Tuesday, July 14, 2015

"Why God does everything!"

Why God Does Everything!

Why does God do what He does? I was greatly helped in understanding this question by something Dr. J. I. Packer wrote in his book Hot Tub Religion. He said: “The only answer that the Bible gives to questions that begin: “Why did God do this or that is for His own glory.”
Everything God does is for His own glory.  Everything God permits is for His own glory. Everything God pursues is for His praise through Jesus Christ” (1 Pet. 4:11, “… in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen”).
From beginning to end nothing in the Bible is more ultimate in the mind and heart of God than the glory of God — the beauty of God, and the radiance of his manifold perfections. At every point in God’s revealed action, wherever he makes plain the ultimate goal of that action, the goal is always the same: to uphold and display his glory.
Why did God create and redeem a people who would be called by His name? He did it for His own glory (Isaiah 43:7, “everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made.”).
Why did God raise up Pharaoh and harden his heart? He did it to make known His glory (Exodus 14:4, “And I will harden Pharaoh’s heart, and he will pursue them, and I will get glory over Pharaoh and all his host …”Exodus 14:18, “And the Egyptians shall know that I am the LORD, when I have gotten glory over Pharaoh, his chariots, and his horsemen.”).
§  He predestined us for his glory (Ephesians 1:6).
§  He  created us for his glory (Isaiah 43:7).
§  He elected Israel for his glory (Jeremiah 13:11).
§  He saved his people from Egypt for his glory  (Psalm 106:8).
§  He rescued them from exile for his glory (Isaiah 48:9-11).
§  He sent Christ into the world so that Gentiles would praise God for his glory (Romans 15:9).
§  He commands his people, whether they eat or drink, to do all things for his glory (1 Corinthians 10:31).
§  He will send Jesus a second time so that all the redeemed will marvel at his glory (2 Thessalonians 1:9-10).
Therefore the mission of the church is to, “Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous works among all peoples” (Psalm 96:3).
The Hebrew word for “glory” means “that which is heavy or weighty.” When used figuratively, it refers to God’s intense, profound presence, his sheer “weight.” By contrast, David Wells says that God is regarded by many modern Christians as “weightless.” We must rediscover God’s glory.
Sam Storms gives a simple, but profound definition of the glory of God: “Glory is the beauty of God unveiled! Glory is the resplendent radiance of His power and His personality. Glory is all of God that makes God, God, and shows Him to be worthy of our praise and our boasting and our trust and our hope and our confidence and our joy! Glory is the external elegance of the internal excellencies of God. Glory is what you see and experience and feel when God goes public with His beauty!”
Like a diamond, the glory of God is a treasure with many facets. God’s glory is too active to fall into a simplified man-made compartmentalization of the subject. Indeed, we see in the Scriptures that this glory is very active and diversified. It comes (Isa 60:13; Ezek 43:2, 4; Micah 1:15), departs (1 Sam 4:21–22; Hosea 10:5), passes (Exodus 33:22) goes down (Ps 49:18), goes up (Ezek 11:23), goes out (Ezek 10:18), arouses oneself (Ps 57:9), arises (Ezek 3:12; 10:4), flies away (Hosea 9:11), stands (Ezek 3:23; 10:18), dwells (Ps 85:10), sends (Zach 2:12), shines (Isa 60:1), fills (Exodus 40:34,35; 1 Kings 8:11; 2 Chr 5:14), rejoices (Ps 16:9) and sings praise (Ps 30:13).
The glory of God is overwhelming. God is not like the dumb idols. The “comfort” found in false religions is that somehow the deity needs me. Their deities must be brought his food, moved into position, dusted, and repaired. But the glory of God declares that the living God does not need us. Sinful men must stagger back, painfully conscious that God is self-sufficient and we are completely unessential. The biblical terminology for glory has two aspects.  One is the renown God deserves because of the weightiness of his reputation.  The other is radiant and resplendent light.
