God is Righteous and Just: Part 6 of Attributes of God

God is righteous and just.

To say God is righteous is to say that God is always right.  It is God’s very nature to always be right.  He cannot be wrong.  He cannot do wrong.  God is righteous because He is the very definition of what it means to be right.  God’s righteousness means that He is just.  

Psalm 97:2 says “Righteousness and justice are the foundation of His throne.”

God’s goodness and righteousness mean that God must be just.  A God who is perfectly right cannot tolerate sin and allow it to go unpunished.  Because God is good and right, sin must be punished.  A righteous God and a just God means that God does not ignore sin.   God’s goodness and rightness never change when God is just and punishes sin.  This is another area where humans are not able to understand God completely.  God’s anger and wrath toward sin do not change in any way His goodness and righteousness.  God is unchanging.  He is always good.  He is always just.  He is always loving.  God cannot be good and ignore sin.  Ignoring sin would not be justice.  God cannot be good and not just.  Goodness and justice exist together and God is always completely both.

Revelations 16:5 and 7 says, “Just are you, O Holy One, who is and who was, for you brought these judgments.”  And, “Yes, Lord God the Almighty, true and just are your judgments.”

When God looks at a sinner who loves his sin and rejects God, justice sentences that sinner to die and go to hell. This is right and good because God tells us that the wages of sin is death.   

When God looks at a sinner who has trusted in Christ’s death on the cross and trusts in God’s forgiveness, justice sentences that sinner to live eternally with God in heaven.  The sin has been dealt with justly because God put the sin on Jesus for us.  Jesus changes our condition from guilty to not guilty.  God is just in both condemning the unrepentant sinner and in saving the repentant sinner.

We, as people, have a hard time understanding the “fairness” of this.  We want murders to be punished for their sin.  We don’t want people who have hurt us to be forgiven because our sense of justice is very different from God’s righteousness and justice.  We have sinful minds and intentions.  God is perfectly right and perfectly just.  We need to trust that God is who He says He is and not allow our feelings of fairness to contradict God’s word.

In what circumstances are you tempted to think God has been unfair or unkind to you?


Put into your own words why rightness and justice must exist in God equally.

Isaiah 30:18  

“Therefore the Lord waits to be gracious to you,

   and therefore he exalts himself to show mercy to you.

For the Lord is a God of justice;

   blessed are all those who wait for him.”

Deuteronomy 32:4

“The Rock, his work is perfect,

   for all his ways are justice.

A God of faithfulness and without iniquity,

   just and upright is he.”

Psalm 119:137

“Righteous are you, O Lord,

   and right are your rules.”

What do you learn about God’s righteousness and justice?

How does this change how you view the circumstances when it feels like God is not right or just?

Getting to know God in relationship:

How will you talk to God differently and read His word differently because of this attribute?

God is Good: Part 5 of Attributes of God

God is good.

“You are good and You do good” - Psalm 119:68

“Taste and see that the Lord is good” - Psalm 34:8

God is infinitely good.  There is no beginning to God’s goodness and there is no ending to His goodness.  There is no limit to God’s goodness.  God is always good.  It is God’s goodness that makes Him kind-hearted, gracious, and good-natured in all that He does.  God cannot stop being good.  God cannot be only mostly good at times.  God’s character is unchanging.  God cannot be indifferent toward anyone or anything.  God’s goodness means that He is always good in all His thoughts, in all His intentions, and in all His actions.  

God created us and saves us because of His goodness.  As sinners, we deserve nothing but death.  We could not earn the right to be born because we didn’t even exist!  Out of God’s goodness He gives us life.  We are born sinners in need of a Savior.  God gives us life because He is good and He delights to do good.  God’s saves us because He is good and He is full of kindness and grace.  We receive His blessing simply because He is good and He chooses to give it to us.

Deuteronomy 7:6-8 “For you are a people holy to the Lord your God.  The Lord your God has chosen you to be a people for His treasured possession, out of all the people who are on the face of the earth.  It was not because you were more in number than any other people that the Lord set his love on you and chose you, for you were the fewest of all peoples, but it is because the Lord loves you and is keeping the oath that he swore to your fathers, that the Lord has brought you out with a mighty hand and redeemed you from the house of slavery”

How has God been good to you?

