Als Blog Pastor Al | 28 Jun 2009 02:38 pm

God’s Judgments: Some Thoughts

Postings like the one you are about to read are an opportunity for me to “throw out” to you some of the things that go through my head for which I may have some ground in Scriputre but that ground may not be as firm as I like.  Such is the case with the issues that I want to address in this blog.  Both issues that I will raise have to do with my own understanding of the judgments of God and how those judgments could be manifest in our lives.  These thoughts are my own and I accept full responsibility for them.  I do not invite you to dare to correct them; I invite you to dialogue with me on these issues.  I need your help and your insight. I may see these issues in a way that is way off base.  But at least give me your ears for this blog and your feedback on it.

Let me set the context.  I do believe that we live in a country that has been richly and greatly blessed by God.  And I do believe that compared to some countries contolled by Muslim Madmen and others that are operated by the Mafia, our country is a good land with some very generous people.  But the fact remains that in America the average per capita giving level stands at somewhere between 2.7 and 3.0 percent.  And this calculation includes on the one side those who give nothing to charity and those who give much of their income to charity.  For example, Rick Warren who makes and enormous amount of money gives away ninety percent of what he makes and John Piper uses the royalties from his writings to support all kinds of efforts particularly among the poor.  So, all said we are still a country that has known rich blessings without responding to those blessings in any kind of way that would be considered proportionately gracious.  My personal conviction is that we are under God’s judgment and that such judgment manifests itself in multiple ways, at least two of them that I wnat to discuss.

First, I bellieve that the medical advances that have come to our culture that are a result of the grace of God that have resulted in our ability to keep people alive to an advanced age are a gift of grace that have become an instrument of judgment.  Many people in our culture lose the sense of what real life is long before they die.  They are alive as life is defined medically but they are not alive at all as life is defined biblically.  They are breathing.  Some have lost their mental capacity completely while others are debilitated in body.  Like Israel wanting a king and God giving her a king, we have asked for physical miracles in the body and have gotten them, but many of them do not bring glory to God.  They leave us with physically deprived and mentally depleted persons who can barely function but just keep on breathing.

I do not think for a moment that God is punishing those people particularly, although in some cases that could be the case.  I would not dare to make that kind of call.  But I do think that God is showing us what we get when we ask for something that is about us and receive it and do not give glory to His Name.  I believe it is a sign of God’s judgment.  But I also believe that there are physcial and mental deprivations that happen to people that are a sign of God’s judgment.  For example, when people profess to know God and to love God and yet act in ways that dishonor Him, God will not be mocked.  He will either visit His wrath upon us in the end or during the days of our lives.  I believe that God sometimes sends sudden sickness in the lives of godly people to visit judgment of those around them who have acted in ungodly ways.  His Name is vindicated in the process and the visitation of sickness is upon someone who will not blame Him but praise Him in the process.  I have seen more than a few situations in recent years where events that seek to bring glory and honor to God are followed by events that mock that same glory, and it has ceased to shock me that I hear in the next few days or weeks about some trauma in that family.

Is this far out to you?  Far fetched?  It is for those who see themselves as the center of a universe in which their God is only and exclusively kind and benevolent.  But it is not far-fetched for me who sees the essence of God as holy and just who will vindicate His Name and His Word upon the earth.  He will not allow us to make much of Him in worship only to walk out of worship into events and activities that are all about the flesh.  This God will not allow us to mock Him.  This God is real.  This God I fear . . . and I love with all my being.

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2 Responses to “God’s Judgments: Some Thoughts”

  1. on 28 Jun 2009 at 4:42 pm 1.cindylou said …

    I couldn’t get the image of Hezekiah (2 Kings 20 [+/-]) out of my mind throughout this post. I’m puzzled by the disconnect between his words throughout chapters 18-19 about God alone being God and then when he receives word from God that he will soon die, he asks for 15 more years of life. Hezekiah repeatedly calls himself faithful and obedient, yet he is unwilling to be obedient to the point of death. And then in the same chapter, when he is informed that his request will cause serious trauma and discord in the lives of his children, he declares so what, I’ll live a happy extra 15 years.

    In chapter 18, he is like David, and does right in the eyes of the Lord, trusted, held fast, the Lord was with him, etc. While it might should bring me comfort to know that even men such as these failed, it doesn’t. It scares me to pieces.

  2. on 29 Jun 2009 at 8:15 am 2.Lorretta said …

    I think about these things ALOT. Two people have shaped my thinking recently. The first is David’s grandmother who will be 100 if she lives to see her next birthday in October. By all accounts, Granny has been a bulwark in the family–keeping things steady in the midst of many storms. She claims to know Jesus but as far as anyone can tell, her relationship with Him is a mystery. She’s a “good” woman and a former member and hard worker in the Methodist church. However, the last 10 years of her life have not been very good and although she’s kept going, the quality of her life has been dismal. She can barely move, see or hear. She’s grateful that she can still see a little bit and walk about a little bit, but that’s the extent of her existence. It makes me sad and scares me to think that’s where it goes if we live long enough.

    The second, was my grandmother who recently passed away. She was a hard woman of Czechoslovakian and Catholic descent but with no real faith in a strength other than her own. As a child, I was really close to her and spent a great deal of time with her in the kitchen, in the parlor learning to crochet and in the garden. Fractured family issues and painful experiences jettisoned me away from New Jersey and the distance between us grew until there was nothing there. One by one the relatives died and finally, she was the last living from her generation. She was being “cared for” (as in given food and shelter) by her son and his wife but there was not love involved–only duty. I went to visit her this last time and found her confined to bed with an injury and what I found shook me to the core; there she was, in a dark and dusty room. A whisper of the woman I had known, her hair was matted with vomit and tangled, her fingernails long and crusted with unknown substances. She lay under a thin blanket with only her shirt on. I barely knew where to begin. I grabbed a hairbrush and began to untangle her hair, talking to her as she asked me questions about my family. After all these years, she still knew who I was. She was very much in her mind. I only had an hour before leaving to get to the airport and it was all I could do to hold back the tears and answer her questions while ministering to her needs. She complained of pain in her leg and pulling back the covers revealed bedsores on her leg and feet. Finding a pillow to place between her knees I realized that my time was short and that this was most likely the last time I would see her. I also knew that she didn’t know Jesus no more than the rest of the family. Cautiously, I began. “Grandma” I inquired, “What do you think happens after you die?” I was not prepared for her answer: “I don’t like to think about it. I’m too busy thinking about this here and now. Ah such is life. Such is life.” I was stunned and wrestled with where to begin. Time was short and so I started talking to her about heaven and God. But she would hear none of it. A voice downstairs yelled that it was time to go and I was at the end. I hastily straightened her room and her blankets one last time and told her I love her but I had to go. “So soon?” she said, “You just got here!” Another yell from downstairs and I had to go. “I love you grandma. I wish I could stay longer but I have to go.” I turned to leave as I heard her say one last time: “Such is life, such is life.” As it turns out, she died 3 weeks later at the age of 95 and as far as I know, she died without Jesus.

    I’m marked forever by these experiences. Because I know that’s not the truth–that’s not the whole, the sum of what God wants for us….to live to a stage of decrepitsy without his truth…to work and invest in ourselves only to come up empty at the end. That’s not living long or living well. I agree with you Al, that’s not “living” at all.

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