians (see 1 Thes. 2:14-16).

Peter once wrote that it was “time for judgment to begin with the household of God” (1 Pet. 4:17).

God’s judgment upon the Jews of Jerusalem and Israel for their rejection of their Messiah fell in the form of a Roman holocaust in 70 A.D. (see Luke 19:41-44; 21:20-24).

In addition, the book of Revelation is primarily a record of God’s future final judgments—the grand finale that every other previous judgment has only foreshadowed.

In light of the fact that the historical revelation of the Bible is full of clear examples of God’s judgment coming upon nations in the form of enemy invasions, famines, plagues, and natural disasters, what can we conclude? Is it possible that God is still doing the same thing today? Has God changed?

We love to say that God is still the same when it comes to His saving, healing, or delivering mercies, but can we say He is still the same when it comes to His judging sin?

Why then do so many modern preachers and teachers downplay God’s active role in judgment upon sin, and worse, blame the devil for things that God takes responsibility for in Scripture?

The fact is, this phenomenon of an all-love-no-wrath God is rather novel. It wasn’t that many years ago when no one would have blamed the devil for God’s active judgment. As an example of common conviction once held by just about everyone who professed to be a Christian, I thought you might find it interesting to read something Abraham Lincoln said at his second inaugural address during our nation’s civil war:

Fondly do we hope—fervently do we pray—that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondman’s [slave’s] two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so it must still be said, “The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.”

I’m not claiming that Abraham Lincoln was infallible, but his understanding of the Bible is certainly more accurate than those who would claim that the devil caused the American Civil War and that God played no sovereign role. Abraham Lincoln apparently believed God was judging the United States for the sin of slavery. Just the fact that God guarantees we will reap what we sow is enough to prove that God is sovereign, and as Abraham Lincoln quoted, “the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.”

God’s Discipline of His Own Children

An unbalanced understanding of God’s judgment has also birthed a faulty understanding of God’s discipline of His own children. The writer of Hebrews states that “those whom the Lord loves He disciplines, and He scourges every son whom He receives.” He goes on to say, “If you are without discipline, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate children and not sons” (Heb. 12:6, 8).

In other words, if you’ve never experienced God’s discipline, you’re not a member of His family. Yet many professing Christians will scoff at such an idea, stating that our loving God has no part in any negative circumstance—and that God only disciplines us through His Word. In their thinking, God would never afflict a disobedient believer in order to bring him to repentance, even though the New and Old Testaments plainly teach that concept (see Ps. 119: 67; 1 Cor. 11:27-32). If we are blind to God’s discipline in our lives, then when His discipline occurs, we’ll react by rebuking the devil rather than by repenting of our sins.

Let’s adjust our theology to fit the Bible rather than adjust the Bible to fit our theology! Whenever we find ourselves reading God’s Word and saying, “That can’t mean what it says, because that doesn’t fit what I believe,” then we’re headed for trouble.

In Conclusion

As we conclude this book’s second section, allow me to summarize the major points of the last six chapters.

(1) God has sovereign control over His universe.

(2) God has given every believer authority over Satan so far as his own life is concerned. It is every believer’s responsibility to use his God-given authority and resist Satan by believing and acting on God’s Word.

(3) God is sovereign over Satan, and Satan can only do what God permits.

(4) God has used and will continue to use Satan as an agent of His wrath.

(5) Satan only has authority to rule over the kingdom of darkness, that is, the domain of all who are not serving Jesus.

(6) God has sovereign control over the forces of nature and over human governments.

With this foundation laid, we can now go on to study the lives of some very important Bible characters who were tested by a loving, holy, sovereign God. Most importantly, we will discover more of how God is working in our lives, so we can fulfill His plan for His glory.

 

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God’s Tests » Chapter Twelve-The Judgment of God

Chapter Eleven-The God of this World

God's Tests, Chapter 11

There is one final objection that should be addressed as we conclude several chapters studying the topic of God’s sovereignty over Satan. That objection is often expressed by two questions: “But what about the scripture that tells us that Satan offered Jesus ‘all the kingdoms of the world’ during His temptation in the wilderness? Doesn’t that prove that Satan, as ‘god of this world,’ is running everything on the earth?”

Those are good questions, and to arrive at the correct answers, we must consider all the relevant scriptures. By ignoring context, the Bible can be made to say just about anything.

Of course, from considering other Bible passages, we’ve already proven that Satan does not have complete control over the entire world. So in what capacity is Satan “god of this world”?

The answer is that Satan is ruling those who are submitted to him, which is everyone who is not submitted to Jesus. They are yielding, to a greater or lesser degree, to his temptations. They are his slaves. So in that sense, he is their god.

Jesus taught that if a person isn’t born again, he is spiritually a child of Satan (see John 8:44). Paul also indicated that Satan’s spirit is at work in those who are unsaved (see Eph. 2:1-3). Satan is ruling only the kingdom of darkness. That is why, for example, we are told by Paul that some of the evil spirits whom Satan leads are called “the rulers of the darkness of this world” (Eph. 6:12, KJV, emphasis added).

Satan rules only those who choose to remain in darkness by rejecting the truth. For that reason, he is “the god of this world.”

What about the claim Satan made to Jesus during His temptation? How are we to interpret the following verses?

And [Satan] led [Jesus] up and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time. And the devil said to Him, “I will give You all this domain and its glory; for it has been handed over to me, and I give it to whomever I wish” (Luke 4:5-6).

First of all, we should be extremely careful building our theology on the words of someone whom Jesus called “the father of lies” (John 8:44). We would be foolish not to question the truthfulness of Satan’s claim.

Notice Satan claimed that he could give the domain and glory of the world’s kingdoms to whomever he wished. Is that true? Let’s compare Satan’s claim with what the prophet Daniel once said to proud King Nebuchadnezzar:

You will be driven away from mankind, and your dwelling place will be with the beasts of the field…until you recognize that the Most High is ruler over the realm of mankind, and He bestows it on whomever He wishes (Dan. 4:25, emphasis added).

Did you notice any contradiction? Satan claimed that he could give the domain and the glory of the world’s kingdoms to whomever he wished. Daniel, however, claimed that God was the ruler of mankind and that He bestowed earthly positions upon whomever He wished. So who are you going to believe? Personally, I’m going to choose Daniel over the devil.

There is one possible way, however, that these two scriptures can be reconciled, if, in fact, Satan was actually telling the truth. God—the sovereign ruler of the universe, humanity, and all earthly governments—has permitted Satan to rule over one kingdom, and that is the kingdom of darkness. That being so, Satan was not offering Jesus an earthly, human, governmental position of authority. Rather, Satan was offering Jesus a position of authority over a spiritual kingdom—the kingdom of darkness—if Jesus would submit to him. Such a position Satan could offer, because the Bible is clear that Satan is ruling over several rankings of evil spirits, through which he administrates his entire dark kingdom. Together, Satan and his minions hold human rebels in their captivity (see Eph. 6:12).

Satan, to a certain degree, is ruling the kingdoms of this world, but only because the people of the kingdoms of this world are submitted to him. Kingdoms are made up of people.

Satan is ruling governments to a certain degree because many governmental leaders are submitted to him, knowingly or unknowingly. He is not, however, ruling those who are not serving him—those who have been freed from his power by Jesus Christ.

Stop and think for a moment: What would happen if every person in your country, including government leaders, would repent and submit to the lordship of Christ? Would Satan have any control over your nation? No, he would have none at all. Satan only has authority over nations inhabited by people who are serving him.

The fact that Satan exercises authority over the kingdom of darkness provides no proof that God is not sovereign, or that “God’s hands are tied” from doing anything He wants to do. We have already proven from other scriptures that God is sovereign over the earth, and He is sovereign over Satan’s kingdom as well.

Apparently, the devil was willing to delegate a large portion of his authority to Jesus as long as he (Satan) remained the top dog. Of course, that would have required that Jesus commit high treason against His Father, joining Satan’s rebellion. He would have become vice-devil. Praise God that Jesus didn’t yield to Satan’s offer!

God’s Sovereignty Over Earth and Nature

Despite all the evidence of Scripture, it is clear that some Christians still believe that Satan possesses much more power than he actually does possess. Some have even given him complete power over all of the forces of nature, whereas Scripture says otherwise:

[God] changes rivers into a wilderness, and springs of water into a thirsty ground; a fruitful land into a salt waste, because of the wickedness of those who dwell in it. He changes a wilderness into a pool of water, and a dry land into springs of water; and there He makes the hungry to dwell, so that they may establish a city, and sow fields, and plant vineyards, and gather a fruitful harvest (Ps. 107:33-37).

Sing to the Lord…who covers the heavens with clouds, who provides rain for the earth, who makes grass to grow on the mountains…. He sends forth His command to the earth; His word runs very swiftly. He gives snow like wool; he scatters the hoarfrost like ashes. He casts forth His ice as fragments; who can stand before His cold? He sends forth His word and melts them; He causes His wind to blow and the waters to flow (Ps. 147: 7-8, 15-18).

In both the Old and New Testaments, there are plenty of examples of God using the forces of nature as a means of judgment. He is the one, for example, who flooded the earth during Noah’s time and sent the ten plagues upon Egypt (see Ps. 78:45-49).

When Jonah was running from his calling, sleeping on a Tarshish-bound ship, the Bible declares, “the Lord hurled a great wind on the sea so that the ship was about to break up” (Jonah 1:4, emphasis added). It was God who did it. Some may claim that surely the original Hebrew text states—although it doesn’t—that God permitted the great wind and, therefore, the storm was from Satan. But what difference does it make? If God “permitted” Satan to send a storm, then that proves it couldn’t have happened unless God had permitted it. God is sovereign over Satan. And God is sovereign over nature.

God is apparently also in the hailstone business. We read in the tenth chapter of Joshua, when the Israelites defeated five kings:

And it came about as they fled from before Israel, while they were at the descent of Beth-horon, that the Lord threw large stones from heaven on them as far as Azekah, and they died; there were more who died from the hailstones than those whom the sons of Israel killed with the sword (Josh. 10:11).

For even more proof of God’s sovereignty over nature, see Job 38:22-38; Jer. 5:24; 10:13; 31:35; Ps. 105:16; 135:6-7; Matt. 5:45 and Acts 14:7. God’s judgment through the forces of nature is clearly evident in the Bible. Why then have some come up with the idea that, when a hurricane or earthquake or flood strikes, it is the work of the devil, and God would like to stop it but He can’t?

Take note that when the Bible refers to Satan as “the god of this world” (John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11 and 2 Cor. 4:4), the Greek word translated world in these instances is either kosmos, meaning “order or arrangement,” or aion, meaning “age.” By contrast, the Greek word for “earth,” our physical planet, is ge. Our God is, as Jesus said, “Lord of heaven and earth” (Matt. 11:25, emphasis added).

One More Thought

I must address one final misconception about Satan that has been accepted by some Christians. Is it true that Satan received Adam’s authority when Adam sinned?

The plain fact is that there are no references in the Bible that make such a claim or imply it. Nowhere does the Bible state that Satan got Adam’s authority when Adam sinned. The theory that he did is usually based upon Jesus’ encounter with Satan during His temptation in the wilderness. There Satan claimed that his dominion had been handed over to him. Some have assumed that it was Adam who handed that dominion over to Satan. That, however, is only a theory.

Actually, every unbeliever has handed Satan personal dominion over his life, and thus Satan is his god, which, as I have already said, is why Satan is called “the god of this world.” Adam and Eve were the first persons to yield to Satan, and all since them have followed in their footsteps. Consequently, Satan’s domain has been handed over to him by the entire human race, with God’s permission.

Furthermore, the Bible never says that Adam lost his authority when he sinned. Man is still subduing the earth, and ruling the fish, fowl, and beasts, which is all the authority Adam ever received in the first place.

 

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God’s Tests » Chapter Eleven-The God of this World

Chapter Ten-Satan, Tool of God’s Judgment

God's Tests, Chapter 10

In this chapter, let’s take one final look at the subject of God’s restraining power over Satan. It’s very important that we understand how God sometimes uses Satan to bring about His discipline or judgment upon the disobedient—a concept that Scripture affirms.

Let’s first consider two interesting Old Testament examples. The first one is found in Judges 9 and 10.

You perhaps remember the story of Gideon, and how God used him to defeat the Midianites with an army of only 300 men. You may not remember that Gideon became the father of 72 sons by several wives and at least one concubine. After Gideon died, his concubine’s son, named Abimelech, along with the full support of the people of his hometown (Shechem), formed a conspiracy and massacred 70 of Gideon’s sons. Only Jotham, Gideon’s youngest, escaped.

God, of course, was not pleased with this treatment of Gideon’s sons, especially since Gideon had fought on their behalf against the Midianites, resulting in 40 years of peace for Israel. Scripture says that God is not mocked, and whatever a man sows that shall he also reap (see Gal 6:7). God guarantees it. Let’s read then how God fulfilled His guarantee in this situation:

Now Abimelech ruled over Israel three years. Then God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech, in order that the violence done to the seventy sons of Jerubball [Gideon] might come, and their blood might be laid on Abimelech their brother, who killed them, and on the men of Shechem, who strengthened his hands to kill his brothers (Judg. 9:22-24, emphasis added).

The end of the story is that Abimelech slaughtered all the people of Shechem and shortly thereafter he himself was killed in battle—all because of an “evil spirit,” which “God sent.”

The question is, does God have evil spirits to send? Apparently, yes, because that is what the Bible says. Keep in mind, however, that the Bible didn’t say that God sent an evil spirit who was His friend and who lived with Him in heaven. No, if we consider the entire context of Scripture, it would seem safer to conclude that God, who possesses sovereign control over Satan and his demons, permitted an evil spirit to engender strife between two parties in order to bring judgment upon them. And why does Scripture say this evil spirit was sent by God? Because the evil spirit came as a direct result of God’s sovereign will to judge a group of wicked people. God used an evil spirit to execute His judgment.

Another incident illustrating God’s use of Satan as a tool of His judgment had to do with Saul. As the first king of Israel, he was hand-picked by God and assumed his duties with humility and sincerity. Soon, however, Saul committed some serious sins, which disqualified him for enjoying “a kingdom that would endure” (1 Sam. 13:14).