A.W. Tozer says “Remember that you can answer every question with this expression: ‘God of His goodness willed it.  God out of His kindness willed it.”

Whatever happens to you, is out of God’s good character.  That does not mean that we feel like everything is good.  Some things will feel bad and hurt.  But, God has not stopped being good.  God is perfectly good at all times.  Because God is infinite, because God is immanent, because God is immense, He is able to use His goodness in ways we do not understand.  We must choose to trust God is who He says He is.  God declares Himself to be good.  Your feelings don’t change that fact.

Isaiah 63:7 says, “I will recount the steadfast love of the Lord, the praises of the Lord, according to all that the Lord has granted us, and the great goodness to the house of Israel that He has granted them according to His compassion, according to the abundance of His steadfast love.”

Psalm 100:5 says, “For the Lord is good; His steadfast love endures forever, and His faithfulness to all generations.”

When in your life have you doubted God’s goodness?

What has happened in your life that you don’t feel is good?

What does God’s word say about those situations?

Will you choose to trust God’s goodness?  Will you choose to say, “God allowed this situation because He is good and His intentions for me are good”?

Getting to know God in relationship:

How will you talk to God differently and read His word differently because of this attribute?

 

God is Immense: part 4 of Attributes of God

God is immense.

God is bigger than you can ever imagine.  

Isaiah 40:12 says “Who has measured the waters in the hollow of His hand and marked off the heavens with a span, enclosed the dust of the earth in a measure and weighed the mountains in scales and the hills in a balance?”  

Have you ever been to the ocean?  Can you picture a God so big that He can measure all of the oceans in His cupped hands?  

Look at the mountains that surround our state.  Look at just Mount Rainier.  Think about God being so big that He can pick up Mount Rainier and put it on a scale.  Think about that!  That is a BIG God!

Think about the size of the universe.  The Milky Way galaxy that we live in on Earth is 100,000 light years long.  One light year is 6,000,000,000 miles long, and the galaxy is 100,000 times that!!   The closest star to the Earth, the Sun, is 92.96 millions miles away from the Earth.   The galaxy closest to us is the Andromeda Galaxy and it is 2,000,000 light years away.  The Hubble Telescope estimates that there are 100,000,000,000 galaxies and our technology has not allowed us to see all of what really exists beyond those.  Scientists believe that is just the beginning of what galaxies really exist!  

Stop and watch this youtube video on the galaxy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVsqCLyoU3o&t=2s

Psalm 104:1-3 says, “Bless the Lord, O my soul!  O Lord, my God, You are very great!  You are clothed with splendor and majesty, covering Yourself with light as with a garment, stretching out the heavens like a tent.  He lays the beams of His chambers on the waters; He makes the clouds His chariot;  He rides on the wings of the wind.”

Stop and think about how big God must be to create and control and hold all the stars, moons, planets, comets, all the galaxies, together.  He keeps them in their places and always, at all times, is holding them together.  Scientists estimate that there are at least 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars.  

Psalm 147:4 says “He determines the numbers of the stars; He gives to all of them their names”.  

Remember, the sun is the closest star to Earth.  Earth could fit into the sun 1,300,000, times.  And God has placed 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars (at least!) in the sky one by one and calls them by name.  

Stop and think about that.  God brings the stars out one by one.  He knows every single star by name.  

That is an immense God!

Think about how huge God is!  What does that mean to you?

This same huge, immense God is also immanent.  He is with you!

In Romans 8:31 Paul asks the question, “If God is for us, who can be against us?”

Answer that question for yourself.  How does God’s immensity and immanence matter to you?
 

Getting to know God in relationship:

How will you talk to God differently and read His word differently because of this attribute?


 

Written by Wendy Wood, CHCC counselor

God is Immanent - part 3 of Attributes of God

God is immanent

Immanent means to permanently live and remain in something.  God’s immanence means that He is everywhere, all at the same time.  God does not have to travel to be with us.  He is right here, wherever you happen to be.  Another way to think about God’s immanence is to say He is present at all times, in all places.  

Psalm 139:8-10  says, “If I ascend to heaven, you are there!  If I make my bed in Sheol, you are there!  If I take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there your hand shall lead me, and your right hand shall hold me.”  

