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God may you
"win your case when you go into court!"
Goodspeed’s
dramatic translation of Romans 3:4 matches Paul’s use of David’s
prayer in Psalm 51:4. The apostle has raised the question, does
the lack of faith among God’s privileged people mean that God
Himself cannot be trusted? "By no means! God must prove true,
though every man be false; as the Scripture says, ‘That you may
be shown to be right in what you say, and win your case when you
go into court.’"
If God had
not been accused, there would have been no need for Him to
defend Himself. And just as the charges had been heard
throughout the universe, so the answers must be publicly made
known. When Daniel described a convening of the heavenly court,
he emphasized the open presentation of the evidence. A hundred
million watched as "the court sat in judgement, and the books
were opened" (Daniel 7:10, RSV).
As sinners
needing salvation, we naturally tend to be preoccupied with what
God has done to save us, so that we may be regarded as righteous
when our cases come up in the judgement. But the Bible speaks of
a prior concern of far greater importance—the confirmation of
the truthfulness and trustworthiness of God Himself.
Some find
it hard to believe that the Infinite One would tolerate—let
alone encourage—the questioning of his inscrutable ways. But the
book of Revelation and many other parts of Scripture describe an
age-long conflict over the divine character and government that
has involved the whole universe—even to the extent of war up in
heaven (see Revelation 12:7-17).
Unless God
wins this war and reestablishes peace in His family, our
salvation is meaningless. Who would want to live for eternity in
a warring universe? Moreover, the conflict is over God’s own
trustworthiness, and until serious questions concerning His
character have been convincingly resolved, what sound basis is
there for our faith in Him?
What would
it mean for God to win this war? His enemies are His own
children. To destroy them would be no victory for a loving
Father, but an agonizing loss. Think of the eternal void Lucifer
will leave in God’s infinite memory!
If the
conflict were merely over power, how easily God could
demonstrate His superiority. But even the demons already
acknowledge this, and in their distrust of so powerful a God
they "tremble with fear" (James 2:19, GNB).
The
controversy is over a far more subtle issue: Who is telling the
truth, God or the brilliant leader of His Angels?
The former
Lightbearer, now called Satan or the Devil, meaning "accuser" or
"adversary," first succeeded in persuading vast numbers of his
fellow angels that God was unworthy of their trust (see
Revelation 12:4, 9). Then when the conflict was extended to our
newly-created planet, he accused God of lying to our first
parents and insinuated that he had been arbitrary, vengeful and
severe in His harsh restriction of their freedom.
If Satan’s
charges are sustained, we would be foolish to place our trust in
such a deity. Has God responded to these accusations? Do we find
His answers a sufficient basis for our faith?
The
Bible—all of it—is a record of the lengths to which God has been
willing to go to convince us of His trustworthiness. During the
past forty years, I have enjoyed the privilege of leading groups
through all sixty-six books more than 130 times. With each
successive reading it becomes more convincingly apparent that
God is not the kind of person His enemies have made Him out to
be. On the contrary, He values nothing higher than our freedom
and our freely given love and trust—toward Him and toward each
other. Such qualities cannot be commanded or produced by force.
Nor does God ask us to trust Him as a stranger. Instead He first
reveals Himself, that we may come to know Him and decide for
ourselves whether we find Him worthy of our trust.
This is
why, instead of destroying His enemies, God took His case into
court. The supreme Creator of the universe humbly submitted His
own character and government to the scrutiny and investigation
of His creatures.
How did God
set out to win His case? Did He resort to bribery or
intimidation? Satan accused God of buying loyalty in the case of
Job. Did He expect the court to accept His claims of
trustworthiness simply because of who He is—the powerful Creator
of the universe? Did He bedazzle the court with miracles? Did He
threaten to destroy anyone who voted against Him? Would that
have helped Him win His case? What kind of victory in court did
He desire?
Most of
all, since the issue is a question of trust, did God manipulate
the jury by miraculously planting faith in their hearts so they
would all vote in His favor? Would you trust a God who would so
control the minds of His children or be satisfied with such
artificial faith?
There are
no shortcuts to trust. Claims of trustworthiness prove nothing.
The devil can make such claims. Hitler claimed he could be
trusted, and history showed the folly of believing mere promises
and claims without confirming evidence. When Satan questioned
the genuineness of Job’s faith, God did not settle the matter by
divine pronouncement. Instead, he permitted the painful
demonstration of the facts in the case. This is God’s way of
establishing the truth.
Even though
God has been falsely accused, there is only one way to meet the
charge. Only by the demonstration of trustworthiness over a long
period of time and under a great variety of
circumstances—especially difficult ones—can trust be
reestablished and confirmed.
This is why
God in so "many and various ways" demonstrated the truth about
Himself "to our fathers" through the long centuries of Old
Testament history (see Hebrews 1:1, RSV). Finally, He sent His
Son to live among us. And the way Jesus lived, the way He
treated people, the things He taught about His Father, and most
of all the unique and awful way He died were the clearest
revelation of the truth about the trustworthiness of God the
universe will ever see or need.
What a
price God has been willing to pay to restore and confirm trust
in His family! And the costly demonstration was not only for the
benefit of us sinful mortals. The whole universe has been
involved. Christ did not die for sinful men alone. He shed His
blood for the sinless angels, too! For they, too, needed the
faith-confirming message of the cross.
Paul
explained this to the believers in Colosse. "Through the Son,
then, God decided to bring the whole universe back to himself.
