Posted on 04/11/2005 7:28:38 AM PDT by Alex Murphy
Words Written to Friends
selections from the letters of Francis Schaeffer
Letter Eight
Being Angry at God
In the midst of a fallen world things are abnormal; they have been changed from that which God made them originally. Christ could be angry at the tomb of Lazarus as He faced the abnormality of death; and we have a right to be angry too. But to be angry at God is both silly and blasphemous. One cannot have the Christian answer that men are really significant in history and then expect God to eradicate every wrong result from that significance while allowing the good aspects of that significance to still operate. If man can influence history, he can influence it for evil and cruelty, as well as for good and noncruelty...
August 28, 1969
1861 Huemoz sur Ollon, Switzerland
have a great day Glenn
You seem angry.
Do you want to talk about it?
Amen. And how true that what is ultimately in our best interest...for our good...is so often what seems from our own limited and temporal perspective to be the worst possible thing that could happen to us.
LOL
Well, at least GLENNS is trying to keep us on topic!
Seriously, if you three want to continue your discussions, please take it to another thread. And Rev911, this makes my second request to you to stay on-topic, or drop off the thread.
Alex merely asked me to stay on topic and drop it
merely respecting alex's wishes - though Im intrigued - and wouldnt mind if we spoke about this via frmail
regardless, I have to bail for an appt.
have a good day
So this is a post without criticism thread, huh?
Interesting.
In the midst of a fallen world things are abnormal; they have been changed from that which God made them originally.
I've been told he made them to be exactly as they are now. Thus nothing is abnormal... Maybe I was told wrong.
Christ could be angry at the tomb of Lazarus as He faced the abnormality of death; and we have a right to be angry too.
Jesus wept.
But to be angry at God is both silly and blasphemous.
You got a scripture for that, Francis?
One cannot have the Christian answer that men are really significant in history and then expect God to eradicate every wrong result from that significance while allowing the good aspects of that significance to still operate. If man can influence history, he can influence it for evil and cruelty, as well as for good and noncruelty...
Huh?
BTW, I expect no criticism of my comments.
I would love to be on the ping list to read these treasures.
You got it! I've added you to the list.
Not very Calvinistic, if you ask me.
"But to be angry at God is both silly and blasphemous.
You got a scripture for that, Francis?"
You are on to something there. I seem to remember Jeremiah saying something to the effect, "You tricked me" and he was not happy about it.
You are on to something there
Hope this helps if you want to research Schaeffer's claims further:
Schaeffer makes repeated references, throughout his books, to Jesus being angry at Lazarus' tomb. In his first book He Is There and He Is Not Silent, he elaborates a little more on the subject. I've reproduced the passage here, hand-typing it from my personal copy...
Let us go to the tomb of Lazarus. As Jesus stood there, He not only wept, but He was angry. The exegesis of the Greek of the passages John 11:33 and 38 is clear. Jesus, standing in front of the tomb of Lazarus, was angry at death and the abnormality of the world -- the destruction and distress caused by sin.. A footnote appears, following the phrase "John 11:33 and 38 is clear", and it cites the source of Schaeffer's interpretation, namely B.B. Warfield. The footnote reads thus:
See B.B. Warfield, Biblical and Theological Studies (New York, Scribner's Sons, 1912), "On the Emotional Life of Our Lord," pp. 35-90
Yes, cool. Someone who is posting some good stuff. Add me to your ping list as well.
In the service of the Lord,
Christian.
Thanks for the request! I've added you to the list.
Help me out here. I'm trying to figure out how Paul, under the inspiration of the HS, tells that all things work together for good to those that love and God and are the called is somehow not quite right. Even in the sense of the death of saints, which was the original objection to this wholesome doctrine, we learn from the Bible that death itself is a gift from God.
Are we not more than overcomers?
Actually, as I write and think about it, even being angry at God itself must work together with all things for the ultimate good of the saints.
In the service of the Lord,
Christian.
LOL. Is that what God thought when Jeremiah complained? "OH Jeremiah, you have such a high view of me because you whined." Is God just that big grandfatherly guy in the sky who understands when we're being "authentic"? Well let's see what God actually said:
19 This is how God answered me: "Take back those words, and I'll take you back. Then you'll stand tall before me. Use words truly and well. Don't stoop to cheap whining. Then, but only then, you'll speak for me. Let your words change them. Don't change your words to suit them.
Opps! Sure, be authentic and then be prepared to repent.
Confused? Sometimes.
Fearful of God? Yes, that I may fear others and things less.
Do you have room for another one on your ping list?
There are very few who believe that the Christian life is all "roses", save a few deluded folks in the prosperity gospel sects. But let's be "authentic", shall we? Have you had a similar experience as Jeremiah? Has your pastor tied you up and whipped you in front of your congregation and town? Let's not suppose that our comfy American lifestyle in anyway represents the hardship that Jeremiah went through or any other Christian martrys. When you begin to experience hardships such as these then come back and talk to me about anger at God.
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