You don’t ever need to pray “God, be with me”.  He is always with you!

Do you ever “feel” like God is not with you?

Whether or not you “feel” God’s presence does not change the fact that God is always with you.  He is immanent!  He is above all things, beneath all things, inside all things, outside all things.  God is not confined in any way.  He keeps all things together at all times through His constant presence.  God even gave Himself the name “Emmanuel”.  “Emmanuel” means “God with us!”

How can God’s immanence (His being with you all the time) bring you comfort?

How can God’s immanence (His being with you all the time) increase your love for Him?

Getting to know God in relationship:

How will you talk to God differently and read His word differently because of this attribute?

 

Written by Wendy Wood, CHCC counselor

God is Infinite: part 2 of the Attributes of God

God is infinite.

We humans are finite.  That means we have a beginning and an end to our lives here on earth.  We are limited in our understanding of things.  For example, we don’t fully understand cancer and how it begins or how we can cure it.   We are limited in power and limited in our ability to make what we want happen.  For example, just because we want a million dollars, we can’t just make that happen because we say we want it.  We are limited by time and space.  We are only in one place at one time. You can’t play soccer with one friend at the same time that you have ice cream with another friend.  You have to choose one place to be at a time.  We have a limited amount of resources.  We have to choose how to spend our money and our time because we have a limited amount of both.

But, God is infinite.  He has no beginning and will never end.  “God has no bounds.  Whatever God is and all that God is, He is without limit.” God has no limit to His knowledge and wisdom.  There is absolutely nothing that confuses or stumps God.   God is not limited by time and space.  God is everywhere - past, present, and future - in all places, at all times.  Everything on earth, everything in heaven, everything everywhere is God’s, and He could create more at any time.  When God said, “Let there be light”, it appeared because He is infinite in power.   He has no limit to His resources. Look at this symbol below.  This is what math people use for infinity.  Where is the beginning of this shape?  Where does it end?  This symbol stands for infinity because there is no beginning or end, you can trace it over and over and never reach an ending.  That is how God is.  He has no beginning and no end.  There is no beginning or end to any of God’s attributes.

We simply cannot understand fully what God’s infinitude means because we are not infinite.  

But, we should spend time thinking deeply about this attribute of God and what it means to us.  God has revealed this attribute of Himself for His glory (so we will think highly of Him) and our benefit.  Everything about God is without limits.  God’s mercy is infinite.  God’s grace is infinite.  God’s love is infinite.  How does God’s infinitude impact our lives?  How can we rest in God’s character of His being absolutely limitless?  How can God’s infinitude lead to trusting Him more?

Consider these verses.

Romans 11:33-36  “Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God!  How unsearchable are His judgments and how inscrutable His ways!  For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who has been His counselor?  Or who has given a gift to Him that He might be repaid?  For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things.  To Him be glory forever.  Amen”.

Psalm 50:10-12  “For every beast of the forest is mine, the cattle on a thousand hills.  I know all the birds of the hills and all that moves in the field is mine.  If I were hungry, I would not tell you, for the world is mine and its fullness are mine.”

Psalm 90:2  “Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God.”

 

Revelation 1:8 . “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, “who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.”

While we cannot understand completely a Being who is so unlike us in this aspect, we can marvel at the wonderful God who is infinite.  

How is God’s infinite nature a reason to be joyful?  

Getting to know God in relationship:

How will you talk to God differently and read His word differently because of this attribute?

 

Written by Wendy Wood, CHCC counselor


 

Attributes of God

Over the next couple of weeks, this blog will feature a study of God.  Each day you will be reminded of an attributes of God and how understanding that attribute can change your relationship with God.

Introduction to the attributes of God study:

If someone asked you to describe God, what would you say?

Can you describe God as well as you can describe your best friend?

God sent Jesus to live on earth the be the perfect sacrifice for our sins so that we could be in a relationship with God.  God invites us to get to know Him in a deep and personal way.

What do you know about the President of the United States?  Do you know his name?  Do you know where he lives?  Do you know his wife’s name?  Do you know something about his personality?

You probably know something about the President, but you don’t know Him personally.  He wouldn’t invite you to his house or call you on the phone and ask for you by name.  You know about him, but you don’t have a relationship with him.

