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The
Truth About God.....
Many years ago I awoke in the middle of the night to the sound of my father in agony, it was to mark the beginning of the slow trip through hell called cancer. If you are going through this yourself or with someone close to you please forgive my use of that horrible word, few words can match it for horror. But such was the beginning of a process of questioning and thinking that ended for me some years after my father's death.
My first
reaction to my father's pain was one that surprised and disturbed me a
great deal; anger and resentment towards God. I never would have
expected it. I am more than
somewhat embarrassed and actually sad to have to tell you what
I said to God, I actually told him "I know everyone has to die,
but if you let Dad suffer horribly I'll never forgive you, because
I know you can prevent it if you want to".
Fortunately,
my father never went through the long suffering, the anticipation of
which brought on my outburst to God. But it did leave me with a
problem; I needed to know
why God permits suffering. There was obviously something about
the nature of God that I didn't understand.
So like
whinnie-the-pooh I was determined to
think, think, think.
The first
rule in my process of inquiry that
I determined to use for the answer to the question of God and
suffering, was; that the answer must be quite deductive, as
opposed
to inductive, in other words; an inductive conclusion is achieved
by direct observation. For example, if you see me move a glass
of water with my hand you know how that glass was moved. However,
if you don't directly see me move the glass, but I'm the only other
person in the room you can deduce that I moved the glass. Similarly,
most conclusions as to why God permits wickedness are somewhat
inductive;
God exists, God is all powerful, wickedness exists, therefore God
permits
wickedness.
The second
rule of inquiry was a principle of deductive reasoning that Sherlock
Holmes tried to impress
on Watson "When you have eliminated every possibility, whatever
is left, no matter how impossible must be true". In other words,
if you come to a crime scene, and you eliminate every possible murder
weapon except for a green monkey with a red machete, you have to
put aside your preconceptions and preferences and look for a green
monkey with a red machete.
The third
rule of inquiry was a principle of
tenacity from my Dad. I remember one time many years ago I was out on
the
patio with my Dad and my oldest brother came up and very smugly said
"no
one can understand the fact that God has no beginning or end". To which
Dad
said "well, I don't understand it, but that doesn't mean it can't be
understood.
You can understand anything if you think about it long enough, look at
what
Einstein did with Time. Who would have thought that Time could be so
well
understood?".
The forth
principle was one from my mother, and although I wasn't going to
consider it binding I wanted to
honour it if I could. She maintained that "the truths about God
elevate him, and lies about him degrade him".
So, armed
with these four principles of inquiry:
1.
The problem must be quite deductive and not inductive.
2. After I
had eliminated every possibility whatever was left, no matter how
impossible, I had to accept.
3. You can
understand anything if you think about it long and hard enough.
4. The truth
about God should elevate your view of him.
And so, my
pondering began.
The first
question I asked of the great 'out
there' was "is this just the way things are supposed to be?".
Interestingly,
the bottom line of all medicine, law, religion, philosophy, and much
science
is the simple sentence "things ain't right". Medicine tries to repair
and
prevent, Law tries to control and correct, Religion and Philosophy try
to
explain, and much of Science tries to repair.
So the
answer to the first question is; No, this is not the way things are
supposed to be.
The second
question, which at first seems to
be the same as the first question is "is the earth being lived in
according
to God's will?". Now this is where it gets interesting, logically the
answer must be the same as the answer to the first question; "No,
the earth is not being lived in according to God's will". So,
stated differently; the earth is being lived in against God's will.
As I thought about this I realized; if you can do something against
someone's will, that person obviously has limitations. For example, if
I come into your house and take some of your possessions against your
will, I can only do that if I'm stronger than you or I have legal
powers over you, as in the case of a repossession. But in each case you
have limitations. If you had unlimited control or powers there is no
way I could take those possessions against your will. Likewise the
earth can't be lived on in a manner against God's will if he's
unlimited, therefore God must in fact be a
limited being. This, needless to say, is
something I had never
heard before anywhere, but invoking the Holmesian principle "when
you have eliminated every possibility, whatever is left no matter
how impossible must be true" requires you to come to that conclusion.
And in fact, the Lord's Prayer confirms this; by asking for God's will to be done on Earth, it is apparent that the Earth is existing in a condition against his will (Matt 6:10). And on the night preceding his death, when Jesus begged for "this cup" to be "removed" because it was not 'his will', who was he picturing ?(Luke 22:42)
But if this is true; that these conditions exist against God's will, it seems to degrade God and not elevate him.
