Tag Archive | The Knowledge of God

The Knowledge of the Holy: The Justice of God

Knowledge of the Holy

[Editor’s Note: This is a 23-Day Series exploring different aspects of God’s nature and personality, using Tozer’s “The Knowledge of the Holy” as a discussion starter. You can read the introduction of the series here.]

We all want a God who gives us our fair share and protects us from who would wrong us. We also deeply want a God who forgives us for the evil that we participate in. And if we have a bad view of God, one who is injust, we will either be terrified of God because of the wrong we have done or we will attempt to take advantage of Him for the forgiving God that He is. Either way, at the end of the day, only by understanding God as a God of justice will we relate to God as He truly is.

To understand God’s justice, we first have to understand that righteousness and justice are the same thing. God is just because He is righteous in all He does. Psalmists and prophets of the Old Testament called out to God to judge the world and when they did they made an appeal to God to make the whole world right again.  Justice, as Tozer tells us, contains the idea of moral equity. God’s judgments (and therefore His justice) are His way of setting the world right.

Tozer is also faithful to point out where we have elevated someone or something above God. He takes aim at the places where we have constrained God and said “he must do such and such because it’s just.” And it’s in this place where we have made justice something God is bound to. God is not bound to justice. Justice is bound up in God. Justice is the way God does things. Its part of His nature that we have learned and applied to things, but nothing is just if it isn’t found in God. God acts the way He acts, and we on the outside view that and call it justice.

All of this talk of justice, of God acting just all the time, could be used to persuade us that God is only just and never merciful. It can produce a kind of fear of God that would dread Him but never run to Him, that is to say, an unbiblical kind of fear of God. But God’s justice is never at odds with His mercy. To quote Tozer “goodness without justice is not goodness.” And whenever God acts justly, He is also acting with mercy. No more clearly is this seen than in the cross of Jesus. Justice was done and mercy was given, but neither justice nor mercy was diminished. Both attributes of God’s nature are in full force simultaneously manifested without the least bit of contradiction. And the result was the justification of you and I.

And this is where I feel like the real meat of our discussion is today. God is just and He makes just decisions. So many today say things like “only God can judge me” or “judge not, lest you be judged,” and in the ultimate sense these statements are true. But they tare an attempt to escape God’s judgment and treat Him as if He is not just. They treat Him as if He does not see sin or as if the sin doesn’t matter to Him. But sin matters deeply to God. It cost Him you. It cost Him His son. It’s not a light thing. So we must tremble before God. We must believe that He really takes this issue called iniquity very seriously.

And yet simultaneously, we cannot run away from God because we have sin. The justice of God is most fully displayed in the death of His son. He crushed sin in His Son to draw us closer to Him. How awful would it be to know remorse for your sin but to hate it so much you never received its cure?! In Jesus we have both Judge and Attorney. He helps us and vindicates us. And our victory over sin is never accomplished until we run to the judge who will stand in our place for us.

So acknowledge today both the places where you have treated sin lightly and where you haven’t run to Your judge with Your sin. If you deal with both issues, You will find a just God who gives mercy. And in that place, we find freedom.

That’s my takeaway today. What’s yours? Leave a comment so we can all grow together!

Day 1: Why We Must Think Rightly About God

Day 2: God Incomprehensible

Day 3: A Divine Attribute: Something True About God

Day 4: The Holy Trinity

Day 5: The Self Existence of God

Day 6: The Self Sufficiency of God

Day 7: The Eternity of God

Day 8: God’s Infinitude

Day 9: The Immutability of God

Day 10: The Divine Omniscience

Day 11: The Wisdom of God

Day 12: The Omnipotence of God

Day 13: The Divine Transcendence

Day 14: God’s Omnipresence

Day 15: The Faithfulness of God

Day 16: The Goodness of God

Day 17: The Justice of God

Day 18: The Mercy of God

Day 19: The Grace of God

Day 20: The Love of God

Day 21: The Holiness of God

Day 22: The Sovereignty of God

Day 23: The Open Secret

The Knowledge of the Holy: The Goodness of God

Knowledge of the Holy

[Editor’s Note: This is a 23-Day Series exploring different aspects of God’s nature and personality, using Tozer’s “The Knowledge of the Holy” as a discussion starter. You can read the introduction of the series here.]