A relationship definitely involves getting to know stuff about a person, but it is more than that.  It is not just having facts about someone, though that is a part of it.  A relationship is deeper connection where you share your thoughts and struggles, and you depend on and trust the other person.  

You get to know someone by asking them questions, spending time with them, watching what things they like to eat, drink, and do.  You ask questions and listen to how the person talks.  You want to know what is important to the other person and begin to understand how they think. Getting to know someone takes time and effort.  It takes time to trust a new friend.  It takes time to understand how they think and to get to know how they will respond in certain situations.

To get to know God, to have a relationship with Him, takes time.  You need to spend time getting to know what God is like.  You need to understand more about His character, what He likes and dislikes.  As you spend time getting to know the attributes of God, you learn more of what He values and what is important to Him.  You begin to see that He is very different from humans, but still invites us to be His friend.  It takes time and energy to know God and to build a relationship with Him.

Have you ever had a friend that talked too much?  You felt like you never got to speak and had to listen to them talk about themselves all the time?  A good relationship is a conversation.  You take turns talking and listening.  You get to know each other, it is not just one sided.  Both people get to know one another.

The same is true of our relationship with God.  We can talk to God in prayer and tell Him about what we are dealing with (even though He already knows!) and ask for His help.  But if our relationship with Him is one-sided, it’s not a healthy relationship.  We equally need to listen to God and hear what He has to say.  God speaks to us through His word, the Bible.  He reveals all about who He is and what He likes and dislikes.  God reveals His purpose for giving us life and how to live a life that pleases Him.  As we get to know God more and more, our lives should be changing and becoming more and more like Christ.  That’s the evidence of being in a relationship with God.

We can know a lot about God, like the President of the United States, but still not have a relationship with Him.  We need to spend time hearing from God in His word, and talking to Him sharing our struggles and joys with Him.  He calls us His friends if we have trusted in Jesus as our Lord and Savior.

The following attributes of God are designed to help you get to know God better and to begin to build a relationship with Him.  As you read about God, talk to Him about Him.  Praise Him for how great He is and ask Him to help you live in a way that shows you trust that everything God says about Himself is true.

Written by Wendy Wood, CHCC counselor

How Big Is Your God?

Article posted on DesiringGod.org

During car rides throughout the pines of East Texas, our daughter often observes her surroundings and asks big questions about God.

“Is God bigger than that tree, mama?”

“What about the road? Is he longer than that?”

Outside of the obvious difficulty in answering such massive questions, my heart smiles at her curiosity — mostly because it makes me quiver to consider the magnitude of a God who cannot be measured by any of our pitiful metrics.

It is a good and humbling thing to observe who God is in comparison to who we are. The heart-dropping ingloriousness of our sin in relation to God’s holiness is as a rotten, puny tree stump beside General Sherman, the giant sequoia holding the title as the largest individual living stem in the world. Your stomach drops at its vastness. You cannot wrap your mind around how something this gargantuan exists.

The insurmountable nature of God can be for us a source of peace and joy. We have this butterflies-in-the-stomach effect as we approach the Lord, unable to fully see his providence, yet catching it in glimpses through dimmed eyes.

None Like Him

God is the knower of thoughts, seeker of hearts, knowing the measure of our days, yet standing outside of time, ordaining every second before there was even one (Psalm 139). We may say God is “omnipotent,” but applying the label doesn’t help our minds get around him, even as children of God. We can’t size him up. Our mental arms can’t wrap around this cosmos-creating, secret-having God (Deuteronomy 29:29).

Consistently throughout Scripture, we have the question arising, Who is like the Lord? After God parted the Red Sea for Israel, Moses erupts into praise and leads the people with the words, “Who is like you, O Lord, among the gods? Who is like you, majestic in holiness, awesome in glorious deeds, doing wonders?” (Exodus 15:11).

After prophesying exile, Isaiah’s pronouncements shift upward in hope as he proclaims comfort for God’s people: “It is he who sits above the circle of the earth, and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers; who stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to dwell in” (Isaiah 40:22). The Old Testament continues with accounts of God’s otherness from his creation.

There is no one like him.

