"For we know that
all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the
called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28 )
Do all things really
work together for good?
Of all the questions that trouble the hearts of God’s people, none is the greater than the question Why? No matter how many sermons we hear or how many Bible verses we memorize, the question returns again and again.
Why did this happen?
Lord, why didn’t you answer our prayers?
When we see the pain
of a fallen world, we wonder, “Where is God?” Over the centuries the greatest
minds have wrestled with the problem of pain and suffering and still the
questions come:
Why me?
Why now?
Why this?
The questions hang in
the air. We wonder why
things happen the way they do, why a teacher in Libya is shot and killed, why
the bus didn’t make it to the church, why the baby was born with such
disabilities.
Why do these things
happen? Why do they happen to good, decent people? Why do they happen to people
who love the Lord? Let’s drill down a bit into this subject.
Providence
The doctrine of Providence of God helps us understand. If it does
not answer every question, it surely provides the only possible basis for
understanding. Though the word itself
is not found in most modern translations of the Bible, the concept is certainly
biblical. Providence refers to “God’s gracious oversight of the
universe.” Every one of those words is important. God’s providence
is one aspect of his grace. Oversight means that
he directs the course of affairs. The
word universe tells us that God not only knows the big
picture, he also concerns himself with the tiniest details.
Here are five
statements that unfold the meaning of God’s providence in more detail:
He upholds all things.
He governs all events.
He directs everything
to its appointed end.
He does this all the
time and in every circumstance.
He does it always for
His own glory.
The doctrine of God’s Providence teaches us several important truths:
First, God cares about
the tiniest details of life. Nothing escapes his
notice for he is concerned about the small as well as the big. In fact, with
God there is no big or small. He knows when a sparrow falls and attends every
funeral, and he numbers the hairs on our head. With some folk God has to do a lot
of subtracting. He keeps track of the stars in the skies and the rivers that
flow to the oceans. He sets the day of our birth, the day of our death, and he
ordains everything that comes to pass in between.
Second, he uses
everything and wastes nothing. There are no accidents with God, only
incidents. This includes events that seem to us to be senseless tragedies.
Third, God’s ultimate
intention is to shape His children into the image of Jesus Christ (Romans 8:29 ). He often uses
difficult moments and human tragedies to accomplish that purpose.
Many verses in the
Bible teach these truths, including Acts 17:28 (“in him we live and move and
have our being”), Colossians 1:17 (“in him all things hold together”),
Hebrews 1:3 (“He upholds the universe by the word of his power”),
Proverbs 16:9 (“The heart of man plans his way but the Lord establishes his
steps”), and especially Psalm 115:3, (“Our God is in the heavens; he
does all that he pleases”).
The doctrine of God’s
providence is really a combination of four other attributes:
Sovereignty—He is in control
Predestination—He is in charge of how
everything turns out
Wisdom—He makes no mistakes
Goodness—He has our best
interests at heart
Someone has said, “God
doesn’t roll dice.” Nothing happens by chance. Ever! Devine providence is the
invisible hand of God moving through the circumstances of life.
Providence Illustrated through Joseph
In many ways Joseph’s
whole life is the Old Testament illustration of a profound New Testament truth.
Deep in our hearts we know that Romans 8:28 is true.
Joseph’s story goes
something like this. Because Joseph was the favored son of his father Jacob, he
was the object of envy by his many brothers. The day came when his brothers
conspired to sell him to the Midianites who happened to be passing by. They
splashed his “coat of many colors” with the blood of a goat in
order to make it appear that he had been killed by a wild animal. They showed
the coat to Jacob, who believed their lie and sorrowfully concluded that Joseph
was dead.
Meanwhile Joseph was
taken to Egypt by the Midianites. There he was sold again, this time
to Potiphar, who was head of Pharaoh’s security force. Genesis 39
tells us that Joseph gained favor with Potiphar because the Lord was with him
to bless him. Eventually Potiphar put Joseph in charge of his entire household.
