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- INS:How does God keep His promises? by Richard W. De Haan
-
- What if we have done our part by "believing", but we haven't seen
- any results? Is there something we don't understand? Is there something
- else we need to do to see God's promises fulfilled?
-
- If you are searching for answers to these kinds of questions, I
- encourage you to read the following pages. In this booklet, RBC staff
- writer Kurt De Haan guides us through a study of what the Bible says
- about the promises of God. Use this material as a starting point for
- your own discovery of the vast wealth of promises we have been given by
- a faithful God.
-
- But You Promised!
-
- Have people ever let you down? That question belongs in the same
- category as: Do birds have wings? Do fish have fins? Is the sun hot? Is
- water wet?
-
- But what about this question: Has God ever let you down? What if we
- rephrase it: Have you ever felt that God didn't keep His word? Think
- about it for a minute. Have you wondered, even complained, that He
- didn't come through the way you thought He said He would?
-
- We know, for instance, that God has promised to protect and care for
- His children in this world. He has promised to make them strong, to
- fill their hearts with joy and a peace that passes all understanding.
- We know that God has promised to answer our prayers.
-
- Yet at times those promises seem empty. Our prayers for a rebellious
- child or an unsaved spouse seem to go unanswered. A friend dies of
- cancer. Inflation chews at our paycheck. Neighborhood crime gets worse.
- Terrorists plague the world. And Jesus hasn't come back yet.
-
- What happened to all the promises? Has God failed to keep His word?
- Have our expectations exceeded God's promises?
-
- What is a promise? The way some people use the term, a promise is
- nothing more than a good intention -- easily discarded if it gets in
- the way. They see a promise as something that is made to be broken. But
- when God makes a promise, He's doing more than just expressing wishful
- thinking. He is giving His absolutely trustowrthy word!
-
- The original language of the Old Testament does not have a specific
- word for the concept of promise, but that doesn't mean the idea isn't
- there. The Hebrew words (amar, dabar) that are translated by the
- English word promise have the meaning of "to say" or "to speak". When
- God and others in the Bible speak about what they will do in the
- future, the word promise fits well. In each case, the speaker's word,
- honor, and integrity are at stake.
-
- The New Testament follows the same pattern as the Old. God stands
- behind what He says. Therefore the idea comes naturally from the Greek
- word angelia, which means "an announcement" or "a message".
-
- The promises of God are the heart of the Bible. Everything God has
- spoken, every announcement, every message, is really a promise based on
- God's perfect, good, and trustowrthy character.
-
- Why is there confusion about the way God keeps His promises? At
- times, a gap developes between what we think God has said He would do
- and what we see happening in our everyday experience. This gap,
- however, says more about our failure to understand than about God's
- ability to remain true. Our confusion can be due to any one (or
- several) of the following factors.
-
- 1. Faulty expectations. At time we may fall into the trap of
- thinking that God will keep his promises in the way we expect. We might
- assume that He will do it in ways that are immediately obvious rather
- than in a manner that becomes apparent only in time. We may expect Him
- to change our external circumstances and environment when what He rally
- wants us to see is that His promises can be fulfilled through inner
- changes in us.
-
- We tend to be shortsighted. God is intoo long-range planning. We see
- only the surface, here-and-now events, and we do not know how God is
- working behind the scenes to fit the pieces together to form an overall
- pattern. The ways God has acted in the past, though, show that He
- fulfills some promises in stages or in unexpected ways.
-
- 2. Faulty interpretations and applications. We may simply miss the
- point of what God has said. Or we may understand a biblical promise
- accurately but fail to see that God gave the promise to someone else in
- a particular situation.
-
- A small book of collected biblical promises states in the
- introduction: "Take each promise to mean just exactly what is says.
- Don't try to interpret it or add to it or read between the lines." That
- may sound good. We certainly must avoid reading "between the lines" of
- Scripture, but it is dangerous to say that we should not try to
- interpret the promises. That can be a huge mistake. Failure to
- understand a promise in its context can lead to some very bad
- conclusions. Too many people go around quoting Bible verses as promises
- to them as individuals when in fact the promises were given to specific
- biblical characters, a nation, or only to people of a certain time
- period.
-
- 3. Faulty feelings. Our emotions have a way of taking over the
- driver's seat of our lives. Wrong emotions can overrule right thinking.
- As a result, if we have been hurt, we blame God for not doing what we
- think He promised. The death of a loved one can cause us to lose
- perspective if we allow our feelings to override the truth about God. A
- failed romance or a marriage on the rocks can trigger doubts. Personal
- rejection, failure, loss of a job, physical pain, or injustice can stir
- up feelings against God that become stronger than any force of reason.
-
- 4. Faulty memory. When it comes to remembering, we can all be like
- an absent-minded professor who forgets how to get home. We can get so
- wrapped up in the details of everyday life that we forget more than
- just anniversaries, birthdays, phone calls, groceries, and
- appointments. We even forget what should mean the most to us -- the
- eivdence of God's faithfulness in our lives and how He has fulfilled
- His promises to us in the past. As a result, we lose confidence in His
- ability to be faithful in the future.