Sometimes the attributes we are studying in this journey seem so simple and so uncontested that we have a hard time thinking God was any other way. And yet, when we get past the immediate statement “God is _______,” we find there are a hundred different scenarios where our belief in these attributes is tested and we find ourselves acting as if that quality wasn’t true. The attribute of God’s goodness fits nicely in that category. All of us like to believe God is good. Very few have probably trusted in God’s goodness in a way that satisfies their heart in the hour of testing.  And that is the journey in front of us as we look at God’s goodness.

In fact, goodness is such a common word, so easily spoken and believed, that Tozer begins the chapter defining “goodnesss.” What is it? What do we mean when we say it about God? Many think it means God is right or holy or pure. But when we talk about God’s goodness, we are actually talking about His capacity to do good to mankind.  He is full of good will towards the most sinful of us and this reality should stagger us and change how we live.

There are tremendous implications of a God dedicated to doing good to mankind. All of our relationship to God and our hope in securing His favor is based on the fact that God is good. Something about God caused Him to want to do good toward us rebels.  And because of this fact, we are able to enter into a relationship with this good God through the sacrifice of His Son and access an innumerable amount of prosmises. Because God’s goodness is part of His nature, it is “self-caused, infinite, perfect, and eternal.” God’s reason for being good has nothing to do with us or our merit. He does it because He wants to be good to us.

This is why we can trust that when we come to God, He will not despise us or act unfavorably toward us. Quoting Meister Eckhart, Tozer reminds us that a man who repents of a life full of more sin than all the sin of every age could come to Jesus in repentance and find God as being good towards him. In our day, we can say that Hitler, the most vile abortion doctor, the greediest Wall Street Banker, and the man who traffics women and young boys could all find mercy from this good God, if they come to Him in repentance.

Tozer’s response to the sinner who comes to Christ wondering how God will treat him is to point the sinner to Christ. In Christ we see how God acts in every circumstance. To the hypocrite and the poser, Jesus may remain distant. But to the broken, the poor in spirit, the self-hater, and the destitute, they will all find Jesus welcoming them into the goodness of God.  Tozer closes reminding us that our relationship with God is a paradox: because God is great, we tremble in holy fear, but because God is good, we draw close, knowing God will be good to us.

I thoroughly enjoyed today’s chapter, because this is one of those chapters that gets to the heart of the gospel and our own hearts. Jesus calls us to be good to everyone because our Father is good to everyone, even His enemies (Matthew 5:44-45). But so often I find myself running out of goodness to give to others. So often I find myself being overcome by the poor response of others. But God has called us to not base our responses to them on how they respond to us, but on how God responds to us. And because God is an infinite source of goodness, we should have a never ending source to pull from.

For that reason, I want to call you, dear brothers and sisters, to taste the Lord’s goodness (Psalms 34:8). When we taste the refreshing goodness of the Lord, it’s easier to be good to those around us. When we aren’t encountering the Lord’s goodness, it’s easy for us to become bitter and disappointed with the actions of others. Instead, we remind ourselves of the Lord’s goodness. We remember that we didn’t deserve goodness, but Christ showed it to us anyways. As we do, we become thankful and see more of the Lord’s good hand in our lives.  We begin to acknowledge what has already been good and we see more of it as well.  The goodness that flows from God to us as we renew our minds in this way will naturally flow to others.

But friends, we cannot sit back and resist the Lord’s goodness. We have to become hearty souls hungry for the Lord’s goodness.To the degree that we don’t, we will become like the older brother in the story of the prodigal son, always trying to do well and living at the Father’s house, but at the end of the day very distant from our Father’s heart.  Let’s fear that reality and know that by simply being willing to receive God’s goodness, we can have the Father’s heart and be filled with joy.

That’s my takeaway today. What’s yours? Leave a comment so we can all grow together!

