Success in Sin
This article was published in the
Presbyterian Standard, Issue No. 4, October-December 1996.
T
HERE are many perplexities in God's providence, not the least of which
concerns the progress of evil at the present time. We are assured that
sin is the abominable thing which God in His holiness hates (Jer.
44:4): further, and contrary to popular evangelical thought (or rather
lack of thought!) that He hates all workers of iniquity (Psa. 5:5). Yet
in our observations of human affairs we do not always seem to see the
outworking of these solemn truths. In every place men sin with a high
hand — and the hand of Divine judgment appears to be stayed. The
workers of iniquity are busy about their labours, but the stroke of
justice never falls. Even the most flagrant sins go unrewarded, and
those responsible remain defiant and mocking. Here, too, we wonder
whether the punishment fits the crime.
Notable Judgments
In fact, visible judgments of God, like miracles, are rarities in
Scripture. Most notable of all was the deluge which overwhelmed a
corrupt and violent race (Gen. 6:11, 18). Certain nations have also
been visited for their collective disobedience — particularly
Egypt with a decade of plagues (Exod. 9:14). Whole cities with their
perverted inhabitants were once converted to clinker (Gen. 19:24, 25).
But these are remarkable chiefly because of their rarity.
More numerous in
the Bible are visitations upon individuals. Cruel Jezebel is hurled to
her death and eaten by dogs according to the word of the prophet (2
Kings 9:30-37): the vain Nebuchadnezzar is made to grovel as a beast
(Dan. 4:33); Herod the demigod is eaten alive by worms (Acts 12:21-23)
and Elymas the sorcerer is blinded for his determined opposition to the
gospel (Acts 13:8-11). Oh, the terror of the Lord! This is the God with
whom we have to do! "Say unto God, How terrible art thou in thy
works!.....he is terrible in his doing toward the children of men."
(Psa. 66:3, 5).
The House of God
So we learn of the heathen. Are we tempted to think then that a
religious profession disqualifies men from such dealings of God? That
such strokes will never come near the Church? But have we not read of
priests swallowed up alive by the earth, a prophet's servant smitten by
leprosy, and a worshipper of God falling dead on the spot (Acts 5:1-5)?
If it be objected that these were unregenerate men, hypocrites, then we
might also point to others whose sincerity was not in doubt. David's
adultery brought in its wake the death of his child and a troubled
kingdom — and that after the sin had been confessed (2 Sam.
12:13, 14)! Zacharias, "righteous before God, walking in all the
commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless" was nevertheless
struck dumb because he stumbled at the angel's message of a son to be
born to him in his old age (Luke 1:6, 18-20)! Even the best of saints
have their blemishes, and these are not overlooked by God.
Yet Sodom is with
us now, and no fire and brimstone fall from heaven! Men still lie to
God, but they are not seen to expire there and then! Do we begin to
imagine that sin has become something less than exceedingly sinful
because of these things? God forbid.
How then do we account for this apparent discrepancy between God's declared attitude to sin and its present daring progress?
Dispensation of Grace
When our wisdom would be to command fire to come down from heaven to
consume God's enemies, the wisdom of God decrees otherwise. Now is
pre-eminently the dispensation of grace, for in the words of Jesus
Himself, "the Son of man is not come to destroy men's lives but to save
them" (Luke 9:56). Even His enemies must hear the gospel; some among
them will become His friends. The man of sin is permitted to flourish,
because popery in the first instance is to be consumed by the spirit of
Christ's mouth, as her devotees are won to the Saviour through the
anointed preaching of the gospel; only then will she be finally
destroyed by His own glorious appearing (2 Thess. 2:8).
Hidden Penalties
We must never think that the only judgments of God are those seen with
our bodily eyes: it is not simply that which is visible which is real.
Perhaps we wonder at the mark set upon Cain by the Lord after his
fratricide, what it was; but do we detect the horror which had already
filled his conscience, revealed in that cry of anguish, "My punishment
is greater than I can bear" (Gen. 4:13)? The "fear [which] hath
torment" (1 John 4:18) had seized him.
That the ungodly
who never enter a place of worship should have their eyes closed by God
does not cause us great surprise, but a heart hardening under the
preaching of the Word is a most solemn thing. The pew is occupied as
regularly as ever, the Bible opened and the Psalms sung with the rest:
but the outward demeanour hides a heart like granite and a conscience
more calloused with each sermon. The one least aware of the catastrophe
is the individual himself. From the very gates of heaven he is soon to
be thrust down to hell (Luke 10:15)!
If grace is glory in the bud, then such inward punishments are surely the first swellings of the awful bloom of damnation.
The Day of Wrath
Men rashly translate a delay of judgment into a denial of it, and so
are emboldened in their sin (Ecc. 8:11). The Lord may suffer the guilty
for a season but He will by no means clear them. Their deeds are kept
in record, and their appointed wrath is stored as it were in a place of
safe-keeping before it is eventually poured over their heads (Rom. 2:5,
6).
After all, the
greatest judgment in this life is when God leaves us to ourselves. When
no gospel messengers are sent our way, no reproving voices strike our
ears and no convictions smite our consciences. Such silence is the
desire of many, and God very often grants them their wish.
If a man should
ever wish to be damned in hell then all that it is necessary for him to
do is - nothing. Nothing exceptional that is. Once when our Lord
foretold the state of things at His return, He compared it to the times
of Noah and Lot (Luke 17:26-30). Instinctively we focus on the violence
and the sexual depravity of those days — and excuse ourselves.
But the text
imparts a sharp rebuke to our self-righteousness. It is the very
ordinariness of the lives which Christ highlights here: the feasting,
the marrying, the trading, the labouring; these activities were
sufficient to condemn millions! They were engaged in all these lawful
things in a self-seeking way, to the exclusion of God and His glory.
The average, decent, normal life is after all just another lane in the
broad way that leads to destruction (Matt. 7:13).
Rod of Reproof
Let us bring this nearer to home. Believers too may fall into sin and
defile their garments. The occasional can too quickly and easily become
the habitual. Do we bless the Lord then for His chastisements? How Adam
must have praised God for the rest of his years that He was ever
arrested with those words, "Where art thou?"! David that his adultery
was discovered to him by the man of God (2 Sam. 12:7)! Peter that the
cock crowing melted his heart into tears of repentance!
Oh, for searching
ministries that would disturb our carnal ease and spur us on to
holiness! Keep me, oh keep me, from getting success in sin! It is the
prosperity of fools! Make me of a tender conscience and to learn Thy
fear, which is clean, and endures forever. |