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God
on Trial
Jason VanDorsten
September
2005
I believe in the sovereignty of God.
That is, God's sovereignty is the attribute by which He rules over all
of creation -- and to be sovereign, God must be all-knowing, all-powerful,
and absolutely free. I furthermore believe that just as indispensable as
His sovereignty is the goodness of God.
A.W.
Tozer says this about God's goodness:
The goodness of God is that
which disposes Him to be kind, cordial, benevolent, and full of good will
toward men. He is tenderhearted and of quick sympathy and His unfailing
attitude toward all moral beings is open, frank, and friendly. By His nature
He is inclined to bestow blessedness and He takes holy pleasure in the
happiness of His people. That God is good is taught or implied on every
page of the Bible and must be received as an article of faith as impregnable
as the throne of God. It is a foundation stone for all sound thought about
God and is necessary to moral sanity. To allow that God could be other
than good is to deny the validity of all thought and end ill the negation
of every moral judgment. If God is not good, then there can be no distinction
between kindness and cruelty, and heaven can be hell and hell, heaven.
The goodness of God is the drive behind all the blessings He daily bestows
upon us.
Scripture clearly teaches both the goodness
and the sovereignty within God's character. Yet, in times when great
disaster occurs, is it not our tendency as men to put God on trial? We
tend to attack one or both of these attributes of God. We cry, "Look at
these hurricanes! Look at these people suffering! How could God have let
this happen? Is He really in control?"
Or if we do not doubt His sovereign
control over a given situation, we are more than prone to put His goodness
on trial. Who among us has never asked, in some form, "How could a good
God allow this horrible thing to happen?"
It is only the frailty of man that
feels either God's goodness or His sovereignty is somehow diminished by
disaster. Did God know -- even ordain -- that Hurricane Katrina would wreak
such havoc upon our neighbors to the south? Absolutely. Did He know all
those people would be left houseless, possessionless, fleeing their homes
for their lives? Yes indeed. Did He ordain each death, each loss of a child,
a parent, a spouse, a friend? He foreknew every single one. But His sovereignty
and His goodness remain intact. Our doubt takes nothing away, just as our
belief adds nothing to them. His attributes need no defense, least of all
this very writ. Everything that has taken place amidst the recent hurricane
-- from loss to life, from hatred to love -- demonstrates the goodness
and sovereignty of almighty God. Do we understand it? Hardly. But doubt
neither His goodness nor His sovereignty.
We would do well to remember that
we are not sovereign. We see only a few pieces of a canvas that stretches
beyond time, and with even the best of humankind, our sight is tainted
by our own depravity. Our vision and knowledge are finite and limited.
God's are not. Instead of putting God on trial, let us instead see through
eyes of faith, ever trusting in His immeasurable goodness. Even if we do
not understand, let us say along with the Old Testament prophet Jeremiah,
"Though He brings grief, He will show compassion, so great is His unfailing
love."
Jason VanDorsten is a pastoral
intern for the Emerging Generations ministry at Reston Bible Church in
Virginia. |
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