But consider this illustration: A good strong man gets into a situation
where he has to fight a dirty streetfighter, well, he makes a resolve
to himself that he's not going to fight dirty just to win a fight. So,
he wades into the fight and probably takes a few more licks than he
would
have if he'd fought dirty, but, by golly, he wins. As he walks away
from
the fight do you view him as a weak man because he limited himself to
fighting
clean? Hardly. His limitations actually make you view him with more
respect. Actually, the Bible says that God cannot lie... That's a
limitation,
it also says he can't leave his word unfulfilled, or a promise
unkept...
Those are limitations too. So limitations can be a good thing and a
sign
of strength. So mom's still right.
So, the
first conclusion I came to (there are three main conclusions and one
super-conclusion) is: God is limited.
The second
point is actually quite straightforward, if unorthodox. And it is this;
anyone who suffers unfairly
against their will is a victim. That, in fact is the definition
of a victim. So God by definition is a victim: His creation has
somehow been wrested from him and abused in front of his eyes against
his will with him unable to stop it. What this did for me is, for the
first time in my life, I felt compassion for God. Instead of "poor me,
my Dad is suffering with cancer and God won't help my Dad or me" it
became
"poor God, his creation has been somehow taken from him, and he's
forced
to see it suffer". So the second conclusion is: God
is a
victim. In fact The
victim.
The third
conclusion is a bit more convoluted. So put on your thinking cap. To
illustrate this point let
me create a scenario similar to that of the book of Job, wherein
the veil of invisibility into heaven is removed and we can see
and hear the events happening in heaven. The scene is this: Satan
has just gotten Adam and Eve to sin and he's back up in heaven
polishing stars, or whatever it is they do up there. And along comes
God and he says to Satan " I saw what you just did with Adam and Eve."
Satan's
reply "So?".
God: "Well,
because of what you got them to do, now they have to die".
Satan: "So?".
God: "That
means you have to die too".
Satan: "No I
don't".
God: "How is
that?".
Satan: "You
can't kill me. Unless you can prove that you wouldn't do the same thing
in similar circumstances. With the right pressure you'll bend or break
the rules too. No one is any better than me, with the right
circumstances and motivation anyone will bend or break the rules".
(That Satan feels that no
one has perfect integrity, and that God's integrity is on trial can
be established with at least two accounts in the bible. The first is
in Job chapter 2:3 wherein God in talking to Satan says ' you try to
incite me without cause to do evil to my servant Job', thus showing
that Satan thought he could provoke God to do wrong. The second account
is in Matthew 4:1-11 where Satan directly tries to challenge and
compromise
Jesus' integrity. Again, who was Jesus picturing?)
God: "That's
not true, my laws are perfect and I'll never break them."
Satan:
"Really? Well, try this one on, big guy.
You told
Adam and Eve if they touched or ate
that fruit they would die and you'd reject them. Yes?".
God: "Yes".
Satan:
"...and you always keep your word, in
fact, that's one of your laws. Yes?".
God: " Yes
to both".
Satan: " But
you also had already told them that they could have children. And you
always keep your word. So let's see... hmmm.... You've rejected them,
but they still can have children, so obviously the children won't be
yours, I guess that makes them mine".
At that
point God knew what Satan would do to human children, brutalizing,
rape, torture, disease...
Satan:
"...by the way, you had a little rule
with Adam and Eve; if they so much as ate or touched that fruit once,
you'd
kill them. I'm holding you to your own rule; if you so much as bend or
break
one rule one time to help them, you lose. and then you can't kill me.
Your
big lesson with Adam and Eve was respect for property rights, (see the
monograph on this website 'everything you need to know about life')
and you no longer own the human race, I do." (remember, even
Jesus acknowledged that Satan was the ruler of this world, {John
14:30})
So, what I
realized is that God is on trial. Just because you're on trial that doesn't mean you're guilty, but you
do have to show up in court. (The concept of God being on trial is not
foreign to the Bible; Asaph in Psalm 74:22 says to God 'arise o God,
do conduct your own case at law'. And again in Micah 6:1-3 God offers
to put himself on trial with Israel)
It is an
interesting fact of life that you can tell a great deal about a person
by watching them work, you can see if they are organized, neat, smart,
clean, etc. etc. Applying that same principle to observing God's work
you will come up with an interesting conclusion about the nature of
God; the nature
of every single thing God has made, without exception, can be described
with one word, and that word is "Law".
