Understanding God's Sovereignty Amidst the Problem of Evil

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Evil exists. Evil exists. Patently obvious, axiomatic, self-evident unless you are one of those grape-nuts Christian Science people who follows the teaching of Mary Baker Eddy Glover Patterson Fry. Who said "all evil is an illusion." Apparently including infidelity and divorce. Most people would affirm that evil is an incontrovertible fact. Playing metaphysical games is pretty silly since evil dominates our world and our culture. [00:07:19]

First of all there is natural evil. It is impersonal, external, physical, temporal, diseases, disaster, catastrophes from tiny bacteria to tsunamis and everything in between. It is everything from viruses to volcanoes. The whole natural world is blighted incessantly by bad things. We live at the mercy of a fallen creation. We live at the mercy of physical corruption which is evident to us in the very aging process. [00:09:01]

God exists; that is to say that the God of the Bible. He is the true and only living God. There is no other God, but the God of the Bible. We demonstrated one way to see that when we said in the earlier session that whoever created the universe will know how it operates. And we know the creator is the God of the Bible because the Bible understands reality perfectly. [00:13:23]

He is all powerful. He is all knowing. He is good. He is loving. He is holy. He is sovereign and controls absolutely everything. There is nothing that exists or occurs or ever will that is not in His control. Let me give testimony to that from scripture. I Chronicles 29:11-12 "Thine O Lord is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is thine. [00:14:27]

God created everything that He created of His own free choice, and He designed them the way He designed them because that is the way He wanted them, knowing full well that angels would rebel and so would men. God created angels and people and planets and stars and sky and earth and mountains and seas and desserts and plains and lakes and streams and sun, and you go on and on and on. [00:20:08]

God wills evil to exist. There is no other possible conclusion. In Isaiah 45, let me read a section starting in verse five. "I am the Lord, there is no other. Beside me there is no God. I will gird you thou you have not known me, that men may know from the rising to the setting of the sun that there is no-one besides me. I am the Lord; there is no other, the one forming light and creating darkness, causing well-being and creating calamity. [00:23:20]

God wills evil to exist without being evil. He is light and in Him is no what - darkness at all. God wills evil to exist. Now, at this point panic strikes the heart of an Armenian. He becomes short of breath. His eyes roll back. There are accelerated heart rates and palpitations. His palms become sweaty because like the theological liberals he has got to rescue God from this horrible caricature. [00:25:11]

God willed it for His own glory. Listen to the Westminster Confession. "God from all eternity did by the most wise and holy council of his own will, freely and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass. Yet, so as thereby neither is God the author of sin, nor is violence offered to the will of the creatures, nor is the liberty or contingency of second hand causes taken away. [00:46:20]

Romans 3:5 "If our unrighteousness demonstrates (mark that word) the righteousness of God, what shall we say?" Our unrighteousness, “sunistemi”, demonstrates, manifests, discloses the righteousness of God. What is Paul after? He has been showing that God is faithful to His promises to Israel and their sin and their unbelief can't alter that faithfulness. And God is righteous and Israel's unrighteousness does not cancel God's righteousness. [00:47:51]

The presence of sin allows God to demonstrate His righteousness. The presence of sin allows God to demonstrate His love. How else could He show the character of love that loves enemies and sinners if they were none? Turn to Romans 9:22 "What if God" - here comes the same word in the NAS translating verbs that are synonyms in the Greek. "What if God, although willing to demonstrate His wrath “endeiknumi." To demonstrate His wrath. [00:49:33]

God determined to demonstrate His wrath; to put it on display, a demonstration of His wrath. Another interesting note - the word demonstrate here is "aorist middle." It would be intended in the Greek grammar to be understood this way "God determined to demonstrate for himself." It is reflexive. To demonstrate for Himself, for His own glory, for His own satisfaction, His wrath. [00:51:16]

The greatest good is God's everlasting glory. And what is our response? Back up in Romans 9:14. What's our response? "What shall we say then?" There is no injustice with God is there? “May genoita,” no, no never. God is God. God has a right to do whatever He wills. He defines justice by what He does. In case you were wondering about that He says to Moses "I'll have mercy on whom I'll have mercy, and I'll have compassion on whom I will have compassion." [00:57:45]

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