Why God Has Never Taken a Risk


John Piper (also, watch the 3-minute video here):

Alan Hirsch and Michael Frost write in The Faith of Leap:

It seems correct to say that God took something of a risk in handing over his mission to the all-too-sinful human beings who were his original disciples—and all the sinful disciples beyond them. We wonder what Jesus must have been thinking on the cross, when all but a few powerless women had completely abandoned him. Did he wonder if love alone was enough to draw them back to discipleship? The noncoercive love of the cross necessitated a genuinely human response of willing obedience from his disciples. Given our predispositions to rebellion and idolatry, it is entirely conceivable that history could have gone in a completely different, indeed totally disastrous, direction if the original disciples hadn’t plucked up the internal courage to follow Jesus no matter where. (36–37, Locations 464)

The view of God embodied in this quote from Hirsch and Frost is

  1. false to the Scriptures;
  2. built on a false philosophical presupposition;
  3. damaging to the mission of Christ in the world;
  4. and belittling to the glory of God.

1) False to the Scriptures

Their view of God and Jesus is that they are so little in charge of the success of the Great Commission that “it is entirely conceivable that history could have gone in a completely different, indeed totally disastrous, direction if the original disciples hadn’t plucked up the internal courage to follow Jesus no matter where.”

This is false. God is fully in control of his mission on earth: a) Jesus did not wonder if it would succeed; b) God can be utterly counted on to finish it, and c) every person ordained to eternal life will be drawn into the mission.

a) Jesus did not wonder if the mission would succeed.

He promised: “This gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come” (Matthew 24:14).

He has all authority and will be with us to the end (Matthew 28:1820). And he said, with this absolute authority, “I will build my church, and the gates of the hell shall not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18). He is not uncertain of the success of his mission. He will do it.

b) God accomplishes all his purposes in the mission.

“I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose’” (Isaiah 46:9–10).

When a disciple “plucks up the internal courage to follow Jesus,” it is God who put it there. “By the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me” (1 Corinthians 15:10).

When missionaries accomplish great things for Christ they say, “I will not venture to speak of anything except what Christ has accomplished through me to bring the Gentiles to obedience — by word and deed” (Romans 15:18).

No saint will say in heaven: The mission succeeded because my will was decisive in taking risks and making sacrifices. Rather, the saints will say, “God equipped us with everything good that we might do his will, working in us that which is pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever” (Hebrews 13:21).

c) There was not the slightest chance that the mission of God could have gone in a “disastrous direction,” that is, could have failed.

When all gospel influences have come into a person’s life, the decisive word over their lives is the word of Luke after Paul’s preaching in Acts 13:48: “As many as were appointed to eternal life believed” (Acts 13:48).

2) Built on a false philosophical presupposition

Their false presupposition is that for God’s love to be genuine (“noncoercive”) and for humans to be humans, man’s will must be ultimately decisive in bringing about obedience to the mission. If God’s will were ultimately decisive, then his love would not be genuine but coercive, and humans would not be humans but (presumably) robots.

They say, “There were no guarantees that [the disciples] would make the right choices. If this were not the case, then we are not human precisely at the point where we must be most completely human” (37).

The reason I call this a philosophical presupposition is that it does not come from the Bible, but from the human mind. Nowhere does the Bible say or imply that ultimate human self-determination is the prerequisite for human responsibility or divine love. That presupposition is an alien idea.

What the Bible does show over and over is that God’s will is decisive in all affairs (Daniel 4:35), and humans are truly responsible and God is truly loving and just. The Bible lets this paradox stand. So should we.

3) Damaging to the mission of Christ in the world

When they imply that the success of the mission depends decisively on disciples “plucking up internal courage to follow Jesus,” they rob the mission of its most precious and empowering promises.

Jesus empowers us for risk and sacrifice by purchasing on the cross the promises of the new covenant. “I will make with them an everlasting covenant, that I will not turn away from doing good to them. And I will put the fear of me in their hearts, that they may not turn from me.” (Jeremiah 32:40).

How do I know that, if I follow him to the riskiest place, I will be able to persevere in faith? Hirsch and Frost lay the burden of perseverance decisively on us. God lays it on the blood-bought “everlasting covenant.”

The mission is damaged where the promises of God’s decisively enabling grace are denied.

4) Belittling to the glory of God

When the success of God’s mission is made to depend decisively on humans, humans get the decisive glory. But where all is made to depend divisively on God, God gets the glory.

Whoever serves, [let him serve] as one who serves by the strength that God supplies — in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ (1 Peter 4:11).

[God works] in us that which is pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen (Hebrews 13:21).

