George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
February 3
God's Self-Limitation
"God... delivered his strength into
captivity." Psa 78:61
These words in their primary and historical
reference refer to the taking captive of the Ark of God by the Philistines.
What a terrific calamity that seemed to Israel! They thought that the glory of
Israel had departed. To the whole world it looked as if God were overcome, as
if some power had arisen that was really superior to God, or as if there was
something in the world that would ultimately baffle and defeat His purposes.
You can understand how, to a religious nation like the Jews, it was a
tremendous and terrifying thought, as, of course, it ought to be to every man.
And then this inspired writer came along being illuminated by the divine
Spirit, and puts a different meaning on the whole thing--says that God designed
it, says in his own poetic language that God, nobody else, God delivered His
strength into captivity.
Don't you see in a moment how that thought
would animate and inspire Israel? It was not enemies who had defeated God, it
was God who had deliberately done it. God had not exercised His own
omnipotence; He had self-limited Himself. And if we could only understand how
God, not only with the Ark for that was typical, but right down the centuries,
has voluntarily delivered His strength into captivity, I think it might confirm
our faith.
God's Sovereign Will
Well now, let's consider the thought of
God's sovereign will. The one jubilant note of the whole Bible is that God's
will in itself is sovereign. "I formed the light and I created the
darkness. I am God and there is none beside me." Anyone who imagines that
there is any will in the universe that can ultimately thwart God is not making
the Bible his rule of faith and life. Of course, that does not mean that God's
will is arbitrary. God limits His rule of many things just because He is love.
As Butler said in his own deep way, "God's being is a kind of law to His
working." All God's workings must be love if He is love. But it does mean
that God's will in itself is irresistible, that nothing can ever ultimately baffle
it, that there is no rival in heaven or in hell who can ever stand against the
will of God. Don't you see how that thought is bound up with the ringing note
of triumph of the Bible? You have no assurance for the future of the world, but
for the future of yourself, and yourself strangely corresponds to the greater
progress of the world.
What a great comfort when a man can say,
"This is the will of God, even our sanctification." Poor, weak
sinners baffled every day, it is God's will that ultimately we will be clothed
in white. But if God's will can be thwarted, if there are powers abroad that
limit His sovereignty, why, you and I in every effort may be just beating the
air. Nothing may come of it. You know that makes life impossible, and therefore
all the depths in your heart corroborate the jubilant assurance of the Bible.
If it did not it would not be the Bible because the deepest mark of inspiration
is within, and if the Bible did not correspond with all the voices from the
depths of your heart, you might lay it aside as not being inspired. But when
you come to the Lord Jesus, you find the Lord Jesus teaching you to pray,
"Thy will be done."
Now if God's will is an irresistible will,
and if it is always exercised as an irresistible will, why should you and I
pray, "Thy will be done"? It will be done whether you pray or not; it
will be done whether you help or not. It must be done if it is exercised as a
sovereign will. Don't you see you are faced by this dilemma, though nobody likes
the argument of a dilemma--either the will of God is not omnipotent (a thought
that is intolerable to the human heart) or else for wise, holy purposes, when
God is dealing with mankind, He does not totally exercise His sovereign
will--He delivers His strength into captivity. And don't you see what His wise
and holy purposes are?
Fellow-Workers With God
My father used to spend his leisure in
editing books, and I remember once, just when I was about to finish school, he
was editing one of the cantos of Childe Harold. He had the introduction all
shaped out and most of his notes were blocked, and he turned to me and said,
"I am very busy. I want you to complete the editing of this book for
me." You know, to this hour, I have never forgotten it. To this hour I
remember the joy and pride I felt when I was called to be a fellow-worker with
my father.
And if God's will for mankind were
sovereign, if it just had to be, you could not be a fellow-worker with God. It
would not make the least difference what you did, whether you prayed or worked
or gave. God is so passionately eager that you and I, His children, should be
raised up to the joy and honor of being fellow-workers with Him that He just
does not exercise the sovereignty He might--He delivers His strength into
captivity, limits Himself that His children may help Him. Surely that is a
motive worthy of a father, and that is just the name that Jesus gives Him.
I don't want to be philosophical, but you
might put it another way. You might think of the purpose. Well, now, if you are
going to be a fellow-worker with a man, that man must have a purpose. If a man
has a purpose for building a house, every mason, every bricklayer is a
fellow-worker with him. If a shipbuilder has a purpose for building a ship,
then the whole labor force can be fellow-workers with him. If a man has no
purpose, you cannot be a fellow-worker with him. And it is just so with man and
God.