This was a high honor for a Hebrew slave. Because he was competent, confident,
and good-looking, Potiphar’s wife approached him about having a sexual
affair. Joseph refused, pointing out that he could not betray Potiphar and
he would not sin against God .The
woman persisted, to the point that one day when everyone else was gone, she
attempted to pull him down on her bed. Joseph fled from the scene, leaving his
cloak behind. Joe had a difficult time keeping a coat didn’t he? Humiliated by
his refusal, she accused him of rape. It was a false charge, of course, but
Potiphar believed his wife and had Joseph thrown in prison.
In prison Joseph
prospered once again and gained the respect of his fellow prisoners and of the guards. This
happened because the Lord was with him to bless him. Eventually the cupbearer
and the baker were thrown in the same prison and Joseph befriended them. One
night they both had dreams they could not interpret. But Joseph was able to
interpret them with the Lord’s help. The dreams came true exactly as Joseph had
predicted—the baker was hung but the cupbearer was released. Joseph asked him
to remember him after he was out, but he didn’t.
Two years passed and
Pharaoh had a dream that he could not interpret. That’s when the cupbearer
remembered Joseph’s amazing ability and mentioned it to Pharaoh who ordered
Joseph brought before him. Joseph correctly interpreted his dream and was
rewarded by Pharaoh, who made him the Prime Minister of Egypt. Not bad for a Hebrew slave who had
been sold into slavery by his brothers!
Eventually a famine
settled on the Near East . Jacob told his sons
to go to Egypt and buy some grain. They go and in the process meet
Joseph—only they don’t know it’s Joseph. This happens twice. Then Joseph
reveals his true identity. They are shocked and then scared because they
betrayed him and now he’s in a position to get even. But Joseph doesn’t do
that. In fact, he stuns them with these words:
And now do not be
distressed or angry with yourselves because you sold me here, for God sent me
before you to preserve life. For the famine has been in the land these two
years, and there are yet five years in which there will be neither plowing nor
harvest. And God sent me before you to preserve for you a remnant on
earth, and to keep alive for you many survivors. So it was not you who sent me
here, but God. He has made me a father to Pharaoh, and lord of all his house
and ruler over all the land of Egypt (Genesis 45:5-8).
But that’s not the end
of the story. The brothers
go back to Canaan and tell their aged father that Joseph is still alive. He
can’t believe it, but eventually they convince him to come to Egypt with them. He makes the trip and is reunited with the son
he had given up for dead many years ago. Then he meets the Pharaoh who offers
to let Joseph’s family settle in Egypt for as long as they like. The family settles in Egypt and lives in peace there for many years. Finally Jacob
dies at the age of 147. Now it’s just Joseph and his brothers. They fear that
with Jacob’s death Joseph will be free to take revenge on them. So they tell
Joseph, “Oh, by the way, before Dad died he told us to tell you to treat us
kindly.” It sounds like just one more deception to cover their guilt.
JOSEPH SAW GOD
EVERYWHERE
Listen to Joseph’s
response. These are the words of a man who believes in the providence of God.
But Joseph said to
them, “Do not fear, for am I in the place of God? As for you, you meant evil
against me, but God meant it for good, to bring it about that many people
should be kept alive, as they are today” (Genesis 50:19-20).
How could Joseph talk
like that after all that happened to him? The answer is simple: He saw God everywhere!
Look how Joseph says
it: “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.”
Both sides of
that statement are true. “You meant evil against me”—what the bothers had done
was indeed evil and Joseph doesn’t sugarcoat the truth. They are 100%
responsible for their sin. “God meant it for good”—this doesn’t mean that evil
isn’t evil. It just means that God is able to take the evil actions of sinful
men and use them to accomplish his plans. Joseph saw the “invisible hand” of
God at work in his life. He understood that behind his conniving brothers stood
the Lord God who had orchestrated the entire affair in order to get him to just
the right place at just the right moment in order to save his whole family.