If everything he has made reflects and conforms to law, then he himself must be a law-loving, law-abiding person.
If everything he has made reflects and conforms to law, then he himself must be a law-loving, law-abiding person.
This
conversation between God and Satan continued...
Satan to
God: "Are you perfect?".
God: " Yes".
Satan: "Did
you make me perfect?".
God: "Yes".
Satan: "
Then how did I turn out so bad? If there is a flaw in me I must have
gotten it from you".
With this
compelling logic Satan clinched the deal, at this point God and
everyone else knew that God would have to be so severely tested, that
at the end of the trial he
could with solid proof say "There is no defect in me at all".(Deut 32:5) Just
a side comment here, you have to give the Devil his due. It is
unarguable that Round One went to the Devil. Neither God nor any of his
angels could come up with a counter-argument that could stop this
horrible process, and it is unarguable that Satan derailed God's
original plan.
Here's
something to ponder. Every Christian knows that when Christ was on
earth, he pictured God. Whether you believe he was God incarnate, a
God-man being, or a perfect man, we all know he pictured God. He
himself said "if you've seen me you've seen the Father". So why is it
then, if we know that Jesus
pictured God his whole life on earth, we forget that he especially
pictured
God on his last day of life on earth? When he was on trial, (I count
at least five trials, starting the night before he died), and said not one word
in self-defense, when he died of a broken heart, the person who most
loved God; tried, convicted, and executed as a blasphemer. Who was he
picturing? God is on trial, and yet how much does he say in his own
defense? God would die of a broken heart if he could die, because of
the reproach he has had to endure. Here is the kindest, most tender
hearted person who has ever lived accused even by his best servants of
permitting wickedness. And when Jesus died his horrible death, is there
any doubt in your mind that he was a victim? Again, who was he
picturing? (Please, you really must read Psalm 69:20) And so the super-conclusion is: God
does not permit wickedness, God has wickedness forced on him against
his will.
In fact in
the Bible book of James, James says "with evil God cannot be tried, nor
with evil does he try
anyone". God just flat does not have evil in him, he never touches
the stuff. To even say he "permits" wickedness is an inaccurate
statement at best, and a false accusation at worst. I like Elihu's
denouement towards the end of the book of Job, "Know this for a
fact; God will never do wrong".
What is
called God's permission of wickedness might be illustrated in this
manner; A man marries a woman
who already has a child, but before he can adopt the child, the
mother dies. At the same time the government under which the man
and child live determine that the child needs a surgery that the
father/husband feels is unnecessary. At this point the father has
two choices, one; kidnap the child and probably get caught and lose
the child forever, two; let the government do the surgery, adopt
the child, and then repair the damage. If God were to intervene
prematurely (illegally) he would ,in fact, prove Satan's point and all
would
be lost. If he waits until he has the legal right, Ezk 21:27 (Please
see the monograph on this website ' how the ransom works') he will
regain control and do his repair ("look I'm making all things new"
Revelation 21:5).
Conclusions:
1. God is
limited (in a good way)
2. God is a
victim
3. God is on
trial
4. God does
not permit wickedness, but it is
forced on him against his will. (SuperConclusion)
Well, it's
probably not what you're used to hearing, but as Elihu said to Job (Job
34:3) "...the ear itself makes a test of words, just as the palate
tastes when eating".
Also, please
consider this: For a law to be a law it can have no exceptions, in fact,
that is what makes it
a law. Similarly, for a complete explanation to be truly complete
it must cover all possible aspects, or it is in fact not a complete
explanation. To say that God permits wickedness so as to
allow
persons to choose to serve him might satisfy some. But frankly, many
have chosen to serve God and still suffer and experience wickedness.
And even Asaph in the 73rd Psalm confirmed that the wicked do not serve
God and yet sometimes prosper greatly. And when a two-week old infant
suffers horribly and dies of cancer, please, tell me how that child
benefits from suffering. In fact, wickedness is not here for anyone's
benefit.
It is a horrible thing that God is forced to deal with, and he will
deal
with it well. But it is not something he chose.
