"God's good also includes when our own failings create complications and trouble. Abraham's failings certainly did. We would expect God to punish Abraham for his cowardice, or at least let him suffer for it. It would only be just. That's right. It would only be just; not gracious and not loving. Our heavenly Father does not return justice to us. We could not bear it. Only One ever has. For the sake of that One, our God returns good for sin and moral cowardice. He is gracious to those who, like Abraham, falter when trying to feel their own way through the dark. He loves those whom He has called even when they are groping along a path away from the light of the world."
EVEN FROM THEIR FAILINGS
"The saints of the Bible were
not supermen. No saints are. We are completely mistaken in our
presumption that they stood a cut above us in their spiritual prowess.
They were men and women who struggled in faith, suffered in hope, and
sinned in the midst of real temptation. They denied Christ when push
came to shove, like Peter. They complained at God, like Moses. They fell
into great vice through cowardice, like Abraham. Not once, but twice
Abraham passed off his wife, Sarah, as his sister, rather than his wife
when confronted by powerful men who desired to have her as a wife. He
declined to trust himself to God's rescue by standing up to the kings of
Egypt and Gerar (Gn 12 and 20).
Not once, but twice God rescued Abraham from the complications of his
own cowardice and even increased his blessings. God does things like
that. That's what makes saints.
God promises "that for those
who love God all things work together for good, for those who are
called according to his purpose" (Rm 8:28).
Seen from the gospel end of God, what the world says is bad, God
intends it for good. This divine promise is not a pie-in-the-sky piety
where Christians are always happy and successful, righteous and good.
Far from it. God forces us to call good what the world hates and
despises. Our hope is not in the light, but hidden unseen under the
darkness we will have hope.
God's good also includes
when our own failings create complications and trouble. Abraham's
failings certainly did. We would expect God to punish Abraham for his
cowardice, or at least let him suffer for it. It would only be just.
That's right. It would only be just; not gracious and not loving. Our
heavenly Father does not return justice to us. We could not bear it.
Only One ever has. For the sake of that One, our God returns good for
sin and moral cowardice. He is gracious to those who, like Abraham,
falter when trying to feel their own way through the dark. He loves
those whom He has called even when they are groping along a path away
from the light of the world.
I often see this as God's
way in people's lives. They come to my office to open their broken
hearts at crisis times in their lives. Perhaps, they have fallen into
sin and vice, like Abraham. Maybe they struggle with why they are facing
suffering, and if it is sent by God, why they are not suffering it
better, why they aren't better at accepting their trouble without tears
or anger or frustration. "If I am in the light, why do I feel the
darkness all around?" I tell them that when people are in deep crisis
this is when they most appreciate and completely understand the grace
and mercy of God. Their hope is buoyed up even though they cannot see
the object to which their hope clings. Suddenly, the signs of God's
mercy that seemed only empty rites now become meetings with God, they
look past the servant who serves and hear God's comfort for them in
sermons, they suddenly find hope for life when the body of Christ is
placed on their tongue and the blood of Christ is received in faith for
the forgiveness of sins. Like Abraham they can hear of the God who works
good "even from their failings," as Luther says."
Rev. Dr Scott Murray
Romans 8:28-39 (ESV)
Martin Luther:
"The saints daily commit
many such sins. They, too, are carried away by occasions. But these sins
differ from the sins of the ungodly, which deny the faith and militate
against the acknowledged truth. Abraham is not that kind of man. Yet he
feels the law in his members (Rm 7:23),
which sometimes tears him from the right way, namely, when he is not
excited by fervent faith, when the days are evil and times of
tribulation are at hand, just as we, too, daily experience in ourselves.
"Therefore you must note
that the saints should not always be excused from all sins; for the
conclusion that they, too, had bodies or flesh and felt their passions,
which original sin left even in such as were reborn in faith, serves to
comfort us.
"But here another question
arises. Why does God allow such sins to be committed by His own? Why
does He permit His own to stumble in this way? The most appropriate
answer to this question is given on the basis of the outcome. God
permits it to happen this way in order that He may have the opportunity
to achieve many good results. The saints do not fall in order to perish;
they fall in order that God may bestow rich blessings on them by
heaping greater benefits on them, as is written: 'We know that all
things work together for good' (Rm 8:28) for the saints, and a gloss to this passage adds: 'Even their very failings.'
"No one can have any doubt that God sends tribulation and
misfortune to the end that they may benefit us; for Paul's statement is
well known: 'If we endure, we will also reign with him' (2Ti 2:12). Yes, God even makes up for our misfortunes."
Martin Luther, Lectures on Genesis 20, 5
Prayer:
Lord
Christ, work Your good in my life even through my failings. Keep me
from despair. Hold me in the bosom of Your love, that I might rest in
Your promises. Amen.
22 October 2013
Rev. Dr Scott Murray
Photo: KL
- The Gospel is fresh and new and free! I am thinking of Rom. 4:5 "And to the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness," (ESV). (Phil. 3:7f)
"For the sake of that One, our God returns good for sin and moral cowardice. He is gracious to those who, like Abraham, falter when trying to feel their own way through the dark. He loves those whom He has called even when they are groping along a path away from the light of the world." (Scott Murray)
- Glory to our gracious God!
"Hallelujah, salvation and glory":
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cU8ymxpqgOg
Photo: KL
- The Gospel is fresh and new and free! I am thinking of Rom. 4:5 "And to the one who does not work but believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as righteousness," (ESV). (Phil. 3:7f)
"For the sake of that One, our God returns good for sin and moral cowardice. He is gracious to those who, like Abraham, falter when trying to feel their own way through the dark. He loves those whom He has called even when they are groping along a path away from the light of the world." (Scott Murray)
- Glory to our gracious God!
"Hallelujah, salvation and glory":
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cU8ymxpqgOg
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