Thereafter, King Saul’s attitude and actions degenerated, and he disobeyed God again. When it became clear to him that David, the young giant-slayer, would be his replacement, he grew jealous. Consequently, we read that “the Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and then an evil spirit from God” began to terrorize him (1 Sam. 16:14, emphasis added).

Was that evil spirit actually a spirit from God? Again, in light of the rest of Scripture, it seems more reasonable to conclude that it was one of Satan’s evil spirits, permitted by God to afflict Saul in hopes of bringing him to repentance.

Note that God also demonstrated His mercy toward Saul by giving young David an ability to play anointed music that would bring temporary deliverance to Saul’s tormented mind. Scripture says, “Whenever the evil spirit from God came to Saul, David would take the harp and play it with his hand; and Saul would be refreshed and be well, and the evil spirit would depart from him” (1 Sam. 16:23). God was in effect saying to Saul, “I love you and want you to be free from torment, but you must repent of your selfish jealousy.”

From these two Old Testament examples we can see how God sometimes uses Satan as a tool of His discipline or judgment upon the disobedient.

A New Testament Example

One New Testament example that reveals this same principle is found in Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians. In the church in Corinth, a man was living in an immoral relationship with his stepmother. He was still being welcomed by the church, however. Paul instructed the Corinthian believers:

In the name of our Lord Jesus, when you are assembled, and I with you in spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus…deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of his flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus (1 Cor. 5:4-5, emphasis added).

Notice that they were to deliver the man over to Satan for the destruction of his flesh. Scripture often credits Satan as being the one behind sickness (see, for example, Acts 10:38). Also notice, however, that the purpose behind the disciplinary action was so that the man’s spirit would “be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.” That is, when the man found his body being assailed with sickness, he would hopefully come to his senses and repent of his sin.[1]

Once again we see that God used Satan as a tool of His discipline upon a disobedient person.

If sickness assails us, should we immediately conclude that God is trying to discipline us? Not necessarily. Sickness can occur for reasons other than God’s judgment, and we’ll discuss those other reasons later on. It certainly is wise, however, to do a spiritual examination of our lives any time sickness strikes to make sure we have not opened the door to God’s discipline by our disobedience.

Opening the Door to Satan?

In regard to this subject, I’ve often heard Christians and preachers make the statement that we can “open the door to the devil through disobedience” or claim that, “when we disobey, it puts us out in the devil’s territory where he can afflict us.” Both of these phrases are frequently used by those who want to emphasize the goodness of God. Unfortunately, however, they have been taken to an extreme, to the point where, in some people’s minds, God’s discipline and judgment have been annulled.

If you have any doubts that the God of the New Testament is every bit a holy Judge as the God of the Old (they are one and the same), just read the book of Revelation. Yes, God is good, merciful, full of compassion, and longsuffering, but when His mercy is repeatedly spurned, ultimately His judgment falls. The New Testament teaches that it is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the living God (see Heb. 10:31). The apostle Paul wrote, “Behold then the kindness and severity of God” (Rom. 11:22, emphasis added).

So does God actively discipline and judge sinful people, or do they only “open the door to the devil” (apart from God’s sovereignty)? Let’s look some more at what the Bible says.

If any man destroys the temple of God, God will destroy him, for the temple of God is holy (1 Cor. 3:17, emphasis added).

Nothing is said about the devil destroying anyone. Paul wrote, “God will destroy him.” We know from other scriptures that God might destroy that person by allowing the devil to destroy him, but the point is that the destruction occurs because of God’s judgment.

Speaking of a wicked woman whom He calls Jezebel, Jesus said in the book of Revelation:

And I gave her time to repent; and she does not want to repent of her immorality. Behold, I will cast her upon a bed, and those who commit adultery with her into great tribulation, unless they repent of her deeds. And I will kill her children with pestilence; and all the churches will know that I am He who searches the minds and the hearts; and I will give to each of you according to your deeds (Rev. 2:21-23, emphasis added).

Notice that Jesus takes the credit for the killing of her children (I assume her “spiritual children,”—her band of disciples).

Scripture says of King Herod, whom we have mentioned in an earlier chapter:

And immediately an angel of the Lord struck him because he did not give God the glory, and he was eaten by worms and died (Acts 12:23, emphasis added).

The devil wasn’t anywhere near this one. It was an angel of the Lord who struck Herod so that he died.

Jesus Himself said:

And I say to you, My friends, do not be afraid of those who kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do. But I will warn you whom to fear; fear the One who after He has killed has authority to cast into hell; yes, I tell you, fear Him (Luke 12:4-5, emphasis added)!

Notice it was God who killed and God who might cast someone into hell. Some actually claim that Jesus was speaking of the devil in this passage, affirming that Jesus’ disciples should fear Satan because he kills and casts into hell! The Bible is quite clear, however, that God is the One who casts people into hell, not the devil (see Rev. 19:20; 20:10, 14). Jesus was speaking of God, His Father, as the One to fear, because He is the One who kills and casts into hell.

James 4:12 warns:

There is only one Lawgiver and Judge, the One who is able to save and to destroy (James 4:12, emphasis added).

All of this is to say that we need to be cautious that we don’t emphasize the saving mercy of God to the extreme of negating His destroying wrath. From a biblical standpoint, one really can’t believe in God’s mercy without also believing in His wrath, because His wrath is the very thing from which we are saved:

Much more then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved from the wrath of God through Him (Rom. 5:9; see also 1 Thes. 1:10).

For further proof that the God of the New Testament actively judges the disobedient, see Acts 13:8-12; 2 Thes. 1:6; 1 Tim. 5:24; 2 Tim. 4:14; Heb. 13:4; 2 Pet. 2:1-9 and Jude 5.

We could look at hundreds of other scriptures that prove that God is a God of judgment, but I’m sure you’re convinced. And there are no scriptures that speak of anyone “opening the door to the devil through disobedience.” The truth is, people can open the door to God’s discipline or judgment through disobedience, and God may use the devil to discipline or judge those persons.

God has used, is using, and will in the future use Satan to accomplish His own divine purposes. He is indeed sovereign. Fear Him!

The Lord has established His throne in the heavens; and His sovereignty rules over all (Ps. 103:19, emphasis added).


[1] A similar example is found in 1 Tim. 1:19-20.

 

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God’s Tests » Chapter Ten-Satan, Tool of God’s Judgment

Chapter Nine-God’s Restraining Power Over Satan

God's Tests, Chapter 9

In this chapter and the next, we will continue exploring the concept of God’s restraining power over Satan. Throughout Scripture, God demonstrates repeatedly that He has plenty of ability to restrain the “god of this world” any time He desires.

Let’s consider an initial example found in a passage that is familiar to most churchgoers. Speaking through the prophet Malachi, the Lord was reproving His people for withholding their tithes and offerings. He actually accused them of robbing Him! As a result of their disobedience, they were “cursed with a curse.” The “fruits of the ground” were being destroyed, and the “vine in the field” was “casting its grapes” (Mal. 3:9, 11). If they would repent, however, and begin once again to pay their tithes and offerings, the Lord promised:

I will…pour out a blessing until there is no more need. Then I will rebuke the devourer for you, so that it may not destroy the fruits of the ground; nor will your vine in the field cast its grapes (Mal. 3:10b-11, emphasis added).

Who was the devourer? Scripture doesn’t say. We are only told the devourer was destroying crops, and that God would rebuke it if Israel repented. If God was speaking of Satan or one of his evil spirits, then we could say (as some would) that Israel “opened the door to the devil through disobedience.” If, however, we mean that God had no sovereign part in the matter, we are entirely incorrect. We would be much more accurate if we said that the Israelites opened the door to God’s discipline through disobedience, and God consequently disciplined them by permitting Satan to afflict them.

If God played no sovereign role in this particular incident, then apparently He and Satan switched roles. Satan was punishing disobedient people, and at the same time God was apparently unconcerned because He was doing nothing! That idea is, of course, absurd.

Another clear example of God’s restraining power over Satan is found in the story of Job. As we read of the initial heavenly conversation about Job, it becomes abundantly clear that Satan can do nothing to harm Job unless God permits him:

Then Satan answered the Lord, “Does Job fear God for nothing? Hast Thou not made a hedge about him and his house and all that he has, on every side? Thou hast blessed the work of his hands, and his possessions have increased in the land. But put forth Thy hand now and touch all that he has; he will surely curse Thee to Thy face.” Then the Lord said to Satan, “Behold, all that he has is in your power [literally hand], only do not put forth your hand on him” (Job 1:9-12, emphasis added).

God had been protecting Job, having placed a hedge about him. But as a result of Satan’s challenge, God lifted that protective hedge to some degree, limitedly permitting Satan to afflict Job, yet not allowing Satan to afflict Job’s health.

After Job’s first set of trials, Satan again accused Job before God. This time he claimed that if Job were to lose his health, then he would surely curse God. Consequently, the Lord permitted Satan to afflict Job’s body, yet restrained him from actually killing him (see Job 2:3-6).

So in Job’s story we observe God’s restraining power over Satan demonstrated three times, as He (1) restrained Satan from doing anything, then (2) permitted him to afflict Job in every way except physical sickness, and finally (3) allowed him to steal Job’s health. Clearly, Satan could do nothing except what God permitted.

Of course, Job’s story occurred after the fall of Adam; therefore, if Satan usurped Adam’s authority (and notice I said if), then he had Adam’s authority when he afflicted Job. This again proves that even if Satan did gain some authority on the earth as a result of Adam’s fall, he never gained unlimited control and was completely subject to God.

Sadly, in an attempt to “defend God’s loving character,” some argue that Job “opened the door to Satan through fear,” based upon Job’s statement in Job 3:25: “For what I fear comes upon me.” Fear, however, was not the reason for Job’s trials—as is clearly revealed from an honest examination of the first two chapters of Job. Later in this book, when we look more fully at the life of Job, I’ll prove beyond any doubt that Job did not “open the door to Satan through fear.”

God’s Restraining Power over Satan in Peter’s Life

In the New Testament, we have a very clear example of God’s restraining power over Satan. Found in Luke’s Gospel, this account is somewhat similar to Job’s story. There, just a short time before Jesus was betrayed, He said to Peter:

Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has demanded permission to sift you like wheat; but I have prayed for you, that your faith may not fail; and you, when once you have turned again, strengthen your brothers (Luke 22:31-32, emphasis added).

A note in the margin of my Bible lists an alternate translation that reads, “Satan has obtained by asking to sift you like wheat.” Either translation indicates Satan had to obtain permission before he sifted Peter.

God permitted Satan to sift Peter like wheat for a reason, and you can be certain that God was motivated by love. Those who have not yet learned of the positive results of trials or who are blind to God’s divine purposes will scoff at that idea, yet it is completely biblical. And clearly, once again, God is sovereign over Satan. Satan could do nothing to Peter unless he received permission from God, just as in Job’s case.

An Example From the Book of Revelation

A fourth example, also from the New Testament, is found in Revelation 20:

And I saw an angel coming down from heaven, having the key of the abyss and a great chain in his hand. And he laid hold of the dragon, the serpent of old, who is the devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand years, and threw him into the abyss, and shut it and sealed it over him, that he should not deceive the nations any longer, until the thousand years were completed; after these things he must be released for a short time…. And when the thousand years are completed, Satan will be released from prison, and will come out to deceive the nations which are in the four corners of the earth…. And they came up on the broad plain of the earth and surrounded the camp of the saints and the beloved city, and fire came down from heaven and devoured them. And the devil who deceived them was thrown into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are also; and they will be tormented day and night forever and ever (Rev. 20:1-3, 7-10, emphasis added).

Notice that it will require only one angel to bind Satan and completely stop his work for one thousand years. Under the influence of certain teachers, I at one time thought that God could do this at the beginning of the Millennium because that is when “Adam’s lease on the earth expires.” In other words, God (supposedly) gave Adam authority on the earth for a certain time period. When Adam abdicated his authority, Satan got a “time-limited lease.” Up until the expiration date of that lease, God supposedly couldn’t stop Satan because Satan had a legal right to do anything he wanted.

That kind of logic is faulty, however, for several reasons. Foremost, because we see so many other examples (after Adam’s fall) of how God restrained Satan’s activities on the earth. By an overwhelming weight of scriptural evidence, we see that God is quite able to hinder the work of Satan.

The second reason is deduced from the fact that, after 1,000 years, God will release Satan again for a short period. Does this mean that Adam’s lease will once again become operative for a short time after the Millennium and, therefore, God will be legally obligated to loose Satan for a little while again? Would God prefer to keep the devil in prison even beyond the 1,000 years, but won’t be able to because Satan has a legal right to come out?

No, what this scripture reveals to us is that God has a divine purpose in permitting Satan to do what He permits him to do. And what is that?

Before Satan is bound, we read that he “deceived the nations” (Rev. 20:3). After he is released from his thousand-year prison term, he once again “deceives the nations” (Rev. 20:8)—this time into thinking that they can overthrow the rule of Christ in Jerusalem.

God obviously will have a divine purpose in releasing Satan from his prison, and that is to deceive the nations to attempt a siege against Jerusalem. And there they will meet with judgment.

Please note that I did not say that God wills that people be deceived so that they will be judged. We know that God wants every person to be saved (see 1 Tim. 2:4; 2 Pet. 3:9). God loves every human being, and He sent His Son to pay the price for everyone’s sins (see 1 John 2:2).

However, we also know that God has given every person a free will, and that He has decreed that the only people who will be saved are those who, under the drawing of the Spirit, choose to repent and believe in Jesus. Keep in mind that, in order for God to determine who has chosen Jesus, there must be something else for people to choose.

If Jesus was the only available choice, then He wouldn’t be someone whom you could choose. Imagine an election in which there was only one candidate. It really wouldn’t be an election, would it? That kind of “election” would be similar to the situation that would exist if there was no choice other than Jesus.

So we see that Satan serves a divine purpose in God’s eternal plan, as the alternate choice for humankind. God has permitted Satan to exist on the earth so that He can determine who will be qualified to live in His presence for eternity and who must perish in hell. The Bible makes it clear that if a person is not serving Jesus, then he is serving the devil (see 1 Tim. 5:15; 1 John 3:10).