Dear king
David made a very peculiar statement once. He had just done that awful
episode in his life with Bathsheba, and he wrote Psalm 51. And in that
Psalm he makes this peculiar statement to God "against you, you alone I
have sinned". He just
murdered a man, committed adultery, and yet he says to God 'against
you alone I have sinned'. Why? Because David knew that 'Guess Who' had
to clean up the mess, not him, but God. Everything ever done wrong will be
fixed by God and is in fact against God. We're just very lucky to have
a God like him.
So, gentle
reader, thank you for taking the time to read this. Please take a bit
of time to ruminate on it.
(If I could Just trouble you with a brief afterword here..... )
We are
always told that God is;
Omnipotent
(all powerful)Omniscient (all knowing)
and,
Omnipresent (in all places, everywhere).
These
statements are intended to be the highest superlatives that could
possibly describe our Creator. And they are well-intended, but on
closer examination, God is not unlimited in his power. In fact, Satan is
the unlimited one, he will use his power for good or bad whenever and
however he chooses. God on the other hand will only use his power
for good, so he is not All powerful, but he does
have Unmeasurable power, but he, because of his
pure and clean nature has no power for wrong.
God also is not all
knowing, if that were true then all things would be predestined, but he
gave us his greatest gift when he gave us the ability to choose
(free-will). Some would say 'God chooses not to know', well,
that is true, if I choose not to know how to speak Japanese, do I know
how to speak Japanese? No. If God chooses not to know everything about
the future then he is not all knowing. Some would say by choice, I
would say by design, and really it's the same thing.
And lastly God is
not Omnipresent, because then he would be in the hand of the murderer,
when murder
is committed, and in the virus that causes horrible disease.
So we are
told that God is:
Omnipotent,
but he's not, he's better than that, he only uses his power for Good.
We are told
that God is:
Omniscient,
but he's not, he's better than that, he lets us choose. (Free-Will)
We are told
that God is:
Omnipresent, but he's not, he's better than that, he is perfectly clean
and never touches bad (see the monograph on this website "Uncommon
Definitions of Common Words": at the end of the definition for the word
Sin, the part
about the word 'holy').
It turns out that God is not as we have been told, he turns
out to be much better than we could have ever imagined.
Elihu said at Job 36:2, 'Have patience with me a little while, and I shall declare to you that there are yet words to say for God'.
Consider too, this deep insight that David made about God's character.
(And this is paraphrased to bring out the thought.)
David, speaking of God, said:
'I have come to see that You are the kind of person that values keeping your word so much, that you put the doing of right, and the keeping of your word, as more important than how people may view you as a Person. No matter how much it may effect your reputation or hurt you.'
(paraphrased from psalm 138:2)
"For thou hast magnified thy word above all thy name." (ASV)
"For You have magnified Your word above all Your name." (NKJV)
"You have exalted your word above all your name" (ESV, footnote reading)
So, He values his word above his name. Kind of a different thought, yes ?
Actually, what an amazing insight into God's nature and personality. It almost takes your breath away to realize what kind of person God actually is.
Methinks David knew God very well.
~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~
Factor this into your cogitations as well:
In the Bible book of Job everyone just assumes that God is causing all of Job's problems, it's not even questioned by ANYONE, EVER.
But here's the amazing part; When God finally speaks on His own behalf.... HE DOESN'T BLAME ANYONE. All he basically says to Job is, "You shoulda known me better".... THAT'S IT !
Anyone else would have said, "It's not my fault, Satan did it !" But there's no record that the role of Satan was EVER revealed to Job. (possibly later, but not necessarily)
What kind of person can take that kind of abuse and not blame the guilty ?.....
(hmmm...... kinda reminds me of somebody on trial with Pontius Pilate..... hmmm....)
I'm tellin' yah, this is an amazing God.... This is a very Noble Person.....
really think about this..... in personal terms, not in religious terms.......it's just unbelievable.....
~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~o~
If you're still having problems with the concept of God being on trial, (yep, it's a lil' different) let me share a little Biblical Gem with you:
Paul at Romans 3:4 correctly translates Psalms 51:4 which really says according to Paul, 'that you will win your court-case when you are judged' ! (the only correct english translation I'm aware of, of Ps. 51:4, is the Douay where it is numbered as 50:6). Oddly though, many translations of Paul's translation of Ps 51:4 at Rom 3:4 are correct. God being judged and on trial is not foreign to the Bible, or to the Bible writers.
David clearly knew it, Asaph clearly knew it, Paul clearly knew it ...
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