
These are my notes from my ladiesโ Sunday School class this morning. Iโll be posting the notes from my class here each week. Click here for last week’s lesson.
Through the Bible in 2014 ~ Week 3 ~ Jan. 12-18
Job 32-42, Genesis 12-21
Ishmael and El Roi
What does โIshmaelโ (Genesis 16:11) mean? El Roi (16:13)? Ishmael means โGod hears.โ El Roi means โthe God who sees me.โ Today, weโre looking at Godโs sovereignty as displayed in the passages we read this week.
What do we mean when we say God is โsovereignโ? Omnipotent? Omniscient? โSovereigntyโ the way we use the word in the church today, means that God has authority and control over all things, people, and circumstances. He is omnipotent (all powerful) and omniscient (all knowing). Nothing in the universe happens without His knowledge, causation, or permission. Weโll see how God defines His sovereignty towards the end of todayโs lesson. Because God is sovereign, we can TRUST Him.
Elihu (Job 32-34, Focal Passage- 33:29-30): Godโs knowledge is perfect and complete. Ours is not. Elihu (as well as Jobโs other three friends) thought he had Godโs reasons for Jobโs suffering all figured out: God brings suffering in order to lead men to repentance. Since Job was still suffering, he must still be in unrepentant sin. Elihu (and the others) were partly right. Sometimes, that is why God allows us to suffer. But not in Jobโs situation. Each of them had a small piece of the puzzle, but none of them had the whole picture. Job wisely trusted God, who was the only one in this situation who knew the whole story, instead of his friendsโ counsel.
42:7-9– Because our knowledge is incomplete, we must be extremely careful what we say about, or on behalf of, God. (Acts 20:26-27; Revelation 22:18-19, 2 Timothy 2:15) We are not to go farther than Scripture, nor stop short of declaring the full counsel of God. We are not to add to nor take away from Godโs word. We are to handle Godโs word rightly. We are to believe what Godโs word says in context. Otherwise, we risk slandering the character of God.
Abram (Genesis 12-21): God isnโt just sovereign over the โbigโ things. Heโs sovereign over the โsmallโ things, too. He can be trusted in all things.
Abram trusted Godโs sovereignty in the โbigโ things (Genesis 12:1-4; 15:1ff; 17:1-14)โฆ Abram trusted God in a lot of โbigโ things. When God came to him and told him to leave his comfortable home and surroundings for a life of being a nomad, and didnโt even tell him where he was going, Abram went without question. When God told Abram He would give him innumerable descendants even though Sarai was barren, and that He would give Canaan to those descendants hundreds of years later, โhe believed the Lord, and [God] counted it to him as righteousness.โ (15:6) When God introduced the idea of circumcision to this 99 year old man, Abram didnโt try to talk God out of it or suggest a different way, he trusted God and obeyed.
โฆbut sometimes he had trouble trusting Godโs sovereignty in the โsmallโ things (Genesis 12:11-13, 20:1-3; 16:1-2, 17:15-21; So did Lotโs daughters- 19:1ff; Genesis 2:24, Matthew 19:4-6) Abram trusted God when He rearranged and relocated his entire life. He trusted God to give him a myriad of descendants when he didnโt even have one child. He trusted that God would give thousands of square miles of land to his greatgreatgreatgreatgreatโฆ grandchildren, yet when it came to protecting him and his wife, Abram gave in to fear and lied not once, but twice, about Sarai being his wife. Then, instead of trusting the God who had made all these great promises to him to cause Sarai to conceive on His timetable, he and Sarai took matters into their own hands with Hagar and violated Godโs plan for marriage. Abram โlistened to the voice of Sarai,โ not the voice of God. (Just because bearing children โthroughโ a handmaid was culturally acceptable at the time and Scripture doesnโt record Godโs verbal disapproval of it doesnโt mean it was OK with Him.)
We see the same thing later with Lotโs daughters. Instead of trusting the God who sovereignly protected them from gang rape and the destruction of Sodom to give them husbands and children (or that it was OK with God for them to remain single and childless), they took matters into their own hands in a vile way. It is never Godโs will for us to violate Godโs word in order to bring about what we think are His purposes.
