Random Blog Clay Feet: Show Mercy to All
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Monday, January 07, 2008

Show Mercy to All

For just as you once were disobedient to God, but now have been shown mercy because of their disobedience, so these also now have been disobedient, that because of the mercy shown to you they also may now be shown mercy. For God has shut up all in disobedience so that He may show mercy to all. (Romans 11:30-32)

I realize that I jump around sometimes and end up going back to previous passages without any rhyme or reason apparently. But that is partly a result of my desire to keep in mind the context of whatever I am looking at and many times while reviewing the previous context I see more things there that I want to explore and capture. And since I am not bound by any artificial constraints forcing me to keep moving forward on a predetermined schedule I enjoy the freedom to simply allow the Word and the Spirit to say whatever they wish to me at any given moment or on any occasion.

My real purpose in studying and writing what I am seeing and feeling is not to create arguments or convince others of my opinions but to simply document and capture for future reference what I am learning each time. The real purpose is not so much for gathering good information as it is to connect my mind and heart together with the mind and heart of God on an ongoing basis. I am nurturing a vital relationship that brings me life and hope and strength. These studies are mostly about my deepening desire to know God much better, to unmask the lies about Him that I am surrounded by and still find inside of me and have them replaced with the liberating truth of the increasing knowledge about the goodness and true greatness of God. That, I believe, is the definition of His glory.

OK, I got off on a soapbox for a bit. Back to what I want to find in this text. I see something in this repeated phrase about being shown mercy. What I have usually assumed when I read this was that the emphasis was on the people who needed mercy because of their badness. But what I am starting to notice is that the emphasis can just as easily and more importantly be put on the existence of God's unfailing mercy and the revelation of that mercy to anyone willing to acknowledge it.

Paul is bringing both groups he is addressing here closer and closer to each other by showing that the real need of both groups is to perceive and receive (experience the transforming effects of) the mercy of God. While they may have different reasons for needing that mercy they both need to see it much more clearly. Ironically, the religious class of people find themselves inflamed in disobedience because of the mercy that God is revealing to the irreligious class. His mercy and compassion for open sinners and His embracing acceptance of them in spite of their reputation with those who profess to be God's chosen people stirs up jealousy and bitterness in the hearts of religious addicts. But in doing this they end up finding themselves immersed in a state of disobedience just as much as those they look down on.

This is an interesting way that God works according to Paul. What I see here is that a prerequisite for seeing and receiving the mercy of God is to realize and acknowledge our own condition of disobedience and need for that mercy. As was explained in the first few chapters of this book it is much easier to see disobedience in other peoples lives than in our own. Therefore God often has to allow us to experience more of the natural progression of sin in our lives and its painful effects before we are willing to see that we are just as messed up and helpless as everyone else caught in this planet of sinners.

It does not really matter what flavor of disobedience we have or have nurtured throughout our life. We may have a history of open abandonment to living recklessly and playing loose with our life attempting to prop up our hearts with as much pleasure and selfish exploitation as we can pull off. Or we may be the socially proper sinner who looks good to all around us and keeps our pain and problems under wraps in a hardened heart. We may even be “good” and proper church-going folk who have a great profession of morality and work very hard to manage appearances and perform every requirement that we can possible accomplish. We may be very successful image managers to the point that we have even fooled our own minds into thinking that God must be pleased with our accomplishments.

But Paul says that God has shut up all in disobedience so that He may show mercy to all. Is the primary emphasis here on the fact that all need mercy? That is certainly a real fact and without that mercy none of us would have any hope. But I also believe that even more importantly we need to see God as the ultimate Source of all mercy, One who is the embodiment and personification of mercy itself, not just a Being who chooses to show mercy given the right conditions to select individuals or groups.

The irony that I see in this passage is that it seems that the mercy seen by each opposite class of people is due to the disobedience of the other group. Although Paul is here talking to Gentiles he is speaking about both groups and their relationship to God. You – the Gentile believers who have responded to God's revelation of Himself to you – once were disobedient to God, but now have been shown mercy because of their disobedience. In this case the opportunity to see mercy is because of the disobedience of the other group, the unbelieving Jews. Because of the rejection of God's plan for the nation of Israel and their successful demand for a divorce from their supernatural Husband, God, the Gentiles now are given a surprising opportunity to enter into the place vacated by the unbelieving Jews.

In the second case referring to the opportunity of the Jews in this new arrangement, Paul shows the cause of their opportunity to see mercy is because of the mercy shown to the Gentiles. It seems to me that in both cases it is the condition and choices of the other party that causes each to finally catch a glimpse of the mercy of God.

It also becomes clear at this point in the book that even though from our viewpoint the two classes look radically different, that one class looks like they are far from God and the other class appears to be very into righteousness and all that kind of religious stuff, that from God's viewpoint all are shut up in disobedience. And what is the only realistic option for hope by either group of disobedient sinners – to see more clearly the mercy that is being shown them by a revelation of the One who is mercy. It becomes very clear here that God shows mercy to all.

But because God is mercy and shows mercy to all, does that mean that all will see mercy and be drawn into a healing relationship because of that revelation? God deeply desires that that would be true, but sadly very many refuse to believe in the mercy of God. The lies of Satan are very strong to distort the truth about God's mercy and most people insist on believing that God is a mixed bag of both good and evil. They insist on believing that mercy and justice are somehow the light and dark side of God, that they are in opposition to each other in the mind of God and that there is a brooding, angry, vengeful side of God that will someday break out in angry fits of wrath to impose forced punishment on all those who reject His mercy. This is one of the worst lies that keeps sin so tenacious in our hearts and poisons almost all religious beliefs throughout history.