Both God and Satan are vying for the hearts of men. God is drawing everyone to Himself by several means: through His creation (anyone who wants to can see that there must be a Creator), through people’s consciences, and by the witness of the Holy Spirit through His church (see John 15:26-27). Satan is drawing men to himself (away from God) through temptation and deception, and God permits Satan to do just that. Again, if there were no alternative to following Jesus, how would God know who truly wanted to serve Jesus?

Why People are Deceived by Satan

Have you ever marveled at unbelievers who go about their lives without regard to God? They take no notice of Him, even though He is seen everywhere through His creation. I’m looking out my window right now, and I can’t help but think of God. When I look at His creation, I am awed. God has amassed evidence in front of us all that reveals His existence, His power, and His character. Consequently, every person is without excuse before God, just as Scripture says (see Rom. 1:18-21).

As I’m writing this, it is springtime, and the tulips and daffodils are in full bloom. I wonder, How does God turn soil into flowers? How can He get all those beautiful colors out of the ground? Furthermore, How can He make apples from the same soil by which He also makes tomatoes and bananas? I marvel at people who don’t marvel.

We don’t have to look any further than our own bodies to learn something about God. We are “fearfully and wonderfully made” (Ps. 139:14). Yet unbelievers go about day to day and never acknowledge God. They seemingly have no concern for how He feels about their words, thoughts, and actions, while eternity is rushing toward them like a freight train without brakes.

How can people be so blind? The answer is that they are deceived by Satan. They are every bit as deceived as the people whom Satan will delude into thinking they can overthrow the government of Jesus at the end of the Millennium. Paul said in 2 Cor. 4:3 that “the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelieving, that they might not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ.”

Here, however, is the important point: Why are those people deceived? The answer is because they want to be deceived, because their hearts are so wicked. Read how the apostle Paul described unbelievers in his letter to the Ephesians:

The Gentiles…walk, in the futility of their mind, being darkened in their understanding, excluded from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the hardness of their heart; and they, having become callous, have given themselves over to sensuality, for the practice of every kind of impurity with greediness (Eph. 4:17b-19, emphasis added).

The unsaved are willfully ignorant because their hearts are hard. Satan can only deceive those people who will allow him to deceive them, those who desire to believe his lies. They love darkness, just as Jesus told us (see John 3:19). In addition, Satan cannot stop any person from being born again if that person decides to repent and believe in Jesus. So no one can accuse God of unfairness when He permits Satan to deceive people. No one has to remain deceived.

Obviously, through Satan, God is testing humanity. Satan must be permitted to do something or else there would be no test. It would be like the Garden of Eden without the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. There must be an alternative that draws people away from God in order for God to determine who is willfully coming toward Him.

I hope you are grasping this concept. Jesus will be reigning over the earth for 1,000 years during His millennial reign. During that 1,000 years, there will be no alternative to serving Jesus. The Bible says that Jesus will rule with “a rod of iron” (Rev. 19:15). At the end of that thousand-year period, God will release Satan from prison to deceive evil people whose hearts are inclined to hate Jesus yet who have been feigning obedience to Him. The true condition of their hearts will be openly manifested when Satan is released.

Satan won’t be able to deceive everyone at that time—only those whose hearts are already inclined toward rebellion. They will be wide open to his deception when he is released and will naturally do what they have been wishing they could do for a long time. The only reason they will not have tried to overthrow the government of Jesus before Satan’s release is because they will know they would never succeed, even though they might love to see it happen. Once Satan deceives those who don’t want to submit to Christ’s rule, however, it will become abundantly clear who loves Jesus and who hates Him. Then God can righteously judge them, which He will do.

The exact scenario is being played out right now on a larger scale. If Satan were not here to deceive the hearts of people who don’t want Christ to rule their lives, those people would outwardly obey God, yet inwardly long for the chance to rebel. Such people are certainly not fit to live forever in God’s kingdom. Because they are deceived, however, the attitude of their hearts is manifested in their daily words and deeds, and they are storing up judgment for themselves. God gives them a lifetime to repent of their rebellion. If they do, He will give them a new nature through Christ along with freedom from bondage to sin and Satan.

Paul affirmed this very concept in his second letter to the Thessalonians. Writing about the antichrist during the time of the Tribulation Period, he wrote:

And then that lawless one will be revealed whom the Lord will slay with the breath of His mouth and bring to an end by the appearance of His coming; that is, the one whose coming is in accord with the activity of Satan, with all power and signs and false wonders, and with the deception of wickedness for those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the truth so as to be saved. And for this reason God will send upon them a deluding influence so that they might believe what is false, in order that they all may be judged who did not believe the truth, but took pleasure in wickedness (2 Thes. 2:8-12, emphasis added).

In one sentence, Paul stated practically everything I’ve been trying to explain. Notice that these people already had the opportunity to “receive the love of the truth so as to be saved,” yet they chose not to “believe the truth, but took pleasure in wickedness.” God will allow Satan (through the antichrist) to work false signs and wonders in order to deceive those who are Christ-rejecters, “in order that they all may be judged.”

God’s Grand Design

No doubt the greatest example of how God used Satan to accomplish His own divine purposes occurred when God permitted Satan to inspire evil men to crucify Jesus:

Yet we do speak wisdom among those who are mature; a wisdom, however, not of this age, nor of the rulers of this age, who are passing away; but we speak God’s wisdom in a mystery, the hidden wisdom which God predestined before the ages to our glory; the wisdom which none of the rulers of this age has understood; for if they had understood it, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory (1 Cor. 2:6-8, emphasis added).

Who are the “rulers” about whom Paul is writing? Many think that Paul was speaking, not of earthly rulers, but of demonic rulers—the wicked spirits who motivate evil leaders on the earth.[1] Moffat’s translation speaks of these rulers as the “dethroned powers who rule this world.”

My point is that if Satan had known what was going to be accomplished on the cross according to God’s predestined plan, he would never have motivated anyone to crucify Jesus. Satan ignorantly played right into God’s hands, and redemption was accomplished for us through Christ’s sacrifice! Once again, God used Satan, as evil as he is, to help Him accomplish His own divine purpose.

Are you beginning to see that God has a grand design for all that has happened and all that is yet to happen? The fall of humanity was not something that caught God by surprise, requiring Him to form a hastily designed plan to repair what caught him off guard! God’s purpose and grace have been “granted us in Christ Jesus from all eternity” (2 Tim. 1:9, emphasis added). God has had everything under His sovereign control from before the time of creation.

If you’ve read this far, that is probably an indication that you’ve passed God’s initial test of repenting of your sins and turning to Jesus. That was, however, just the first step that you took towards becoming more like Jesus. Many more steps must follow, and they all involve God’s tests


[1] The Greek word translated here as “rulers” is often used in the New Testament in reference to demonic spiritual rulers, as well as human rulers.

God’s Tests

Part 1: All About Tests

Part 2: Who’s in Control Here?

Part 3: Tried and Found True

Part 4: Wrapping it Up

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God’s Tests » Chapter Nine-God’s Restraining Power Over Satan

Chapter Eight God’s Sovereignty and Our Authority

God's Tests, Chapter 8

In this chapter, I’d like to begin by further considering an important aspect of God’s sovereignty, that is, His restraining power over Satan. If we can grasp that concept, we can better understand the spiritual authority that God has (and has not) given to believers. Keep in mind that we have already established that all authority stems from God. Anyone who possesses any authority has it because God has granted it to him (see John 19:11; Rom. 13:1).

Let’s start by going back to the beginning, even before God created Adam and Eve. Obviously, no human beings had any authority then. We do know that, sometime before Adam and Eve were created, Satan attempted to gain some authority. He was, however, quickly dealt with. Jesus said that He saw Satan “fall from heaven like lightning” (Luke 10:18). That gives us at least a little glimpse of Satan’s power in comparison to God’s power. Satan was no match for God, which is what you would expect, since God is the Creator and Satan is merely a creation.

When God created Adam, He did give him certain authority, but Adam’s authority was clearly limited, not unlimited. God told him, “Fill the earth, and subdue it; and rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over every living thing that moves on the earth” (Gen. 1:28, emphasis added). Obviously, Adam was not given absolute sovereignty over everything on the earth. He couldn’t control the weather, for example. Essentially, God gave Adam authority to rule over the fish, birds, and animals, and that was it. Moreover, Adam was very much still under God’s authority as an under-ruler, as plainly indicated by the fact that God judged him when he sinned. Adam couldn’t rule over God and kick Him out of the garden.

The reason I make that point is because some think (erroneously) that when Adam sinned, somehow Satan was able to usurp the authority with which Adam originally was entrusted. Some have even gone so far to say that God has no authority on the earth, and therefore, He can’t do anything here unless we “give Him permission” by asking Him. Supposedly, they say, God’s hands are completely tied because Adam gave his authority to Satan.

The Bible never states, however, that God gave Adam all authority or sovereignty over the earth. Therefore, if Satan did actually gain what Adam had, then Satan has never had all authority or sovereignty either. If Satan has Adam’s authority (and notice I say if), then, just as Adam was under God’s authority, so too, Satan is under God’s authority.

This might help us to answer an age-old theological question: “If God knows what we need even before we ask Him, why does He require that we ask Him? Why doesn’t He just give us what we need?”

Some non-sovereignists offer this answer: “Because when Adam fell, he gave his authority to Satan, and God has no authority to act on this earth unless someone on this earth asks Him to do so.” That answer seems to make God dependent upon us.

One who is more biblically balanced, however, has a different answer. He remembers, as we learned in a previous chapter, that the primary lesson God was trying to teach the Israelites during all their trials in the wilderness was this: “Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God” (Deut. 8:3). In other words, God was trying to teach His people to look to Him for everything, that He was their source, that they needed Him desperately. I suspect that God is trying to teach us that same lesson.

Why does God require us to ask for what He already knows we need? Because we need to learn, as did the people of Israel, to look to God as our source for everything. Self-sufficiency is prideful, and God hates pride.

Can you see the danger in a theology that promotes the idea that “God’s hands are tied, and unless we ask Him, He can do nothing”? It leaves us with the impression that God is dependent upon us, rather than the understanding of what God is actually trying to teach us—that we are dependent upon Him. One view makes us proud, the other makes us humble.

God’s Self-Limitation

If God is limited in any way, it can only be because He has limited Himself. For example, can God save a person—even if that person has no faith? No, God can’t—or else He would violate His own word. God is limited in the salvation of people because He has sovereignly determined that salvation is received only by faith. Because of that, we can prevent God from saving us from our sins. He has, for His good reasons, given us authority to reject or receive Him.

Unfortunately, however, some have taken the concept of God’s self-limitation to an extreme, propagating the idea that poor God can no longer do anything unless someone uses his faith. God is allegedly helpless without us. Each time, however, that God does something apart from a response to someone’s faith, that theory is debunked.

I can’t help but think that God is insulted by the very idea that His hands are supposedly tied because of Adam’s fall. It is equivalent to saying that before He created humanity, God was too stupid to see what was going to happen, and so He got Himself into a big mess that rendered Him powerless on earth. The Bible, however, plainly teaches that God knew humanity would fall, and that He, in fact, planned for the redemption of humanity even before He created us (see Matt. 25:34; Acts 2:2-23; 4:27-28; 1 Cor. 2:7-8; Eph. 3:8-11; 2 Tim. 1:8-10; Rev. 13:8).

Here is a good question to ponder: If it is true that God lost His authority over Satan when Adam fell, how is it that He has given all believers authority over Satan in their own lives?

Some claim that Jesus could only give people authority over Satan after His resurrection—when He supposedly “got back what Adam lost.” Jesus, however, gave His disciples authority over Satan and demons before His resurrection:

And He called the twelve together, and gave them power and authority over all the demons…. And He said to them… “Behold, I have given you authority to tread upon serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy, and nothing shall injure you” (Luke 9:1; 10:18-19, emphasis added).

Quite obviously, Jesus was sovereign over Satan before and after the fall of Adam, as well as before and after His own resurrection. God has shared some of His authority with the church, and the church should be exercising its God-given authority over Satan. Even if the church fails to exercise its authority, however, God will continue to exercise the portion of His authority that He has not given to the church. You can count on that!

God’s Sovereignty Over Human Government

Let’s take a look at a few scriptures that will give us insight into God’s sovereignty over the earth. Satan isn’t ruling nearly as much as some folks think. Some have mistakenly thought, for example, that the devil has control over every earthly government, and that God has no influence whatsoever. That, however, is simply not the case.

Let’s consider some scriptures that reveal God’s sovereignty over human government. The first two are from the book of Acts. The setting for the first scripture passage is shortly after Peter and John had been put on trial and threatened by the Sanhedrin. They returned to the other believers, and along with the entire church prayed the following prayer:

For truly in this city there were gathered together against Thy holy servant Jesus, whom Thou didst anoint, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, to do whatever Thy hand and Thy purpose predestined to occur Acts 4:27-28, emphasis added).

Surely the disciples didn’t believe that God inspired Herod, Pilate, and the Jews to play their particular parts in the events that led to Jesus’ crucifixion. They did, however, realize that God permitted each one to do what he did in order to fulfill His preordained plan for the sacrifice of Christ. As we saw earlier, Jesus Himself acknowledged this very thing when He was questioned by Pilate. When Pilate asked Him, “Do You not know that I have authority to release You, and I have authority to crucify You?” Jesus replied, “You would have no authority over Me, unless it had been given you from above” (John 19:10-11). Pilate was governor only because God had sovereignly granted him to be governor.

The apostle Paul, in his sermon on Mars Hill in Athens, endorsed God’s sovereignty over human governments when he said: “And He [God] made from one, every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined their appointed times, and the boundaries of their habitation, that they should seek God” (Acts 17:26-27, emphasis added). God predetermined the histories of the nations at least to some degree.

In the Old Testament, the prophet Daniel said of God, “It is He who changes the times and the epochs; He removes kings and establishes kings” (Dan 2:21).

Daniel later informed Nebuchadnezzar, proud king of Babylon, that he would lose his mind until he recognized “that the Most High is ruler over the realm of mankind, and bestows it on whomever He wishes” (Dan. 4:25, emphasis added).