God made peace through His Son’s death on the cross and so
brought back to himself all things, both on earth and in heaven"
(Colossians 1:19, 20, GNB). It is through the meaning of the
cross that the war that began up in heaven is finally brought to
an end and eternal peace is made sure.
Twice in
his letter to the Ephesians, Paul wrote of God’s purpose to
bring his whole family back together again in unity and harmony
(see Ephesians 1:10; 3:10). As Jesus said before His
crucifixion, "When I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw
everyone to me" (John 12:32, GNB).
The 1611
first edition of the King James version has Jesus saying that He
will draw "all men." But later editions carefully indicate by
the use of italics that the word "men" has been supplied. Paul’s
larger understanding of the involvement of the onlooking
universe in the meaning of the cross supports the translation of
the Good News Bible, "I will draw everyone."
Ellen White
emphatically agrees that "the plan of redemption had a yet
broader and deeper purpose than the salvation of man. It was not
for this alone that Christ came to the earth...but it was to
vindicate the character of God before the universe." Then she
quotes John 12:32, boldly and correctly leaving out the limiting
word "men" (PP 68, 69).
In the same
chapter in Romans where Paul calls for God’s victory in court,
he cites the supreme evidence upon which God bases His defence
and wins his case. God sacrificed Himself in His Son to provide
convincing demonstration of the truth. As Paul explains, "God
showed Him publicly dying as a means of reconciliation to be
taken advantage of by faith. This was to demonstrate his own
righteousness, for in His forbearance God had apparently
overlooked men’s former sins. It was to demonstrate His
righteousness at the present time, to show that He Himself is
righteous and that He sets right those who trust in Jesus"
(Romans 3:25, my own translation).
God had
told the truth in Eden. He had not lied as Satan charged. Sin
does result in death. But no, it is not torture and execution at
the hands of a vengeful God. God did not lay a hand on His Son,
either in Gethsemane or on Calvary. He "gave Him up" as He will
give up sinners in the end. And they will die. And God will cry,
just as he wept over rebellious Israel, "How can I give you up,
how can I let you go?" (See Hosea 11:8; cf. Romans 1:24, 26, 28;
4:25)
Was it
worth such a price to clear up any misunderstanding about sin
and its consequences and how God is involved in the eternal
death of His unsavable children? Why was it so important to God
that His children should not serve Him from fear of torture and
execution?
Some of
God’s own misunderstanding people demonstrated the terrible
answer. The universe watched in horror as scrupulously devout
observers of the Sabbath tortured Jesus to death in God’s
name—then hurried home to keep holy yet another seventh day, to
show that they were indeed God’s faithful and obedient people.
How could
they be so religious and so cruel? Was it because they
worshipped a god who would do the very same thing? Cruel
persecutor Saul served such a god until he met Jesus on the
Damascus road. Is there a warning here to Christians who worship
a god who would miraculously keep sinners alive in the final
flames until they have been sufficiently tortured before
execution?
Three
highly privileged disciples were invited to watch the awesome
experience in Gethsemane, but they were too sleepy to pay
attention. Only one of them went out to Calvary to see and hear
for himself God’s costly answers to the questions in the great
controversy.
But the
evidence was not wasted on the rest of the universe. Ever since
Christ cried out on Calvary, "It is finished," the loyal angels
have never tired of assuring God that He has won their
everlasting love and trust (see Revelation 4:8; 5:11-14). On the
basis of the evidence God had overwhelmingly won His case. And
He had won it with evidence that could stand up under
investigation for eternity! Only here on this planet are there
any remaining doubts about the truthfulness and trustworthiness
of God.
The open
way in which God sought to win His case is itself persuasive
evidence of His trustworthiness. He even warned against
accepting questionable evidence, especially signs and wonders
used as a substitute for truth (see Deuteronomy 13:1-3). This
warning, of course, invited people to look carefully at the
miracles God Himself performed.
God also
warned of the danger of accepting too quickly the claims of
religious leaders that their messages came straight from God;
they could be lying (see 1 Kings 13). This in turn invited
people to be cautious in accepting claims and promises that
seemed to be made by God Himself.
On the road
to Emmaus, God further demonstrated His concern that important
decisions be based on weight of evidence rather than the
authority of someone’s mere assertions, no matter who he may be.
As Jesus talked with the two disciples, He disguised Himself
until He had interpreted the Scripture and had led them to an
intelligent faith in His life, His character, His mission to
earth, and His death and resurrection. Clearly, He wished the
truth to be established in their minds, not because it was
supported by His personal testimony, but because the teaching
and predictions of the Old Testament, agreeing with the facts of
His life and death, presented unquestionable evidence of that
truth (see Luke 24:13-35).
That the
Sovereign of the universe, who has the power to run His creation
any way He wishes, should humbly choose to win our agreement on
the basis of adequate evidence is unbelievable—but true! God has
clearly shown it to be His preference, and history has
demonstrated the reason why.
God even
prefers that we regard ourselves not as His servants but His
friends. As Jesus explained in John 15:15, the reason for this
incredible offer is that the servant simply does what he is
told. No reasons. No explanations. Just unquestioning submission
and obedience. It is an honor to be God’s faithful servant, but
God prefers the intelligent cooperation of understanding
friends.
God was
honored by the confidence of Abraham and Moses when—with all due
reverence—they ventured to question His purposes and plans. As
can be expected of good friends, they were concerned about God’s
reputation. And God was proud to acknowledge them in the Bible
as His trusted friends.
How could a
God like this fail to win His case—at least with me and you!
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