The New Testament deepens our understanding of his distinctness. When the crowds pressed in on Jesus during his preaching and left not even a spot at the door, four men lowered their paralytic friend down through the roof, and Jesus’s initial response to their faith was to forgive the disabled man’s sins. We get a glimpse into the evil hearts of the scribes as they question Jesus’s authority wondering, “Who can forgive sins but God alone?” (Mark 2:7).

It baffles the senses of the natural man to encounter the otherness of God made manifest through Jesus Christ.

Reaching into the Unfathomable

If you browse pictures of General Sherman, you will see many pictures of people standing at its base, appearing as grasshoppers in comparison.

All the trees in our neighborhood are mountable, which is good news for our (soon-to-be) three boys. There’s something about bear-hugging the base of a tree and attempting to climb it that allures our sons, our oldest especially. He is scratching at the bark to mount it. I think fear might fill him, though, if we were to drive to upstate California and show him General Sherman.

Yet here we are, full access to God through his word and power (Ephesians 1:17–19). This insurmountable, unfathomable, incalculable God reveals himself to children, calling forth praise even from infants (Matthew 21:15–16). We can “know the Lord” (Hosea 6:3), not because our minds have ascended the infinite, but because God in his infinitude accommodates our lowliness. We have Christ’s righteousness, grace upon grace, and the fulfillment of countless promises, not because of our works, but all because of our big God’s lavish grace. What have we not to be joyful for?

God’s grace cannot be weighed (1 Peter 1:10–12). His power cannot be measured (Ephesians 1:19). And it is given to us — sinners against the insurmountable God — by grace.

We Have God

No one is like him. No, not one. We can shudder at the magnitude of that reality and glorify him through overflowing thanksgiving and joy at such an immeasurable gift. Yet in our shuddering, we embrace him as our dearest Friend, closest Confidant, and Bridegroom. It is the greatest, kindest, and richest thing we could ever experience — because we were made for it.

Weak little grass shoots tossed by the wind next to the largest single Stem there is. We have God. That is a reality that we base our entire lives upon.

Know What Not to Say

Article by  Jon Bloom

Christians should be the most careful speakers in the world. We ought to be characterized by two kinds of trembling when it comes to words: we should tremble at the words God speaks and we should tremble at the words we speak.

We know we should tremble at God’s word, for he tells us,

“This is the one to whom I will look: he who is humble and contrite in spirit and trembles at my word.” (Isaiah 66:2)

But why should we tremble at the words we speak? Because Jesus said,

“I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak, for by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned.” (Matthew 12:36–37)

“Every careless word.” That should stop us in our tracks. It should set us trembling, considering how many words we speak. And by “speak” I mean every word that comes out of our mouths, our pens, and our keyboards. We speak thousands of words every day, sometimes tens of thousands.

When we experience these two kinds of trembling, they occur for the same reason: we love and fear God and don’t want to profane his holy word or to profane his holiness with our unholy words. Such trembling makes us want to speak carefully and sometimes not speak at all. Because we believe,

For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven: . . . a time to keep silence, and a time to speak. (Ecclesiastes 3:17)

A Time to Be Silent

There really is a time to keep silent. And that time comes more often than most of us are conditioned to think.

We live in an age of unceasing talk. Never in human history has the noise of human communication been so constant. Even when we are quiet we are not silent, as we receive and dispense talk through our digital media. Our culture does not believe that “a fool multiplies words” (Ecclesiastes 10:14).

On one level, it believes that multiplied words brings multiplied knowledge, and multiplied knowledge brings multiplied wisdom. On another level, not fearing God, it simply doesn’t really care how many words flow. So it relentlessly inundates us with information, analysis, commentary, critique, punditry, and mockery through every communication stream. We cannot help but be conditioned by this environment.

And with the advent of social media, nearly everyone now has a broadcast platform from which they can publicly hold forth on any social, cultural, political, economic, or theological issue, any controversy, any scandal, any whatever anytime they wish, regardless of what they know. And while the democratization of public communication is a remarkable historic phenomenon and certainly has some wonderful benefits, it is a dangerous thing, spiritually speaking. It’s an immense, cacophonous forum of multiplied, foolish, careless words, for which every participant, whether they know it or not, will give an account to God.

The Beginning of Wisdom

Christians know that “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” and “the beginning of knowledge” (Psalm 111:10Proverbs 1:7). And one expression of that fear is trembling at God’s holy word, and at our own.

