Daily Bread for Sep 29, Hab 1-3
Today’s readings are Hab 1-3.
Habakkuk is
written somewhere in Jeremiah's time, probably around 620 BC, perhaps earlier.
It comes after God uses Assyria to discipline Israel and before God uses the Babylonians/Chaldeans
to do the same - to Assyria first then Judah. The over-arching theme of
Habakkuk is God's sovereign authority in using wicked nations to accomplish His
divine will in the lives of His chosen people, then judging those evil nations
for their wickedness. As Habakkuk accurately prophesies, Babylon will capture
God's people then be judged by Him.
Habakkuk is another graphic portrayal of the tension
between sovereign election and human responsibility. God is completely
sovereign over all the events of history. However, men and women are entirely
responsible for their actions and will be judged accordingly.
This point is hard for us to reconcile. As a result, many
try to rationalize God's actions with explanations that fall short of what we
know the character and nature of God to be, frequently robbing Him of sovereign
authority, saying "God would never allow that to happen. Evil is outside
the will of God." This leaves God helpless to the whims of evil
men, nature and Satan. Other attempts to resolve the tension between
God’s sovereignty and man’s responsibility deny God His omniscience, "God
does not know what's in the future because He has given man free will and man's
decisions have not yet been made." This perspective leaves Him powerless
in the face of the will of man. In truth, many people are uncomfortable with
God being sovereign over everything and everyone in creation. The sin of
self-determinism and its pitfalls can be traced all the way back to the Garden
when Adam and Eve decided they wanted to be like God and ate the forbidden
fruit.
However, in books like Habakkuk, we hear that God raises up
kings and nations to be used in refining His people, then judges those same
kings and nations for their behavior. How can this be? Does God judge on
behavior?
We see exactly the opposite in the Scriptures in the story
of the Jews. Time and again, it is God's grace that determines their fate, not
their behavior. If their future depended on their conduct, they would fare no
better than the Chaldeans.
The sole difference between the Jews and the Chaldeans is
the Jews have been chosen as God's vessels. The Chaldeans have not. As such, it
is never the Jews' behavior that earns God's grace. Their status is based on
God's sovereign election and the transformation He effects in their hearts (Eze
36:26). Why does God choose the Jews? It is His prerogative (Ex 33:19, Rom
9:15). We quickly see that it is the changed heart that is the evidence that
they have been chosen. As imperfect as they are, they have a new passion and
reverence for God. Apart from the grace that changed their hearts, they were
doomed.
As the storyline of the Bible progresses, we see that the
heart of every Jew has not been transformed, only some. Only those with changed
hearts will be redeemed. Their new hearts will be demonstrated by their faith
and their desire to please God. Some of those examples show up in Heb 11.
If we understand this, it should be fantastic news to those
of us who name Jesus Christ as Lord and savior. We have been chosen as well,
not by our behavior, but by the grace of God. We don't have to conjure up new
hearts, for God gives us new hearts as gestures of His grace. Those new hearts are
the evidence, the guarantee that we are saved. Yes, at times our behavior is
not in harmony with our new hearts. Those times are reminders that God is still
working on us. When they occur, we thank God that His grace is not dependent
upon our behavior, but on the work He is doing in us.
The Assyrians, the Chaldeans, the Babylonians and every
other person who opposes God, rejects His only Son and lives in a constant
state of rebellion against God. They are not doomed by their behavior, but by
their evil, unregenerated hearts. God has not doomed them to Hell. Their sin
dooms them to Hell. They're not, in any way, victims of anything but their own
desires, victims of their own evil hearts and God judges them righteously.
Those who receive new hearts are judged according to the gift of grace they
have received in and through Jesus Christ.
When we see His grace as that slender thread that rescues
us from eternal flames, a thread that comes to us, not because of our behavior
(Rom 3:23) nor because we have good hearts (Jer 17:9; Mark 7:21) nor
because we made a correct decision (Rom 9:14-18) but solely because He is God
and has the right and authority to save whom He will, we will fall to our knees
in eternal thanks to Him for having redeemed us.
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