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Contents
The Final Verdict
Why are we alive? What is the meaning of life? Listen
to one man's attempt to define our existence: "For what are we, brother? We
are but a phantom flare of grieved desire, the ghostly and phosphoric flicker of
immortal time. We are an unspeakable utterance, an insatiable hunger, an
unquenchable thirst, a lust that bursts our sinews, explodes our brains, and
rips our hearts asunder. We are a twist of passion, a moment's flame of love and
ecstasy, a sinew of bright blood and agony, a lost cry, a haunting of brief
sharp hours, an almost-captured beauty, a demon's whisper of unbodied memory. We
are the dupes of time" (Thomas Wolfe).
Can we glibly shrug off his lament as the raving of a madman, or is there some
logic to his plea? Is there any evidence for his claim that we are simply dupes
of time? Let's be honest. The scandal of Christianity is the existence of a
world where violence, greed and pain rule; where brute strength and national
wealth determine the destiny of nations; where an accident of birthplace
determines whether one will grow up free or enslaved, comfortable or starving.
Christians insist that God rules over all and that He both cares about His
creation and intervenes in it to accomplish His will. But the evidence cries
out, No! Where was this loving God when millions were being slaughtered in the
earthen pits and gas chambers of Nazi Germany? Where is He now while starvation
puts an end to the wretched existence of untold thousands of helpless children?
How can we possibly square theology with reality; a loving God with the horrors
of existence?
We cannot solve this dilemma by the evidence of our senses. The scientific
methods we commonly use to understand the world and our place in it will simply
not work to bring together these opposite poles of good and evil. The only
possible way to escape despair is by the most monumental leap of faith
imaginable. We must believe in a story told us by a Being we cannot even prove
exists. To make it even more difficult, this story insists that our dilemma can
only be resolved if we recognize the existence of billions of unseen beings
throughout the universe. The census has yet to be taken which conclusively
proves the existence of even one of these beings. And yet, if we reject all of
this we will be forced to echo the words I began with. What a monumental leap of
faith! Let us now regard the story told in a 3500-year-old Book, not as a folk
tale or legend, but as reliable history, worth risking life itself for.
I am asking you to believe this incredible story, not because I can prove it to
be true, but simply because this Book says it is true. I am asking you to order
all your perceptions to be in harmony with the world-view outlined in these
pages. I maintain that this approach, and only this approach, will allow us to
avoid the ultimate scandal of Christianity--a good God who allows unconscionable
evil to run rampant over this planet.
Yes, we do have an answer, but the answer humbles our intellect and confounds
rational analysis, for it lies in the realm of faith. Do you understand clearly
how things got from eternity to here, and more importantly, how things will
proceed from here to eternity? We will now attempt, in highly condensed format,
to scan the storyline, in hope that we can find exactly how our existence in an
evil world makes sense in God's universe.
In the most ultimate of all beginnings, God had some
exceedingly difficult choices to make. Would He create life or not? More
importantly, what kind of life would He create? Would it be programmed like a
computer to behave in certain ways? Would it be an animal with instinctual
behavior but no conscience? Or would the highest level of created life be very
similar to God Himself, with moral sensibilities and the freedom for each
individual to choose their own destiny?
God's choice was made infinitely more difficult by His foreknowledge. He clearly
saw that to allow free choice would lead to the horrors with which we are all
too familiar. Would He create robots, or animals, or beings in His own image who
would almost destroy His universe? God knew that it would be better to create
nothing at all than merely to create robots or creatures without free choice. He
understood that only creatures with total freedom of choice could enter into the
relationship He desired to have with His creation.
By endowing intelligent beings with total freedom, God would expose the universe
to extreme danger. All His created beings could choose against Him, and thus
doom themselves to self-destruction. If there is any sense in which God is
responsible for the existence of evil, it is because He decided to allow free
choice, with all options totally open. But I thank God today that He did not
choose the other options, that I stand free in God's universe to make my own
choices, with no hidden buttons which some higher power can push to make my
decisions for me. Even in the midst of evil and despair, I still stand free to
choose another way, with no overriding fate determining my destiny.
Free choice is the most important concept in the history of the universe. It is
the inviolable right of every created being, with which God will not interfere
and with which Satan is forbidden to tamper. The answer to nearly every problem
today comes back to the concept of free choice. Because the very nature of free
choice is to be independent of coercion, any decisions made are the individual's
own responsibility and cannot be charged to God. They cannot be predetermined or
controlled.