-
- So now what do we do? How do we bring our expectations and feelings
- in line with God's plans and truths? How do we live a fulfilling life
- by faith in God's promises? That's what the following pages will try to
- resolve.
-
- HOW DOES GOD KEEP HIS PROMISES?
-
- Every political campaign seems to be the same. Promises and
- platitudes pollute the air. (Maybe that's what is depleting the earth's
- ozone layer!) Each candidate tries to out- promise the other. And after
- every election, the results are predictably the same.
-
- Some promises are quickly broken because the candidate never
- intended to fulfill them. Other promises, while well-intentioned, were
- beyond the candidtae's power and ability to fulfill. Maybe an
- unforeseen string of events or new information changed the politician's
- mind about the wisdom of his original statement. powerful
- special-interest groups may exert pressure, making sure that they get
- what was promised, while less influential people seem to get lost in
- the crowd.
-
- God, though, is not like a politician, a corporate executive, a
- supervisor, a teacher, a student, an employee, a coach, a player, a
- father, a mother, or a child. Everybody -- not just the politician --
- has a problem with keeping promises. We all have difficulty following
- through on our word. God, however, does not. He has all the power and
- wisdom in the universe at His disposal. He will never have to make an
- excuse for failing to fulfill what He has promised, and we have no
- excuse for not believing Him.
-
- We've already mentioned some possible reasons for the seeming gap
- between our perceptions of God's promises and how life actually is
- played out. Together, let us search for answers that will help us
- correct our view of God and His promises. We will discover that God
- keeps His promises (1) on His terms, (2) to His intended audience, (3)
- by His methods, and (4) in His time.
-
- On His Terms
-
- Do you read product labels? If you do, you've read words like these:
- "This product is guaranteed for 5 years from date of purchase against
- defects in workmanship. this guarantee excludes damage caused by
- failure to follow label direction." Or you've read a recipe in a
- cookbook that guarantees a delicious dessert -- if you follow the
- directions. You can't get away with substituting baking soda for flour,
- or salt for sugar.
-
- God's terms for keeping His advertised promises are clearly stated.
- And what He promises, He will deliver. Some promises come with an
- unconditional guarantee. That is, He promises to hold up His end of the
- agreement no matter what we do. Then there are promises that carry with
- them directions (conditions) that we must follow if we are to enjoy all
- that He has offered. These conditional promises are dependent on our
- fulfilling certain requirements.
-
- Psalm 100 reminds us of the character qualities of the One who makes
- promises on His terms. "Know that the Lord, He is God; it is He who has
- made us, and now we ourselves; we are His people and the sheep of His
- pasture. Enter into His gates with thanksgiving, and into His courts
- with praise. Be thankful to Him, and bless His name. For the Lord is
- good; His mercy is everlasting, and His truth endures to all
- generations" (vv. 3-5).
-
- The One who made us continues to be the Lord over all of live. By
- His nature God is good, merciful, and forever true to His word. The
- rest of the Bible tells us how God's promises to mankind reflect those
- qualities. Because He is all those things, we do not have to fear when
- we hear that God keeps His promises on His terms.
-
- What kinds of conditions are attached to God's promises? Many
- promises are like appliance warranties that hold true only if the
- customer does not do things that void the agreement. That was the case
- in the Garden of Eden. God promised that Adam and Eve would enjoy life
- in the Garden if they followed His rules, but they would suffer the
- death penalty if they disobeyed (Gen. 2:16, 17).
-
- The covenant that God made with Moses and the people of Israel at
- Mount Sinai contained many conditions. Prior to the giving of the Ten
- Commandments, God said to Israel that if they kept the covenant
- agreement with Him and obeyed Him fully, He would care for them as His
- special treasure (Ex. 19:3-6).
-
- The Ten Commandments state a few results of missing or meeting God's
- conditions. The Lord said that He would punish all who worshiped idols,
- but He would show love to those who loved Him (Ex. 20:4-6). He pormised
- to hold guilty anyone who spoke His name in a disrespectful or
- contemptuous way (v. 7). He promised long life in the Promised Land to
- those who honored their parents (v. 12).
-
- In Exodus 23:20-33, God said He would wipe out Israel's enemies when
- they went into Palestine, He would take away sickness, and He would
- ensure long life and no miscarriages. However, the conditions included
- paying attention to and obeying the Angel of God, worshiping God, and
- not making a covenant with their enemies or allowing them to live in
- the Promised Land.
-
- Here are some other examples of conditional Old Testament promises:
-
- * God promised success, prosperity, and protection if the people
- obeyed the Law of Moses (Josh. 1:7-9).
-
- * God told Gideon that if he followed His directions, he would win a
- battle (Judg. 7:1- 25).
-
- * God told Eli that His previous promise to bless his family and
- maintain his family priesthood was going to be nullified bacuase of the
- sins of Eli and his sons (1 Sam. 2:27-36).
-
- * When the Israelites asked for a king, the Lord promised good
- things if the people honored and obeyed Him, but warned of judgment if
- they rebelled (1 Sam. 12:13-15).
-
- * Because Saul failed to measure up to God's demands, he forfeited
- the kingship (1 Sam. 13:13, 14).