God’s glory is the perfect harmony of all his attributes into one infinitely beautiful being. The glory of God summarizes the seriousness, the perfection, and the infinite significance of all of the attributes of God. It sums up who He is, in the awesome brightness and weightiness of all His perfections. What does it mean then for us to glorify God? We cannot add to His glory, for He is already perfectly and infinitely glorious. Rather, for us to glorify God means for us to ascribe the glory that is due His Name in worship. It means that we acknowledge His glory by living as though His perfections are as serious and significant as they really are, so that we reflect His glory through a pure mirror. It means that nothing horrifies us more than the thought of bringing dishonor to His glorious Name, and nothing delights us more than to feel His pleasure as we live to the praise of His glory. It also means that we declare His glory among the nations, inviting others to join us in our love affair with His glorious perfection. Glorifying God thus consumes and defines every aspect of our life and witness as well as our worship.
In James 2:1 the Lord Jesus is referred to as, “the Lord of glory. Some translations smooth out the passage to read: “our glorious Lord Jesus Christ,” or “Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory.” But what James actually wrote was “our Lord, Jesus Christ, the Glory.” James is stressing an important fact when he calls Jesus “the Glory.” When the Bible speaks of glory, the word usually refers to a cloud of radiance — light, color, and sound– that appeared from time to time in the Old Testament, the shekinah glory. Those allowed to see into this cloud, as in Ezekiel 1, saw within a myriad of shining angels surrounding the throne of God. This company manifests the glory of the shining Being at the center. That Figure, seated on a throne, is the source of glory, the source of light reflected and refracted through the angels. He is Glory Personified. James, writing from a Jewish perspective to Jewish converts, wants his readers to see that Jesus and the Shekinah Glory of the Old Testament are the same.
Christ is the incarnation of God’s glory (John 1:14), and it is the vision of this glory in the new heavens and earth for which we all hope. When Jesus walked the earth, this glory was usually hidden from plain view and only visible for brief moments to a select few of His disciples (Luke 9:28–36). But all who love and serve the Messiah will one day get to see the beauty of His glory. In the new Jerusalem we will see Him face to face (Rev. 21).
The great sin of the world is not that the human race has failed to work for God so as to increase His glory, but that we have failed to delight in God so as to reflect his glory. For God’s glory is most reflected in us when we are most delighted in Him!
Dr. John Piper illustrates so articulately: “God has no deficiencies that I might be required to supply. He is complete in himself.  He is overflowing with happiness in the fellowship of the Trinity. The upshot of this is that God is a mountain spring, not a watering trough. A mountain spring is self-replenishing. It constantly overflows and supplies others.  But a watering trough needs to be filled with a pump or bucket brigade.  So if you want to glorify the worth of a watering trough you work hard to keep it full and useful.  But if you want to glorify the worth of a spring you do it by getting down on your hands and knees and  drinking to your heart’s satisfaction, until you have the refreshment and strength to go back down in the valley and tell people what you’ve found.
You do not glorify a mountain spring by dutifully hauling water up the path from the river below and dumping it in the spring.  What we have seen is that God is like a mountain spring, not a watering trough.  He is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him.
In other words, this unspeakably good news for helpless sinners — that God delights not when we offer him our strength — but when we wait for his this good news that I need to hear so badly again and again, is based firmly on a vision of God as sovereign, self-sufficient and free.  If we do not have this foundational vision of God in place when we ask how we can please him, it is almost certain that our efforts to please him win become subtle means of self-exaltation, and end in the oppressive bondage of legalistic strivings.  A lifelong hope in the overflowing grace of God to meet all our needs (“according to the riches of his glory!)simply will not stand without a deep foundation in the doctrine of the greatness and the glory of God.”
We urgently need to recapture the centrality of glorifying God in our lives and work. Too much of what passes for evangelical Christianity in America is man-centered or even self-centered for the glory ourselves and not the glory of God.
Open up the gates and let the King of glory come in
Fill the whole earth with praises as we lift our hands and worship You
Open up the doors and let Your glory fill the earth!
Message by : Pastor Wade Trimmer

tridm.org



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