Friday, December 11, 2009

God's Work for His People

Isaiah 64:4 teaches us that God “works for those who wait for him.” The wrong way to understand this phrase is to envision God as our employee. We have accepted his application to come serve our cause and advance our purposes. He is our subordinate who scurries around and answers to us. We assess his performance and review his effec­tiveness in the role of worker: does he measure up, do we keep him on the payroll? We determine whether he deserves praise and reward for his on-the-job achievements.


The right way to interpret this expression is to realize that God is the one who has infinite power, skill and wisdom, and he is prepared to apply his efforts for our good. We lack the necessary strength and discernment to run our own lives (or others’ lives), or even to survive in the end. All we are capable of doing, in com­parison to the grand competence of God, is to “wait” for him—to give up our efforts, throw up our hands, recognize our weakness, and cast our lives upon his all-sufficient, gracious care.


So God works for us not as an employee we order around, but as our Great Physician: he examines our souls, diagnoses the terminal disease of pervasive sin, and prescribes treatment through the gift of cleansing of our sin stains (Isa 1:18) and justification by taking our guilt upon himself (2 Cor 5:21). In fact, the omniscient Doctor acts with such brilliant ingenuity that he orchestrates all of life’s circumstances for the good of his people (Rom 8:28—of course, he does this in his time and in his way).


Back to Isaiah 64:4. Who has ever heard of such a God—one “who works for those who wait for him”? It’s unprecedented. The gods of Isaiah’s peers and of many worshippers today (i.e., “gods” like wealth or beauty or power, or any other notions of deity that contradict Scripture) expect people to work for them; devotees are to serve and strive to get gain from their gods. But the true God demands that we NOT work, and instead wait for him: rest, trust, depend. Humble faith honors our all-sufficient Lord. We don’t approach him with gifts in hand to help his cause: we come with empty hands. “Waiting” is his gift to you this Christmas.

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