QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ABOUT GOD
QUESTION #85 -- How can God
have form and place if He is in
every place in just the same
sense He is in any place?
ANSWER #85 -- God is not in
every place in just the same
sense He is in a certain place.
He is everywhere in the
perfection of His attributes,
but He is in a certain place in
the essence of His being. This
may not be a very clear
statement, and illustrations do
not help a great deal in a theme
so profound. But this
illustration might at least
suggest the distinction. I sit
here in this room working at the
typewriter. In essence I am
right here, within the form and
qualities of my body, mind and
spirit, and I am nowhere else in
this sense at all. But just now
two boys met on the street a
hundred feet away and I was
"present" and saw them play at
boxing. An insect on the window
sill was in essence nearer to
the boys than I. But its
attributes are so limited that
it was not "present" at the
meeting of the boys at all. But
now if you expand my attributes
(intellect, sensibility and
will) sufficiently, you could
make me "present" a mile away,
and on indefinitely, until as in
the case of God, He is
everywhere present in that He
knows and feels and exercises
His power without any limit.
Still He is in a certain place
in essence, and it is there the
angels and redeemed saints see
His face and worship Him day and
night forever and forever.
* * *
QUESTION #86 -- If the Lord is
omnipresent, as the Scriptures
seem to teach, how could Cain,
Jonah and others get away from
the presence of the Lord?
(Genesis 4:16; Jonah 1:3).
ANSWER #86 -- The term "presence
of the Lord" is used in the
Scriptures with at least three
different meanings. But the
meaning is always clear from the
consideration of the context.
(1) God is in heaven in personal
essence. (2) God is everywhere
in the perfection of His
attributes.
(3) God is present in His favor
where two or three are met in
His name and wherever anyone's
life is pleasing in His sight
The men you mention and others
in their class went away from
the favor of the Lord only.
* * *
QUESTION #87 -- When is it, in
life or in death, that "it is a
fearful thing to fall into the
hands of the living God"?
ANSWER #87 -- It is any time, in
this life or in the one to come,
when mercy gives way to
judgment, the offender having
neglected the refuge offered by
the atoning blood of the Lord
Jesus Christ.
* * *
QUESTION #88 -- How do you
explain the apparent
contradiction in the following
scriptures: John 1:18; Exodus
33:11; Exodus 24:10, 11; I
Samuel 31:4-6, and 2 Samuel
1:6-10. Some of these
scriptures, as you see, say that
no man has seen God, and the
others give instances where they
did see Him.
ANSWER #88 -- Dr. Scofield's
explanation is, I think, quite
well stated. He says, "The
divine essence, God, in His own
triune Person, no human being in
the flesh has seen. But God,
veiled in angelic form, and
especially as incarnate in Jesus
Christ, has been seen of men."
(See Genesis 18:2, 22 and John
14:8, 9.)
* * *
QUESTION #89 -- What are the two
"immutable things" mentioned in
Hebrews 6:18?
ANSWER #89 -- The promise of God
and the oath by which He
confirmed it.
* * *
QUESTION #90 -- Our Sunday
school class wants to ask who it
is we are to fear, as mentioned
in Matthew 10:28: is it God or
the devil?
ANSWER #90 -- It is God.
* * *
QUESTION #91 -- Is God's program
so rigidly planned that the
disciples, for example, had to
tarry in the upper room for the
Holy Ghost? or could they have
failed to carry out the divine
plan, and thus have left the
world without salvation?
ANSWER #91 -- Compulsion, even
divine compulsion, can apply
only to inanimate objects, like
stocks and stones, and to
creatures not endowed with the
power of moral choice. I would
not say that God could not and
would not have found some other
way, even if that one hundred
and twenty had failed to tarry
in the upper room for the coming
of the Holy Spirit, but the only
compulsion that these men and
women had, according to my
judgment, was their love for
Christ. If they could not have
done other than they did, then
they are not to be thanked for
doing what they did, and they
were not, after all, made holy
by the Spirit, but were simply
made His tools. Even heaven
itself, you know, does not close
its gates either day or night,
for it is blessed improbability
that holds saints and angels in,
and not sordid impossibility.
* * *
QUESTION #92 -- Do you believe
there is a time when sickness
will be unto death and that our
days are numbered and will end
at a given time, except it be by
special divine interposition, or
does just exposure or wrong
treatment of disease lead to
death? Please explain John 11:4.
ANSWER #92 -- We may not be able
to explain it, but there seems
to me to be no doubt that God's
choices for us are contingent
upon secondary considerations.
For instance, I would say it was
God's will that the poet, Edgar
Allan Poe, should live to bless
the world. But Poe gave himself
to dissipation and died an
untimely death. Only this much
is essential in my creed about
the length of life: I believe
that the life of anyone who is
fully obedient to God is
immortal until his work is done.