-
- * If a person takes his advice from the Lord and not from wicked
- people, he will enjoy the Lord's favor (Ps. 1).
-
- * A person can enjoy a close relationship with God if he does what
- is right, speaks the truth, does no wrong to his neighbor, despises the
- vile person, honors the righteous, keeps his work, and does not exploit
- others (Ps. 15).
-
- * If a person puts his trust in the Lord and follows obediently, he
- will experience the shepherding love of God (Ps. 23).
-
- * If you "delight...in the Lord", then "He shall give you the
- desires of your heart" (Ps. 37:4).
-
- * If a person reveres God, he will find wisdom and gain God's
- blessing (Prov. 2:1-8; 3:1- 10).
-
- * Isaiah reminded the people of the Lord's desire to gibve them the
- best He had to offer -- if they would only obey Him (Is. 1:10-20).
-
- * Ezekiel said that a person could expect judgment if he were
- guilty, and honor if he were righteous (Ezek. 18).
-
- * Jonah announced judgment on Nineveh if the people did not repent
- (Jonah 3).
-
- A few examples of New Testament conditions:
-
- * God will bless if we become poor in pspirt, mourn over sin,
- express meekness, hunger and thirst for righteousness, show mercy, seek
- purity, pursue peace, or experience persecution for God's sake (Matt.
- 5:1-12).
-
- * If we seek what has eternal value, God will take care of our
- temporal needs (Matt. 6:25-34).
-
- * If we put our trust in Jesus, we will be given eternal life; but
- if we reject Him, we cannot escape condemnation (John 3:16-18).
-
- * If we submit to God and resist the devil, he will flee from us
- (James 4:7).
-
- * God has given us everything we need to live in a way that pleases
- Him. If we take hold of what He has given to us, we will "never
- stumble" and we will be rewarded in heaven (2 Pet. 1:3-11).
-
- * God will forgive if we confess (1 John 1:9).
-
- * If we ask anything according to God's will, we will receive what
- we pray for (1 John 5:14, 15).
-
- What kinds of promises are unconditional? An unconditional promise
- is simply one in which God says He will do something, and nothing we
- can do will stop if from happening. The fulfillment of unconditional
- promises does not depend on the faithfulness of people, but only on
- God. Even if we are unfaithful, God cannot be anything but faithful to
- His word (2 Tim. 2:13).
-
- Some examples of unconditional promises:
-
- * God told Noah that He would never again send a worldwide flood
- (Gen. 9:8-17).
-
- * God promised Abraham a son, a nation from his descendants, and a
- land (Gen. 15).
-
- * David received assurance that his royal line would last forever (2
- Sam. 7:16).
-
- * God repeatedly told Israel of His unfailing love for them and His
- ultimate plan to restore their nation (Jer. 30-33).
-
- * Jesus said He would return to earth to reward the righteous and
- punish the wicked (Matt. 16:27; 25:31-46).
-
- * Jesus promised that after He ascended to heaven He would send the
- Holy Spirit (John 16:5-15).
-
- * Jesus said that Satan's forces would never overcome the church
- (Matt. 16:18).
-
- * Jesus promised to save, keep, and resurrect to eternal life all
- who trust in Him (John 6:35-40).
-
- Can God's promises ever be only partially fulfilled? Yes. Some
- promises may be fulfilled in part because only part of the conditions
- have been met, or the promises may be fulfilled in stages according to
- God's plan.
-
- For example, the Lord told the Jewish people who were coming out of
- Egypt that He would drive out the nations before them and give them the
- Promised Land. They were to do this in stages (Deut. 7:22, but because
- of their failure to follow all His instructions they only drove out
- part of the people who inhabited the land, and they experienced only
- part of God's blessing.
-
- Another good example is the groups of prophecies about the coming
- Messiah. The Old Testament promises were fulfilled in part dfuring
- Christ's first coming and the others will be fulfilled when He comes
- again. The prophets spoke of a coming king who would be of the line of
- David, a king who would restore Israel's status as God's special nation
- (Is. 9:6, 7; Jer. 33:14-26; Zech. 9:9,10). Jesus fulfilled the part of
- the promise about the suffering Servant (Is. 53) and will one day
- return to set up His eternal kingdom.
-
- Should the book of Proverbs be interpreted as promises? The proverbs
- are promises in the broad sense that they describe how God rewards
- those who fear Him and live wisely, and how He opposes those who
- disregard Him and live foolishly. We can run into problems, however, if
- we do not interpret the proverbs within the context of Old Testament
- wisdom writings and in light of all biblical truths.
-
- The proverbs offer practical wisdom about the effects of certain
- kinds of actions. For example, a person who lives a life of violence
- can expect to be a victim of violence (1:18, 19). Ignoring the wisdom
- of the proverbs will lead to a shortenend, problem-filled life
- (1:19-33) instead of a life that enjoys the favor of God (2:1-8). Every
- proverb, though, cannot be understood as a promise of here-and-now
- results. Within the context of the whole Bible, we know that in many
- cases God reserves the right to delay perfect justice until the day of
- judgment.