[I pray that you will be] filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ, to the glory and praise of God (Philippians 1:11).

It is hard to exaggerate how important it is for the mission of the church, in reaching the unreached peoples of the world, to have a fully biblical vision of the greatness and the sovereignty and the glory of God. Knowing him as he really is, as revealed in the Bible, is the foundation of mission-finishing risk and sacrifice.

Praying in Jesus’ Name


From John Piper:

Here’s what is present when we kneel to pray in Jesus’ name:

    1. God the Father on his throne sovereign over the universe, with a welcoming, countenance focused on us.

    2. God the Son in his high priestly role, standing as advocate before the throne as a Lamb that was slain with perfect righteousness and with all God’s promises purchased fully in his hand interceding for us.

    3. God the Spirit within us, having already inclined us to pray, poised to guide our prayers, put to death our sins, awaken our faith, illumine God’s word, and produce his fruit.

    4. The word of God open before us, inspired by God, alive with penetrating power for conviction of sin and indomitable hope, revealing the Father, the Son, and the Spirit to our souls, shaping and guiding our prayers after God’s will.

    5. Our sin forgiven, but humbling us to need and love our merciful saving God.

    6. God’s grace like a great rainbow of hope arcing from the throne to our soul.

    7. Our will captured by these realities, moving words (or only groans) up out of our mind (or only heart) to God with praise and thanks and confession and requests.

 

In The Midst Of Temptation


No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.

1 Corinthians 10:13

God…

“is faithful.”

“will not let you be tempted beyond your ability.”

“will provide a way of escape.”

will cause you “to endure it.”

The Holiness of God Imagined


Picture this:  In front of you are the towering heights of Mt. Everest.  The peak is so high that its zenith is hidden by the clouds.  Beside Everest, you see the expanse of the lowest point in the world, Death Valley.  Comparing one to the other, the differences are obvious.  Any person standing in front of these two wonders could point to the noticeable variations.

Now, imagine you are viewing Earth from the moon.  You look back towards the “pale blue dot” picking out the seas, land masses, and clouds.  But your ability to process depth has vanished.  Before you were able to explicitly determine the huge discrepancies between Mt. Everest and Death Valley.  However, you are now comparing them from a new vantage point.  Instead of comparing them by the characteristics of one another, you have taken on a completely new perspective.  From this new perspective, there is little difference between the two.  In fact, if you didn’t know any better, you’d say they were the same height.

Where am I going with all of this?  Well, think of this picture in relation to your knowledge about God and man.  How does God view my sin?  When I think of my sins, do I compare my “goodness” to my brother or to God?  In the final analysis, is my sin very different from my brother’s?

The illustration brings to light the answers to these questions.  Man inherently measures himself against his brother.  If I sin, I may say, “Well, my sin isn’t as bad as his sin so I’m okay.”  This kind of thinking brings about many problems, but the main issue is that a false sense of holiness develops.  Instead of looking to a truly holy being to be the objective standard for holiness, I am comparing myself to a mere human – sinful and all.  What happens is that Everests and Death Valleys are formed.  Good and bad are defined simply upon human morality.

The second we change the perspective – the vantage point – from man to God, everything changes.  Now, if my morality is compared to God’s instead of my brother’s, I fall well short.  God’s holiness makes a clean sweep over humanity and says, “No one is good.”  If I thought myself to be an Everest, I am cut down to the size of a Death Valley.  From God’s sight, and in reality, “all have sinned, and fall short of his glory.”  All are made equal in the sight of true holiness.

This illustration is not my own.  It was adapted from a message I heard from Pastor Phil Thorne.

The Simplicity of God


From Kevin DeYoung:

“We all believe in our hearts and confess with our mouths,” says the Belgic Confession (1561), “that there is a single and simple spiritual being, whom we call God” (Article 1).

God is simple.

This is an important truth few Christians have thought about. By “simple” I don’t mean God is dim-witted. Nor do I mean that God is easy to understand. Simple, as a divine attribute, is the opposite of composite. The simplicity of God means God is not made up of goodness, mercy, justice, and power. He is goodness, mercy, justice, and power. Every attribute of God is identical with his essence.

So you cannot say love is more central to God than sovereignty, or vice-versa. Christians make this mistake all the time. You’ll hear people say, “God may have justice or wrath, but he is love.” The implication: love is more central to the nature of God. But God is a simple being, not a composite being. So he is righteousness in the same way he is love.