Clearly, God’s sovereign hand plays a part in the rise and fall of earthly rulers and kings. Notice Daniel said that God was “ruler over the realm of mankind,” not Satan.

More Proof

In Acts 12:20-23, we read about King Herod delivering an address to the people of Tyre and Sidon. His enthusiastic audience cried out during his speech: “The voice of a god and not of a man!” What happened next? “And immediately an angel of the Lord struck him because he did not give God the glory, and he was eaten by worms and died” (Acts 12:23). Thus ended King Herod’s reign, and I don’t think anyone would say that it was the devil who killed him. The Bible plainly stated it was an angel of the Lord.

Without apology, Paul declared in Romans 13:1-2:

Let every person be in subjection to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those which exist are established by God. Therefore he who resists authority has opposed the ordinance of God (Rom. 13:1-2, emphasis added).

From studying other scriptures we know that there is a valid time for civil disobedience, but my main point here is that no government on the earth exists apart from God’s permission. In fact, Paul goes further than that and says that every government is “established by God.” That includes even governments that are less then perfectly righteous (which, I would guess, includes all of them). It is quite clear from numerous scriptures that God sometimes uses corrupt and evil leaders as a means of His discipline or judgment upon deserving people. If you’ve ever read the Old Testament you know that.

I am not saying, of course, that God motivates any evil rulers to be evil. Yet God permits evil people to rule, and He uses them at times to fulfill His divine purposes. For example, God used evil Pharaoh, evil Herod, and evil Pilate to fulfill His divine plans. God is using evil rulers even today.

Some years ago, I ministered at a pastors’ seminar in Nicaragua. At that time, that Central American nation was experiencing civil war as the U.S.-backed contras were trying to overthrow the Marxist Sandinista government. I remember asking a pastor who had lived in Nicaragua all his life if he would rather live under the former government, or under the Sandanista government. He expressed that under the former government, the economy had been doing well and times were much better. When I questioned him about the present situation, I learned that inflation was running at an incredible 22,000 percent, and hundreds of thousands of Nicaraguans had fled their homeland to look for a better life elsewhere.

Then that Nicaraguan pastor made an incredible statement. He told me that he would rather live under the Sandinista government because, in his words, “Before the Sandinistas, nobody was coming to the Lord. Since the Sandinistas have come into power, everything has gotten worse, but now many people have opened their hearts to the Lord and the churches are growing!”

Isn’t that interesting? God can use even ungodly leaders to bring people to repentance. Isn’t that essentially the story of the history of the nation of Israel? A cursory reading of the book of Judges makes that clear. Numerous spiritual revivals have been spawned by unwitting, evil leaders.

But isn’t God a God of love? Yes, He certainly is, and He may therefore mercifully allow temporal troubles to motivate people to wake up, repent, and be saved from eternal troubles.

Of course, God is also a God of judgment and wrath, as was demonstrated when Herod was eaten by worms and when Pharaoh’s army was drowned in the Red Sea. The Bible says that God is love but it also says He is a consuming fire (see 1 John 4:8; Heb. 12:29). Paul wrote, “Behold then the kindness and severity of God” (Rom 11:22, emphasis added). When God’s mercy is repeatedly spurned, His judgment ultimately falls. Down through the ages, God has sent judgment upon numerous nations who have spurned His mercy, including Israel, by means of evil kings and leaders.

Let’s read what God Himself said through Jeremiah concerning how He personally deals with nations:

At one moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to uproot, to pull down, or to destroy it. If that nation which I have spoken turns from its evil, I will relent concerning the calamity I planned to bring on it. Or at another moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to build up or to plant it, if it does evil in My sight by not obeying My voice, then I will think better of the good with which I had promised to bless it (Jer. 18:7-10).

You can see that when someone argues against God’s sovereignty over the nations, He is arguing against God Himself, because God speaks as one who is is sovereign over the nations.

Because God is sovereign over human governments, does that mean we should just sit back and assume that whatever happens in our government is God’s ordained will? No, in both Old and New Testaments, God’s people are admonished to pray for their nation’s leaders (see Jer. 29:7; 1 Tim. 2:1-4). Once again, this teaches us to look to God for everything—even for good government. God may do things in our government because we ask Him.

In addition, we can ask for God’s mercy upon our ungodly nation, asking God to give everyone more time to repent. Our prayers may forestall His judgment.

I must also add that if we live in countries where we can vote and be involved in the political process, that means God has given every one of us, as citizens, a certain amount of political authority. We should exercise our God-given authority as good stewards who will one day given an account. Again, all authority is from God. If you have a right to vote, it is from God.

God’s Sovereignty and Natural Disasters

Now let’s consider natural disasters. Are they the work of God or the devil?

Many years ago, before the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, I traveled to Romania for a ten-day ministry trip. In studying about that country in preparation for my trip, I came across a statement concerning Romania in the popular prayer guide, Operation World, by Patrick Johnstone. He stated: “The rate of conversions has noticeably increased since the severe earthquake in 1977.”

So was it God or the devil who caused that earthquake?

If it was the exclusive work of Satan (who must then have authority to cause earthquakes), why then doesn’t he cause earthquakes all over the world, in every city? Why doesn’t he kill us all by earthquakes? And why doesn’t he target cities full of people who are serving the Lord rather than cities full of people who are atheists? (If you answer that last question with, “Because God won’t permit Satan to send earthquakes to cities where many people are serving the Lord,” then you’ve just admitted to believing in God’s restraining power over Satan.)

What does the Bible say? Scripture records several incidents when God caused earthquakes because He was judging wicked people. Isaiah warned Jerusalem’s enemies: “From the Lord of hosts you will be punished with thunder and earthquake and loud noise” (Isaiah 29:6, emphasis added). During the rebellion of Korah recorded in Numbers 16, the earth opened up and swallowed an entire group of sinful people. In the book of Revelation, at least five different earthquakes are attributed to God’s judgment. In fact, the last one will be the greatest earthquake the world has ever experienced (see Rev. 16:18-20).

Again, God is a God of judgment as well as a God of love. In fact, because He is love, He must also be a God of judgment, simply because love is fair and just. God must react when sinful, selfish acts are committed—or else He is not loving at all.

Should we think that the God who casts wicked people into hell would never judge evil people on earth by means of an earthquake or some other natural disaster? Obviously we should not think so, especially when the Bible is full of scriptures that plainly state God sometimes sends judgment through war, famine, and pestilence (for example, Jer. 14:1-12; 27:8).

Does Satan cause all earthquakes? The earth quaked when God came down on Mt. Sinai (see Ps. 68:7-8). Surely that wasn’t the work of the devil. There was an earthquake when Jesus cried out from the cross, “It is finished!” (Matt. 27:51). Was that the work of Satan? An earthquake also occurred when Jesus was resurrected (see Matt. 28:2). Did Satan cause that one?

What about the earthquake in the Philippian jail where Paul and Silas were imprisoned? No one was killed, everyone was released, and a few were saved as a result. Was that the devil’s doing? (See Acts 16:22-34. Also see 1 Sam. 14:15, Is. 5:25, Jer. 10:10, and Acts 4:31, for a few other examples of earthquakes which God caused.)

What Jesus Had to Say on the Subject

Along these lines, Jesus mentioned two contemporary tragedies in one of His sermons:

Now on the same occasion there were some present who reported to Him about the Galileans, whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. And He answered and said to them, “Do you suppose that these Galileans were greater sinners than the other Galileans, because they suffered this fate? I tell you, no, but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. Or do you suppose that those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them, were worse culprits than all the men who live in Jerusalem? I tell you, no, but, unless you repent, you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:1-5).

Notice that Jesus did not, after citing those two tragedies, say, “Now those things were the work of the devil because God is a God of love.” Rather, Jesus used those two tragedies to remind those who survived that they were no better than the ones who perished, and unless they repented, they would suffer a similar fate. At that time, they were being warned of God’s judgment. For the time being, they were receiving God’s mercy.

About forty years later, however, judgment did fall upon the Jews and Jerusalem in the form of a holocaust by Roman armies in 70 A.D. That event was clearly a result of God’s sovereign judgment upon them according to Luke 19:41-44; 21:20-24.

Of course I’m not saying that God inspired Pilate to murder those Galileans or that the falling of the tower of Siloam was an act of God. Pilate acted by his own volition, and perhaps human error was to blame for the tower’s collapse. But God obviously permitted both tragedies. Additionally, no one can argue that those who perished weren’t deserving of death, or else he must argue against Jesus.

Furthermore, I’m not saying that every tragedy is permitted by God because He is judging wicked people. I am saying, however, that we are unbalanced when we believe that no tragedy ever occurs because of God’s judgment.

How many modern preachers, if they had lived during Jesus’ time, would have commented differently than Jesus did concerning those two above-mentioned tragedies? How many would have preached, “That was the work of the devil, because God is love”? Many would have, because I’ve heard them say similar words as they explain modern tragedies to their followers.

I recently read about a preacher who ministered to some (and I quote) “angry and confused” hurricane victims who “blamed God for the devastation.” This particular preacher told his confused and angry audience that it was Satan, not God, who caused the hurricane. As a result, some “expressed a desire to learn more about the ‘true nature’ of God.”

It’s too bad Jesus didn’t know about “God’s true nature” when He warned His confused audience of their need to repent or perish! Had that modern-day preacher studied his Bible, he would have told his “confused and angry” audience something more like, “You self-righteous people think you deserve better treatment, but God declares that you are sinners. You actually deserve much worse. That same God, whom Jesus said is ‘Lord of heaven and earth,’ is warning you that He is a holy and wrathful God. Yet, in His great mercy, He sent Jesus to die for you so you could escape His eternal wrath. He is now calling you to repent and receive forgiveness of your sins through the sacrificial death of the Son of God. If you don’t, you will one day experience not just a sampling, but a full dose of God’s eternal wrath in hell. So repent of your wickedness, believe in Him, and He will forgive you of all your sins and receive you as His very own children.”

If we are honest with what the Scriptures say, any person who is not obeying God is worthy of God’s instant judgment. In the two tragic examples that Jesus mentioned, it is clear that those who died got what they deserved, and those who survived didn’t get what they deserved—they were mercifully being given more time to repent. No unsaved person has any promise of being shown any more mercy than he has already been granted, and the fact that he has lived as long as he has is a testimony to God’s incredible mercy.

Man-made Suffering

Quite obviously, much of the suffering in the world today is man-made. For example, much of India’s poverty can be blamed on Hinduism. Because Hindus believe in reincarnation, it is considered immoral to kill animals, and consequently, rats eat tons of grain annually that could feed multitudes of hungry people. If India would embrace the truth, fewer of their people would be malnourished because they could eat the cows, chickens, and goats that God intended for them to eat. In addition, the rodents could be exterminated, making more grain available to the population.

Many famines in the world today are a result of government policies, civil unrest, inequitable trade policies, lack of knowledge and greed. Disobedience to God’s laws always brings suffering. Perhaps these situations could sometimes be better referred to as God’s passive judgment rather than His active judgment.

When Tragedy Happens to Christians

What about Christians who experience tragedies? The answer to that question is not quite as simple. We must first determine what kinds of tragedies we are talking about and what kind of Christian is experiencing a tragedy. If we are talking about a Christian who is in disobedience, then we are talking about a Christian who, unless he repents during the time he is being shown mercy, is in danger of experiencing God’s discipline. Paul referred to those Christians in his first letter to the Corinthians, stating that some of them were sick—and some had even died—because of God’s discipline or judgment. If you are a disobedient believer, I encourage you to repent.

If we are talking about tragedy striking an obedient believer, then we need to classify certain kinds of tragedies. Many obedient believers have suffered persecution for their faith to the point of torture and martyrdom. That is certainly a tragedy from a human standpoint, but it is not one from which we are promised deliverance. The Bible, in fact, promises us that we will be persecuted (see 2 Tim. 3:12). Church tradition states that every one of the apostles died for his faith. Although the apostle John may be an exception, he was still exiled and severely persecuted.

Millions of Christians have been martyred, and many more have suffered harsh persecution. There are times when God has miraculously delivered His people, but other times He has not. That is determined by the sovereign will of God. (We will further examine the subject of the persecutions of Christians in a later chapter.)

Another kind of tragedy that obedient believers have suffered is chronic sickness and disease. Unlike with persecution, however, we do have many biblical promises that we can trust for deliverance from illness. It seems clear from Scripture that sickness is in a special class all by itself when it comes to suffering. For example, James wrote:

Is anyone among you suffering? Let him pray…. Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord; and the prayer offered in faith will restore the one who is sick (James 5:13-14, emphasis added).

It is unfortunate that some teachers have taken scriptures that apply only to Christians suffering persecution and have erroneously tried to apply them to Christians suffering sickness. Jesus didn’t always deliver the persecuted. He never, however, turned away anyone who came to Him for healing. It may surprise you to learn that one tenth of all that was written about Jesus in the four Gospels concerns His healing ministry. If you are chronically ill, there is hope for your healing. I encourage you to immerse yourself in Scripture, and in particular, in those passages that build your faith for healing. (And even if you are not healed in this life, praise God that you will receive a new body one day!)

What about calamities, wars, and natural disasters as far as the obedient believer is concerned? Certain scriptures encourage us to believe that no calamity, war, or natural disaster that is permitted because of God’s judgment will fall upon an obedient believer. For example, when Jerusalem was destroyed and hundreds of thousands perished during the Roman holocaust of 70 A.D., there was not one obedient believer in the city because Jesus had warned them so they could escape (see Luke 21:20-24). Also, Noah and his family were saved during the great flood, and all the children of Israel were protected in the land of Goshen when God sent the plagues upon Egypt.

The Bible provides other encouraging examples of God’s pre-warning believers of coming calamities in order that they might avoid them. For example, in Acts chapter 11, we have record of a prophecy given by Agabus warning of a soon-coming famine, which took place during the reign of Claudius. Consequently, believers in Antioch (where Agabus delivered his prophecy) sent a contribution “for the relief of the brethren living in Judea” (Acts 11:29).

When Paul was on a ship transporting him to Rome, God tried to warn the ships’ captain through Paul that they would lose their ship and lives in a great storm, but the sailors didn’t listen. As a result, they suffered the consequences—although God did mercifully protect the lives of everyone on board (see Acts 27:9-26).

