Tag Archive | The Knowledge of God

The Knowledge of the Holy: The Wisdom 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.]

Trusting the person who knows everything becomes easier when we are convinced of the character of the person who has the knowledge. Yesterday we read and wrote and spoke about God’s omniscience, His ability to know everything. Today we read about God’s wisdom. The two ideas, knowledge and wisdom, are often confused in our day, but they are essentials that build our trust in God.  The enemy desires to convince us that God either isn’t knowledgeable or that He is not wise. If he can win either battle, we will be worse off. And so this topic of God’s wisdom must be understood and lived out.

Our natural minds want to come to the conclusion that God is not wise. We look around and see so much wrong that it is difficult to come to another conclusion. Tozer reminds us that this attribute must be understood by faith. We believe it and then we understand. In our understanding, we come to a place where we understand the world is marred by the sin of man and subject to frustration. This world we see, though birthed in the wisdom of God, is tainted by man trying to move in his own wisdom.

Wisdom, according to the Bible, is not just informational, but full of moral qualities: love, purity, and justice. We’ve known smart but impure people: we call them shrewd. But God is full of wisdom, not just all-knowing, but full of the qualities that make us willing to put our trust in Him.  Many times it’s easy to look at what God does and conclude that He is not wise. But we have to understand that God is devising a perfect end and achieving through a perfect means. God is doing the most good for the most people for the longest period of time in all of His dealings with us.

Our belief in God’s wisdom–that He is working on our behalf for our good–get’s tested in our daily actions. We so often plan our own strategy, pray some, strive for our best interests…and as Tozer points out, with all of this activity, we still fear we will miss our best good. Tozer points us to a better way–hate our wisdom and fall on the wisdom of God. Believe He operates in wisdom for us, even though some times we may not see it.

I know in my own life, this has been a struggle. It’s easy to doubt God’s wisdom when life takes a turn that is painful. These are the places where I must remind myself that God is more committed to my eternal happiness than I am.  This is a powerful reality that I think we rarely feel. Like toddlers who feel their parents must hate them when they are punished for playing with knives, we so often feel God doesn’t have our good at heart.  But this is where we must mature- in trusting that our Creator sees better than we do.

Jesus tells us the same thing: If our earthly Fathers are evil and they give good gifts to their children, then how much more will our heavenly Father seek to give good gifts to His children (Matthew 7:11)? It’s this understanding that God knows our needs (omniscience) coupled with His willingness to do us good (wisdom) that satisfies our hearts that he is truly trustworthy. And this is one area I need to grow in immensely. I need to be able to trust God when I cannot see the good God is currently doing for me.

I’ll finish by quoting Tozer:

It is heartening to learn how many of God’s mighty deeds were done in secret, away from the prying eyes of men or angels…When the Eternal Son became flesh, He was  carried for a time in the darkness of the sweet virgin’s womb. When He died for the life of the world, it was in the darkness, seen by no one at the last. When he arose from the dead, it was “very early in the morning.” No one saw Him rise. It was as if God were saying, “What I am is all that need matter to you, for there will lie your hope and peace. I will do what I will do, and it will all come to light at last, but how I do it is My secret. Trust me, and be not afraid.”

What was your take away from today’s reading? Let us know in the comment section.

It’s not to late for you to join in with us. You can catch up in the posts below:

The Knowledge of the Holy Series

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 Divine Omniscience

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.]

Imagine that you are being asked to pledge your allegiance to a leader. This leader will be responsible, not just to help you succeed at your job, but he will also be responsible for your marriage, your health, your safety, not to mention whether you have food to eat and the condition of your soul.  In that scenario, what kind of leader would you want? I don’t know about you, but I would want the most capable leader possible, one that can understand every scenario and understand the best one for me to take. Even in that scenario, I would still worry about him making mistakes. This is the question that lies at the center of today’s Tozer reading. God’s omniscience, His ability to know everything, is at the heart of whether we follow Him whole-heartedly or not.

Tozer argues that God’s knowledge is vast. It’s so vast, in fact, that it is perfect. It doesn’t grow. God doesn’t learn. He knows everything without having to be taught.  And because God is in fact the source of every created thing, God knows and understands every created thing and how it will behave, better than the created being itself. In many ways, God’s omniscience is tied to His omnipresence (His ability to be everywhere at once), and so when we really begin to think about what God knows, we cry out with David, “Where shall I go from your Spirit? Or where shall I flee from your presence?” (Psalm 139:7).

