We've all heard these before...
God's a hater
God's genocidal
God's cruel
God's mean
God's ___ place negative adjective here ___*
Blah Blah Blah
This is what everyone should've read from the Bible....
[ John 15:14 ~ "You are my friends if
you do what I command." ]
We
hear it all the time from folks that do not know their Bible well or read it
often:
“How
can God supposedly be such a loving God, when He allowed genocides?”
When
people read the story of the Amalekites they usually chalk-up the call to
eradicate them as an overreaction on God’s part or an overly hostile and angry
God, just as the heretic Marcion did in the early second century. This is a
telling comparison…that people who think like Marcion think the same way as a heretic did.
Here’s
the thing though, the statements about wiping them out comes multiple times and
for a while, God's people can't seem to get these people dead enough for God's purposes. As the flawed vessels they are, they continue to
fail in this task. As with everything else...it all works out to God's glory.
It works out if one actually reads the Bible, understands history and educates themselves
about God's so-called "genocidal rages" which are in reality
justified retribution for horrific and unspeakable evils to children, the
elderly and women. Evils that most people casually glance over as just another
difficult to understand passage from the Old Testament.
Exodus
17:14 “Then the Lord said to Moses, “Write this as a memorial in a book and
recite it in the ears of Joshua that I will utterly blot out the memory of
Amalek from under heaven.”
Deuteronomy
25:17-18 “Remember what Amalek did to you on the way as you came out of Egypt,
how he attacked you on the way when you were faint and weary, and cut off your
tail, those who were lagging behind you, and he did not fear God.
1
Samuel 15:3 “Now go and strike Amalek and devote to destruction all that they
have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, child and infant, ox and
sheep, camel and donkey.’”
Amalek
was the grandson of Esau. The Amalekites themselves were cruel and cowardly. In
every story in which an Amalekites participate, we see extraordinarily evil people committing cruel acts and doing so in a cowardly manner. They are not noble in
their actions.
In
Exodus 17:8-16, we learn that the Lord is particularly peeved at the Amalekites
and He swore to (v.16) "have war with Amalek from generation to
generation." The real crime here is not because the Amalekites attacked
the army of Israel. Oh no, they (Deuteronomy 25:18), “met you on your journey
and attacked all who were lagging behind; they had no fear of God” The
Amalekites only attacked those who were unable to defend themselves, the weak
(think children and elderly) and those unable to keep pace in the desert with their stronger
brothers. They attacked the stragglers, those in Israel who were too ill, too
weak, or too young to protect themselves. These are the very people that God as
a specific heart for in their weakness and downtrodden lives. After this
incident the mass of people were broken into tribes and the weaker ones would
from that point on, always be in the main body moving along with their tribe
(Numbers 2)
As
God promised, He beleaguered the Amalekites. They were never friends of Israel
nor God because of their wickedness. In Numbers, they fought the Israelites entrance into
Canaan. In Judges, they are mentioned several times as Israel's oppressors.
When the Amalekites show up in Scripture it is assured they will act as
cowardly skunks.
They
are finally done away with in…
1
Chronicles 4:43 ~ “And they defeated the remnant of the Amalekites who had
escaped, and they have lived there to this day.”
Had
Saul carried out his duty as charged earlier in the Bible, they would’ve been
wiped off the face of the Earth sooner but all happens to the glory of God
anyway. So who was cruel here? God or the Amalekites? The One seeking to right
the wrong with justice or the ones committing the unspeakable atrocities? What
we learn from the story and context is that the Amalekites had it coming in
terms of justice. What we also learn is that people that are brazen enough to
make the aforementioned thoughtless comments need to learn to read the Bible
better.
The
Amalekites nor other people that God smites did what God told them if they were
to be His friend. Obey His commands. They did just the opposite and reaped the
reward for disobedience (Deuteronomy 28). They are cursed and
inevitably...annihilated for their wickedness. ZAP!