Let me give you an example of God’s protection in my own life. When I was a young Christian many years ago, I had a habit of picking up almost every hitchhiker along the road so I could practice sharing the gospel with a captive audience. One day, however, when I was driving on an interstate highway through a certain city, I heard what seemed to be an audible voice say to me: “Man with a beard—don’t pick him up.” Within a half a minute, I drove around a bend, and there underneath an underpass was a man with his thumb out, and he had a beard. I’ve always wondered what would have happened if I had picked him up. Jesus did promise that the Holy Spirit would “show us things to come” (John 16:13).

The late Demos Shakarian, founder of the Full Gospel Businessmen International, tells in his biography of how God warned his Armenian grandfather and fellow Christians of a coming holocaust in Armenia by means of an illiterate “boy-prophet.” Many of the believing Christians fled the country and, in 1914, one and a half million Armenians died at the hand of the Turks.[1] No Christian who obeyed God’s warning suffered in that tragedy.

I’m so glad that God cares for His children. Still, I know that I don’t have all the answers. I can only offer as many as I’ve found in Scripture. So we’ll have to trust God regardless of what comes our way. I’ve learned that when we face what we don’t understand, we should fall back on what we do understand. Nothing that can happen to you can change the fact that Jesus died for you. Nothing can separate you from His love (Rom. 8:38-39).


 

 

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God’s Tests » Chapter Eight God’s Sovereignty and Our Authority

Chapter Seven-Two Views on God’s Sovereignty

God's Tests, Chapter 7

 

Who is ultimately running the world? Is God truly sovereign? What authority does the devil possess? What role do chance and human choice play in the events and outcomes of our lives?

Those are all important questions, and if we are to understand much about God’s tests, we’ll need the answers. That will require that we do more than simply skim over the surface of the Scriptures. We’ll have to plunge into the deep.

So take a deep breath. Let’s stay under for a while as we explore some beautiful revelation about God’s sovereignty from Scripture.

The Bible certainly affirms that God is sovereign: “The Lord has established His throne in the heavens; and His sovereignty rules over all” (Ps. 103:19, emphasis added). Paul refers to God as “the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord of lords” (1 Tim. 6:15).

Although God is sovereign, possessing all authority, we would be wrong to conclude that He has never given limited authority to other persons in the universe, or that He has not granted His creatures the privilege of making their own decisions. Scripture tells us that He has done both. Some to whom He has granted authority have abused their authority. Many whom He has allowed to make their own choices have made wrong choices. Consequently, not all that happens on earth is God’s perfect will. Yet everything that happens must be within His permissive will, or else He is not supremely sovereign.

If God is sovereign, possessing all ultimate authority, then anyone who possesses authority anywhere in the universe—including human beings or Satan—only has it because it has been granted to him by God. There is no other way for anyone to gain any authority. If there were, we would be forced to conclude that God is not all-powerful and all-knowing—as the Bible tells us He is.

If authority was taken from God by force by one of His creatures, then that creature was more powerful than God, and God is not all-powerful. Similarly, if authority was swindled from God by one of His creatures, then that creature was smarter than God, and God is not all-knowing because He was fooled.

Thus, anyone who has any authority is under God’s authority and is operating with His permission whether he realizes it or not. For example, Pilate said to Jesus, “You do not speak to me? Do You not know that I have authority to release You, and I have authority to crucify You?” Jesus answered, “You would have no authority over Me, unless it had been given you from above” (John 19:10-11). Likewise, Paul wrote that “there is no authority except from God, and those which exist are established by God” (Rom. 13:1).

Hyper-Sovereignists and Non-Sovereignists

As I mentioned in an earlier chapter, two extreme views often surface whenever the subject of God’s sovereignty is discussed. I refer to the adherents of those two extreme views as the “hyper-sovereignists” and the “non-sovereignists.”

The hyper-sovereignist has concluded that God causes everything that happens, completely ignoring Satan and the wills of human beings. The hyper-sovereignist makes statements such as, “You can never be certain of what God will do because He is sovereign, and He can do anything He desires.” Although God can certainly do anything He desires, He will not do what would violate His own character or Word. The hyper-sovereignist, however, leaves the impression that God might actually transgress His own Word or fail to keep His promises. That, of course, is entirely incorrect. God will never break His Word. He always keeps His promises. If God tells you what He will do, you can be sure He’ll do it.

On the other extreme, the non-sovereignist thinks that God has very little or no control over what is occurring on this earth. Things went so wrong in the Garden of Eden that, ever since, God has been up in heaven watching the world from a distance, waiting patiently for the Millennium when He will finally be able to control the earth again—once Satan is bound. Some non-sovereignists are even convinced that if God does do something on the earth in this age, it is only when He is given the right by someone on earth who prays. This view, also, is entirely incorrect according to the Bible.

As we study the Scriptures, we’ll see how both hyper-sovereignists and non-sovereignists need to learn something from each other.

Back to the Boat on Galilee

Let’s consider again the story of when Jesus and His disciples faced a fierce gale as they were crossing the Sea of Galilee. We’ll view the scene from both standpoints—the hyper- and non-sovereignist’s.

Had there been a hyper-sovereignist in the boat that day, he would have declared, “We know that God is in control, and so we trust that He has a purpose for sending this terrible storm. Let us not question Him. It seems strange to us that God would want all of us to drown today, but we know that ‘God’s ways are higher than our ways.’ Let us, then, humbly accept His will for us.”

The non-sovereignist in the boat would retort, “I’m sorry, but you are quite mistaken. God is good, and He would never send a storm to cause us all to drown in this lake. God has nothing to do with this situation. This storm must be from Satan; so let us rebuke the devil and overcome this circumstance.”

Whose theology is correct? Actually, both are partially right and partially wrong.

Was it God’s will for Jesus and His twelve disciples to drown that evening on the Sea of Galilee? The hyper-sovereignist thought so. The non-sovereignist, however, disagreed, and he was correct, as all of us know who have read the end of the story. It was not God’s will for Jesus and His disciples to drown that evening on the Sea of Galilee.

Who caused the storm? The hyper-sovereignist thought it was the sovereign God; the non-sovereignist thought it was the devil. One of them must be correct.

Some readers may think that neither is correct, believing that severe weather is—as is often said by preachers and theologians—only “a naturally occurring phenomena in our fallen world full of sin.” That explanation, however, is just a camouflaged admission of ignorance, as it raises more questions than it answers. Does severe weather occur simply because of the presence of sin on the earth? Does sin by itself generate hurricanes and tornadoes? If that is the case, then severe weather is man-made. That idea is absurd, of course.

So those who say that severe weather is “just a naturally occurring phenomena in our fallen world of sin” must mean that severe weather is a result of God’s judgment upon this sinful world. If that is what they mean, then they are really saying that God is responsible for severe weather. If it is a manifestation of His judgment, then it occurs because of His decree.

Some would argue that severe storms are “just the forces of nature at work,” but that is a similar explanation that is no explanation at all. Who created the forces of nature? It was God. Even if those forces act randomly, it was God who determined or permitted those forces to act randomly, and so He is responsible.

So, either God, the creator of all nature, still has control over the forces of nature, or Satan somehow gained control to some extent. Therefore, either God or Satan was responsible for the life-threatening storm on the Sea of Galilee that evening. So who was it?

Does Satan Have Control of the Wind?

The fact is, the Bible most often gives God credit for control of the wind, not the devil. Only once in Scripture is Satan given credit, and he first had to receive permission from God to cause a “great wind” that took some lives (see Job. 1:12, 19). At all other times when credit is given, it is given to God (see, for example, Gen. 8:1; Ex. 10:13, 19; 14:21; 15:10; Num. 11:31; Ps. 48:7; 78:26; 135:7; 147:18; 148:8; Jer. 4:11-12; 10:13; 51:16; Ez. 13:13; Amos 4:9, 13; Jonah 4:8; Hag. 2:17; Rev. 7:1). Here are a few scriptures not included in that list that you can read for yourself:

Thou dost rule the swelling of the sea; when its waves rise, Thou dost still them (Ps. 89:9, emphasis added).

Those who go down to the sea in ships, who do business on great waters; they have seen the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. For He spoke and raised up a stormy wind, which lifted up the waves of the sea. They rose up to the heavens, they went down to the depths; their soul melted away in their misery…. Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and He brought them out of their distresses. He caused the storm to be still, so that the waves of the sea were hushed (Ps. 107:23-29, emphasis added).

Thus says the Lord, who gives the sun for light by day, and the fixed order of the moon and the stars for light by night, who stirs up the sea so that its waves roar; the Lord of hosts is His name (Jer. 31:35, emphasis added).

And the Lord hurled a great wind on the sea and there was a great storm on the sea (Jonah 1:4, emphasis added).

From looking at all of Scripture, we can only conclude that either God caused the storm on the Sea of Galilee or Satan caused it with God’s permission. Therefore, the hyper-sovereignist is certainly correct in saying that, ultimately, God was in control of the situation that evening.

On the other hand, the non-sovereignist is correct in asserting that God wants us to use our faith to overcome trying circumstances. That’s a lot different than just accepting them as God’s final and ordained will—as the hyper-sovereignist thinks.

Yet the non-sovereignist has perhaps missed something that the hyper-sovereignist has at least partially understood: The non-sovereignist doesn’t see any divine purpose in His circumstances. In the boat that day with Jesus, the non-sovereignist didn’t take into consideration that it was God who was leading them across the Sea of Galilee. He didn’t recognize God’s foreknowledge of the gale or the fact that God will use adversity to cause our faith to grow.

Arriving at a Balanced Understanding

As a young Christian, I was greatly influenced by the hyper-sovereignist viewpoint. I thought that anything and everything that happened to me was God’s ordained will, and my job was to learn and grow through the difficulties that the Lord allegedly sent my way. I read certain books about being “fully surrendered to the Lord.” Although the authors didn’t realize it, they actually taught me to surrender to Satan’s attacks, attacks that God wanted me to resist and overcome.

Some years later, I was influenced by the non-sovereignist view and was swayed to believe that there was absolutely no divine purpose in any negative circumstance. If something was negative, it was from the devil. Period.

Both viewpoints are unbalanced and lead to extremes.

Because the hyper-sovereignist often does not recognize Satan’s “fiery darts,” he is an easy target. The devil must delight as the hyper-sovereignist humbly accepts a demonic assault as being sent from God. He is “destroyed for his lack of knowledge” (Hos. 4:6).

On the other hand, the non-sovereignist, who laughs at how deceived the hyper-sovereignist is, is a little deceived himself. He rejects the idea that God might lead someone to a place where he will experience difficulties—as He did the Israelites after their exodus. He laughs at the idea of learning lessons from God when difficulties strike. He ignores scriptures about spiritual growth stemming from hardship.

The Theological Pitfalls of the Non-Sovereignist

The non-sovereignist’s theology may lead him to extremes in understanding God’s judgment or discipline upon sin. In his mind, if a Christian sins and is, for example, disciplined through sickness as a result (a biblical concept; see 1 Cor. 11:28-32), the non-sovereignist thinks God played no sovereign role in the suffering. Rather, that person “opened the door to the devil” or “got out on the devil’s territory.”

Most Christians who use such expressions are trying to help others see that God is a God of love, and that we, not God, are responsible for the consequences of our sin. When such expressions are accepted apart from a scriptural balance, however, the result is serious doctrinal error, because God’s discipline upon sin is annulled. Suddenly, we have a God who doesn’t punish sin, and we’ve created a devil who does punish sin. The non-sovereignist who is trying to defend God’s character has actually defamed it, detracting from His holiness. Additionally, he has made Satan look somewhat holy, as he, acting on his own, apart from God’s authority, is allegedly putting sickness on people when they sin, which might motivate them to repent! Satan suddenly seems more like God than God!

So what is the truth of the matter? The truth is that God may permit Satan to afflict with sickness one of His children who has persisted in disobedience. God’s objective is to bring His disobedient child to a place of repentance. (I am not saying, of course, that all sickness is a manifestation of God’s judgment or discipline. According to Scripture, however, such a possibility certainly exists.)

God can permit Satan to act or restrain him to any degree. Satan can do nothing except what God permits.

A Few Objections Answered

Some readers might object, saying, “But God has given us responsibility to resist the devil, and we must not wait for God to do something about the devil—we must resist him ourselves.” I agree. God has indeed given believers responsibility and authority to resist the devil, and we should resist him (see Jas. 4:7; 1 Pet 5:8-9).

That fact, however, does not detract from the fact that Satan can do nothing except what God permits him to do. God has not abdicated to believers all of His authority over Satan, making Himself helpless or dependent upon us. God has authority over Satan that He has never given to believers. The authority He has given to us is limited.

Again, some readers may object: “God has given us all authority over Satan, not just some authority!” But think about that for a moment. If you have all authority over Satan, why don’t you banish him from the face of the earth? Why don’t you cast him into the abyss for one thousand years, just as we are told God will do during the Millennium? The reason you don’t is simply because you can’t—because your authority over Satan is limited.

God has given us responsibility and authority over Satan as far as our own lives are concerned, as is clear from Ephesians 6:10-17, James 4:7 and 1 Peter 5:8-9. In all these scriptures we are told that we should resist Satan. That is a part of God’s sovereign plan. It’s our responsibility to use our God-given authority to resist the devil in our personal lives. We are entirely wrong, however, if we conclude that God no longer has any authority over Satan or that He has given all His authority to the church.

An example would be if I had a million dollars and gave one hundred dollars to you. Now that $100 is your money. I can’t spend it for you because it’s yours, not mine. If you want to waste it, that’s your business. Likewise, God has given us some of His authority, and now it’s ours to use—not God’s. That doesn’t mean, however, that God no longer has any authority over Satan. God is exercising His authority over Satan and restraining him every day. He is sovereign just as the Bible says He is.

Scriptural Proof of God’s Sovereignty Over Satan

Allow me to prove this from Scripture. In 1 Corinthians 10:13 we read:

No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will provide a way of escape also, that you may be able to endure it (1 Cor. 10:13, emphasis added).