Providence Applied
Joseph is saying,
“Though your motives were bad, God’s motives were good.” Though it took
years and years for God’s purposes to be clear, in the end Joseph saw the hand
of God behind everything that had happened to him.
Think about the
implications of that statement:
At just the right
moment Joseph’s brothers threw him into the cistern.
At just the right
moment the Midianites came along.
At just the right
moment he was sold to Potiphar.
At just the right
moment Potiphar’s wife falsely accused him.
At just the right
moment he met the baker and the cupbearer.
At just the right
moment the cupbearer remembered Joseph.
At just the right
moment Pharaoh called for him.
At just the right
moment he was promoted to Prime Minister.
At just the right
moment Jacob sent his sons to Egypt .
At just the right
moment the brothers met Joseph.
At just the right
moment Jacob’s family moved to Egypt .
At just the right
moment Pharaoh offered them the land of Goshen .
At just the right
moment they settled there and prospered.
All of this happened
at “just the right moment” and in “just the right way” so that the right people
would be in the right place so that in the end everything would come out the
way God had ordained in the beginning. God never violated anyone’s free will,
yet everything happened as he had planned. That’s the providence of God in
action.
At just the right time
Joseph was thrown into prison.
Think of the “minutiae
of providence.” If we look with the eyes of faith, we can see God’s
fingerprints everywhere.
Here’s a mighty
question from Joseph’s life,
“Can you trust God
with the details of your life?”
But that’s not quite
the right question. We need to change one word.
Not “Can you?” but
“Will you?”
“Will you trust God
with the details of your life?”
There’s another way to
say this. Either you run the universe or he does. A lot of people try to run the
universe, but it never works out. Or you and I can bow before the Lord and say,
“You are in charge… I’m not. I will trust you with every detail of my life.”
If you’ve been around
for a while, you can look back and see how God has likewise lead you with his
gracious beneficence. I know I can.
He Maketh
No Mistake
In the 1920s a young
man named A. M. Overton became the pastor of the First Baptist Church of
Baldwyn, Mississippi. Baldwyn is a small community in north Mississippi on the road between Tupelo and Corinth .. In 1932 Mrs.
Overton was pregnant with their fourth child, but when it came time for
delivery there were complications and both she and the baby died. During the
funeral, the preacher officiating at the service noticed Pastor Overton writing
something on a piece of paper. After the service the minister asked him about
it, and he handed him the paper with a poem he had just written. The poem was
unknown for many years until someone set it to music. It eventually went around
the world.
The poem is called “He
Maketh No Mistake.”
My Father’s way may
twist and turn
My heart may throb and
ache,
But in my soul I’m
glad to know,
He maketh no mistake.
My cherished plans may
go astray,
My hopes may fade away,
But still I’ll trust
my Lord to lead,
For He doth know the
way.
Tho’ night be dark and
it may seem
That day will never
break,
I’ll pin my faith, my
all, in Him,
He maketh no mistake.
There’s so much now I
cannot see,
My eyesight’s far too
dim,
But come what may,
I’ll simply trust and
leave it all to Him.
For by and by the mist
will lift,
And plain it all He’ll
make,
Through all the way,
tho’ dark to me,
He made not one
mistake.
That will be the
testimony of every child of God. When
we finally get to heaven, we’ll look back over the pathway of life and see
that through all the twists and turns and seeming detours that he was with us
all the way.
Until that morning
comes and the sunlight of God’s presence fills our faces, we move on through
the twilight still believing that though life is often hard, God is good. In
the end we will say with all the children of God as we look back on our earthly
pilgrimage, “He made not one mistake.”
Fear not! We have a
great God!
There is more to this intriguing story but we will have to wait until we get to heaven.
Joseph, the man who saw God everywhere will tell us the rest of the story in his own words.
Blessings,
John
John
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