We are taught that it is profoundly wise for us to cultivate the discipline of being slow to speak (James 1:19). Slow to speak implies that there is a time for silence. Sometimes it means we are silent for some appropriate brief or extended period of time while being quick to hear (listening carefully), so we gain an accurate understanding of an issue before we speak carefully. And sometimes it means we don’t speak at all. The former is always a necessity for us; the latter is often a necessity.

God calls us to live counter to our hair tongue-trigger culture. In a world where rapid-fire information, rapid-fire commentary, and rapid-fire counter-commentary are continually igniting raging forest fires of words (James 3:5), the sons and daughters of God are called to be fire-quenching peacemakers (Matthew 5:9). And one of the underutilized ways of peacemaking is recognizing the time to keep silence. Less words can be less fuel for the fires.

A Time to Speak

But Christians must not always keep silence. There is a time to speak and there are things we must say. Our God is a speaking God and we know he most definitely wants us to speak (Matthew 24:1428:19–20).

But when God speaks, he speaks very intentionally and, considering his omniscience, he speaks with tremendous restraint. And that’s the way he wants us to speak, as his exceedingly non-omniscient children and ambassadors (2 Corinthians 5:20): intentionally and with restraint. He wants us to learn to speak like Jesus.

We, like Job, have the tendency to speak rashly and confidently about things we really don’t understand (Job 42:3). But Jesus often said less than he knew because he was prayerfully listening to the Father and saying only what he discerned he was supposed to say (John 8:26). Just because he had a mouth and a public platform did not mean he should always employ them. Rather, he said, “I do nothing on my own authority, but speak just as the Father taught me” (John 8:28). He perfectly lived out and modeled for us this verse:

Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips! (Psalm 141:3)

God deploys his children strategically in every sphere. He gives us each a few assignments and gives us each some things to say in order to bring the gospel to bear in our limited spheres. Each of us must prayerfully discern our spheres and limitations. None of us, as individuals, churches, or organizations, is called to address every current issue. And if this is true of issues we have knowledge about, it’s especially true of issues with which we have little or no personal experience.

If we are in some form of leadership where we are called to address such an issue, we should first pray for wisdom, then we should be publicly honest about what we don’t know and not succumb to pressure and try to speak more than we do know. And then, if the Lord leads, we should pursue the understanding required to speak more helpfully.

And when we do discern God’s direction for us to speak, we, like Jesus, remember that our mouths, fingers, and platforms still belong to God. We are not free to say whatever we wish about what we know. We do nothing on our own authority, but must say only what we discern God wants us to say.

Tough, Tender, or Quiet?

We speak the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15), but we don’t speak for human “likes”; we speak for God’s approval. So that means we sometimes speak a loving truth that’s tender and sweet (Proverbs 16:24), and other times we speak a loving truth that’s graciously hard (Proverbs 27:6). This is speaking like Jesus, who sometimes said things like, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28), and who at other times said things like, “Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:5).

Discerning when to say a loving tender truth, when to say a loving tough truth, and when to say nothing at all is the tension God has purposefully designed to keep us prayerfully dependent on him. It is frequently not patently obvious. There are times we really want to speak and we should not. And there are times we really don’t want to speak and we should.

What will help us most in discerning when it’s a time to keep silence or a time to speak is cultivating a holy trembling at God’s word and at our words. The right kind of fear of the Lord is our best mouthguard.

Jon Bloom (@Bloom_Jon) serves as author, board chair, and co-founder of Desiring God. He is author of three books, Not by SightThings Not Seen, and Don’t Follow Your Heart. He and his wife live in the Twin Cities with their five children.

Originally posted on DesiringGod.org  https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/know-what-not-to-say

Psalm 118 A Remedy for the Fear of Man

 

Psalm 118:1-4

“Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good;

His love endures forever.

Let Israel say:

“His love endures forever.”

Let the house of Aaron say:

“His love endures forever.”

Let those who fear the Lord say:

“His love endures forever.”

Think about the amazing gift of God’s love.  It is not His rejection and wrath that last forever. When God looks at His children, those who have trusted in Christ as their Lord and Savior, He sees us clothed in Christ’s holiness and righteousness.  When we are in Christ, when we are united in Him by faith, God loves us like He loves His own Son.