Paul promises that God will not allow us to be tempted beyond what we are able. We know, of course, that Satan is the tempter, not God (see Jas. 1:13). God, however, restrains Satan to the degree that He “will not allow” him to tempt us beyond what we are able. We see that Satan can do nothing more than what God permits.

That one verse in 1 Corinthians helps us to understand where our authority ends and where God’s begins. None of us have any authority to control the degree of temptation that Satan sends. In fact, we have no authority to stop any degree of temptation from the devil. If we had unlimited authority, we could command him to never tempt us again. But only God has that much authority. We do have authority to resist temptation and not be overcome by the devil.

What the Devil is the Devil Doing Here?

Have you ever wondered why God even permits Satan to be on the earth, or why God permits Satan to tempt anyone? When God cast Satan out of heaven, why didn’t He banish him to some other galaxy? Why this planet? Or, if there was some reason that Satan had to be banished to the earth, then why did God place humanity on the same planet? Couldn’t God have arranged things so we wouldn’t have to share space with the devil?

To gain a glimpse of at least part of the answer, consider what the Lord said through Moses in Deuteronomy 13:1-3:

If a prophet or dreamer of dreams arises among you and gives you a sign or a wonder, and the sign or the wonder comes true, concerning which he spoke to you, saying, “Let us go after other gods (whom you have not known) and let us serve them,” you shall not listen to the words of that prophet or that dreamer of dreams; for the Lord your God is testing you to find out if you love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul (emphasis added).

I doubt that any of us would claim that God was the one who inspired that false prophet or gave him the ability to work a false sign or wonder. Surely that prophet was empowered by Satan, not God. Yet God permitted that Satan-empowered, false prophet to arise in order to test His people.

So here is at least a partial answer to the question of why Satan is on the same planet and why God permits him to tempt us: It is so God might know what is in our hearts. God is testing all of us. Do we love Him enough to obey Him and resist Satan’s temptations?

In earlier chapters, we considered numerous examples of God’s tests as recorded in Scripture, so this should come as no surprise to us. God uses Satan’s temptations to test people. This agrees perfectly with what we have already studied in Judges 2 and 3, where God used Satan’s temptations as a test. In addition, this harmonizes perfectly with the incident when Jesus was also tested through Satan’s temptations.

A true-blue non-sovereignist never sees God’s hand in anything other than the blessings he receives. A biblically-balanced sovereignist, however, sees God’s sovereignty in all things. Even Satan’s temptations are more than just temptations; they serve a higher purpose—as tests from God.

Please don’t misquote me. I never said that God and Satan are working together or that they are on the same team. I only stated that God will use Satan’s temptations as His own tests, and that is quite plain from the scripture we just read in Deuteronomy 13.

God test us, at least in part, because He wants to bless us and make us a greater blessing to others. He promotes those whom He can trust. If we can’t resist the small temptations that come with small blessings and small responsibilities, how can God trust us with bigger blessings and greater responsibilities, blessings and responsibilities that will surely attract greater temptations?

If, for example, God entrusts us with a little money, and we yield to Satan’s temptation to share none, how can God trust us with more money? He can’t, because we failed to pass His small test, administered via Satan’s temptation.

How sobering it is to realize that our reaction to temptation reveals our love, or lack of love, for God.

In the next chapter, I have more to share with you on the subject of God’s sovereignty and His restraining power over Satan. Keep reading to learn more, especially if you have objections. I hope to answer them all!

 

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God’s Tests » Chapter Seven-Two Views on God’s Sovereignty

Chapter Six-Jesus Tests the Sick

God's Tests, Chapter 6

Once we begin to understand the subject of God’s tests, we soon notice many other biblical examples of people whom He tested. Jesus, for example, sometimes tested the faith of people whom He healed.

I admit that I’m just as baffled as anyone why some people are chronically afflicted with sickness while others are not. But I do find a lot of encouragement in God’s Word for those who need healing. There are plenty of heartening healing promises and stories of people whom God healed. There are, however, also stories of sick people whose faith was tested before they were healed. It is inescapable.

Why would Jesus test someone’s faith? I suppose because there are counterfeits to authentic faith. What appears to be faith must be tested to determine if it is, in fact, authentic faith. In order for faith to be proved true, it must be tested.

Let’s consider a few incidents when Jesus clearly tested people’s faith.

We’ll begin with the well-known story of the four men who lowered their paralyzed friend through a roof. Their determined faith is inspiring.

As I’m sure you remember, those four men couldn’t find a way to get their paralyzed friend into a home where Jesus was teaching. The house was apparently packed with people. That didn’t stop them, however. They made their own way inside by digging through the roof (see Mark 2:4), which would have been flat and probably accessible by exterior stairs.

Now let’s think about what they did. Who owned that house that they dug through? If it didn’t belong to one of them, they must have realized that the person who owned it would be upset with their remodeling of the roof. Someone would have to repair it. Perhaps they assumed that once their friend was healed, the owner of the house would likely show them some mercy.

In any case, they began digging through the hardened clay as well as cutting through whatever was supporting that clay. Can you imagine the scene inside the house? Digging a hole through a hardened, clay roof is something that can’t be done cleanly and quietly. Imagine the thud of rocks or the scraping sound of some digging tools echoing through the house as the work progressed. Imagine small chunks of dried clay falling from the ceiling and landing on people’s heads. Surely the air in the house became choked with dust, perhaps to the point of people coughing and wiping it from their eyes. Surely there was a commotion, and certainly someone went outside to yell at the men who were destroying the roof! If so, they didn’t listen.

Finally the four friends created a small opening, and a shaft of light would have stretched from the ceiling to the floor—easily seen because of all the dust particles in the air.

Next they began tearing away at the edges of their hole to enlarge it to fit their friend’s stretcher. That would entail more noise and dust, as well as additional coughing and wiping dirt from eyes. By the time those four men peered over the edges of their hole to see if they were on target (above Jesus), I suspect they would have discovered a fairly hostile crowd staring back up at them! Beyond that, they knew full well that they were about to disrupt the whole meeting to an even greater degree when they lowered their friend into the room. Talk about stealing the show!

Jesus’ Reaction

What was Jesus doing all this time? The Bible doesn’t say, so we can’t be certain. I find it hard to believe, however, that He continued preaching during the commotion. One thing we know He didn’t do: He didn’t stop the men from digging a big hole in the ceiling.

No record in any of the Gospels mentions that Jesus told someone to stop the men from digging their hole, or that He Himself yelled up at the men once their hole was big enough for His voice to be carried to the roof. The Bible simply says that Jesus “saw their faith” (Mark 2:5). That’s all we know of Jesus’ reaction—He observed their faith.

Why didn’t Jesus stop the men from digging? Because in that clay, which stood between Jesus and their friend, was the proof of their faith. Every piece of clay that was torn from that roof was a testimony to the faith of those persistent men.

If the devil was the same then as he is today, then those men’s minds were assailed with doubts and discouragement as they dug: “Can’t you hear all the people coughing and choking in the room below you? Are you crazy? What if your friend isn’t healed? Then you’ll really feel stupid for this stunt!” But they would not be denied. Their faith persevered.

I like to imagine Jesus folding His arms, leaning up against the wall, and watching that hole in the ceiling grow larger and larger, as a smile grew larger and larger on His face. There is no record of Him becoming angry over the matter.

Finally, the four men succeeded in lowering their paralyzed friend on a stretcher by ropes in front of Jesus—a difficult task in itself. They believed if they could get their friend to Jesus, He would heal him. And He did.

What would have happened if, when they brought their friend to that house and found no entry, they had said, “Surely if it was God’s will for our friend to be healed, God would have made a way for us to get to Jesus”?

Had they adopted such reasoning, their friend would not have been healed, even though we know (from reading the story as it turned out) that it was Jesus’ will for the paralyzed man to be healed.

In the end, I’m sure they were all glad that they persevered, passing a difficult test.

Blind Bartimaeus

He ought to be called “Believing Bartimaeus,” in light of his tenacity to be healed.

Bartimaeus was sitting on a road outside Jericho, begging as he did every day. He heard a crowd passing by and, upon inquiry, discovered that it was Jesus who was leading the people. He must have heard about Jesus healing people, and so he immediately “began to cry out and say, ‘Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!’ ” (Mark 10:47).

Jesus, however, didn’t immediately stop or apparently take any notice. Perhaps Jesus didn’t hear him at first. I suspect, however, that Jesus must have heard him because Bartimaeus was making such a disturbance that “many were sternly telling him to be quiet” (Mark 10:48).

If Jesus did hear him, then why didn’t He immediately respond? It couldn’t have been because Jesus didn’t want to heal him, because Jesus ultimately did heal him. The only reason I can think of is because the man’s faith had to be proved, and if it was going to be proved, it had to be tested.

Bartimaeus had plenty of opportunity to be discouraged and quit. Again, the Bible says that many were sternly telling him to be quiet. For most people, such rebukes would have discouraged them enough to stop shouting for Jesus. Bartimaeus, however, would not be discouraged. Scripture says, “He kept crying out all the more, ‘Son of David, have mercy on me!’ ” (Mark 10:48, emphasis added). He would not be denied!

Have you ever felt like Jesus was ignoring you? I have. Maybe, however, we were not being ignored. Maybe we were being tested.

The Reward of Persevering Faith

Finally, Jesus stopped and called for Bartimaeus to come to Him. Note that Jesus didn’t walk over to Bartimaeus; He expected Bartimaeus to walk to Him—even though he was blind. Jesus must have been testing his faith. If Bartimaeus really believed that he’d receive his sight, he’d make it to Jesus no matter how many times he stumbled in the process.

Beyond this, Scripture tells us that when Bartimaeus realized that Jesus was calling for him, he cast aside his cloak and “jumped up” (Mark 10:50). I don’t know if it is true or not, but I’ve heard that in Jesus’ day, blind people wore a certain cloak that identified them in public as being blind. If that is true, Bartimaeus certainly demonstrated his faith when he cast aside his cloak. He knew he soon wouldn’t be needing it any longer! Also take note that he “jumped up.” That indicates that he was excited. People who have faith are excited because they are expecting good things.

Then came the final test. Bartimaeus stood in front of the One whom He believed would restore his sight. Jesus asked him what seemed to be a ridiculous question: “What do you want Me to do for you?” (Mark 10:51). Surely Jesus knew that a blind man would want to see. He was once more testing Bartimaeus’ faith. When people possess genuine faith, you can always tell by what they say.

Thankfully, Bartimaeus did not respond with, “Jesus, I humbly accept that it is Your will for me to be blind!” Rather, he said, “Rabboni, I want to regain my sight!” (Mark 10:51). There was no doubt in his heart that Jesus could and would heal him. And Jesus did.

We can rejoice in Bartimaeus’ healing, but I wonder how many other sick people cried out to Jesus at some time or another, and became discouraged when He didn’t immediately respond. I wonder how many yielded, unlike Bartimaeus, to the rebuke of bystanders?

Like Bartimaeus, we may also need to persevere in faith and pass the test of patience once we have prayed for something that God has promised us in His Word. Additionally, we can be sure that God is listening to our words to see if we really believe His words.

Ten Tenacious Lepers

Luke tells us about a time when Jesus entered a certain village, and ten leprous men cried out to Him from a distance, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” (Luke 17:13). They likely stood at a distance because, under Mosaic Law, they were not permitted to mingle with non-leprous people, lest others become infected.

When Jesus took notice of them, He shouted back, “Go show yourselves to the priests” (Luke 17:14). Again, according to Mosaic Law, a leper who was cleansed had to be examined by a priest. If the priest declared him to be clean, he could re-enter society. Those ten lepers definitely had their faith tested. They had to believe that, by the time they got to the priests, their leprosy would be gone.

Interestingly, if we look closely at the story, we realize that Jesus instructed those ten men to journey as many as fifty miles to be examined by the priests, who would have been in Jerusalem (see Luke 17:11). In other words, Jesus said to them, “You want to be healed? Okay. Take a fifty-mile hike!” Only someone who truly believed would have obeyed Jesus’ instructions. Praise God that all of them believed, and they were “healed as they went” (Luke 17:14). Delay did not mean denial, and Jesus told the former leper who returned to Him that his faith had made him well. His was a faith proved true by passing a test.

The Syrophoenician Woman

I personally can’t think of anyone with whom Jesus dealt who had more faith than the Syrophoenician woman. Jesus Himself told her that her faith was great (see Matt. 15:28). Her faith, however, was severely tested.

She followed Jesus for some time, crying out, “Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David; my daughter is cruelly demon-possessed” (Matt. 15:22).

Jesus heard her but completely ignored her. The Bible plainly says so: “But He did not answer her a word” (Matt. 15:23).

Apparently, she continued following and crying out to Jesus, because His disciples asked several times that He would send her away. They told Him that she was bothering them with all her shouting (Matt. 15:23). She would not, however, be discouraged.

According to Mark’s Gospel, Jesus escaped to a house, but this woman came into the house, and bowed in front of Him, desperately crying, “Lord, help me!” (Matt. 15:25; Mark 7:24-25).

Jesus’ reply to her seems cruel: “It is not good to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs” (Matt. 15:26). That is why I told you that, in my opinion, this woman had greater faith than anyone else with whom Jesus dealt. It’s one thing when bystanders try to discourage you—but it’s another thing when Jesus Himself discourages you!

It is quite possible, in my opinion, that Jesus ignored her, not only to test her faith, but for the same reason that God ignores the prayers of many people. He ignores their prayers because they have no claim on Him—because they’ve never believed and repented. By their sinful lifestyles, they send a message all day to God that says, “I hate You!”, but then they ask Him to do things for them!

The New Testament teaches that “the eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and His ears attend to their prayer, but the face of the Lord is against those who do evil” (1 Pet. 3:12). God’s ears are not open to the prayers of the unrepentant, and perhaps that is why Jesus initially ignored the Syrophoenician woman’s cries. He did, however, grant her request once she was at His feet admitting that she was, indeed, a “dog,” and a “dog” who was requesting crumbs from the table of her master. It appears that a sinner was making Jesus her Master, passing the first test that God is waiting for everyone to pass. Jesus then said to her, “O woman, your faith is great; be it done for you as you wish.” We next read that “her daughter was healed at once” (Matt. 15:28). She passed Jesus’ test.