So
what we see from God is not monstrous and evil behavior but is actually justice due for an unrepentant people. These are the type of people that
remain in their sin and refuse to repent. They are therefore worthy only of
death and that is what they receive. It is the eventual destination for all that
refuse to turn to God…eternal punishment in death, separated from God forever.
The
next idea is usually always missed by those that would make the "mean
God" accusations against God. The next statements never occur to these
types of people because frankly, those naive enough to make the previous
accusations are ignorant of the Bible and the truth of God’s amazing patience
in the face of exceptionally abominable practices and disobedience.
As
was often the case, God was extraordinarily patient, long-suffering and
forbearing when it came to people’s sin. Most often (as they usually do today),
they confused God’s silence and patience as His final reaction, judgment or
even apathy. Just as people will realize today sooner or later, this prolonged
patience and silence was only calm before the storm of judgment. In dealing
with evil nations in the OT, God often withheld punishment until their
wickedness reached a particularly high level or a fevered pitch. He was
abundantly patient until sinners had been given over fully to their reprobate
nature and depraved minds and literally began thumbing their noses at God in
defiance just was we see in the United States and the world today. Year upon
year of wickedness and flaunting of sinful behavior meanwhile they are flipping
God the middle-finger.
What
we see with the Amalekites is that the violence against the Israelites was not
the main mitigating factor for the hammer of justice coming down on their
heads. It was the overt rebellion against God and their outrageous insolence.
It must also be understood that in a Sovereign God’s universe it is actually
God who was avenging the Israelites, not the Israelites themselves. It is God
who has perfect knowledge, wisdom, justice and the authority to make this type
of judgment call against a people. Mankind on the other hand even on their best
day do not have the ethical ground to stand on nor the authority to make this
judgment without being hypocrites and mockers of God for they themselves are
sinners worthy of death.
This
being said we should look closer at God’s wrath in these so-called genocidal
situations. They are extreme from our point of view but in reality we
are all worthy of the same punishment and it wasn’t for Jesus Christ and God’s
forbearance we would’ve gotten it already. If we attempt to fully grasp God’s
wrath we must remove ourselves from our myopic human
presuppositions and points-of-view. We must look at God’s wrath through a
divine lens as much as we can as fallen humanity. We need to see the
far-reaching implications of God’s wrath and stop viewing it from our
pigeonholed viewpoint.
Other
than Jesus Christ, the closest we have in terms of the pathos of God when it
comes to wrath and anger is through the shrieks and pronouncements of impending
doom from the prophets. No pathos or emotion of God is more vehemently
denounced by today’s politically dorky society that God’s anger towards
sinners. “We can’t preach God’s wrath, it’ll scare people away and we’ll lose
church members!” “We can only talk about a loving and accepting God that has
open arms for everybody.” …Even though this perception of God is not the God
fully described in the Bible. We as humans always see God’s anger as sinister
and, well, evil and something that should be inhibited or repressed. It is rare
that those quick to pass judgment on God’s motives rarely ever bother to
actually read into the reasons for why He is angry in the first place. They
usually just assume they know and then fraudulently jump to conclusions and assert
that “God is mean”.
What
we do find if we read the Bible is a God who: Accumulates anger through human
injustices, sin and disobedience. Instead of judging them immediately and
react to them on the spot he forebears and the sin ends up becoming accretions
adding to God’s anger. Here we see a key element in God’s wrath. It is not an
attribute per se as much as it is a manifestation of reaction to existing sin.
Otherwise God is indeed love. Wrath is God’s reaction in justice to sin not an
actual attribute of God. It is not His essence it is an outward dynamic.
Although anger and wrath in the human context is usually wrong and evil we
cannot say the same for God. Anger when associate with immorality and malice
which are not of God will always be evil but these descriptions don’t apply to
God do they? God does not think like man thinks and that’s exactly why we need
to get to where God is. Because where we’re at even makes us think improperly
about God’s wrath.
