Last time at http://gordon-feil-theology.blogspot.ca/2017/03/why-would-god-care-about-us.html
we presented 5 reasons and evidences why God would care about us. The last one
was that he sent his son to die for us.
Why
would he need to send his son to die for us?
God’s aim is to dwell with us, but for this to work,
we have to be like him. He is love. Later, we will see that he tells us that love
is expressed by a series of principles and that violating those principles is sin (I John 3:4). He established that in end only love would
survive, and he accordingly determined that sin would cease by the sinner
ceasing. Sin earns its own reward, and
that reward is death. God’s solution to that is at Romans 6:23: “For what one earns from sin is death; but eternal life is
what one receives as a free gift from God, in union with the Messiah Yeshua,
our Lord.” Perhaps the best
known verse in the Bible is John 3:16: “For
God so loved the world that he gave his only and unique Son, so that everyone
who trusts in him may have eternal life, instead of being utterly destroyed.”
Is
this fair? If he made us the way we are, then he is responsible for our
tendency to sin, and he should be able to forgive us easily enough with no
death.
He made us with the capacity to sin. A capacity is different than a tendency.
Ecclesiastes 7:29 says that he made us upright, but that WE “have devised many schemes”
There would be nothing eternal gained by living in this
world of evil if we didn’t acquire such distaste for sin that we would be
totally repulsed by it. (Amos 5:15:
“Hate evil, love good…”) When we
are made alive in a permanent form and we no longer have the human weaknesses
that now beset us, we will be totally adverse to sin, as God intended. This intention is demonstrated by making it
clear that
a.
He
does not abide with sin. He sets the
perfect example.
b.
He
determined that the penalty for sin is death (to uphold the principle that sin
must be rooted out).
So
God cares for us, but since he is all-powerful and all-knowing and all-loving,
why do we need to pray? If he is already
as informed as he can get, why doesn’t he just give us what we need without
being asked?
The
question assumes correctly that “your Father
knows what you need before you ask
Him”6 (Matt. 6:8). What we
are building with God is a relationship.
Relationships are built upon focusing on each other and by
communications. By the way, this
communication can be two-way. Sometimes
when we calm our minds and in prayer cut ourselves off from distractions, our
minds can be open to God’s thoughts to us: sometimes comfort, sometimes
correction, and sometimes specific instruction.
Just be sure to try the spirits (I John 4:1): are these communications according to God’s
written teaching?
Why
is it that prayers go unanswered by a God who cares?
Who can
say that they go unanswered? When the
answer is “No”, has the prayer gone unanswered? There is a lot that has to be
considered by God when determining how to answer our prayers, such as what is
ultimately good for us, and what is good for others. We do not have the view
that he has, not only of the impact different answers to our prayers would have
on others, but also on what our own situations will be.
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