If you ask me to share my favorite attribute of God, I would respond without hesitation: His Sovereignty over every detail of life. As pastor and Bible teacher RC Sproul explains:
- “If there is one single molecule in this universe running around loose, totally free of God’s sovereignty, then we have no guarantee that a single promise of God will ever be fulfilled.”
As this fact about God has sunk root in my consciousness, I have grown less impatient when delays happen during the day, whether in traffic or in lines at the store. I’ve been able to create a possible scenario like: ‘Maybe God is preventing me from being involved in an accident’.
That kind of application is easy. But what happened the other day shifted my mind to ponder other areas within God’s sovereign reach.
During this particular ‘occasion’ my pride intersected with my sin.
First my area of boasting: “I’m the kind of gal who stays within bounds of food choices so that my body feels (and looks) lean”
Next my fall: But the FOOD looked SO good that I served myself a larger-than-I-should portion. And like Eve in the garden, I took and ate.
Finally my sin: (not that my pride was not sin) “Yikes, now I feel uncomfortably full. Oh, no! I HATE this feeling- and it’s my fault. How could I have done that! I can’t stop obsessing about this feeling of fullness. Why didn’t I stick with a smaller portion?” Self…self…self…self………down into me, away from Mike, away from happy thoughts about God that lift the burden of ME off my shoulders.
When it was time, to bed I headed:
- to tossing and turning
- to restless sleep interrupted with thoughts of ME
- to the next morning with a soulful, self-absorbed greeting of God
- to my walk, while listening to a John Piper sermon
- to light and freedom from God, via a new thought!
Could it be that God is sovereign over even my own sin? That this ‘lapse’ is part of His plan for growing me to depend more and more joyfully and comprehensively on Him for everything?
I had never even considered that His sovereignty extended to MY own sin. I wavered and the thought began to mist away.
But reason, in the form of a syllogism, rushed in to defend and grow this tiny flicker of hope:
Either God is sovereign over everything or He has no control over human and natural events
God IS sovereign over everything
Therefore, He has control over every human and natural event
What follows is mere corollary:
- My sin/mistake/bad thing/poor judgment/lapse/evil/hurtful word/thoughtless or deliberate cruel action/ugly thought is part of the ‘everything’ that God has planned or ordained to unroll according to His purposes.
- If I don’t FRET when traffic interrupts my plans, then I shouldn’t FRET when I act in ways I don’t like
- Caveat – this does not mean that when I do bad stuff, it’s NOT bad stuff. It IS bad and sinful. And as my husband reminded me, Jesus has paid for each and every sin. Therefore, it’s not only POINTLESS but a display of lack of faith as well as a symptom of FALSE PRIDE to beat myself up. Kinda like carrying out the old Catholic church ritual.
From those thoughts on my early morning walk, came the heart-lifting reminder and sure word that God is working ALL things for my good and His glory and even this humiliating/image-busting “it’s not like me to do….XYZ” event is in His Hand.
So I let the overeating of the previous evening go. Just like that. I haven’t yet processed the notion that all those years of self-absorption with food, débuting with 9 years of bulimia and the 32 years since then have been sovereignly allowed/planned by God. But this kairos moment is another reminder that God has called us to reason from His truth. As Abraham Kuyper so reassuringly proclaimed:
- “There is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry, Mine!”
My ‘stuff’ is included in that ‘square inch’; God IS working all the misery of my own doing as well as the misery that intersects my life from other second causes. The God who created the universe and all that is in it IS the First Cause, or He is No cause. We can’t have it both ways.
My comfort is further bolstered by this account of wandering souls, stuck in misery of their own making:
Psalm 107: 10 to 14 –There were those who dwelt in darkness and the shadow of death, prisoners in misery and chains because they had rebelled against the words of God and spurned the counsel of the Most High. Therefore, He humbled their heart with labor; they stumbled and there was none to help. Then they cried out to the Lord in their trouble; He saved them out of their distresses. He brought them out of darkness and the shadow of death, and broke their bands apart.
Apr 12, 2015 @ 21:23:04
Maria – I found yours, this Post, just after I ‘sent’ mine – thank you as always! Will digest again using the ipad as I head for bed. Happy Sunday to you. Jill
Apr 12, 2015 @ 22:54:28
This afternoon daughter Sarah felt a sovereign God’ s leading to visit Pastor Groce at Homestead hospice. She asked her Dad to join her. We all missed his planned sermon at Hazelwood, and I only knew him as our organist’s husband. I was not as moved as Sarah. I acceded to her request, met and prayed (in english and japanese) with a dear and wonderful brother. Some of the kitchen staff and family and all saw and heard the Sovereign God . Your post confirms and helps us to feel HIS reality. Harold (humbled) Borchert
Apr 14, 2015 @ 19:33:39
Maria, highly recommend Extravagant Grace by Barbara Duiguid and Trusting God by Jerry Bridges. Both extensively discuss God’s sovereignty over our sins.
Apr 14, 2015 @ 19:50:32
Van – thanks. The 1st book is actually in my pile of books to read!