As you’ve noticed here lately, I’ve taken to publishing some devotionals from some of the great men of God from the past. The reason I’ve done this is because so much of what I see and hear today from christians and from the pulpits is a message contrary to who God is and what He expects from His children. We live in a country that has taken to speaking lies and believing lies with little evaluation, with little thought, with little desire to prayerfully and diligently seek truth above all else. None of us, including ME, has the corner market on truth or has a perfect understanding of it, and thus is in no position to state anything unequivocally as being 100% true. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve stated something as true, and been surprised and even shocked when other people didn’t agree with me. Since then I’ve learned that it’s the height of arrogance for any human being, ME, to say anything in such a way that precludes my being wrong in any way, shape, or form. I am incapable of living or presenting truth without error. If I could do that then I would be sitting at the right hand of God intercessing and advocating for you instead of sitting here in front of my computer typing these words.
Am I a man of truth? Am I a man of love? As much as my heart and limited understanding can comprehend of what it is to be truthful and loving I am. My ability to know, to understand, to live my life with truth and love expands daily, and sometimes minute by minute. After 49 years of living on this earth, I can tell you that with all I’ve learned about truth and love I have no doubt that I’ve barely scratched the surface of either of those subjects. There is a depth to love, to truth, that no human being born of sinful flesh will ever be able to fully comprehend while on this earth. To fully know their depth would be to know God in all of His glory and Holiness, and as created beings whether on this earth, or in Heaven, I don’t believe that we shall ever know all there is to know of Him.
There are many things about God that I don’t understand. There are complexities, mysteries, things that are hard to reconcile, and even things that seem contradictory, but my lack of understanding in no way impinges upon my faith or belief in God, or in the fact that His son, Jesus, died for me. To deny, mistrust, doubt and excuse ourselves and our behavior in light of who God is, and His expectations simply because we don’t have full understanding of Him reveals our sinfulness in all of its’ conceit and ignorance.
Of late, questions about God’s sovereignty, and the ways and means by which he accomplishes His will both in the world, and in our lives have come before me. I’ve been asked heart-rending questions that are extremely difficult to answer, and sadly can’t be answered definitively; at least not by me. I will address these issues in relation to my own life and the limited understanding which I possess in the hope that any misunderstandings can be cleared up.
Some of you know from reading past posts that I haven’t always lived what I refer to as a clean life though I know that no life is clean. At different points in my life I’ve been the victim of abuse, and an abuser of drugs and alcohol. I’ve been a thief, a liar, a drunk. I’ve been divorced twice, and married three times. I’m crippled and live with chronic pain. I don’t say this with any sense of pride, or as in look at me. The only reason I mention these things is in order to understand what I’m going to say you have to know where I came from and who I was.
As a child, my mother used to beat me with anything she could lay a hand on; she burned me with cigarettes, she cussed me, she told me that if she knew what I was going to be like she would have had an abortion. Horrible things. How do you reconcile going through that with a loving God, with a God who is sovereign? How could a loving God allow me to suffer, to experience shame and degradation, humiliation, to live in fear, and to carry so much anger and hate that I wanted to kill? How could He see me going through those things and do nothing? Why didn’t He stop the bullying I experienced at school? Those are hard questions. What do you say to someone who has gone through horrific circumstances or is going through them?
Did God cause my mother to beat me? Does He cause evil? No. Absolutely not! Did He give His consent? No. Did He allow it? Yes. Words are so imperfect, so flimsy, when it comes to accurately depicting or describing feelings and thoughts, and when it comes to God and the things of God words are inordinately clumsy. Allowing doesn’t mean consenting to, agreeing with, or promoting because. Permitting doesn’t mean condoning. The fact that God allows evil, that He permits it’s existence in no way means that He condones or gives His consent of it. When I look back on my childhood, though I couldn’t see it then, I see now that He was with me all along. I know He cried tears as I shed them, that His heart was breaking even as mine was, that He burned with anger even as I did. Nor was He inactive during that time. He was there in my pastor who cried with me, and prayed with me. He was there in my grandmother who showered love on me, in my neighbors, in my school teachers, in so many people, in so many places. It wasn’t that He wasn’t there. I just couldn’t see Him because someone else had turned out the light.
Something that concerns me is the prevalence of false teaching in our society, especially from the pulpits of so many churches, and even from those who, as well-meaning as they are, promote falsehood by only adhering to one side of a two-sided coin. To speak of God as love, without speaking of His holiness, His justice, His righteous anger toward sin is to pervert the truth of God. God is love. This is absolutely true. Yet, He is also Holy, Just, and Perfect To teach that God is love without teaching that He is Holy, that He hates evil, and that sin will be punished is to promote falsehood and gives people a false sense of security. Our churches and our christian witness lost its influence when we quit using the words Jesus Christ, sin, redemption, the cross, the blood, forgiveness, sanctification, justification, righteousness, and holiness, and started using pop-psychology, and feel-good theology in their place.
There have been instances when through a poor choice of words I have hurt and offended people. For those who have been hurt or felt pain through something I’ve said or written, I’m deeply sorry. It grieves me to think that I’ve caused anyone pain, and I ask that you please forgive me. Please remember that sometimes we read things into other people’s writing that aren’t there simply because we view everything through the lens of our own education, life experience, and knowledge of God through His word.
At no time, that I can remember, have I ever stated or implied in one of my posts that I felt someone was being deceived. To say that someone is being deceived is a judgment best left to God and to Him alone. I find myself being guilty of something I told myself I wouldn’t do, and hadn’t done until recently, which is to quote scripture in order to prove a point. It’s not that I don’t believe that the Bible is the infallible word of God because I do, but any and most scriptures can be used in such a way as to validate an opinion, and to make the word of God say anything we want it to say. To quote a scripture is one thing, but to tell someone this is what it means when proving a point is to place myself in the position of the Holy Spirit. I am deeply ashamed of myself for doing this, and won’t do so again.
There is much that I don’t understand, and I’ve made many mistakes, but I believe that the Bible is the revelation of God’s love for man, ME, through the life of His Son, Jesus Christ. I believe we’re to love God, to love each other, and to promote that love to others through our expression of the love He gave us. I think it’s out-of-place and detrimental to the cause of Christ to debate, argue, and expound differences of opinion and draw focus to what separates christians rather than on what draws us together.
Please, let’s remember that love encourages and builds people up. It doesn’t tear people down, or makes others doubt themselves. If we’re concerned about others let us pray for them, let us ask the Holy Spirit to guide them, let us come along side of them in love. It’s God’s job to change the hearts of people. It’s our job to just love the hearts they have.
A Thought on Clarification and God
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