Victor Van Heerden
Member
- Joined
- Mar 22, 2018
- Messages
- 252
God’s ways are not our ways - Don’t read into the Bible your own desires and sensibilities!
Isaiah 55:8 "For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways," declares the LORD.
Often in our eagerness to stand in and protect God from a perceived slight on His divine character by non Christians we can sometimes read into the debate our own desires. For instance: "What kind of God will invent and create the largest torture chamber in the universe called hell, to incinerate for eternity, billions of fallen angels, their evil leader and billions of unbelievers?" Or " Was God wrong to demand genocide or not when he commanded the Israelite to totally annihilate their enemies, men, woman, children and even animals"? Or "Did God demand human sacrifice or not? Did God approve of slavery, polygamy or not, homosexuality, abortion, and other social issues etc"?
Christians are often quick to come to God’s rescue to find counter-verses to argue that God shares our modern sensibilities on these matters. This is understandable because no believer would want to be on the wrong side of moral issues. But let God and the Bible speak for itself. There are sixty six books of the Bible coming from many Middle Eastern authors who lived thousands of years ago and where from different primitive cultures and with different ideas of God to our modern western ideas.
We cannot presuppose God or His Word, because after all His is God and the Bible is His Word. He is sovereign and in charge. He has not fallen off His throne and made someone else in charge. We need to remember who is the boss so to speak and never forget that God is in charge and that we are not empowered to judge him - whether the problem is ambiguity or contradictions in the Bible or evil in the world, especially when we can’t even understand the situation enough to convict him.
Bottom line – we are His Creation and His children, who are we to say anything to the potter or our Father when we are the clay. “But now, O Lord, You are our Father; we are the clay, and You our potter; and all we are the work of Your hand.” (Isaiah 64:8)
Often in our eagerness to stand in and protect God from a perceived slight on His divine character by non Christians we can sometimes read into the debate our own desires. For instance: "What kind of God will invent and create the largest torture chamber in the universe called hell, to incinerate for eternity, billions of fallen angels, their evil leader and billions of unbelievers?" Or " Was God wrong to demand genocide or not when he commanded the Israelite to totally annihilate their enemies, men, woman, children and even animals"? Or "Did God demand human sacrifice or not? Did God approve of slavery, polygamy or not, homosexuality, abortion, and other social issues etc"?
Christians are often quick to come to God’s rescue to find counter-verses to argue that God shares our modern sensibilities on these matters. This is understandable because no believer would want to be on the wrong side of moral issues. But let God and the Bible speak for itself. There are sixty six books of the Bible coming from many Middle Eastern authors who lived thousands of years ago and where from different primitive cultures and with different ideas of God to our modern western ideas.
We cannot presuppose God or His Word, because after all His is God and the Bible is His Word. He is sovereign and in charge. He has not fallen off His throne and made someone else in charge. We need to remember who is the boss so to speak and never forget that God is in charge and that we are not empowered to judge him - whether the problem is ambiguity or contradictions in the Bible or evil in the world, especially when we can’t even understand the situation enough to convict him.
Bottom line – we are His Creation and His children, who are we to say anything to the potter or our Father when we are the clay. “But now, O Lord, You are our Father; we are the clay, and You our potter; and all we are the work of Your hand.” (Isaiah 64:8)