So even though God knew that one angel would exercise
the right of free choice against Him, personal liberty was so important that God
made the decision to create intelligent life anyway. Once this decision was
made, it would not have been possible for God to remove Lucifer from His
creation plans. If God were to eliminate, before their creation, all beings who
would choose against Him, would free choice be real or a sham? This most
important principle would be turned into a lie, and God would be fully aware of
His own hypocrisy.
Lucifer made his fatal decision over God's plans to
create man on this earth. Lucifer was not included in God's planning session,
and jealousy filled his heart. His jealousy focused on Christ's position in the
Godhead, and the net result of his dissatisfaction was open rebellion. As the
rebellion matured, Lucifer focused his charges on the character of God. He said
that God was unjust and impossible to obey. The law of God was a natural target
for Lucifer, for the law tells what God is like. If the law proved to be unfair,
then it would follow naturally that the character of God is flawed, and He would
be unworthy of worship and obedience. Perceiving this focus of Lucifer's attack
is particularly important if one is to understand God's method of handling the
rebellion.
Clearly, once Lucifer had exercised his right of choice against God, God could
not solve the problem by merely destroying him. The only way to solve the
problem permanently would be to allow the process of free choice to run its
natural course. When the decisions of all members of God's universe have been
finally made, then the book can be closed on Lucifer's great gamble. God's
character and government must be vindicated by time and demonstration, not by
force or authority.
God allowed the misery of sin because of the worthlessness of forced obedience.
He determined to protect freedom of choice at all costs. God did not prevent Eve
from sinning, because He would not tamper with free choice. Jesus came to earth
and died to allow men to choose freely once again. And sin will not end until
Satan himself freely bows down and confesses Jesus' Lordship. This freedom has
been very expensive indeed, but the survival of the universe is at stake.
The reason God has been waiting so long for sin to run its course is because He
Himself is on trial before the universe. Are Satan's charges valid or invalid?
Will the course of sin vindicate God or Satan? God has submitted His own
character to the investigation and judgment of His creatures. The whole plan of
salvation revolves around this fact, and it cannot come to an end until all
charges against God have been totally disproved. It was difficult even for God
to explain to the angels the subtle though vital differences between the truth
and Satan's charges. Even for Him it was more effective to demonstrate the facts
than to explain them. This is why the Bible is so largely a history of God's
handling of rebellion and His treatment of those who have been caught up in its
consequences.
Satan's original attack was soon followed by an organized revolt, which quickly
developed into a massive rebellion, as a whole planet began living under his
system of law. The great controversy between Christ and Satan was in full
flower, and God's handling of the rebellion was being closely watched by every
unfallen intelligence. It surely must have caused amazement that because of the
principle of free choice, God allowed evil to have free rein. Yet only this
could prevent more destructive long-term evil.
This principle is the best explanation we have to understand how such an evil
world can coexist with a good God. Suffering and tragedy have come into the
universe because of choices made by free individuals, and God simply will not
overrule free choice. Because of man's choices Satan has become the temporary
ruler of this planet. This world is not God's way at all, but rather it is
Satan's demonstration for all who care to see what his government is like. Satan
is only being permitted to work his will temporarily, so that all can make
informed choices between God and Satan.
When Adam and Eve bought Satan's arguments, God set the
plan of salvation into motion. The only hope for mankind and for God's
government now lay in the intervention of God Himself into the human situation.
The colossal risk of this plan was at the same time the very thing that gave it
potential for saving the universe. The Saviour was not to operate as a
superhuman deity, but instead would function totally within the limitations of
human experience, in order to disprove or confirm Satan's accusations against
the law and character of God. Satan now charged that it was impossible for any
of the descendants of Adam to keep God's law. It was crucial that the Son of God
be born into this world as we are born, in order to meet Satan's charge that it
was impossible for fallen man to obey God's holy law.
An intensely interested universe looked on as Christ and Satan did battle on the
very planet where Satan ruled as prince. Over the course of thirty years they
watched Satan's battery of charges fall defeated, one by one. This demonstration
culminated on Calvary, where Satan's last attempt to discredit God failed
abjectly. There his battle for the minds of unfallen beings was lost. Now they
had proof that God was wholly good--even unto death--and that His law was
absolutely fair. Satan had truly fallen like lightning from heaven, and by
killing the sinless Son of God he had now fallen from the all-important arena of
the minds of unfallen beings. After Calvary Satan knew that he had lost. From
this point he and the fallen angels would forever be on their own, without a
shred of sympathy from intelligences in the heavenly sphere.
