Do All Things Really Work Together for Good?
By
Pastor Errol Hale

Everyone
has heard of Murphy's Law. "Whatever can go wrong will go wrong." O'Toole's
Commentary on Murphy's Law states:
"Murphy was an optimist." Other
variations on Murphy's Law include The Unspeakable Law which asserts, "As
soon as you mention something, if it is good, it goes away and if it is bad, it
happens." The Law of Selective Gravity insists, "An object will fall so as to
do the most damage." Howe's Law
postulates, "Every man has a scheme that will not work." One that we can all relate to, especially
when in the grocery store, is Etorre's Observation:
"The other line moves faster."
We
snicker at these because we can relate to the feelings of doom that they each
in their own way convey. The fact is, many of us, including God's children, expect the worst.
It
is against that pessimistic backdrop that I remind you of the words of Romans
8:28.
We know that
all things work together for good to those who love God and to those who are
the called according to His purpose.
And we know
Who
is we? According to Romans chapter eight, we are the
ones who are in Christ Jesus and for whom there is therefore now no
condemnation (v.1). We are the ones who,
filled with the Holy Spirit of God, think
spiritually and therefore walk [or
live] in the spirit (vv. 4-9). We are
the ones who will be resurrected and glorified someday (v.10-11). We are the
children of God (vv. 15-16), heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ (v.17). When life gets so difficult that we do not
even know how to pray, we are the ones for whom the Holy Spirit of God
intercedes before the throne of the Father in Heaven (vv. 18, 26-27).
And we know
We
have an inner confidence given to us by the promises of scripture and the inner
testimony of the Holy Spirit who bears witness with our spirits that we are the
children of God.
And we know that all things
work together for good
All things --
even the things that are bad work
together for good. Even
sickness and disease. Even accident and injury.
Even persecution and injustice. All
things work together for good.
All things work together for good
Even
the things that are not working well, or that seem to be working together to
accomplish the greatest possible injury.
As children of God, we know that all things work together for good.
All things work together for good
Good
is not always pleasant, or easy, or convenient, or quick, or painless.
Good
is often annoyingly uncomfortable, arduously difficult, intrusively
inconvenient, tediously slow, torturously painful.
Before
all the facts are in, good is not easily understood.
Good is often difficult, if not
impossible, to understand -- until later. Until the facts are in. What looks good,
often turns out to be bad. And what is
bad often turns out to be good -- later.
Bad
people have a skewed definition of what is good. Good people, if there were any truly 100% good
people, which, according to Jesus, there are not -- good people would know good from
bad. But, since there isn't a one of us
who is truly 100% good we shouldn't be too surprised when we occasionally
mistake what is good for what is bad. We
shouldn't be too surprised when we frequently misjudge what is bad for what is
good.
God is the only One who is truly good. Isn't that what Jesus told the rich young
ruler in Mark 10:18? The young man ran
to Jesus, knelt before Him and asked Him, "Good teacher, what shall I do that I
might inherit eternal life?" To which
Jesus replied, "Why do you call Me good? No one is good but One, that is, God." God is the only One who is truly good. He is therefore the only One who can
accurately discern what is good and what is bad -- especially in those cases in
which we are either confused, or worse, sure something
is good, when it is bad, or that something is bad when it is indeed good.
Since
God is good, and since He alone knows what is good, we must learn to discern
what is good and what is bad based on what He
says -- in spite of what we see, or feel, or hear, or believe or hope for.
God is sovereign. That means that there is nothing He cannot
do. He is free -- free to do whatever He
pleases. God checks with no one. He needs no one to sign off on His ideas
before He implements them. We sometimes
call earthly kings sovereigns, but they are not really sovereign. They may
be free to make laws in their own kingdoms, but they are not free like God is
free. God is the only One who is
sovereign in the absolute sense.
God is omnipotent. That means He has all power. It doesn't mean that He has more power than others. It doesn't mean that He has the most power of all. It means that God has all power -- including the power that others have. No one who has power, great or small, has any
power apart from God. Jesus told Pilate
as much, didn't He? As it is with
sovereignty, so it is with omnipotence.
God is the only truly omnipotent, or all powerful, being.
God is good. That God is good means that there is nothing
about Him that is in any way less than good.
He thinks only good thoughts. He
does only good deeds. He never has a bad
day. God is the only one who is truly
good.