Numbers
23:19 ~ “God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should
change his mind. Has he said, and will he not do it? Or has he spoken, and will
he not fulfill it?”
There
are no defects in God’s thinking or God’s justice if He is truly omniscient,
omnipotent and Sovereign. Therefore, if he is angered, it is
justified. If justified His wrath at some point must be expended or absorbed as
in the case of Jesus on the Cross for Christians. The wrath of God is not some
errant instantaneous “shotgun blast” or emotional outburst. It is never a
spontaneous explosion but rather a slow methodical reaction prompted by the
sinful behavior of men. God’s wrath is not only systematic and orderly, it is
also meticulous, voluntary and purposeful, motivated by concern for right and
wrong.
It
is therefore horribly wrong and thickheaded to identify God’s wrath with evil. It
may be evil by association when related to man but never when in relation to
God. Only a sinfully wicked and reprobate mind would make this assumption
anyway. A mind far from God and therefore not very well versed in the
Scriptures.
The
irony is that God’s wrath can often be a blessing as in the case of Jesus
Christ’s Crucifixion on the Cross. As fire can be harnessed for good to use as
a tool to produce positive things when in the right hands, so to it can be used
as a weapon and become fatal in the wrong hands. This analogy applies to wrath
when wielded by man…it is usually a weapon and evil. When applied to God it is
a tool or energy steered for righteousness and holy purpose. Anger in God’s reality
is never in isolation either. It is an a homogeneous whole that also includes
justice, righteousness, love and all of God’s other infinite attributes. No so
for man. To say the least, man is wanton, partial, unbalanced and
frankly…scatterbrained and crazy compared to a perfect God. God on the other
hand is benevolent, perfectly balanced and orderly.
God’s
wrath is always in reaction to wayward man otherwise there would be no divine
wrath. Why does God do this? Because He loves and wants what’s best for His
creations especially the ones bestowed the greatest honor…of being created in
God’s own image.
One
last thing that needs to be mentioned is God’s sustained silences
in the face of pronounced evils. His silence is not apathy. One of the biggest
evils in the world is apathy so this attribute can never be attributed to a
holy God. Indifference to evil is even more insidious than evil itself and
therefore more evil than evil. It is a silence that makes evil not only
possible but allows it to thrive. This is a sin that all people are very guilty
of. Most of us are and won’t even acknowledge and admit this fact. God on the
other hand is not apathetic in his silence, if anything He is immensely
concerned. Him giving is only Son should’ve clued us into this fact. No, this
silence is not apathy but rather long-suffering and forbearance at a divine
level. Even in the face of the Holocaust, the Khmer Rouge, The Great Leap
Forward, Stalin, Hitler, Mao Zedong, Antiochus Epiphanes, etc.
The
patience of God means restraint of justifiable anger. The patience of God means
another chance at salvation for a wayward person flirting with damnation. We
should be thankful He is so patient.
We
should be so thankful that He is forgiving and forgives those that truly repent
of their sins. We must never forget that at some point forbearance ceases to be
a blessing and switches over to being a curse. This is especially true when
God’s patience is so great that we are given over to our sins which in the
end…become their own punishments…our own tortures.
In
the end God’s expenditure of His wrath is always followed by a call to return
to Him. We are never scorched by the heat of God’s wrath without a glimmer of
hope that we may return to the fold if we turn around and repent. If people
will only turn from their evil and wicked ways and correct their conduct to be
in alignment with God and obedient…there is still hope. There is still and
avenue of return. If not, once they're dead…its over and they are eternally
condemned.
So
the next time you see people experiencing what appears to be God’s wrath, or
you yourself are, perhaps you should be thankful. The fact is you are still
alive and have a chance to repent.
Perhaps
that is the main purpose of the wrath to begin with…don’t you think? On the
eternal scale of things, sometimes God expending His wrath is good for some
people that, up to this point…just haven’t gotten the message. For people like
that it could be worse…
Infinitely
worse, or should I say eternally worse?
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