We could, of course, consider other similar healing stories, such as the healing of the Nobleman’s son, the Centurion’s servant, the woman with the issue of blood, or Jairus’ daughter. All of the primary characters in those stories had to believe in spite of contrary doubts and discouragement. All had their faith tested, and all passed their tests, receiving what they believed. All of them serve as examples for us!

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God’s Tests » Chapter Six-Jesus Tests the Sick

Chapter Five-The Training of the Twelve

God's Tests, Chapter 5

 

Jesus trained His twelve disciples using the same method God used to train the people of Israel after the Exodus. That is, He often placed them in challenging situations where they had opportunities to exercise their faith. We can expect to be trained just as they were. Tests and trials are opportunities to grow. Let’s begin this chapter by taking a look at one of the “training exercises” of the twelve in Jesus’ spiritual boot camp.

Scripture records a time when Jesus once boarded a small boat with His disciples along the shore of the Sea of Galilee and said to them, “Let us go over to the other side” (Mark 4:35).

Before we continue any further in the story, let us ask: Was Jesus being led by the Holy Spirit to go to the other side of the Sea of Galilee?

I can’t imagine that He was not. Jesus lived in perfect obedience to His Father’s will. Surely He and His disciples were in God’s will to journey to the other side of the Sea of Galilee.

After embarking on their voyage, Jesus and the Twelve found themselves assaulted by a “fierce gale of wind” (Mark 4:37). Their boat began to sink as waves broke over its side. Amazingly, Jesus was asleep during all of this.

Now let us ask a second question: Did God know beforehand that gale force winds would assault the Sea of Galilee when His Son and the disciples were traveling across it?

Of course He did. If God is all-knowing, then it certainly didn’t catch Him by surprise.

And now the final question: So why did God lead His Son and the disciples to travel across the water during a time when He knew there would be a fierce gale?

Certainly it was not because He wanted them all to drown. Could the reason have been that God wanted to give them an opportunity to trust Him?

Surely if you or I had been in the boat that evening with Jesus, we would have started praising the Lord when the storm struck, trusting that we were going to make it to the other side. Right? Of course­—just as we always do when we find ourselves in trouble! The disciples, however, hadn’t yet reached our level of faith! Rather than exercise faith, they succumbed to fear and woke Jesus—who subsequently rebuked the wind and the sea.

That is not the end of the story, however. Once the winds were calm again, Jesus turned to His disciples and said, “Why are you so timid? How is it that you have no faith?” (Mark 4:40).

It’s obvious that He expected His disciples to have faith, and the reason is because He had told them it was His will to go over to the other side. They should have at least believed that they would make it to the other side, but they didn’t. They expected to die.

Here’s another question: What happens if you don’t pass one of God’s tests? The answer: You get to take it over again! The incident we’ve just been considering can be found in the fourth chapter of Mark’s Gospel. Just two chapters later, Jesus sent His disciples out on the Sea of Galilee once more to go “to the other side.” On this occasion, however, He didn’t join them. This time He wouldn’t be there to rescue them.

Perhaps you already know that the Sea of Galilee would be better described not as a sea but as a lake. It’s only about eight miles wide and fourteen miles long. From a vantage point on one of the high hills that surround it, you can see the whole body of water and almost any boats that are on it.

Sure enough, the winds began to rise on the lake, headlong against the disciples. It wasn’t a severe gale, but it was enough to challenge their little faith.

Again we should ask: Were the disciples in God’s will? Certainly they were. They were simply following the directions of Jesus, who was surely being led by the Holy Spirit. God wanted them all to go to the other side to minister to the people in that region. In fact, Jesus would shortly be traveling to the same destination, only He wouldn’t use a boat to get there. So the disciples were in God’s will, following God’s plan.

Did God know that the wind would be contrary that evening on the Sea of Galilee? Of course He did.

Row, Row, Row Your Boat…

The disciples departed on their voyage sometime in the evening (see Mark 6:46-47). So let’s say they departed at 7:00 P.M. At most, those twelve grown men had to row about five miles, perhaps even less (from Bethsaida to Capernaum).

They made progress at first, but after they had rowed about three-and-a-half miles the wind began to blow against them. Still, they kept on rowing. When Jesus came walking to them on the water, however, the Bible says that it was about the “fourth watch of the night” (Mark 6:48). That means somewhere between 3:00 and 6:00 A.M. What should have taken no more than a couple of hours took as much as eleven hours, and at least eight hours!

Now can you picture the scene in that boat? I suspect those twelve rowers were exhausted. Surely their backs, shoulders, and arms were sore. They should have been in bed hours earlier. They must have been very sleepy. They had been on the water for as many as eleven hours. And they were making no progress.

I can imagine Philip throwing down his oar and saying, “Gentlemen, this is ridiculous. Let’s just put up the sail and head back.”

Andrew: “NO WAY! We haven’t come this far to quit!”

James: “That’s right Andrew, plus Jesus told us to go to the other side. Remember how just two chapters ago we got rebuked when we panicked on this same lake?”

Peter: “Oh sure. But that was different. Jesus was with us then. This is ludicrous!”

John: “Okay, boys, now settle down. Let’s walk in love toward each other just like Jesus has been teaching us.”

Bartholomew: “Look who’s talking—the one who secretly wants to sit at Jesus’ right hand in His kingdom! And you’re telling us we should walk in love?”

Thaddaeus: “Boys, calm down! Hey, maybe we should do like Jesus did and rebuke this wind!”

Thomas: “I don’t want to be labeled a ‘doubting Thomas,’ but I seriously doubt that any of our rebukes would make a difference.”

So you get the picture. I imagine Jesus viewing the whole scene from His mountain perch and sadly shaking His head as He listened to the disciples’ arguments echo across the lake. After waiting eight to eleven hours for them to demonstrate a little faith, He sighs heavily, stands, walks down the mountain, and starts walking toward them on the water.

When the twelve disciples saw Him walking on the water, they were terrified, and who could blame them? Jesus assured them that they were not seeing a ghost, and then taught all of them a lesson about faith.

Peter said, “Lord, if it is You, command me to come to You on the water” (Matt. 14:28). Jesus replied, “Come!” and Peter stepped out onto the water. He was literally walking by faith. He knew he was in God’s will out there upon the water because he had a promise from Jesus on it.

But then he began to look at the wind and the waves. This is impossible! he thought to himself, and the Bible says that he began to sink. Mercifully, Jesus rescued him and got him safely back to the boat. As He did, however, He said to Peter, “O you of little faith, why did you doubt?” (Matt. 14:31).

Clearly, it was doubt that caused Peter to sink, and it seems reasonable to conclude that doubt is also what kept the disciples on the Sea of Galilee all night. There is no record of any attempt on their part to exercise any faith, and the Bible says that they were “straining at the oars” when Jesus came to them (Mark 6:48).

That reminds me of so many of us, myself included. We’re straining at life’s oars, trying with all our strength to overcome our difficulties. We should do what the twelve should have done. We should drop our oars (that means quitting our own striving, straining and worrying) and lift our hands in praise to God, trusting for His help. Apart from Him, we can do nothing, but through Him, we can do all things.

Other Tests

Space does not permit us to do an exhaustive study of the spiritual growth of Jesus’ twelve disciples or to look at every opportunity God gave them to stretch their faith. Let me, however, briefly point out that they had to trust God for daily provision when Jesus sent them out by twos. He didn’t allow them to take along any money or even a bag to carry basic provisions (see Matt. 10:9-10). They had to trust God every single day.

Months later, Jesus asked them, “When I sent you out without purse and bag and sandals, you did not lack anything, did you?” (Luke 22:35). They had learned to trust God to meet their needs.

The Twelve had to learn to trust God for the words they would speak because Jesus did not even permit them to prepare a defense before their accusers. They would have to trust the Holy Spirit to give them “utterance and wisdom which none of their opponents would be able to resist or refute” (Luke 21:15).

Peter once had to trust that God would supply his tax money out of a fish’s mouth (see Matt. 17:24-27).

Nine of the disciples failed to trust that Jesus had given them authority over all unclean spirits. Finding them unable to cast out a demon from a young boy, Jesus sternly rebuked them for their lack of faith (see Matt. 17:14-20).

Twice (can you guess why it was twice?) all twelve had their faith stretched to pass out a few loaves and fishes to feed a multitude. You may have noticed that when Jesus fed the five thousand (the initial time He multiplied food), He first asked Philip, “Where are we to buy bread, that these may eat?” John’s divinely-inspired commentary states, “And this He was saying to test him; for He Himself knew what He was intending to do” (John 6:5-6, emphasis added).

Concerning this same story of the feeding of the five thousand, Matthew, Mark, and Luke all record that Jesus’ disciples came to Him and requested that He send the multitude away to the surrounding villages to buy food to eat. Jesus’ response was startling: “They do not need to go away; you give them something to eat!” (Matt. 14:16). They, like Philip, were also being tested. Jesus was watching their response. Would they respond in faith or doubt?

If Jesus tells you that you can feed a multitude with a few loaves of bread and a few fish, you can. Just start distributing what you’ve got, and you’ll see a miracle. Unfortunately, the Twelve responded with unbelief: “We have here only five loaves and two fish” (Matt. 14:17).

On numerous occasions the disciples had to exercise their faith as they ministered to needy people. Jesus had commanded them: “Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out demons” (Matt. 10:8). All those things require faith.

Again, I don’t have the space to examine every incident of the apostles’ training. I just wanted you to see that God trained them in a very similar manner as He did the children of Israel. He will, of course, work with us in the same way because He is a God who tests.

Are you beginning to recognize God’s tests in your own life? They often come in the form of troubles and difficulties! (O happy day!)

 

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God’s Tests » Chapter Five-The Training of the Twelve

Chapter Four – The God Who Watches

God's Tests, Chapter 4

Your Bible is full of examples of people whom God tested. Numerous scriptures explicitly state that God “tested” certain individuals, and there is an abundance of stories that illustrate the same principle. Any time God instructed someone to do something that required faith or obedience, it could be considered a test from Him. For example, when He instructed the new generation of Israelites to silently circle Jericho for six days, their faith and obedience were tested. Praise God that on that occasion, they passed their test. (Their parents no doubt would have failed it.)

We’ve already read about God’s testing of Adam, Abraham and the nation of Israel. In this chapter, we’ll take a look at a few more examples of people whom Scripture explicitly says God tested. Our objective, of course, is to help you better understand God’s tests in your own life. Let’s start with Hezekiah.

Hezekiah’s Great Test

Hezekiah, a godly king of Judah, reigned 29 years in Jerusalem. Of him Scripture records this tribute: “He trusted in the Lord, the God of Israel; so that after him there was none like him among the kings of Judah, nor among those who were before him” (2 Kings 18:5).

During his long reign, Hezekiah faced his share of challenges, but he also witnessed God’s power, as he trusted Him for deliverance. For example, it was during Hezekiah’s reign that Assyria invaded Judah, and 185,000 Assyrian soldiers surrounded Jerusalem. Hezekiah looked to the Lord, and an angel of the Lord destroyed the Assyrian army overnight. Later, Hezekiah was divinely healed from a terminal illness, and he lived 15 years longer than he would have otherwise. After his dramatic healing, however, Hezekiah temporarily slipped spiritually:

But Hezekiah gave no return for the benefit he received, because his heart was proud; therefore wrath came on him and on Judah and Jerusalem. However, Hezekiah humbled the pride of his heart, both he and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, so that the wrath of the Lord did not come on them in the days of Hezekiah (2 Chron. 32:25-26).

Keep this incident of Hezekiah’s temporary pride in mind as we continue following his story.

When the son of the king of Babylon heard of Hezekiah’s amazing healing, he sent some envoys to Jerusalem to bring Hezekiah a present. While the envoys were there, Hezekiah vainly showed them all of his treasures: “There was nothing in his house, nor in all his dominion, that Hezekiah did not show them” (2 Kings 20:13b). Shortly thereafter, the prophet Isaiah foretold Hezekiah that the day would come when all his treasures would be carried away to Babylon.

The author of 2 Chronicles adds this interesting footnote:

And even in the matter of the envoys of the rulers of Babylon, who sent to him to inquire of the wonder that had happened in the land, God left him alone only to test him, that He might know all that was in his heart (2 Chron. 32:31, emphasis added).

Obviously, Hezekiah was susceptible to the sin of pride, so the Lord watched him as he spent time with the Babylonian envoys, “leaving him alone” so that He might know what was in Hezekiah’s heart. This is an important point. God looks at hearts by observing actions. Our actions reveal what is in our hearts.

Again we see that God’s primary purpose when He tests people is to learn what is in their hearts. In Hezekiah’s case, God wanted to know if he was still proud, so He simply watched him. And as the Babylonians were learning about Hezekiah’s riches, God was learning about Hezekiah’s hidden heart motives. I wonder what God is learning about us when He leaves us alone? God’s desire to know what is in our hearts explains why He sometimes doesn’t warn us of imminent painful and self-inflicted troubles! I confess that God has “left me alone” more than a few times.

Later Generations of Israelites Tested

During the times of the judges, we discover another biblical example of God’s testing His people. Soon after Gideon died, Israel reverted to idolatry. God said:

“Because this nation has transgressed My covenant which I commanded their fathers, and has not listened to My voice, I also will no longer drive out before them any of the nations which Joshua left when he died, in order to test Israel by them, whether they will keep the way of the Lord to walk in it as their fathers did, or not”…. Now these are the nations which the Lord left, to test Israel by them…. And they were for testing Israel, to find out if they would obey the commandments of the Lord (Judg. 2:20-22; 3:1,4, emphasis added).

The Lord permitted several heathen nations to remain within the territory of the Promised Land in order to test the people of Israel. He had commanded them not to intermarry with those nations or serve their idols. So God tested them by permitting them to be tempted. But don’t get upset with God! Unless there were some foreigners living nearby, how could He know if His people would obey Him to not serve foreign gods and intermarry with foreign nations?

Did the Israelites pass this test? You can probably predict the answer:

And the sons of Israel lived among the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites; and they took their daughters for themselves as wives, and gave their own daughters to their sons, and served their gods (Judg. 3:5-6).

