Skip to main content

Providence

Providence. What is providence? Of what relevance is God's providence?

Providence simply means to foresee. Pro [before] / videre [to see]. But what good is knowing the future and not doing anything about it?

God's providence ties in with His omniscience (all knowing). He sees beforehand everything that is going to happen. Not only that, He knows it and orchestrates it.

That being said, if God is truly in control and orbiting every action and circumstance, both for us and around us, why on earth do we have any ground at all to worry? About anything?

Simple answer? We don't.

"Worry is taking your problems out of God's hands and into your own because deep down you don't think He's capable enough to take care of them." - Voddie Baucham

Worry is a sin. Anxiety is a sin. Whatever happened to trusting God, wholly and completely?

Easier said than done. Trust me, I know.

I'm a worrier. It's probably genetic, but that's no excuse.

Consider Romans 8:28: "And we know that all things work together for the good of those that love God, who are called according to His purpose."

Among Christians, it is a very common verse. The promise it holds is refreshing. But it seems to me, that as soon as anything not-so-good happens, with an outcome that may be hard for us to deal with, we shut God out.

Why do we do it? Maybe we think that God messed up in His planning, or maybe He really doesn't care about us like He claims to.

Friend, I urge you to take a new perspective. For the Christian, we know that all things work together for good. Just 10 verses later, Paul says, "For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord."

Did you read that? Read it again.

NOTHING can separate us from the love of God. Not even death! No created thing. God's providence is in our troubles, our sin, our happiness. He knows the future, He organized it.

So instead of blaming God when something doesn't go the way we think it should (with our vapor of existence and speck of knowledge), we need to to teach ourselves to rely on the ONLY One who knows every detail in all of history and eternity, who is eternal and everlasting. Wouldn't you say that He knows more than us? Obviously. He sees the bigger picture and knows where He is taking us.

Christian, I pray that is a comfort and a reminder for you.

Keep on, persevere. The Almighty God is in control.

<3 Berea

Comments

  1. I really needed to hear that, thank you so much for this I could hear God speaking right through you to me. It was very encouraging and eye opening

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you for your encouragement! We are thrilled that God is using us to be an influence to you and pray He will continue to do so.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Ezekiel's prediction and Christ's fulfillment

Ezekiel Chapter 4-5 There are four object lessons in this passage that display the type of judgement that was coming for Israel and Judah.  First (Ezekiel 4:1-3): Ezekiel was commanded to draw the map of Jerusalem on a clay brick and demonstrate how the city would be attacked and destroyed.  Second (Ezekiel 4:4-8): Ezekiel was commanded to lie on his left side for 390 days, symbolic of the 390 years Israel disobeyed God, and 40 days on his right side, symbolic of the 40 years Judah lived in rebellion against God; and do this while starring at the model of the siege of Jerusalem and prophesying against it. Third (Ezekiel 4:9-17): He was to prepare bread to ration out while he lied on his side and cook it over manure. This symbolized how God would make them eat defiled bread in the land of the gentiles where he would scatter them and where they would starve.  Fourth (Ezekiel 5:1-4): Ezekiel was commanded to shave his hair and divide it into three equal parts. 1/3 was...

Betrothed to Christ

I was reading in Exodus and was reminded of the beautiful picture of Christ and His bride. In Exodus 21:7-11, you find a peculiar law about maidservants: 1) She does not bide by the same laws as the menservants, which can leave their master after six years. 2) If her master who has betrothed her to himself is not pleased  with her, he cannot sell her to the gentiles, but must let her be redeemed; because he has dealt unfaithfully and deceitfully with her. 3) If her master has betrothed her to his son, he must treat her like his daughter. 4) His son must provide for her food, clothes, and duty of marriage and cannot diminish them if he takes another wife. If he does, the maidservant can leave for free. Weird? Kind 'a, but it makes sense. Then God popped a thought into my head about Hosea. Hosea was a prophet who was told by God to marry a harlot to illustrate God's love for Israel. Now at one point Gomer, Hosea's wife, left him for another man and ended up getti...

Judges 17 - Partial Obedience Doesn't Exist

I was doing my morning reading through the book of Judges and was shocked at how twisted this man named Micah was. The chapter starts off with him stealing from his mother, then returning the money, then she makes him an idol out of the returned money, and he makes his son the priest of his idols. Later, a Levite comes by and he hires him to be the priest instead of his son and says: "Now know I that the Lord will do me good, seeing I have a Levite to my priest." Judges 17:13 How can this guys definition of right and wrong be so thwarted? How can he think God is pleased with his actions? Sure he hired God's ordained ministers to be his priest (Lev7:35), but he was worshiping a idol! He wasn't even worshiping the one true God! So he wasn't obeying the Levite Priest law, because he broke a much more serious law: "Thou shalt not make thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in the heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is...