-
- Many verses in Proverbs 3 seem to promise wealth, health, safety,
- and happiness to those who follow the path of wisdom. Proverbs 10:3
- says that the righteous person will not go hungry. A righteous person
- will be untouched by trouble, according to 19:23. No one would deny
- that these proverbs do reflect the general principles of how God has
- designed life to operate -- we reap what we sow (Prov. 11:24-26; 22:8,
- 9; 2 Cor. 9:6; Gal. 6:7). But life is not always so predictable -- as
- the experiences of Job, David, Solomon, the apostle Paul and other
- Bible characters demonstrate. In many cases, God has something better
- in store for a person than immediate here-and-now blessings -- such
- people are laying up treasure in heaven.
-
- The proverbs, therefore, provide down-to-earth principles for
- everyday life. The person who wants to be wise and enjoy God's favor
- will read the proverbs and put their God- fearing instruction into
- practice.
-
- Thinking It Over. How is God's ability to keep His promises
- different from our ability to keep our promises? Why does God keep His
- promises? Are you enjoying the full benefits of God's promises, or are
- there conditions that you are not meeting?
-
- To His Intended Audience. Has this ever happened to you? As you pull
- the envelope out of your mailbox, you read: "You are the winner of 10
- million dollars..." For a moment you don't know whether to jump up and
- down or to call all your relatives. But when sanity returns, you decide
- to open the envelope first. When you do, you notice how the sentence
- continues (in smaller print of course): "...if your numbers match those
- selected by the sweepstakes computer". The promise of 10 million
- dollars applies only to the one person who received the right numbers.
-
- When you read the Bible and you come across a statement that sounds
- like it would be a great promise, can you claim it for yourself? Maybe
- you are unemployed, having a hard time making your savings stretch, and
- you open your Bible to the place where God gives a great promise about
- being prosperous and living in a land flowing with milk and honey.
- Would you get excited? You might if you didn't read on to learn that
- the promise was intended for Israle prior to occupying the Promised
- Land, not you and your desire to move to Beverly Hills. Although such a
- promise is limited to whom it is address, it does reflect God's ability
- to prosper anyone He chooses to prosper.
-
- The author of Psalm 145 recognized that while some of God's good
- promises apply to all people, other promises apply only to a select
- person or group: "The Lord is good to all, and His tender mercies are
- over all His works...You open Your hand and satisfy the desire of every
- living thing...The Lord is near to all who call upon Him, to all who
- call upon Him in truth. He will fulfill the desire of those who fear
- Him; He alsoo will hear their cry and save them. The Lord preserves all
- who love Him, but all the wicked He will destroy" (Ps. 145:9, 16,18-20).
-
- Before we can claim one of God's promises, we need to know if He is
- talking to us or not.
-
- What has God promised to all people? A few of the promises that
- apply to all inhabitants of the earth include: salvation to those who
- believe and condemnation to all who reject Christ (John 3:16-18); the
- assurance that the earth will never again be destroyed by a flood (Gen.
- 9:11); a continuation of the cycles of nature as long as the earth
- exists (Gen. 8:22); history that will culminate according to God's
- master plan (Dan. 7-12); a day of judgment for believers (2 Cor. 5:10)
- and unbelievers (Rev. 20:11-15); a promise that God's character will
- not change (1 Sam. 15:29; Mal. 3:6; James 1:17); rewards for all who
- diligently seek Him (Heb. 11:6); and the certainty that everything He
- says will happen (Matt. 5:18; 24:34, 35).
-
- What has God promised to all believers? Second Peter 1 states that
- "His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and
- godliness, through the knowledge of Him who called us by glory and
- virture, by which have been given to us exceedingly great and precious
- promises" (vv. 3, 4). Among those great promises (conditional and
- unconditional) are the following:
-
- * Provision for our needs (Matt. 6:25-34).
-
- * Answer to prayer (Matt. 7:7-11; 1 John 5:14, 15).
-
- * All we need to live for Him (2 Pet. 1:3, 4).
-
- * Rewards for service (2 Cor. 5:10).
-
- * Help in our praying (Rom. 8:26).
-
- * Eternal life (John 3:16; 5:24).
-
- * A home in heaven (John 14:1-4).
-
- * Assurance of salvation (John 10:29).
-
- * The Holy Spirit within (Eph. 1:13, 14).
-
- * Spiritual gifts (Rom. 12:3-8; 1 Cor. 12).
-
- * Forgiveness for daily sins (1 John 1:9).
-
- * Peace of mind (Phi. 4:7).
-
- * A way to defeat temptation (1 cor. 10:13).
-
- * Wisdom in times of testing (James 1:5).
-
- * Power for living (Eph. 1:19; 3:20).
-
- * Access to God through prayer (Eph. 3:12).
-
- * Mercy and grace in times of need (Heb. 4:16).
-
- * The illumination of the Spirit (1 cor. 2:6-16).
-
- * Freedom from sin's grip (Rom. 6:22).
-
- * Loving discipline (Heb. 12:3-11).
-
- * Ability to make Satan flee (James 4:7).
-
- * Resurrection to glory (1 Thess. 4:16, 17).