Because they miserably failed their test, God disciplined the Israelites by selling them “into the hands of Cushan-rishathaim king of Mesopotamia” (Judg. 3:8). Disobedience generally doesn’t attract God’s blessing.

We’ll explore this theme in greater detail in later chapters, but I want you to see that God may test us by allowing us to be tempted (which gives us something to ponder when we recall that Jesus taught His disciples to pray, “Lead us not into temptation”).

More Tests

If you began this book thinking that God doesn’t test anyone, I hope you are convinced otherwise by now. If not, let me add a few more biblical examples that will surely convince you.

During the time of Isaiah the prophet, God said that He had tested Israel and found her wanting: “Behold, I have refined you, but not as silver; I have tested you in the furnace of affliction” (Is. 48:10, emphasis added). Times of affliction are always times of testing. Years later, the Lord said through the prophet Jeremiah:

“I, the Lord, search the heart, I test the mind, even to give to each man according to His ways, according to the fruit of his deeds” (Jer. 17:10, emphasis added).

Once God sees our actions (or reactions) He then rewards, disciplines, or punishes accordingly. Notice God indicated through Jeremiah that He does that with everyone. God is a testing God.

Predicting a remnant who would one day serve Him, the Lord said through the prophet Zechariah:

And I will bring the third part through the fire, refine them as silver is refined, and test them as gold is tested. They will call on My name, and I will answer them; I will say, “They are My people,” and they will say, “The Lord is my God” (Zech. 13:9, emphasis added).

Here again is the theme of testing through affliction. Like gold and silver are refined in the fire, so affliction reveals the impurities in us. I once heard someone say that the silversmith knows that his silver has been sufficiently refined when he can see his reflection in it. What a good analogy of our refining!

David affirmed that God tests everyone in Psalm 11:

The Lord is in His holy temple, the Lord’s throne is in heaven; His eyes behold, His eyelids test the sons of men. The Lord tests the righteous and the wicked (Ps. 11:4-5a, emphasis added).

Anyone who is honest with the Bible will have to agree that God tests everyone. And we still have much more to read in Scripture about God’s testing Joseph, David, Philip, and Paul. (In the appendix, I’ve listed every scripture that mentions God’s testing of people.)

Now let’s consider a couple of examples of biblical individuals whom God obviously tested although the Bible doesn’t explicitly say so by using the actual word test.

Solomon’s Test

Solomon’s motives were tested when the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Ask what you wish Me to give you” (1 Kings 3:5). Solomon asked for wisdom to rule Israel wisely, and God was pleased with his request:

Because you have asked this thing and not asked for yourself long life, nor have asked riches for yourself, nor have you asked for the life of your enemies, but have asked for yourself discernment to understand justice, behold, I have done according to your words. Behold, I have given you a wise and discerning heart, so that there has been no one like you before you, nor shall one like you arise after you. And I have also given you what you have not asked, both riches and honor, so that there will not be any among the kings like you all your days” (1 Kings 3:11-13).

Solomon’s aspiration was not the accumulation of money, living a long life, or receiving the honor due a king; nor was he preoccupied with revenge. He wanted to serve. Jesus said that if we want to be great, we should become servants of all (see Matt. 20:26). Because Solomon had a servant’s heart, God made him great. Only a servant can be trusted to be a godly leader.

A New Testament counterpart to Solomon’s story is found in Matthew’s Gospel. There Jesus said, “But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added to you” (Matt. 6:33). What are you living for? The accumulation of more money? Prestige? Popularity? Power? Or are you living to further God’s kingdom upon this earth and to please Him? You may have never searched your heart to answer those questions honestly, but you can be sure that God already knows the answer, because you’ve been tested.

A Few Others…

If we wanted to we could look at the tests of many other Bible characters—people like Deborah, Gideon, Samson, Elijah, Elisha, Jehoshaphat, Ezra, Nehemiah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and so on. We would find some who passed their tests and others who failed. Even Jesus Himself was tested:

Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil (Matt. 4:1, emphasis added).

The Holy Spirit led Jesus into the wilderness specifically that He might be tempted by the devil. As we’ve already learned, God tested Israel in the same manner when He permitted them to be tempted (in Judges 2 and 3). Here again God used Satan’s temptations as a test. Jesus was “tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin” (Heb. 4:15).

Jesus could only be fully qualified to be our Savior if He was sinless. How could He possibly be declared sinless unless He had been tempted in every way? Praise God that Jesus passed every test—the only person ever to do so.

Faith Without a Test is Not Faith at All

Actually, there is no such thing as faith without a test. Faith “is the conviction of things not seen” (Heb. 11:1). Faith means trusting God’s promises in spite of what we see or how we feel or what our circumstances seem like. Faith means disregarding the testimony of our senses and holding fast to God’s promises. If you are going to exercise your faith, it will be tested.

Jesus instructed us to “believe we receive when we pray,” and if we will, He promised that we will have our request (see Mark 11:24). But answers to prayers aren’t always instant, are they? We must often stand in faith for a length of time, believing God has answered our prayer before we actually see the answer. There is always a time when our faith is tested.

“Without faith it is impossible to please God” (Heb. 11:6). Without tests, however, it is impossible to exercise faith because faith is not needed for that which can be seen.

What takes the highest priority in your life? Is it what you see with your eyes and hear with your ears, or God’s eternal Word? God’s Word should be our ultimate source of truth. We should judge everything that comes into our minds with the question, “Does that agree with what God has said?” If it doesn’t, then it’s an imagination we need to “cast down” (see 2 Cor. 10:5, KJV).

The Bible promises, “Blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord” (Jer. 17:7). If you don’t believe that, don’t expect to be blessed!

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God’s Tests » Chapter Four – The God Who Watches

Chapter Three – Midnight Praise

God's Tests, Chapter 3

For I do not want you to be unaware, brethren, that our fathers were all under the cloud, and all passed through the sea; and all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea; and all ate the same spiritual food; and all drank the same spiritual drink…. Nevertheless, with most of them God was not well-pleased; for they were laid low in the wilderness. Now these things happened as examples for us, that we should not crave evil things, as they also craved. And do not be idolaters, as some of them were…. Nor let us act immorally, as some of them did, and twenty-three thousand fell in one day. Nor let us try the Lord, as some of them did, and were destroyed by the serpents. Nor grumble, as some of them did, and were destroyed by the destroyer. Now these things happened to them as an example, and they were written for our instruction… (1 Cor. 10:1-11).

It’s not up for debate. According to Paul, the biblical stories about the Israelites have been preserved for our benefit, that we might not follow their poor example. The “congregation in the wilderness” (Acts 7:38) failed test after test, and when they ultimately believed the reports of ten doubt-filled spies, God gave them up as hopeless. Because of their unbelief, they failed to enter the Promised Land (see Heb. 3:19). It is a tragic story indeed.

I often think of the wandering Israelites when I hear someone say, “If God wants me to have something, He’ll just give it to me” That is obviously an untrue conclusion. God wanted the Israelites to possess the land of Canaan, but they didn’t. Whether or not they possessed their inheritance ultimately depended on them, not God. But they never did learn to trust Him. Rather, they always “leaned on their own understanding” Consequently, they wandered in the wilderness for forty years—where the majority eventually died. Then God began working with the new generation. (And they were obviously tested, for example, at Jericho.)

You and I certainly don’t want to follow the poor example of that first generation of Israelites, but unfortunately, too many of us are. We’re always grumbling and complaining about the problems we face even though our Bibles tell us that “God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose” (Rom. 8:28). We don’t trust God in the midst of difficulties even though we know He loves us dearly. Our faith falters. As a result, we also fail to enter our “Promised Land,” never experiencing the Lord’s fullest blessing on our lives, and never becoming the ministers of His blessings to others that He desires for us.

Through the apostle James, our Lord admonishes us:

Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect result, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing (Jas. 1:2-4).

One translation of this verse says that when we encounter difficulties, we should “welcome them as friends” How many of us are doing that? When a trial comes knocking at our doors, do we say, “Praise the Lord! HELLO, MR. TRIAL! You arrive as an opportunity for me to prove God’s promises are true, and once you’re gone, I’ll be a better person for having had you around! My faith will be even stronger; I’ll have a good testimony to share with others; and I’ll be even closer to being ‘perfect and complete, lacking in nothing’!”?

Difficulties assail us all, but it is only those who have faith in God who receive the reward of their faith. Just ask any Israelite. The person who doesn’t trust the promises of God may never find deliverance from his situation—just like the Israelites who died in the desert.

The Majority is Not Always Right

The people of Israel essentially failed every test they faced in the wilderness, culminating with their refusal to enter the Promised Land because they feared the Canaanites. They’d heard that there were “giants in the land,” and they felt like grasshoppers.

What they should have done, however, was to look not at the size of a few overgrown Canaanites but at the size of God. The Canaanites would then have looked like ants. Because the Israelites embraced the wrong perspective, they all eventually perished in the wilderness. Everyone, that is, except Joshua and Caleb, the only two men who believed that God’s promise was more trustworthy than their circumstances. Eventually, they possessed the land. The lesson, written for our benefit, is so obvious that only a theologian could miss it! Believers are blessed! Doubters aren’t.

“I don’t like that kind of teaching!” some will say. The reason is because they don’t want to take responsibility for their failures. They would rather live the lie that it is God’s will for them to remain in the wilderness.

Sometimes those of us who are disregarding our circumstances and trusting God’s Word feel like we are in a minority, and we are. Think about Joshua and Caleb. They were the only two out of more than a million others. Personally, however, I’d rather be classified with the minority who are living in the land that flows with milk and honey than with the majority whose bones are six feet under!

Paul and Silas Under Fire

Prayers of grumbling and complaint rarely receive a favorable answer, but there is something about rejoicing and praising that catches God’s attention. Why is that? Because God responds to faith, and faith is expressed through joy. A wonderful example of this principle is found in the sixteenth chapter of Acts. Allow me to recount the story.

Paul and Silas were doing their best to determine God’s leading during their second missionary journey when Paul received a vision one night. In that vision he saw a man in Macedonia (modern Greece) calling out to him, “Come over to Macedonia and help us” (Acts 16:9). So he and Silas set sail for Macedonia, and upon their arrival first preached the gospel in a city named Philippi.

Everything went well at first—a woman named Lydia was saved, and a young girl was dramatically delivered from a demon. Then trouble began. Paul and Silas soon found themselves in chains, in prison, after having been beaten with rods by the local Roman authorities.

Now before we continue with the story, let’s ask ourselves some questions.

First question: Who was it that led Paul and Silas to Philippi?

Answer: It was God Himself.

Second question: Did God know beforehand that Paul and Silas would be beaten and incarcerated?

Answer: Of course He did. Therefore, Paul and Silas could rest in God’s guidance and His sovereignty. They knew they were in God’s will. (It’s a little different when you are out of God’s will and find yourself in jail. Then the first thing you need to do is repent.)

Third question: What was Paul and Silas’ response to their adversity?

Answer: At midnight, they were praying and singing hymns of praise to God!

Fourth and final question: What happened then?

Answer: Suddenly there was a great earthquake, and every prisoner’s chains were unfastened. The unsaved jailer almost committed suicide, but he was gloriously saved along with his whole family. A few hours later, that newly born-again jailer was serving Paul and Silas a hot meal in his own home. Glory be!

I’m afraid that many of us, had we been Paul and Silas, might have acted differently, and the story might have had a different ending. Instead of praising God, we’d be grumbling to the jailer about the room temperature and the food. The jailer would have concluded that Christians are no different than anyone else. During our prayers, we’d be asking God why He didn’t love us anymore.

Paul and Silas, however, had faith in God.

Did they have faith that God was going to deliver them from prison? No, they couldn’t have faith for that because God has never promised us that we will always be delivered from the persecution we suffer. They could, however, at least believe that “all things work together for good” (Rom. 8:28), because they knew they were in the center of God’s will and that He loved them.

We should follow their good example. It was while incarcerated that Paul wrote the famous words, “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice!” (Phil. 4:4).

Faith that Overcomes

Before we close this chapter I’d like to consider one final example of a man who knew what to do when trouble arose. He didn’t have a last name, but his first name was David, and he authored numerous psalms during tough times. We could look at many examples of his faith during trials, but let’s just survey Psalm 3. David wrote it when he was running for his life from his own son, Absalom. (Talk about having a bad day!)

O Lord, how my adversaries have increased! Many are rising up against me. Many are saying of my soul, “There is no deliverance for him in God” (Ps. 3:1-2).

So there you have the problem stated. Many of us would have ended our prayer right there with, “In Jesus’ name, Amen” David, however, knew better.

But [that means there is something else to consider besides the problem] Thou, O Lord, art a shield about me [that means those folks who are out to get me aren’t going to get me], my glory, and the One who lifts my head. I was crying to the Lord with my voice, and He answered me [Notice he didn’t say, “I sure do hope He heard me”] from His holy mountain. I lay down and slept [There’s no sense staying awake all night and fretting]; I awoke, for the Lord sustains me [My adversaries didn’t get me while I was sleeping because God was watching over me]. I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people who have set themselves against me round about [Why should I be afraid of all of them if God is on my side?]. Arise, O Lord; save me, O my God! For Thou hast smitten all my enemies on the cheek [My faith is strong because I’ve seen you deliver me from my enemies before]; Thou hast shattered the teeth of the wicked. Salvation belongs to the Lord; and blessing be upon Thy people! (Ps. 3:3-8).

Take note that there are no lines in Psalm 3 that read, “God, I know that Thou art sovereign, and so I accept this trouble as from Thine dear hand. I do not understand why Thou wouldst want a rebellious teenager to kill me and take my throne, but Your ways are higher than my ways. So I humbly accept this cross that Thou must want me to bear” (Always beware when you hear a “King James prayer”) It’s always easier to be a fatalist than a believer.

David was no fatalist. He trusted God for his deliverance. And he was delivered, as we know from reading the details of the trial he was facing in 2 Samuel 15.

If you want the kind of results that David enjoyed, you’ll have to trust God like he did. So don’t forget: Doubters are stressed; believers are blessed. Doubts pout, but faith shouts!

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God’s Tests » Chapter Three – Midnight Praise