His love endures forever.  (Not the love of friends or those who we try so desperately to get approval from.  Only His love is forever.)

His love endures forever.  (God’s love will never change.  There is nothing we can do to make God love us more.  And there is nothing we can do to make God love us less.  God’s love is about Him, not us!)

His love endures forever.  (God’s love doesn’t change.  God’s love is not based on our performance or anything we do or don’t do.  God’s love is about what Christ has already done on the cross.)

His love endures forever.  (It is possible to lose the love of friends, parents, spouses, boyfriends and girlfriends, but God’s love will never end.  It is forever!)

Are you resting in the love of God or are you chasing after a lesser love from other people?

 

Adapted from a booklet by Amy Baker

The Heart of True Repentance

Article by Matt Erbaugh

Originally posted on DesiringGod.org

Few things in the life of a believer are as disheartening as the long struggle with persistent sins. This is particularly true when we have experienced victory over sin in other areas of our life. We know God has the power to get rid of our sin, so why won’t he?

It may sound counterintuitive, but sometimes victory over some sin tarries because God desires to teach us how to truly repent of that sin. God desires his people to know not only how to walk in holiness, but also to obey his command to “rend our hearts” when we fall short of his glory (Joel 2:13). Yes, sin in our life is a problem, but so is a life where we haven’t learned how to truly repent of sin.

Torn Hearts

We’ve all probably seen a pastor illustrate the concept of repentance during a Sunday morning sermon. He walks across the stage on the “path of sin” and tells us that repenting is not merely stopping as we walk down the path, but turning to walk back in the direction of God. This is absolutely right; repentance involves both turning away from sin and turning back to the Father. However, the illustration fails to provide the posture of our heart as we come back to God. This is no incidental point, but gets to the very core of what true repentance is all about.

“True repentance, like all good things, is a gift of God.”

In Joel 2:12, the Lord calls to Israel, “return to me with all your heart, with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning; and rend your hearts and not your garments.” In the Old Testament, people commonly expressed great grief and anguish by tearing their cloaks. But more than caring about the proper “signs” of being upset about their sin, God cared that they actually grieved over them in their hearts — grieved to the point of weeping and mourning.

In his famous psalm of repentance, David reminds us that God does not delight so much in the outward signs of repentance (which included making a sacrifice), but “the sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise” (Psalm 51:17). We’re not talking about the shame and condemnation the enemy wants to heap on us, but a godly grief.

We can be in the habit of going through the motions when it comes to repenting, but these passages show that the most important thing is the condition of our heart. Does your repentance look like a heart that has been rent like a garment, broken and contrite as it beats before God? This attitude is missing from most repentance, and it’s the very thing God is trying to teach us!

How to Get a Broken Heart

It may sound strange, but how do we go about getting a broken heart?

“The more glimpses we have of the glory of God, the more we mourn for scorning that glory.”

First, we simply need to ask for it. True repentance, like all good things, is a gift of God (2 Timothy 2:25). If we want to obey the command to rend our hearts, we must ask God to grant us true repentance.

We must also be aware of one of the biggest hindrances to obtaining a broken heart: our neglect of the relational aspect of sinning. By this, I mean that we can view sin as a failure of performance rather than a failure of intimacy. The only grief we experience is disappointment in our inability to do what is right, and not that we have “despised” the living God (2 Samuel 12:9).

When we sin, we play the part of an adulterer who looks for satisfaction in another, rather than the only One who can satisfy. That is why David said to the Lord, “against you, you only, have I sinned” (Psalm 51:4). David rightly saw his failures in terms of relationship, and as a result his heart was grieved as it can be only when we have sinned against the One we love so much.

Behold His Glory

Finally, true repentance comes not merely by understanding the relational aspect of sin, but by understanding the nature of the One with whom we are in relationship. In other words, the more we see God as glorious and holy, the more we will see sin as something to weep over. Repentance is less about feeling bad over behavior, and more about feeling awe and delight towards God. The more glimpses we have of the glory of God, the more we mourn for scorning that glory.

In the end, God’s plan for us is that we will be holy as he is holy (1 Peter 1:16). He will surely do it! In the meantime, he desires a broken-hearted people who have learned to mourn over their sin.