Skip to main content

God's Inexorable Love

 

Have you ever asked God to stop loving you so much?  I’m sure that sounds like a strange thing to ask, but C. S. Lewis, in his book The Problem of Pain, explains to us, that if we are complaining or resisting uncomfortable or painful things in our lives - which his providence has allowed - we may be doing just that very thing.  Why?  How?  We are forgetting that God’s love for us is an inexorable love.  If someone is being inexorable, they are insisting on their own way about things, regardless of how much someone may be complaining about it and petitioning against it.  God has an inexorable love for us, and that means he is going to insist on giving us what is best for us, even when we don’t like how he’s doing it.

Here's an example of God's inexorable love: Jesus comes riding into Jerusalem in a fashion which he knows is a fulfillment of an Old Testament prophecy about the way the king of Israel would come home to his capital city.  The people realize that he is making this claim.  They are also so amazed at the man, that they cannot think that he could be anything else but the king who was to come.  And so, they laud him as a king, spreading their garments in his path, waving palms of royal celebration and throwing them before his approach.  They lift up the old hymns of David and sing the praise of the son of David, returned to rule his people.  Jesus, accepts all this acclaim.  Indeed, when some men told him not to accept it so, he told them that if these people did not cry out with his praise, that the rocks that lay all around his entry would cry out in his honour.  In Jesus’ mind, he is coming to Jerusalem as the son of David; for that is who he is.  He knows he is the king of the Jews.  

But watch him.  What does he do, according to Matthew’s account, when he enters the city and goes straight to the temple, where the people would have continued to worship him?  He brings judgment upon it.  He casts out money-changers and animal merchants, and declaims that they have turned his temple into a den of brigands.  He does not tell the Jews what they want to hear.  He does not tell them that he, their king, has now come to take up his earthly seat and to deliver them from Roman oppression.  He does not tell them that the days of King David have returned, and that he is going to bring them political glory and a religious reformation and revival.  Instead he healed some people and turned around and went back to Bethany.  

As the days followed this event, it became clear that Jesus was determined to not do what they hoped he would do, and they were displeased.  And so, they turned on him.

But here’s what we need to see.  From our vantage point in history, we recognize  that Jesus, though he was purposefully disappointing the expectations of these people, was actually giving them that which was better than what they wanted.  What good would renewed political power and religious practice be for them if they remained the slaves of the sin that had brought them to their troubles in the first place?  It was because God loved them, that Jesus was come to deliver them from their sin and establish his kingdom in their hearts.  He was their king!  And he was bringing his kingdom to them, if they would repent of their sins and receive his rule in their hearts.  Jesus was loving these people, doing for them which He, in his infinite wisdom, knew was the best thing for them.  And his love was perfect.  Even though he knew they would not like what he was doing, and that eventually he would be killed for it, he refused to alter his dealing with them.  We see his fixed purpose to love them, even though they would not understand what he was doing.  We see Jesus loving his people with an inexorable love.  

During the Advent season, we celebrate the coming of the Lord.  We do so by spending time reflecting on our lives and preparing his way into our hearts by reconciling our own wills with his will.  What we need to ask ourselves is, are we prepared to welcome into our hearts a Lord who loves us with this inexorable love?  Can we love, obey and serve this person who will – if need be - go against our wishes, because he knows that there’s actually something better for us?  This is the way he is.  The sooner we are reconciled to it, the better for us.  

Oh friends, let us look up to our Father in heaven, who knows what we have need of before we even ask, and render him the smile of faith.  If he has said “No” to some prayer of ours, or if he is making us wait for what we have asked, or if we simply can’t see how he is possibly going to work out something we’ve brought before him, let us trust his inexorable love.  Let us thank him for loving us so faithfully, so wisely, and so patiently.  Let us sing our hossanas and rejoice in our wonderful King.

image from en.wikipedia.org: The Entry of Christ Into Jerusalem by van Dyke (AD 1617).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Courageous Leadership - Evensong, June, 2023

The texts are Joshua 24 and Galatians 2.

A Sea Shanty for St. Michael and All Angels

Audio of the song   “He Made the Devil Fall” - a “Sea Shanty” (Luke 10:18; Rev. 20:10) Beckmann, Feast of St. Michael and All Angels, 2023 Jesus, he came to Galilee And he made the devil fall! And called the twelve to with him be. And he made the devil fall! Refrain: He made the devil fall, my boys, He makes the devil fall! Christ the King will come again, And he’ll make the devil fall! Ho!   To them his pow'r was freely giv'n, And he made the devil fall! And Satan fell like light’ning from heav'n, And he made the devil fall!  He purged our sins; his vict'ry won! And he made the devil fall! And rose again to take his throne. And he made the devil fall!  He sent St. Michael with his sword, And he made the devil fall! And cast that dragon to the earth, And he made the devil fall!  He’ll send an angel, the devil to take And he’ll make the devil fall! And cast him into the fiery lake! And he’ll make the devil fall!

What is Evensong?

 Here are a few articles explaining the Anglican tradition of Evensong: From Ad Fontes:  https://christhum.wordpress.com/2013/11/26/liturgy-bits-a-spotters-guide-to-evensong/ Here's an article on Evensong from Classic FM:  https://www.classicfm.com/discover-music/what-is-evensong-how-long-service/ The Religious News Service:  https://religionnews.com/2017/08/30/evensong-sees-a-surge-even-as-british-church-attendance-declines/ From choralevensong.org/uk:   https://www.choralevensong.org/uk/about-choral-evensong-724.php For some reason, you have to go to "Read More" to use the links. It helps to differentiate between "Evensong" proper, which is the Evening Prayer service sung by officiants and congregation, and "Choral Evensong", which is the Evening Prayer mostly sung by a choir.