-
- * Strength to do God's will (Phil. 4:13).
-
- What has God promised to Israel? The history of that nation has been
- one of repeated promised and the people's failure to benefit from God's
- gracious offers. The entire Old Testament - the books of Moses, the
- Writings, and the Prophets - are full of promises. The promises come in
- the form of assurances of God's love and care for them, as well as
- prophetic statements about Israel's future and the future of the
- surrounding nations. A few of the many promises to Israel are:
- possession of the land of Palestine (Gen. 13:14-17); the Law's
- blessings and curses (Deut. 28); judgment, exile, restoration (the
- Prophets); a Messiah (Is. 52, 53).
-
- What has God promised to specific individuals? Many biblical
- promises have application to only one individual or a specific group.
- Here are a few examples:
-
- * Pre-Flood inhabitants: death (Gen. 6).
-
- * Noah and his family: rescue (Gen. 7:1).
-
- * Abram: descendants (Gen. 12:1-3; 15:1-6).
-
- * Jacob's family: blessings (Gen. 28:10-16).
-
- * Jews: a land of "milk and honey" (Ex. 3:8).
-
- * Moses: miraculous signs (Ex. 4:1-17).
-
- * Pharaoh and his people: plagues (Ex. 5-14).
-
- * Joshua: a dry path through a river (Josh. 3).
-
- * Gideon: victory in battle (Judg. 6:16).
-
- * Saul: abilities needed as king (1 Sam. 10:6).
-
- * David: a son to build the temple (2 Sam. 7).
-
- * Solomon: wisdom and riches (1 Kin. 3:10-14).
-
- * Hezekiah: 15 more years of life (2 Kin. 20:5, 6).
-
- * Mary: a supernatural conception (Luke 1:26-38).
-
- * Disciples: Spirit-aided memory (John 14:26).
-
- * Paul: strength to endure infirmities (2 Cor. 12:9).
-
- Even though some promises were given to specific people, can't the
- principles apply to us? In some cases yes, and in other cases no. If
- the promise reflects an unchanging characteristic of God and how He
- relates to us, then we can resonably assume that because He is
- unchanging (James 1:17) He will continue to reflect that promise in
- relating to other people. For example, when the Lord told the apostle
- Paul, "My strength is made perfect in weakness", He was addressing a
- specific situation in Paul's life - the "thorn in the flesh" of 2
- Corinthians 12:7-10. Yet that truth applies to all people who recognize
- their weakness and reach out to God for strength (Eph. 1:19).
-
- An example of a promise that we cannot rightfully claim is the one
- given to Joshua when the Lord said, "I will give you every place where
- you set your foot" (Josh. 1:3 niv). That might sound like a great
- promise to claim if we were looking for a home and didn't have enough
- money, but we would be out of order to do so. That promise could remind
- us that God can give us anything He in His wisdom and power chooses to
- give us - including a home we could afford.
-
- Thinking It Over. What is the danger of claiming for ourselves the
- promises that were given specifically to other people? Take time to
- reread the above list of promises given to believers. Thank the Lord
- for what He has promised. Can you think of other biblical promises that
- God has given to you?
-
- By His Methods. While we sit and scratch our heads trying to figure
- out how God is going to answer a prayer or fulfill His promises, He is
- calmly and powerfully workking out His plans, oftentimes behind the
- scenes of life, and in ways and for reasons that we cannot comprehend.
-
- In Isaiah 55, the Lord descirbed our inability to understand His
- methods. He said, "'For My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your
- ways My ways', says the Lord. 'For as the heavens are high than the
- earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your
- thoughts. For as the rain comes down, and the snow from heaven, and do
- not return there, but water the earth, and make it bring forth and bud,
- that it may give seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall My
- word be that goes forth from My mouth; it shall not return to Me void,
- but it shall accomplish what I please, and it shall prosper in the
- thing for which I sent it'" (vv. 8-11).
-
- although His reasons may elude us, and His methods may surprise us,
- God always fulfills His promises. As the apostle Paul said, "The
- foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is
- stronger than men" (1 Cor. 1:25).
-
- In what obvious ways does God fulfill His promises? Most of the
- promises and prophecies of the Bible have already been fulfilled. In
- many cases the fulfillment of the promise was clear and undeniable,
- just as expected.
-
- When God told Pharaoh that He was going to send a plague of frogs,
- He did just that (ex. 8). When the Lord told David that his son would
- build the temple, Solomon was born and he later built it (2 Sam.
- 7;1-17; 1 Kin. 5-8). When God siad that Judah would be judged for her
- unfaithfulness and be sent into exile, that is what happened (Jer. 25).
- God promised a Messiah-Savior, and Jesus came (Is. 53; Matt. 1). Jesus
- said the temple would be destroyed, and in AD 70 it was demolished
- (Matt. 24:2). Jesus promised to build His church, and it has been
- growing ever since (Matt. 16:18). Jesus promised to send the Holy
- Spirit, and on the Day of Pentecost the Spirit came (John 14:16, 17;
- Acts 2:1-4). God told the apostle Pual that he would protect him while
- he was ministering in Corinth, and Paul was not harmed (Acts 18:9- 11).