This has two implications for us mortals who have a limited ability to know things. First, for those who are clinging to sin and hoping they can keep it hidden, we have to realize that God sees all and knows all. “Everything is naked and exposed before his eyes, and he is the one to whom we are accountable,” (Hebrews 4:13). But for the believer who has taken refuge in Jesus, we can have confidence that though everything we’ve ever done or will do is known by God, He has still desired us, called us, and set His love upon us with full knowledge of who we are.

This for me is the major takeaway for this chapter. Many acknowledge God knows everything. Sometimes we fear the fact that God knows everything. The benefit to the believer is understanding God has chosen us and reconciled us knowing all of our failures in advance. God is not surprised by your sin. He’s not sitting in Heaven reconsidering your salvation based on your latest slip up. Yet, so much of the time, we relate to God like He somehow feels differently about us based on our latest slip up (or success). In this way we treat God like a man and not the God He really is.

Friends, God has chosen us having already known everything there is to know about us. He is not surprised. This should motivate us to trust Him and love Him more. When I was dead in my sin and an enemy of God, He chose me.  When I was being transformed by Jesus, but still struggling with old patterns of sin, He already knew it would happen.  He doesn’t have to reconsider, He already knew. And He chose you anyway.  And it’s this confidence in His ability to already know us and still choose us that gives us confidence to come before His throne of grace boldly. That is where we find grace and help in the times we need it most.

And lastly, we can trust God to lead us into the future. If He knows everything, He already knows the outcome of any situation He will lead me into. And because He’s good, I know that He will lead me into situations that are guaranteed to be for my good, even if they don’t seem like it at the time. Understanding this at a heart level makes God an easy person to trust. He knows the future. He will lead us through it well. He will make good choices that will benefit us. And not only does He have our good in mind, because He knows everything, He has the power to make that good happen. And He is worthy to trust with my life and yours.

That’s my take away. What’s yours? Leave a comment in the comment section so we can all grow together.

It’s not to late for you to join in with us. You can catch up in the posts below:

The Knowledge of the Holy Series

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: God’s Immutability

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 chapter features another one of those attributes of God that seems to bleed over from some of the others. God’s immutability simply means that God doesn’t mutate or change. Because God is eternal, however He appears to us now is how He will appear to us throughout history, forever.  Not only does God appear to us unchanged throughout history, though, He never changes. God tells the prophet Malachi this very clearly: “I am the Lord,  and I do not change…” (Malachi 3:6).

That God is immutable, Tozer tells us, means that God cannot differ from Himself. To change would mean to admit some kind of defect in the Godhead. If God went from bad to better, it would mean God was at one point bad. If God went from better to worse, that would mean God would decrease in His glory. And God certainly is not now more mature than he was thousands of years ago. There is no maturing God described in Scripture.

We come to value and understand God’s immutability when we compare him to man who is always changing.  Man is constantly changing, sometimes from worse to better, sometimes from better to worse, and sometimes just maturing. But the old saying is true for man: “Change is the only constant in life.” In this there is hope. God, in His perfection, never changes, nor does He need to. But God uses change for man to offer the hope of a different life, centered around His Son.  That change is possible in man and impossible with God is the hope of the Christian life.

As I thought about this reality, I remembered how the writer of Hebrews tells us that Jesus Christ is the same, “yesterday, today, and forever,” (Hebrews 13:8). What we can take away from this, though, is that Jesus (and by extension the whole of God) feels the same way about us and our circumstances that He felt about things when He was here on Earth. He’s not capricious, talking one way and acting another. Instead, He is faithful and true. We can always count on Him to be a sympathetic high priest towards us. And that is what can give us confidence and boldness to approach Him in our time of need.

Most of us know people who we couldn’t trust to remain the same. They would act one way in front of us and another when we were gone. Or we know people who act reliably aweful. But God is always the same and because He is good and full of love, we can draw near to Him, trust Him, in a way that is difficult for us to do with another here on Earth.

So spend some time today, enjoying Him for who He is, knowing He will never change. He is always constant and His love for you will never wane.

Those are my thoughts. Let us know yours in the comment section.

It’s not to late for you to join in with us. You can catch up in the posts below:

The Knowledge of the Holy Series

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