There
are many more things that God is, but let's consider these three: God is sovereign
(free to do as He pleases). God is omnipotent
(able to do as He pleases). And God is good (he does nothing that is not good). Because God is good, He does only good. Because He is
omnipotent he is able to do the good
He determines to do. Because God is
sovereign, he is free, without
restraint of any kind, to do the good that He desires. This is a comfort to we who even partially
understand it. It is a comfort because
we know that God is free and able to give us whatever He pleases and that
everything that comes from His hand will be good -- even if we don't understand
it. Even if we do not see how it can be
done.
But
people do bad things. People do horribly bad things at times. People do things that are unspeakably bad at times. When people do bad things, horribly, or even
unspeakably bad things, don't these bad things make for bad in the lives of the
people who do them -- and in the lives of those who are touched by the bad
things people do? Certainly -- if there
is no God.
But
there is a God. And He is so in control of all things, that He is able to use even the bad things that bad
people do -- including the horribly and unspeakably bad things
that bad people do -- for good.
Judas
betrayed Jesus Christ, the Son of God.
In my book, if that is not the worst thing that anyone has ever done, it
is at least in the top five. God used that
bad thing, that horribly bad thing,
that unspeakably bad thing, as apart
of His plan to accomplish the best
thing that ever happened to the human race.
Jesus Christ died on the cross to pay the penalty for the sins of His
people and to provide them with His righteousness. God did not cause Judas to devise or carry
out his sinister plot. It came from the
evil in Judas' heart. But because God is
sovereign, omnipotent and good, He employed Judas and his evil exploit to
accomplish God's ultimate good.
All things work together for good -- to
those who love God
People
who do not love God don't understand what this verse is talking about. People who do not love God can't understand. People who do not love God only understand
what they see with their eyes. They only
understand what they feel -- what they personally experience. They know only what they believe. Since our vision, experience and beliefs are
limited, and often wrong, so is what we can understand -- unless we love God.
Loving
God doesn't give us perfect understanding -- just way better.
Those
who love God, have His Word that He loves them, cares for them and will not
allow anything to touch their lives unless it has first crossed His desk, so to
speak. Those who love God are hurt when destruction strikes, but they
are not destroyed. Those who love God experience health
problems. They encounter financial
difficulties and they too must deal with troubled relationships. But those who love God know that God knows
all about their trials. They know that
He hears their cries. They know that He
cares and that He acts on their behalf -- even if not in the way they desire, or
when they desire it.
On
the days that their personal worlds collide with every imaginable catastrophe,
like Job, those who love God, are able to say, "The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away. Blessed is the name of the Lord." Those who do not love God are not heard blessing God often -- if at all. Some who do not really love God may bless God
(and their good luck) on the days when God is giving. But let God take something, anything at all, and
those who do not love God will curse
rather than bless.
Do
you love God? Here is a way to
tell. Examine your heart. Listen to the words of your own mouth -- not
when God is giving. Listen to yourself when He is taking.
All things work together for good to those who love God and to those who are the called
What
does the Bible mean by called? Everyone who has heard the gospel preached
has heard the call, but they are not all among those who are the called. They have heard the general call with their ears.
Some of what they have heard may have even seeped into their minds. But those who are the called are those who
are known by God. They have heard the effectual call of the Holy Spirit of God. Those who hear this call, respond to it. Isn't that what Jesus said in John
10:27? He informed His critics saying,
"My sheep hear My voice and I know them and they
follow Me." The effectual call isn't
about hearing merely with your ears, or even with your minds. It is about hearing God's call with your
heart and responding.
If
you attend a church where the gospel is preached with any measure of
regularity, you have heard the gospel with your ears. If you have thought about what you have
heard, you may have heard it with your mind.
But if you haven't heard the call of God with your heart -- if you haven't responded to that call by following Jesus,
chances are, you are not one of the called.
Chances are you do not love God.
And if you do not love God, things may be okay right now, but someday,
something will touch your life that you will not be able to handle.
When
that happens, you won't just ask God, "Why?" Even people who love God ask "Why?" You will question
God. You will challenge God. If the
problem is big enough, you may even reject
God. Because only people who love God and are among the called know that all things work
together for good.
All things work together for good to those who love God and to those who
are the called according to His purpose
God
has a purpose in everything He does. He
has a purpose for your life and everything in your life. God has a purpose for everything that touches
your life -- both the bitter and the sweet.
There
are times when good things seem to be happening. In the times when everything is going along
smoothly we tend to be confident concerning God's purposes. After all, if we are happy, God's purpose
must be that we be happy. Right? Or so we
conclude.
But
there are the other times -- the times
when nothing seems to be going smoothly.
God has a purpose for these times as well. It is during these times that even if you
love God, even if you are one of those whom He has called according to His
purpose, there are times when you cannot understand,
or even imagine for what purpose
certain things are taking place in your life.