What a magnificent counterattack God had made against
Satan's deceptions! Surely He could quickly tie up the few remaining loose ends
and finish the whole problem of sin. But as a recent book title plaintively
asks, If God won the war, why isn't it over? Indeed, what are we doing here,
2,000 years after the decisive battle?
Once again, we must remember that God's purpose in the plan of salvation is to
finish the experiment of sin finally and unequivocally, while not violating the
free choice of any individual who has ever lived. This requires an extremely
detailed plan of operation, with all possible objections and questions and
pitfalls foreseen and provided for. So we must conclude that not all questions
were answered at the cross, nor were all issues decided. Certainly men and women
on this earth had not made their final choices about God and Satan. And even the
unfallen beings, although they had cast their ballots for God's government,
still did not understand all of the issues involved in the great controversy.
For instance, Satan had always claimed that mercy and justice could not coexist.
If God insisted on an absolute law for all created beings, then He could not
forgive anyone who broke that law. This was the argument which was so decisively
defeated at the cross. Immediately Satan reversed the coin, and began to argue
that God's eagerness to forgive sinners proved that His law had been abolished.
This new argument would take some time to be resolved effectively in the minds
and experience of human beings.
The great controversy has gone on now for two more millennia. Are we any closer
to a final verdict in the twentieth century than we were in the first? What
still needs to happen before God's government and a free universe can once again
find themselves in perfect harmony?
Could it be that the universe needs to know whether God's methods of restoration
really work? They have seen that He can forgive sinners. But forgiveness has to
do with God's attitude toward man. What about man's attitude toward God? That
has always been a trouble spot. God has offered to bring these rebellious
attitudes back into unchanging loyalty to Himself. Will it work? Can former
rebels be placed on a new, sinless earth without risking a new cycle of sin and
rebellion? God is even proposing to relocate a special group of people directly
into heaven before they die. Can He safely accomplish such an awesome task?
God has chosen justification and sanctification as His methods of bringing
rebellious man back into harmony with Himself. Justification works like this:
since the past cannot be lived over again, its sins can only be forgiven. So God
acquits; by faith Christ's substitutionary death pays the penalty for our sins
and removes our burden of guilt. Sanctification is the process which follows in
the wake of justification. Human character, which determines the acts of the
present and the future, can be changed; so God provides the power which we lack
to change motivation and action. Many people wonder whether God can accomplish
these goals completely, or if they can only be partly realized in their lives.
Are God's promises trustworthy?
These questions bring the storyline down to our time. What still remains to be
accomplished, in heaven and on earth, before God can completely finish the sin
problem? I am convinced that God will not let the agony of sin continue one
minute past the time when the last issue has been decided. If He did, then
He--and not Satan--could be held responsible for the suffering caused by sin.
This means two things: first, that there is no celestial clock ticking off a
pre-determined length of time available to the human race. The reality of free
choice precludes any such arbitrary action by God. Second, all issues have not
yet been decided, so it becomes crucially important for us to know as much as
possible about those remaining issues and how we might fit into their ultimate
resolution.
Did you ever wonder what is happening right now in
heaven? There is a judgment going on up there, but it is not at all like the
caricature some have made of it. God is not poring over books to figure out who
is going to be saved and lost. Jesus is not remonstrating with His Father to be
merciful. Jesus and His Father are not adversaries. Remember God's posture at
the very beginning of the sin problem? Rather than acting arbitrarily, God
opened His character and government to the scrutiny of all the beings He had
created throughout the universe. The judgment is simply the concluding phase of
this process.
Once again, God is opening Himself up for evaluation; in a very real sense He is
the One being judged. God wants every being in His universe to be completely
satisfied with how He arrived at His decisions to save some and reject others.
Remember that the primary issue at stake in the great controversy is not the
destiny of individual persons but the character and methods of the Judge
Himself. Satan's great hope is to catch the Judge in an unfair act--an
indefensible verdict, an act of favoritism. God must defend His decisions both
to loyal beings and rebellious ones. So in this work of judgment, God is
inviting all who care to look over His shoulder as He reviews the records and
His own decisions.
Never forget that the issue is between God and Satan, and that God must refute
Satan's charges. In this judgment, will God's character and His dealing with
sinners be vindicated? When all the evidence is in, will every being acknowledge
that He has judged fairly? The very desire of God for all to examine the record
assures us of a positive answer. Without this final judgment no true end to sin
could be realized.
