Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Wrath of God

This week's WordAction lesson is from Revelation 16 where the seven bowls of God's wrath are poured out. The lesson writer makes the point that "little is said from pulpits today about the wrath of God." He blames this on "cowardice and compromise, ... doubt and disbelief," noting that "modern pulpits ... are too often occupied by persons who are eager for acceptance, prestige, and reward."

Ironically, I find there is more risk in focusing on the love of God than on the wrath of God. I have been reminded several times that I need to "teach the truth." That "truth" would include not only the news that God is love and that there is a heaven to gain but also a strong warning that "the finally unrepentant shall suffer eternally in hell." (Manual, Church of the Nazarene, Article XVI.) Failing to include God's wrath in one's teaching is certainly not the road to acceptance, prestige, and reward where I teach! Rather, it can easily lead to accusations of being "soft on sin" and possible loss of position. Even those who want to focus on God's love for themselves like to hear and talk about the wrath coming on those who aren't walking the straight and narrow path.

Still, I don't focus much on the wrath of God. I grew up with an image of a frowning, disapproving Creator. Sure the song said: "the Father up above is looking down in love," but my experience with people who loved me provided plenty of evidence that love didn't mean an absence of disapproval and rebuke. With so few people who seemed to actually like me even when I put on my best face, how could I hope to earn the approval of a God who saw my every sin, heard my every lie and unkind word, and knew my every ugly thought? What a hopeless task it had to be to please God!

One of the stated goals of this week's lesson is "to place our complete trust in God and His mercy." As I have contemplated all this, it has struck me that, although I talk about God's love far more than His wrath, I actually place a lot of confidence, perhaps even "complete trust," in the justice of God as it is built into this world. Two verses are especially dear to me in this regard:

1. Galatians 6:7 Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows. (NIV)

2. Romans 12:17 Do not take revenge, my friends, but leave room for God's wrath, for it is written: "It is mine to avenge; I will repay." (NIV)

I depend on the truth of these two passages as support for an inner commitment to letting people "get away with murder." That commitment doesn't always (or even often) manage to overrule the emotional response to being wronged, but I fall back on those passages as the basis for letting go of the wrong as quickly as possible without demanding justice. Even if I do nothing, demand no apology, hold no grudge, plot no punishment, strike no blow in return, justice is built into this world. Nobody ever gets off scott-free. Sin has consequences. I depend on that. It helps me avoid a little more effectively the idea of taking justice into my own hands for fear God will overlook the wrong.

I don't need the bowls of wrath and the plagues of Revelation 16 for evidence to support my conviction that justice is always served in the end. I can observe the negative impact of sin all around me in this life. For example, the person who speaks to me in unloving tones, probably does not reserve those tones for me alone. I am likely far from the only person with whom he or she has conflict. I suspect the person who treats me like I'm an idiot lives in a world full of idiots and suffers no small amount of frustration. The person who makes strong demands of me likely lives in a world where the only way to get what he or she wants is to demand it. Nothing ever comes easily to them. Rather, they must scrabble for every foothold.

The natural tendency is for people to treat others as they are treated. Thus, the person who doesn't treat others well is unlikely to be treated well.

Is this the wrath of God? Does God rain lightning bolts, frogs, and hailstones down on those who fail to obey His law? Or is the wrath of God embodied in the consequences of sin built into the fabric of the universe and evident all around us? In Revelation 16, it is the former. Maybe that scene reflects some sort of reality. Or maybe it is highly symbolic and the wrath of God is more of a passive, "built-in," negative consequence of serving self.

I don't know what the reality of God's wrath is. I do know, however, that I live better when I cultivate my faith that justice is always served in some way, that, at some level, there are always negative consequences for negative actions. It's the key to peace, kindness, and forgiveness. I don't need to "get even" as long as I remain confident that God sees the wrong done and takes full responsibility for disciplining the wrongdoer.

God is love. And God is just. Righteousness brings heavenly bliss, sometimes surprisingly soon; unrighteousness brings terrible consequences, sometimes surprisingly soon. I'm counting on that.

7 comments:

Seeker Billy Cox said...

"The lesson writer makes the point that "little is said from pulpits today about the wrath of God." He blames this on "cowardice and compromise, ... doubt and disbelief," noting that "modern pulpits ... are too often occupied by persons who are eager for acceptance, prestige, and reward.""

Wow... I guess I can chalk this up to NPH knowing that what type of people still buy their adult sunday school materials.

Marsha Lynn said...

As in people like me??? LOL

These lessons have been pretty good. I'm always glad for a study on Revelation that focuses on the part we can understand rather than endless speculation on the more obscure sections. This particular subject must have just hit a hot button for the writer. I haven't noticed a similar tone anywhere else in the four lessons we have done thus far from the five-part unit.

Marsha Lynn said...

Thanks for the comment, by the way, Billy. It's always nice to know someone is reading.

Billie said...

I wish the author (McCumber(?)) had delved into the non-literal interpretations he hinted at in the material. There might be relevance to the Christian today in that reading.

Seeker Billy Cox said...

My concern with a focus on wrath is that we may very well end up with Jonah, sitting under a vine waiting for the world to burn and then being angry when God doesn't follow through with the fireworks.

It's easy to talk about wrath when we are fairly sure that we're not subject to it.

Carolyn said...

Thanks, Marsha, your blog helped me have an insight that I didn't have before. It spoke to me where I live and in my world. I can apply it to myself and to my everyday experiences.
Carolyn

Marsha Lynn said...

Billy,

You make a good point with the Jonah illustration. However, when I'm at my best, my own mental process goes more like this:

Arghh!!! That person did a terrible thing to me. They're going to pay for this.

Oh, wait a minute -- God says: "Vengeance is mine, I will repay"

Lord, that person did a terrible thing to me! Make them pay!

Oh, wait a minute -- I also have done harm to others. Am I ready to get what I deserve for those things?

Lord, I am hurting because of the actions of that other person. I am also responsible for hurting others. I believe it when you say you will repay. I pray today that you will have mercy on all of us sinners. And I leave it up to you as to what will best serve to discipline the person who did me wrong in light of their motives and intentions.

Jonah serves as a good lesson, but I hope we can count on a God of justice who made a world with "built-in" justice without expecting to somehow be exempt from that justice.