October 27, 2009 | By: John Piper
Sometimes readers of the Bible see the conditions that God lays down for his blessing and they conclude from these conditions that our action is first and decisive, then God responds to bless us.
That is not right.
There are indeed real conditions that God often commands. We must meet them for the promised blessing to come. But that does not mean that we are left to ourselves to meet the conditions or that our action is first and decisive.
Here is one example to show what I mean.
In Jeremiah 29:13 God says to the exiles in Babylon, “You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.” So there is a condition: When you seek me with all your heart, then you will find me. So we must seek the Lord. That is the condition of finding him.
True.
But does that mean that we are left to ourselves to seek the Lord? Does it mean that our action of seeking him is first and decisive? Does it mean that God only acts after our seeking?
No.
Listen to what God says in Jeremiah 24:7 to those same exiles in Babylon: “I will give them a heart to know that I am the Lord, and they shall be my people and I will be their God, for they shall return to me with their whole heart.”
So now connect that with Jeremiah 29:13. The condition there was that they seek the Lord with their whole heart. Then God will be found by them. But now we see that the promise in Jeremiah 24:7 is that God himself will give them such a heart so that they will return to him with their whole heart.
This is one of the most basic things people need to see about the Bible. It is full of conditions we must meet for God’s blessings. But God does not leave us to meet them on our own. The first and decisive work before and in our willing is God’s prior grace. Without this insight, hundreds of conditional statements in the Bible will lead us astray.
*I cried reading this thinking about certain people in my life. This post is dedicated to people whom I love deeply, who see God as a conditional God, and only that. And because of this misunderstanding, they are disinterested in everything God wills them to do, like going to church, praying, reading the bible, meeting other Christians.
Conditions and rules and wills are boring. BORING. Let's not talk about them. Let's not talk about what God wants. Let's talk about something else.
I cried because I could only think about God for what he is. He is the Promise-Keeper.
To the exiled Babylonians he said "they shall be my people, and I shall be their God."
"you are my people, and I am your God."
God you want me to be yours. That's what you really want.
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God my friends are Yours too.
2 comments:
amen.
wow thank you for sharing this!
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