Hagar (Genesis 16:1ff, 21:8-21): God is sovereign over all circumstances, even the bad ones. His sovereignty brings comfort and shows He is trustworthy. Hagar was a slave. No one asked her if she wanted to sleep with Abram or bear his child. She had no choice. She was a victim of Saraiโs and Abramโs disobedience. But see how tender God is with her in these two passages! God comforts her personally and shows her she can trust Him by telling her a little about how He is going to use her circumstances in the future, and by His provision of the well. She can trust Him because He is sovereign over her situation. He has heard her cry (Ishmael) and is the God who sees her (El Roi).
Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 13:13, 18:22-19:29; Ezekiel 18:23; 2 Peter 3:9): God is gracious and patient, yet sovereign over sin, and sovereign in judgment. We learn as far back as chapter 13 that โthe men of Sodomย were wicked, great sinners against theย Lord,โ yet it isnโt until chapter 18 that we learn of Godโs imminent plan to destroy the cities. We canโt be sure of the precise timing, but we do learn in chapter 12 (right before chapter 13 when God states that the men of Sodom were wicked) that Abram is 75 years old, and we find in chapter 17 (right before chapter 18 when Abram intercedes for Sodom) that Abraham is 99 years old. If the events are in chronological order, it appears (not knowing how long they had been โwickedโ before chapter 13) that God mercifully spared his judgment against Sodom for at least 24 years. We see in other places, such as with Egypt (Exodus 12:40-41) and in our own day (since Christโs ascension) that God waited hundreds or thousands of years before bringing judgment.
God is kind, gracious, and patient, because of His sovereignty over sin and judgment. He knows the kind of judgment thatโs required and what it will be like. Over and over He provides ways for people and nations to repent, escape the penalty for their sin, and turn to Him. But when the time of His patience is fulfilled, He faithfully and righteously executes judgment.
God says, โย Have I any pleasure in the death of the wicked, declares the Lordย God, and not rather that he should turn from his way and live?โ and โThe Lord is not slow to fulfill his promiseย as some count slowness, butย is patient toward you,ย not wishing that any should perish, butย that all should reach repentance.โ He has provided a way for us to escape judgment- placing our faith in Christโs death, burial, and resurrection to pay the penalty for our sin.
What does God have to say about His sovereignty? (Job 38-42; Focal Passages: 40:1-2,7-14; 42:1-6)
Where were you when Iย laid the foundation of the earth?
Or whoย shut in the sea with doors?
Have you comprehended the expanse of the earth?
Have you enteredย the storehouses of the snow?
Do you knowย the ordinances of the heavens?
Can you establish their rule on the earth?
Can you hunt the prey for the lion,
ย ย orย satisfy the appetite of the young lions,
Do you give the horse his might?
Shall a faultfinderย contend with the Almighty?
He who argues with God, let him answer it.โ
โDress for actionย like a man;
I will question you, and you make it known to me.
Will you even put me in the wrong?
Will you condemn me thatย you may be in the right?
Have youย an arm like God,
and can you thunder withย a voice like his?
โAdorn yourself with majesty and dignity;
clothe yourself with glory and splendor.
Pour out the overflowings of your anger,
and look on everyone who isย proud and abase him.
Look on everyone who is proud and bring him low
andย tread down the wickedย where they stand.
Hide them all inย the dust together;
bind their faces in the world below.
Then will I also acknowledge to you
that your ownย right hand can save you.
Then Job answered theย Lordย and said:
โI know that you canย do all things,
and that no purpose of yours can be thwarted.
โWho is this that hides counsel without knowledge?โ
Therefore I have uttered what I did not understand,
thingsย too wonderful for me, which I did not know.
โHear, and I will speak;
I will question you, and you make it known to me.โ
I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear,
but now my eye sees you;
therefore I despise myself,
and repentย inย dust and ashes.โ