Self. Limitation
But does it ever occur to you that to have
a purpose is to limit yourself? The builder would not take months to build the
house if he could do it like the palace of Aladdin, all in a moment. The
shipbuilder would not spend years and millions if he could create a ship just
in an hour. And don't you see, if God limits Himself, if God doesn't complete
His purposes in a moment, if God doesn't say in the slums of Glasgow, "Let
there be light," as He once said in chaos, it is because He is limiting
Himself for a purpose. And only in a purpose can you and I, His children, ever
be fellow-workers with Him. I don't have the least doubt that the sovereign
will of God could convert Africa just as we worship here; I don't have the
least doubt that He could change Ireland and make it in a moment the Island of
the Saints, but He does not. Don't you see that if He did, you and I, His
children, could never be His fellow-workers? I think if we could only grasp
that thought, it might help to explain a good deal of the suffering in the
world. It is the suffering of being sharers in a purpose.
Take, for instance, the great French
general who commanded at Verdun. Well now, why did he struggle on there?
Because he had the purpose of saving France. Not only he, but every man down to
the foot soldier shared in his purpose of saving France. They knew perfectly
well that if wounds, pain or death came, all was bound up in the purpose which
they shared with their general. If God has a great purpose, and if the Lord
says, "Thy will be done," we have got to share it; and if it is a
purpose in which suffering is inevitable in such a world as this, doesn't it
cast a good deal of light upon much of the suffering in the world?
The Conviction That We Are Free
I am quite certain there is no Christian
who, when he makes a choice, does not feel that that choice is a real choice,
determined by himself. We all recognize that much of our battle is fixed for us
by heredity, but there is not one of us who does not know in his heart that his
fate is in his own hands. We are free creatures.
And don't you see why God made us like
that? God's purpose was love; God wanted beings who could be in fellowship with
Himself. It would be an awful thing to be a lonely God. God wanted beings who
could share His purpose, think His thoughts after Him, enter into His will,
pray to Him, be His children. And no one could do that unless he were free. God
could easily have made us mechanical so that sin would have been impossible, so
that everything we did would have been automatic. Do you think God could ever
have shared His thoughts and purpose with beings like that? Don't you see, the
moment He made us free, He delivered His strength into captivity? God has
created something with which He cannot interfere. The one thing God can never
do, for His gifts are without repentance, is to smash and shatter our freedom
by the intrusion of omnipotence. God can do just what He does in Christ--He can
woo, He can appeal, He can try to win, He can breathe His spirit on each one of
us; but if we misuse our freedom, not even God will break in with His
omnipotence to make it impossible.
And yet people say, Why does God allow sin?
God does not allow sin. Why does God allow the slums of Glasgow? Why did God
allow war? God never allows war. God, wanting beings to have fellowship with
Him, made us free, and not even God, having made us free, will bring His
omnipotence to stop us when our freewill misused gives us sin, misery, slums
and war.
When God made us free, He delivered His
strength into captivity, and in that sense it is in captivity still. Without
our freedom what a poor, miserable thing life would be. I think all that is
perhaps corroborated by a very deep feeling that God's children have that they
can disappoint Him. If a child does something that is wrong, he disappoints his
mother or his father, or a husband may disappoint his wife, and you and I can
disappoint God. My dear brother, if our sin was predetermined from all eternity,
we could not disappoint God, and there could be no joy in heaven over one
sinner that repenteth.
Christ Was Delivered for Us
Let us consider the thought for a moment in
connection with Christ. Don't you see how it all comes to its climax, how God
delivered His strength into captivity when He gave His only-be-gotten Son for
you and me? He had done it before in regard to His sovereign will when He
created free beings--He had done it because He was love. And then, in His own
way, He did it to its utmost when He gave the Lord--He did it because He was
love. "God so loved the world that He gave"---delivered Him to the
captivity of the virgin's womb, delivered Him to the captivity of the body that
had been prepared for Him so that the Lord emptied Himself and took on Him the
form of a servant. Did you ever think how often the word "delivered"
is used of the Lord Jesus Christ? "He was delivered to the high
priest." "Pilate released Barabbas and delivered Jesus."
"He was delivered by the counsel and foreknowledge of God." But most
beautiful of all: "He was delivered for our offenses." Christ was the
strength of God, and God delivered His strength into captivity. The marvelous
and beautiful thing is just this, that by that deliverance you and I are saved.
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