Now, what still needs to be accomplished on earth to
settle major issues in the great controversy? Remember that Satan is still
pressing his charges against the validity and practicality of God's law, and God
still will not permit any answer to be given to Satan except through the avenue
of free choice.
In order to press home his charges, Satan keeps an accurate record of every
successful temptation. He won't let God forget one of them. His hope is to have
power over those who claim to love the Lord, and thus to discredit the power of
God to change character and behaviour. "Are these people supposed to take
my place in heaven?" he taunts. "Are these the ones who claim to keep
the law of God? Haven't they placed their own interests above Yours? Will You
banish me and my angels from heaven and yet reward these so-called Christians
who have been guilty of the same sins?"
Jesus doesn't argue with Satan. He simply continues offering His power to those
who love Him in confidence that soon there will be a clear-cut and final answer
to Satan's accusations. The ultimate fact we must face regarding such
accusations is that only pure, honest, loving people can bring credibility to
God's character in this world. God has promised marvelous power to wholly
committed people. When His people are ready to accept this power in its fullness
then the character of God will be shown to the world in the form of living
examples.
Surely no greater distinction can come to a people than to be known across the
universe as representatives of truth in the great controversy about God. It is
our privilege to join with the loyal angels in telling and living the truth
about God, and demonstrating it more clearly than it has ever been seen before.
Our world has been so thoroughly deceived by Satan's accusations that only a
faultless demonstration in flesh and blood will prove the authenticity of God's
claims. We have been invited to be living examples that God's grace can indeed
ennoble men and women. Only flesh and blood--mine and yours--can prove that the
gospel is more than a theory! The combination of living evidence with the spoken
word is the unanswerable testimony that will finally silence Satan, the
prosecutor; and vindicate God, the defendant, in this cosmic courtroom drama.
Thus the Christian today seeks to live a holy life--not so God will think better
of him, but so the world will think better of the God they see through him. The
Christian detests sin in his life, not because he fears that God will think less
of him, but because he fears that his friends will think less of God because of
his sins. God's final generation will be so sure of His acceptance of them that
they are set free to live entirely for Him. Their consuming desire is for their
wonderful God to be made known to the world. They have decided that they are
finished rebelling. They find sin to be repulsive because Jesus has given them a
new set of values, along with the power to live up to those values. They become
part of God's ultimate answer to Satan's charges.
These individuals will provide indisputable evidence that God has not asked too
much from His created beings when He asks for obedience to His law. The
reflection of Christ's character in His obedient people speaks eloquently that
God's law has not been unfair, and that God offers freedom when He asks for
obedience. As one writer put it, "the honor of Christ" stands
"complete in the perfection of the character of His chosen people."
The closing chapter in the plan of salvation--the end of sin--will occur when
this conclusive vindication of God's government becomes a reality.
In the triumph of Christ over Satan at the cross we see
the master strategy of God's counterattack against Satan, which assured the
eventual banishment of sin from the universe. The last battle, however, will be
won by Christians girded with the strength of their Master. This demonstration
vindicates God's claims and allows Him to bring sin to a final end.
The next step in our story, the reviewing of the
records by the redeemed during the millennium, is simply to allow the human race
to look over God's shoulder in order to understand His decisions, as He allowed
the unfallen beings to do during the investigative judgment. And at the end of
the millenium, the whole unsaved world will assemble before God's throne for the
same purpose. One conclusive point must be clearly made. All, including the
unsaved, will understand why Satan and sin must be destroyed. This final
acknowledgement of God's justice and love will utterly vindicate God's name. All
will see that sin is without excuse or reason, and that obedience is the only
way of life and happiness.
Only by this protracted, painful, twisting process can sin be brought safely to
an end while preserving freedom of choice for every being. This freedom is the
kingpin of God's master plan for the universe. Why is freedom so important?
Because without the liberty to reject God, neither could we choose Him--and
without choice, love would be utterly impossible. God loves His creatures, and a
lover yearns for love in return. An eternity of growing into love with our Maker
will open still wider vistas of freedom, greater possibilities of accomplishment
than we can ever know here in this darkened world. We should now be making the
choices that will preserve our freedom for all eternity and vindicate the
character of the God who loves us so much that He risked everything--in order
that we might freely share it all with Him.
Copyright ©
1997-2000 Amazing Facts
P.O. Box 1058, Roseville,
California 95678-8058, (916) 434-3880 tel, (916) 434-3889 fax
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