-
- The Bible is full of promises that were fulfilled in obvious ways,
- just as one would expect. At other times, though, God's methods are a
- little harder to understand.
-
- In what mysterious ways does God fulfill His promises? Sometimes we
- may have a hard time recognizing how God has fulfilled a promise or
- imagining how He will fulfill a promise.
-
- When God promised in the Old Testament that He would send a Messiah,
- few people expected a Messiah like Jesus. No one could have predicted
- the way God brought both Jew and Gentile together into the body of
- Christ, the church. No one anticipated such a long time between
- Messiah's work as Redeemer and His work as Judge and King.
-
- On many different occasions, the apostle Paul used the word mystery
- to describe the way God's plan of salvation has been fulfilled in
- Christ. The Lord revealed these truths: the inclusion of both Jew and
- Gentile in fulfilling God's promises of salvation (Rom. 11:25; Eph.
- 3:2-6), the manner in which Jesus provided forgiveness of sins (Rom.
- 16:25; Col. 1:24-27), the resurrection of believers in glorified bodies
- (1 Cor. 15:51-54), the glory of the indwelling Christ (Col. 1:27), and
- establishing the church as central to God's plan to fulfill His
- promises (Eph. 3:8-10).
-
- At the center of God's mysterious fulfillment of promises about our
- salvation, our present life, and the life to come is Jesus Christ.
- Second Corinthians 1:20 states, "For all the promises of God in Him are
- Yes, and in Him Amen, to the glory of God through us." Jesus Christ
- fulfills the heart of all that "the Law of Moses and the Prophets and
- the Psalms: spoke about (Luke 24:44). The Old and the New Covenant
- promises are based on and find their fulfillment in what Christ has
- done and will do (Rom. 9-11, Gal. 3-5, Heb. 7-10).
-
- How are some promises fulfilled in ways we may not expect? At times
- in the Old Testament the Lord used means that people could understand.
- He would send them into battle with a promise of victory, and He would
- give the strength to over come an enemy. On other occasions, though, He
- would do something very unexpected. For example, the defeat of
- Pharaoh's army as they pursued the escaping Jews (Ex. 14), the collapse
- of the walls of Jericho (Josh. 6), and the killing of 185, 000
- Assyrians by the angel of the Lord (2 Kin. 19:35) demonstrated God's
- ability to fulfill His promises in unexpected and supernatural ways.
-
- Another example, this time from the New Testament, shows how some
- promises are fulfilled differently than we might have predicted. Jesus
- told His disciples, "Assuredly, I say to you, there are some standing
- here who shall not taste death till they see the Son of Man coming in
- His kingdom" (Matt. 16:28). Six days later Jesus took Peter, James, and
- John with Him up a mountain. There Jesus' appearance changed, and the
- disciples caught a glimpse of Christ's coming glory (17:1-8). They saw
- a partial fulfillment of what would be completely fulfilled in the
- future when Jesus would come in His glory to establish His rule over
- all the earth.
-
- How does God fulfill some promises in a spiritual way? Although God
- sometimes fulfills promises in visible ways, at other times He
- demonstrates His faithfulness by providing invisible, spiritual
- blessings.
-
- The Psalms contain many statements about the power of God to bless
- the righteous with protection, wealth, health, and long life. We would
- be wrong, though, to conclude that we can expect nothing but physical
- prosperity in this life. One look at the life ofDavid contradicts that
- idea. His life was one of repeated conflict and ups and downs of
- physical well-being.
-
- It is true that we will reap what we sow (Gal. 6:7, 8), but that
- does not mean that we will reap all the benefits right now, in this
- life, in physical, tangible ways. Job knew that. His friends, though,
- made the mistake of assuming that right living always translates into a
- trouble-free life right here and now. Or look at the life of the
- apostle Paul. He went through all types of good and bad experiences,
- yet he found that in all of life he could be content because God was
- being faithful to him (Phil. 4:11-13).
-
- My wife made a plaque for my office with the words of Isaiah
- 40:28-31 written on it. Verse 31 states, "But those who wait on the
- Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like
- eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not
- faint." Since I like to jog regularly, it would be great if I could
- take those words to mean strength for running a 25k race without
- getting tired. But the Lord wasn't speaking to me about running in a
- physical sense.
-
- What those poetic verses promise, however, is God's strength to do
- what He wants you and me to do. In that sense, the words are echoed by
- Paul's statement: I can do all things through christ who strengthens me
- (Phil. 4:13). The fulfillment of the promise in Isaiah 40, then, comes
- primarily through the provision of inner strength.
-
- Thinking It Over. What kind of conclusion did Job come to after he
- had questioned God's method of dealing with him? (Job 42:1-3). Why do
- we sometimes have trouble under- standing God's methods of keeping His
- promises? How have God's promises been fulfilled in your life?
-
- In His Time. Preschool children have trouble comprehending time. (I
- know. I have preschoolers!) You can't tell a child, "We're going to the
- zoo in 2 weeks", and not expect him to ask you every day for the next 2
- weeks if "today" is the day to go to the zoo.
