also we we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to His purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will
This is a brief meditation on this one verse, especially on the final phrase, "who works all things after the counsel of His will."
The verse occurs within an extended outburst of praise, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ." Paul's thoughts are filled with the glory and overflowing majesty of God. Yet, he never explicitly defines God for us -- not in the way systematic theologies or confessions of faith do. He presupposes a common understanding of God, probably because instruction about the nature of God was a part of his evangelistic teaching. Two brief sermons we have from him in Acts to the Gentiles draw out the implications of the Jewish/Christian view of God as creator. (see his sermon at Lystra in Acts 14 and to the Athenians in Acts 17.) We can only assume that these offer a glimpse into his constant practice. On occasion he appeals to the character of God in an ad hoc manner in the course of making an argument, reporting a prayer, or exhorting his readers. Often these are in the form of short relative clauses, such as this one, which we may tend to overlook but which are rich in information about the nature of God. We ought to linger over them.
What does this phrase, "who works all things after the counsel of His will," tell us about God?
1. God is personal. He has motives, thoughts, purpose. He has a will and mind. He is not an impersonal force, principle or law. He is not a universal energy.
2. God is rational. He acts rationally. He has reasons for what he does. He chooses a purpose and acts to fulfill that purpose. He is not arbitrary or irrational.
3. God is consistent. He is not inconsistent and changeable. He does not waver from his own purpose. He is faithful.
4. God is active. Not passive. He works. He acts within time though he transcends time. One day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day. His eternity doesn’t mean just a long time. He exists outside of time; both time and space are His creation. However, He is somehow still able to truly act within space and time.
5. God is independent. He is not constrained by anything outside Himself. His will is the ultimate explanation for all things. He sets His love on
6. God is sovereign. He is sovereignly powerful over all things. Possible exceptions -- random events or chance; acts of the devil and demons; the free, responsible acts of human beings; my own sins -- are found not to be exceptions in the Scriptures.
How should we respond?
Comfort. The corollary to God being rational, active and sovereign over all things, is that every thing that happens has a reason. I do not understand those who find it more comforting to believe either that some things happen purely by chance or that God’s knowledge and power are somehow limited. The issue seems to be a question about the character of God. We need to trust in God’s kindness, goodness, wisdom, power, grace, first. Then, we can trust that a good and gracious, all-wise, all-powerful God has his own good reasons for letting some things occur. Somehow the explanation for these things can be reconciled with His goodness though we ourselves cannot reconcile them. This is far more comforting to me than to think that God is either too weak or too stupid to prevent calamity.
Purposeful activity. We glorify God and fulfill His purpose for us by imitating Him. We may be tempted to think God’s sovereignty over all things would lead us to be passive, or diminish our significance as “real causes.” But this is philosophy, not Christian revelation.
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