Day 1: Why We Must Think Rightly About God

Day 2: God Incomprehensible

Day 3: A Divine Attribute: Something True About God

Day 4: The Holy Trinity

Day 5: The Self Existence of God

Day 6: The Self Sufficiency of God

Day 7: The Eternity of God

Day 8: God’s Infinitude

Day 9: The Immutability of God

Day 10: The Divine Omniscience

Day 11: The Wisdom of God

Day 12: The Omnipotence of God

Day 13: The Divine Transcendence

Day 14: God’s Omnipresence

Day 15: The Faithfulness of God

Day 16: The Goodness of God

Day 17: The Justice of God

Day 18: The Mercy of God

Day 19: The Grace of God

Day 20: The Love of God

Day 21: The Holiness of God

Day 22: The Sovereignty of God

Day 23: The Open Secrett

The Knowledge of the Holy: The Faithfulness of God

Knowledge of the Holy

[Editor’s Note: This is a 23-Day Series exploring different aspects of God’s nature and personality, using Tozer’s “The Knowledge of the Holy” as a discussion starter. You can read the introduction of the series here.]

Today’s reading was another one of those chapters where it seems like all of God’s attributes came crashing in together. Tozer seems to have spent more of the chapter describing how God’s attributes are all one in His being than he did actually describing God’s faithfulness! But it was warranted and served as a good reminder that God is One, not three or even many parts. He is single in everything He does and understanding that will help us know Him much better than we currently do.

In discussing God’s faithfulness, Tozer reminds us that God is immutable (He doesn’t change). And because God doesn’t change, He will be faithful. If there were ever a time that God wasn’t faithful, He would at that very moment have changed.  And this gets at the heart of how God is so incredibly different than we are. We change and therefore we can be faithful or unfaithful, depending on how we feel. But God doesn’t change and so He always remains faithful.

I loved when Tozer identifies ways in which we perceive God wrongly. Today he highlighted the idea we have where God is torn between two different aspects of His character. But God is one and his attributes, like say love and justice, are never at odds within Him. There is no Father/Son arm-wrestling match in Heaven to decide whether justice or mercy will be shown to people on Earth. In God’s justice, He shows mercy. And in God’s mercy, He shows justice.

Tozer then moves to God’s faithfulness. The Bible is full of descriptions of His faithful dealings with His people, from Genesis to Revelation.  But Tozer highlights a profound truth: God’s faithfulness is the grounds for the blessings we hope to inherit one day. Our confidence that we will receive them rests on our ability to trust God’s faithfulness to keep His word. This ability to trust God’s faithfulness, even through hard times, has a biblical name: faith.

We become people of faith by seeing God’s faithfulness played out before us over and over again. We believe something God says and wait for it to come to pass. Then when we see it come to pass, we have an easier time believing it will come to pass again.  There are times when God will give a supernatural measure of faith to help us to believe for things we have never seen before, but most faith grows by watching God do what He says. This is how we gain trust with our parents and others in the natural and it works in a similar way with God.

Understanding God’s faithfulness and becoming a person of faith is crucial to our lives. Only people who know and understand that God is with them and will not abandon them can face the future with courage. Many face life not knowing whether they will succeed or whether death and gloom awaits around every corner. But if you’ve found Jesus faithful, you can even look death square in the face with assurance of victory. You know Your God will not abandon you.

My encouragement for all of us today is to begin to take God at His word. In our lives, you and I have places where we feel like there has been some kind of disappointment with God. That doesn’t mean God has failed, but it’s entirely possible we had incorrect expectations. My encouragement for you today is to find the places where your faith in God has grown weak because You haven’t seen God’s faithfulness and begin to ask Jesus to renew faith in your heart. He will prove Himself faithful. He can do no other.

That’s my takeaway today. What’s yours? Leave a comment so we can all grow together!

That’s my takeaway today. What’s yours? Leave a comment so we can all grow together!

Day 1: Why We Must Think Rightly About God

Day 2: God Incomprehensible

Day 3: A Divine Attribute: Something True About God

Day 4: The Holy Trinity

Day 5: The Self Existence of God

Day 6: The Self Sufficiency of God

Day 7: The Eternity of God

Day 8: God’s Infinitude

Day 9: The Immutability of God

Day 10: The Divine Omniscience

Day 11: The Wisdom of God

Day 12: The Omnipotence of God

Day 13: The Divine Transcendence

Day 14: God’s Omnipresence

Day 15: The Faithfulness of God

Day 16: The Goodness of God

Day 17: The Justice of God

Day 18: The Mercy of God

Day 19: The Grace of God

Day 20: The Love of God

Day 21: The Holiness of God

Day 22: The Sovereignty of God

Day 23: The Open Secret