-
- Adults also have trouble with time. We have difficulty understanding
- God's timing and how He fulfills His promises. We can't wait. We expect
- results today or tomorrow, not years from now.
-
- The author of Ecclesiastes, however, put God's timing into proper
- perspective. He wrote, "To everythings there is a season, a time for
- every purpose under heaven...(God) has made everything beautiful in its
- time. Also He has put eternity in their hearts, except that no one can
- find out the work that God does from beginning to end...God shall judge
- the righteous and the wicked, for there shall be a time there for every
- purpose and for every work: (3:1, 11,17).
-
- In Ecclesiastes 3, the writer points out that the time-bound people
- of planet earth cannot grasp God's eternal purposes (v. 11). The
- perpetual changes of life are part of God's pattern, His plan for all
- the ages. From the human perspecitve, though, it looks like a bunch of
- tangled thread on the back of a piece of tapestry. We cannot see how
- God is working it all together.
-
- As a result, we sometimes question God's timing. If we don't see His
- promise becoming reality right now, we become impatient. We need to
- teach ourselves that God's timing is best.
-
- How does God delay in keeping His promises? Hebrews 11 gives us a
- sampling of Old Testament saints who came to realize that God fulfills
- His promises according to His time plan. They lived by faith, believing
- thatGod would eventually do all He promised, even if they did not
- understand why the Lord delayed action for several years or beyond
- their lifetime.
-
- Abraham is the preeminent example in Hebrews 11. When God told him
- to pack his bags and travel to the land of promise, Abraham went,
- though he didn't know where he was going. The Lord told Abraham that he
- and Sarah would have a child, yet the Lord waited until their old age
- to fulfill His word. And Abraham had to imagine the future when his
- descendants would inherit the Promised Land.
-
- Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph knew of God's promise for their
- descendants, but they did not see fulfillment (vv. 20-22). Moses knew
- that the Lord would rescue His people, but he had to wait until he was
- 80 years old before the Lord used him to lead the people out of Egypt.
- Moses even chose mistreatment in the short run so that later He would
- be rewarded by God (vv. 25, 26).
-
- The writer of Hebrews 11 also lists Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah,
- David, Samuel, and the prophets. Their lives were a combination of
- immediate blessing and delayed fulfillment. Verses 33 through 35 list
- several ways in which they saw God's blessings. But verses 35 through
- 38 list the terrible torture, imprisonment, and death that many faced.
- And then the cahpter ends with these words: "And all these, having
- obtained a good testimony through faith, did not receive the promise,
- God having provided something better for us, that they should not be
- made perfect apart from us" (vv. 39, 40).
-
- The writer of Hebrews saw how all the promises were ultimately
- fulfilled in Christ -- in what He has done to provide salvation and
- what He will do to bring God's plan for earth to fulfillment. Faith is
- being able to wait and trust the Lord to fulfill all He has said He
- will do, even if life is hard for us now.
-
- How have people responded to God's delays? The people of the past
- have resonded like you and I might have. Some grew impatient. Others
- kept the faith. Still others mocked those who looked to the future.
-
- Abraham had his moments of doubt even though he was a man of faith.
- When his wife Sarah grew old without bearing a child, Abraham and Sarah
- began to get creative about fulfilling God's promise. The birth of
- Ishmael by Hagar was the result (Gen. 16). But God, in His time,
- brought about the miraculous birth of Isaac (Gen. 21:1-7).
-
- The Hebrews who came out of Egypt complained and griped against
- Moses and against God because everything didn't turn out just as they
- expected after they escaped slavery in Egypt. As a result, they ended
- up wandering around in the desert for 40 years -- and a whole
- generation of people missed out on the promise of entering Palestine
- (Num. 14).
-
- David was anointed king while Saul was still on the throne. Yet
- David was a fugitive from Saul's "hit men" for many years. When he did
- become king, David saw much evidence of the Lord's goodness to him. But
- David's kingship was far from tranquil, with betrayals and turmoil (1
- Sam. 16-31; 2 Sam. 1-24).
-
- Job came to realize that perfect justice was not to be experienced
- during our lifetime. He learned that God's timing and God's program are
- perfect and wise (Job 42).
-
- The disciples had to learn that Jesus was not immediately going to
- reestablish the nation of Israel and inaugurate the millennial kingdom
- (Acts 1:6-8). They had to learn that there was going to be a period of
- time between His first coming and His second coming (Matt. 24, 25).
- Because Jesus was not the conquering king that many people expected,
- they rejected Him, and only a few believed in Him until after the
- resurrection.
-
- Paul wrote encouraging words to believers who were in danger of
- despair in the face of persecution and the propsect of not seeing
- immediate relief (1 Cor. 15; 2 Cor. 4).
-
- Unbelievers in the last days will ridicule the promise of Christ's
- second coming. The spostle Peter said that these scoffers would say,
- "Where is the promise of His coming?" (2 Pet. 3:4). Peter responded
- with these words:
-
- But, beloved, do not forget this one thing, that with the Lord one
- day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. The Lord
- is not slack concerning His promise, as some count slackness, but is
- longsuffering toward us, not willing that any should perish but that
- all should come to repentance (2 Pet. 3:8, 9).