This affects me in the pursuit
of my calling sometimes in the
midst of "dangers seen and
unseen." I do not believe
disease or accident will lay me
low until God is through with me
here. But I am not arrogant I do
not know at what time God may
get through with me. So if you
hear that I have died of
lingering disease or of sudden
accident do not account it a
calamity; for my faith is that
that can come to me only by the
will of God, and that it is
notice to the world that my work
was finished.
* * *
QUESTION #93 -- Does God know
how each human will will decide
concerning salvation? If you
answer, No, do you not then
limit God's omniscience? If you
answer, Yes, then are not some
by this foreknowledge
predestined to be lost?
ANSWER #93 -- Well, the answer
is yes, so that gets us by
without reflection upon God's
omniscience. God knows all
things, past, present and
future. But He knows past as
past, present as present and
future as future. He also knows
things that are decreed as being
decreed and things that are
contingent as being contingent.
And His foreknowledge of
contingent future things does
not predestinate those future
things. It is difficult for us
to discuss absolute qualities,
since we know only relative and
limited qualities. But it might
help some for us to recall that
our knowledge of the past -- say
of the death of a precious loved
one -- may have nothing whatever
to do with the occurrence which
we know. Likewise, if we could
know the future, as we may in
some limited instances, we are
not necessarily exercising any
influence or power to bring it
about. May we not, therefore,
conceive of God's knowing that a
given sinner will reject all the
agencies engaged for his
salvation without His willing
that it shall be so? For
remember that God does not bind
the will of man, but allows the
power and will to choose as a
heritage to the weakest
responsible soul on earth.
* * *
QUESTION #94 -- Why does God
call a man home when he is far
from being old, and is being
used to win thousands to the
Lord each year?
ANSWER #94 -- God knows the
future as we cannot know it, and
some time in the future we shall
doubtless see that "all His ways
are best." For the present we
must trust where we cannot
trace, and rest on the
confidence that there is a
reason, although we cannot see
it yet.
* * *
QUESTION #95 -- Is God in the
wind and the storm? We have just
had a terrible storm. Do you
think this a special judgment?
Does God still send judgments on
people for their wickedness?
ANSWER #95 -- The moral and
spiritual ends of God's
government are not always
discernible, and we should be
slow to pass judgment upon the
meaning of His general and
particular providences. The
Scriptures ask us to consider
that when the righteous die they
escape many evils that would
otherwise come upon them. One of
the best men I ever knew
perished in the California
earthquake, while thousands of
wicked people in the quake area
suffered not at all. But, come
to think of it, we should not
want it otherwise; for if the
righteous were immune to all the
physical ills of the present
life, commendable motive would
be all but impossible. It is
better that our immunities and
principal joys shall await the
close of our probationary period
and state. In the meantime, let
us look for the revelation of
God's love and mercy in His
written Word and in His vital
grace, rather than in His book
of nature. People who claim they
can see God in nature and do not
need the Bible usually really
mean that they think of God in
the springtime; for nature
worshippers do not know what to
do when winter comes, as it will
come to us all.
* * *
QUESTION #96 -- I have been told
that God sometimes turns His
face away from the sanctified
Christian, as He turned His face
from Christ upon the cross. If
this is true, what is the
meaning of the promise that He
will be with us always?
ANSWER #96 -- I do not think the
comparison between the
experience of Christ on the
cross and our experience in
times of trial is altogether
valid. The forsaking of Christ
by the Father was a symbol of
the Father's acceptance of the
soul of the Son as an offering
for sin, and it has no full
analogy in all the universe. But
there are times in the Christian
experience when we must walk by
faith and not by feeling, and
when we must stand on confidence
in lieu of the consciousness
which we would very much love to
have. Take a time of deep
bereavement: there is much there
that speaks of temporary
withdrawal of divine favor, so
deep and so real is the sense of
aloneness. But in such times God
is not really gone and we are
challenged to trust when we
cannot trace, and to rest when
we cannot see, so that in the
real sense God does not turn
away His face from us -only the
clouds arise to hide His face
and we must rise above the
clouds in faith to be assured
that "He abideth faithful."
* * *
QUESTION #97 -- God says He is
no respecter of persons, how
then can He make the difference
mentioned in Luke. 12:47, 48,
and what is the meaning of
stripes in connection with the
judgment of the last day?
ANSWER #97 -- God is no
respecter of persons in that He
will do for one what He will do
for anyone who meets the same
conditions. But God does respect
conditions -- otherwise He would
have to respect persons. You no
doubt know that the lord in the
parable before us is but an
earthly householder, and not the
Lord Jesus. This is as far as
the idea of stripes should be
taken as to the literal
application. But in the final
awards of God to men, ability
and opportunity will be taken
into consideration, and it will
be easier for the man who comes
from a life of small opportunity
than for one who had large
ability and opportunity, for the
latter has the larger
responsibility. It is impossible
in this world or at the judgment
bar of God to separate privilege
and duty, or opportunity and
responsibility.
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