Herman Bavinck explains:

The simplicity is of great importance, nevertheless, for our understanding of God. It is not only taught in Scripture (where God is called “light,” “life,” and “love”) but also automatically follows from the idea of God and is necessarily implied in other attributes. Simplicity here is the antonym of “compounded.” If God is composed of parts, like a body, or composed of genus (class) and differentiae (attributes of different species belonging to the same genus), substance and accidents, matter and form, potentiality and actuality, essence and existence, then his perfection, oneness, independence, and immutability cannot be maintained.Reformed Dogmatics, Volume 2, 176.

In other words, the simplicity of God not only prevents us from ranking certain attributes higher than others, it allows God to have “a distinct and infinite life of his own within himself” (177). He is not an abstract Absolute Idea who happens to have love, wisdom, and holiness, as if we first conceive of a being called God and then relate qualities to him. Rather, God in his very essence, within himself and by himself, is love, wisdom, and holiness. God is whatever he has, for he has nothing that he is not.

So remember, “God is simple.” His attributes do not stick to him; he is what they are.

Notes from Sunday’s lesson on Angels & Demons


SixTen:  Below are Nate’s notes from this past Sunday’s (3/14/10) lesson:

  1. Angels: the created, morally discerning, strong spirit-hosts of heaven
    1. Created to worship God (Hebrews 1:6, Revelation 4:6bff, 5:11-12)
    2. Created to serve God (Psalm 103:20-21)
    3. Created to minister to us (Psalm 91:11-12, Hebrews 1:14)
    4. Angels long to look into our salvation (1 Peter 1:10-12)
    5. Angels may sometimes visit us (Hebrews 13:2) but should never be worshipped by us (Revelation 19:10)
    6. Angels will accompany Jesus in His judgment (Matthew 25:31-33)
    7. Angels can be terrifying (Luke 2:9)
    8. “Angels” are in the hand of Jesus (Revelation 1:20, 22:16)
    9. Angels are given enormous tasks (Genesis 19:1, Luke 1:26ff, 2:10, Matthew 13:40-43, Revelation 5:2, Luke 22:43, etc.)

Has the Lord opened your eyes to an angel (Numbers 22:31)?

  1. Demons: fallen angels
    1. Satan is their Chief: he is a tempter (Luke 4:6-7), an accuser (Job 1:11, 2:4), a murderer, a liar (John 8:44), and a deceiver (2 Cor. 11:3)
    2. Satan blinds humanity (2 Corinthians 4:4)
    3. We can oblige Satan (Ephesians 4:25-28)
    4. We can spot Satan (1 Peter 5:8-9)
    5. We can live without fear of Satan (1 John 4:4)
    6. We can resist Satan (James 4:7)
    7. We can stand against Satan (Ephesians 6:10ff)
    8. Demons were cast out of heaven for having sinned (2 Peter 2:4)
    9. Demons will ultimately be judged and sentenced forever (Jude 6)
  1. God
    1. Disarms all demons by the Cross (Colossians 2:15)
    2. Commands ALL angels (Psalm 103:20-21), even demons (1 Kings 22:19-23) and Satan Himself (Job 1:12, 2:6).
    3. Helps us rather than Angels (Hebrews 2:16)
    4. Damns all angels who compromise His GRACE to us (Galatians 1:6-10)
    5. Binds us to Himself in Christ, no matter the angels (Romans 8:38-39)

Extras:

  1. There is a difference between “the angel of the Lord” (OT) and “an angel of the Lord” (NT).
  2. Our LOVE must supersede “the speech of angels” (1 Corinthians 13:1)

Thirsting for God


From Afterall.net:

“Not twenty centuries and more have been able to darken the golden glow of the immortal song that has come to us in the forty-second Psalm… in which the homesickness of our human heart cries after the Source of our life. What here grips so mightily is the ardent fervor that breathes throughout this whole psalm, the passionate outpouring of soul… In this psalm the heart itself pushes and drives. It is not from without but from the inner chamber of the heart that the homesickness after the living God irresistibly wells upward… “My soul pants, yea, thirsts after the living God.” Not after Creed regarding God, not after an idea of God, not after a remembrance of God, not after a Divine Majesty, that, far removed from the soul, stands over against it as a God in words or in phrases, but after God Himself, after God in His holy outpouring of strength and grace, after God Who is alive, Who… in holy exhibition of love reveals Himself to you and in you as the living God. You feel that all learning falls away, all dogma, all formulas, everything that is external and abstract, everything that exhausts itself in words… It is not your idea, not your understanding, not your thinking, not your reasoning, not even your profession of faith, that here can quench the thirst. The home-sickness goes out after God Himself… it is not the name of God but God Himself whom your soul desires and cannot do without.”

-Abraham Kuyper TO BE NEAR UNTO GOD, PP. 671-675

The Power of Words


From the Westminster Confession of Faith: [Read more...]