But because you love God, because you are one whom He has called
according to His purposes, by faith, you
just know that all things work together for good to those who love God and
to those who are the called according to His purpose. And it is often in the wake of these times
that we are given the clearest insights into what God's purpose for our lives really is. And it is not
that we be happy. God's purpose for our
lives is that we be holy. And that we trust in Him, rather than in the happy
times we are so fond of.
God's
purposes are seldom fulfilled instantly. Our lives are not made up of a fragmented
succession of unrelated events. It may
seem that way to us, but not to God. We
experience good times, that are overtaken by bad times, that
give way to good times again. The cycle
continues throughout our lives. "Now Jacob loved Joseph more
than all his children." As
the favorite of 12 sons, Joseph enjoyed special privileges. Dad loved him most. He was provided with nicer clothing than his
brothers wore. These were for Joseph
happy times. But his justifiably jealous
older brothers conspired to do him harm.
Though it was their original plan, the eldest brother, Reuben convinced
his brothers not to murder Joseph.
Instead, they just sold him as a slave.
The happy times of special favor while traveling to
see his brothers were rudely interrupted. He was seized and thrown into a pit for
safe-keeping while they devised their plot to be rid of him. While he was in that pit, listening to their
hate-filled talk, don't you suppose it was a frightening and unhappy time for
Joseph?
Before
long, God blessed Joseph, giving him a position of great prominence in his
master's house. Happy days
returned. But when Joseph was falsely
accused of raping his master's wife, and was subsequently thrown into the
Pharaoh's dungeon, happy days were gone more quickly than they had arrived.
The
winds of circumstance shifted again and Joseph found himself out of prison and
in the second most powerful position in the whole Middle East where he
lived the rest of his life in unbridled affluence. Were these the happiest times of all? Was God's purpose for Joseph's life fulfilled
in wealth, power and influence?
No. It was from this position that in the midst
of a famine, Joseph was able to save the lives of his brothers who had
conspired to kill him but settled rather only to sell him as a slave. Was this the ultimate purpose for Joseph's life
-- including the suffering?
No. Joseph died centuries before the purpose for
His life was revealed. You see, Joseph
saved his brothers from starvation. One
of his brothers was named Judah. It was
from the line of Judah that Jesus the Messiah was born, and through Jesus the
sins of God's children were forgiven.
When
we consider stories like Joseph's we are encouraged. We are strengthened to face the hardships we
endure in hopes that someday, like Joseph, we will
come out on the top of the heap. But,
God's purposes are not about the individual ups and down of this life, or even
about a grand finale that awaits us later or at the end of this life. The fact is, things
seldom work out in this life as they
did for Joseph. The fact is, most people sold into slavery die as slaves.
God's
purposes are not restricted to time.
God's purposes are eternal. Whether we drink more deeply in this life
from the bitter cup or from the sweet, if we love God, if we are those whom He
has called according to His eternal
purposes, we need only to tip our gaze upward, take our eyes off of our feet
and peer down the road, past time -- and
into eternity.
Some
people believe the purpose for their lives will be realized when they get out
of school. Or get married. Or have
children. Or when
their children go off to school. Or when their children leave the nest. Or when they retire. While not as exaggerated as
the highs and lows in Joseph's life, our lives will be punctuated with both
happy and sad times. But these
are not the purpose of life.
When
we suffer, even if we are brave in the midst of the pain, when it subsides we
often want to know why we were made to suffer.
"What was the purpose in that, Lord?"
He may tell us a little. He may
even tell us a lot. But ultimately, we
are not likely to have any more than a surface understanding of God's eternal
purposes while in this life. It is not
until we transfer into eternity that we will fully know the extent of God's
purposes in our lives.
We
must train ourselves to look past the short-run milestones in this life, and past this life altogether and into eternity to
know the purposes of God.
It
is from the perspective of eternity
that while at the bottom of the barrel of life Job made a most important
declaration. He didn't know that God was
going to restore his health, his wealth and give him another family. Job was a broken down man waiting to die in
defeat when in triumphant faith he lifted his eyes past time and into eternity, and his voice toward heaven and said, "Even if God kills me, I will
trust Him."
God's
purposes are eternal. We who love God, and are among the called
according to His eternal purposes, do
not enjoy adversity any more than anyone else.
But because we love God and because we are the called according to
God's eternal purposes, regardless of what befalls us in this life, armed with God's promise of glorification and an
eternal inheritance:
We know
that all things work together for good to those who love God and to those who
are the called according to His purpose.
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