-
- Believers, those who profess faith in Christ as Lord and Savior,
- have a life that can be far from glorious. We can be plagued with
- impatience and doubts. Like the psalmist, we may wonder why God allows
- the wicked to prosper and why He doesn't fulfill His promise by
- bringing judgment right now (Ps. 73). We too can become so distracted
- by the present world that we lose sight of the world to come.
-
- We can also benefit from what the apostle Paul wrote at the close of
- his first letter to Timothy. He warned about a preoccupation with the
- present -- the riches and the pleasure of life. Paul encouraged Timothy
- to "pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, gentleness,
- " and to "fight the good fight of faith" (1 Tim. 6:11, 12). The apostle
- then said about Christ's second coming: "He will manifest (it) in His
- own time" (v. 15).
-
- Who is wiser than God? Nobody. All of the promises of God are
- fulfilled in His perfect timing, according to His wisdom. Many of those
- promises are fulfilled now. Many await fulfillment.
-
- All who trust Christ for forgiveness of sins receive that
- forgiveness and new life immediately -- along with all the spiritual
- benefits (John 3; Eph. 1). And while some people experience the
- evidence of God's love and care through propserity of life and good
- health, others experience the love and strength of God through poverty
- and sickness. In all cases, though, God is true to His word. He
- fulfills His promises.
-
- Thinking It Over. What promises of God would encourage a follower of
- Christ to keep on living for Him? How do people in the world mock the
- hope of Christians? What fulfillment of biblical promises can give you
- and me confidence that God will keep His promises to us now and in the
- life to come?
-
- PROMISE CHECKLIST
-
- If you want to follow the advice of the great hymn "Standing on the
- Promises", you need to be sure you are on solid footing. As we've seen
- in this study of God's promises, our spiritual lives must be founded on
- what God has said -- not merely on what we wish He had said or what we
- think He might have said. We need to be sure we are not misquoting the
- Lord when we calim a biblical promise for ourselves.
-
- The basic rules of proper interpretation that apply to the whole
- Bible also form the starting point for our interpretation of biblical
- promises. The rules of interpretation can be summed up in one word --
- context. Two principles from the Radio Bible Class booklet How Can I
- Understnad the Bible? are especially relevant to this study.
-
- 1. The context of immediate setting: Look at the verses that
- immediately precede and follow the promise. Does your interpretation
- fit the context?
-
- 2. The context of the whole Bible: Consider the passage in its
- relation to the whole Bible. God does not contradict Himself. The
- interpretation of the promise must be in keeping with all of Scripture.
- This step requires a growing knowledge of God's Word and a dependence
- on the Holy Spirit to guide your understanding of the Bible.
-
- In this booklet we have examined the promises of God in four
- categories. As we read the Scriptures, we can learn how to interpret
- and apply those promises. Use the questions listed on the next page as
- guidelines.
-
- 1. The terms of the promise. Does the promise have conditions to
- fulfill? Do you meet the conditions? What will happen if you fail to
- measure up? What characteristics of God can increase your confidence in
- His promises?
-
- 2. The people of the promise. Is the promise given to all people of
- all time? Is a specific individual mentioned? Are only believers in
- view? Is the promise to obedient believers only? Are you included?
-
- 3. The method of the promise. Does the Scripture imply obvious
- fulfillment? Could the promise be fulfilled spiritually? Could the
- promise be fulfilled physically? How is God's faithfulness
- demonstrated? What are some of the options in your situation?
-
- 4. The time of the promise. Can fulfillment be expected soon? Will
- it be fulfilled in heaven? Can God fulfill this promise a number of
- times? Why would God possibly delay fulfillment? Are you willing to
- trust God's timing? Could the promise be only partially fulfilled?
-
- TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE?
-
- In the world of shopping, if the product sounds too good to be true,
- it probably is. Whether it's a vegetable chopper, a weed wacker, or the
- latest automobile, the advertised image is more likely to be a mirage
- than reality. What you think is a bargain can turn out to be a major
- disappointment.
-
- God never advertises more than He delivers. He's not out to deceive
- us. He wants us to have the best He has to offer -- the joy of a close
- relationship with Him now, and heaven later.
-
- To enjoy God's best, though, you and I first need to take Jesus at
- His word. He said, "He who hears My word and believes in Him who sent
- Me has everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but has
- passed from death into life" (John 5:24).
-
- His offer is conditioned only on our acceptance of His free gift.
- Does it sound too easy? Too good to be true? It's not. Jesus has proven
- that He can be trusted. He came to earth, lived a perfect life, died on
- the cross in our place, and rose from the dead. If He can't be trusted,
- nobody can.
-
- If you've never done so, choose now to take God at His word. Admit
- that you deserve God's judgment for sin, believe Jesus died for you and
- rose from the dead, accept His offer of new life, and then build your
- life on the promises of God.
-
- Scripture quotations are from the New King James Version, (c) 1979,
- 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson, Inc., Publishers.
-
- "How Does God Keep His Promises?" by Richard W. De Haan. Copyright
- 1990 Radio Bible Class, Grand Rapids, Michigan. Used by Permission.
-