In these final days of the history of the world as we know it, the revelation of God as the embodiment of mercy and love will flood the whole earth. Will the whole earth accept and believe it? Absolutely not! But that does not mean that it will not be made plain. What it does mean is that whenever a person is confronted with the real truth about the nature of God in His purity of motive and the unconditional aspect of His love and mercy, that the choices we make about what we believe about Him will determine the direction we will go and the final destiny we will experience.

If we insist on clinging to our Jekyll and Hyde opinion about God we will perceive everything that transpires before us through that filter and will suffer consequences as real as if what we believed were actually true. When faced with a passionate love that is so intense as to be lethal when not in harmony with it, we will suffer the lethal nature of it precisely because we are unwilling to be in harmony with it, not because there is any motive on the part of God to harm us. On the other hand, if we lay aside our false notions about God and allow Him to transform us through the renewing of our mind and our perceptions about Him, He will reshape our thinking, our feeling, our perceptions so radically that when faced with the unveiling of the real glory of the Father we will burst into the glory of praise and adoration and our beings will light up to resemble blazing suns in the presence of pure love.

Even more importantly, as we assimilate the truth about God's nature we even now become more and more transformed into what we are seeing in Him. As we behold and believe and embrace the mercy of God, both for ourselves and for others, we will discover to our amazement that we ourselves will begin to think and act and feel more merciful. By beholding we become changed.

For God has shut up all in disobedience so that He may show mercy to all. Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways! (Romans 11:32-33)

(next in series)

2 comments:

  1. Floyd -
    Here's a line of thinking that I've wondered on but relates to your discussion of our "Jekyl and Hyde" view of God, our belief that (our faith that?) God is that way, the way the liar told us He is.

    What about the possibility that faith can be more than what we thought it was? Once I was reading about Jesus healing someone where He says "Go - your faith has made you well." And then there are those who at the end will say "Lord! Lord! Hey! Didn't we cast out demons and do miracles and all these things in Your Name? (and they might have added...) What about our faith? Didn't we do all of that in faith?" But He will say to them - "Away from me, you evildoers - I never KNEW you."

    What if our faith is WAY more powerful than we know? Of course, it is His mercy that allows us to have the healthy kind of faith we need to receive His grace - I've always been convinced that in Ephesians, Paul is referring to FAITH when he says - for by grace are you saved, through faith, and THAT (i.e. faith) not of yourselves, not of works, lest any man should boast.

    We need to KNOW God, to LOVE God. God must KNOW and LOVE us for us to be saved. Godly faith, that gift of God, is a vehicle for us to receive His salvation, but false faith is not a substitute - powerful as it is in bringing change in the world. That is probably the "placebo effect". It is probably the way that certain people "win friends and influence people", etc., etc. It is probably how a certain number of false prophets and teachers are able to convince their followers of their credentials, that they must know God, must be from God. But it is only a part of the lie. God has given us dominion over this world in ways we can't explain, but that doesn't mean that apart from Him we can do anything that lasts - whether by "faith" or by our physical or mental strength.

    Let me know what you think.

    Thanks for continuing to write.

    Lord - bless Floyd in his writing and studying. Bless him even more in his family, in his marriage, as a father, as a friend and brother in Christ, member of Your Body. Transform his life, as he desires, so that he is more and more like You, as You desire! We believe Lord - help us to shed the old, the "no-belief", the belief in other so-called "gods", the chaff of our old self, the chrysalis of disobedience.

    Thanks, brother,

    Yours,
    Josh Underhill

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  2. Dear Josh, good to hear from you again brother. I always enjoy your input and intense thinking.
    I completely agree with you that faith is a whole lot more than most people think it is. I have been pondering the real meaning of faith for a number of years and will continue to do so as I learn more and more about it.

    As with everything else that God has set up, faith has at least one if not many counterfeits that try to derail us into thinking we have the real thing. I know that the “faith” that I grew up thinking I had was just an intense effort to believe something and dispel any feelings or ideas contrary to that anywhere in my mind. Of course that is about as successful as trying very hard not to think about elephants, if you have ever heard that scenario. I think that many Christians have some variation of this kind of thinking about the nature of faith.

    One of the most radical things I am learning about faith is the fact that real faith seems to be a response of trust to the trust and faith that God has in us. That certainly makes the description of Jesus as one who is faithful make a lot more sense. He is so full of faith in us to respond to His love that we respond with faith that is inspired and reflective of His faith.

    As you also point out so well in your comment, faith has everything to do with relationship and reflects the character of that relationship as well as those we are relating to. We can also have faith in the wrong powers without realizing it as is seen in those who come up to the last great surprise at the scene of the judgment. So just because we have faith does not ensure that the object of our faith can save us. We are not saved by our faith but by grace. Faith is simply the means by which we latch onto that grace. We can also latch onto other things instead of grace which is all too easy to do.

    Another thing that is confused with faith is positive thinking. Optimism and an upbeat attitude, especially in the face of difficulty can be a great influence both on ourselves and on those around us. And while real faith can have the very same results, a positive attitude does not necessarily mean that we have a saving relationship of faith in the only true source of life and grace.

    What I find interesting is that you brought up this subject just at the very time I am about to reach Romans 12:3 which touches on this very point. Stay in touch and I will obviously be looking much more at this.

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