Some suppose God is in control of everything and that He manipulates every detail of our lives. When things are going well, God may get the credit; if things are not going so well, He is likely to get the blame. The belief for some is that God instigates every illness, tragic accident, catastrophe, death and even foreordains whether or not a given person will be saved in heaven or lost forever in torment. Some are “comforted” in the knowledge they always have someone else to blame. Is God responsible for every evil thing, or is there a culprit laughing in the shadows while he creates distrust in the hearts of the impressionable? We need to be careful what we accuse God of doing!
Perhaps this kind of thinking prompted a church marquee recently that said, “God may disappoint you, but He will never fail.” This writer has disappointed himself, others and especially God, but never has God disappointed. If God never fails (and He doesn’t) then how could He disappoint? God is always good all of the time. His goodness, however, does not preclude the sometimes necessary task of disciplining His children (Hebrews 12:5-11), but that is done out of love and care. Is God guilty of breaking our hearts?
God is in total control of only those things over which He has chosen to be in total control. We live presently in a world where God has chosen to exercise varying degrees of control. While He is the Sovereign of the universe, He gives man freedom to make choices. Some individuals believe and obey Jesus Christ, while others don’t know of Him, or choose of their own accord to reject Him (John 1:11-13; 20:30-31; 2 Thessalonians 1:7-9). Our choices sometimes have significant and eternal consequences (Galatians 6:7-8). God is not culpable for the disastrous consequences of our wrong or immoral choices. This includes even those times when, or if, we allow ourselves to be deceived by Satan and his messengers and fall from God’s grace (Galatians 5:4).
God exercises a degree of control over Satan, but He does not choose, at this time, to exercise full control over him. For instance, God permitted Satan to afflict Job, but placed restrictions telling him on that occasion to “spare his life” (Job 2:6 ESV). Why did God tell Satan to spare Job’s life if he didn’t have power to take it? God is about life. Satan is about death, pain and suffering (John 10:10). From the days of Adam and Eve, God has permitted the evil one to tempt mankind, but again he is limited and cannot pull us away from the Father by force (John 10:27-29). If we choose, we may leave the Father willingly. Being sheep, God does not fence us in. He desires that we serve Him from the heart with a willing mind.
God has chosen to be in control of supplying fallen humanity with a Savior (Luke 19:10; Titus 2:11-14). He has allowed no power in the entire universe to prevent the kingdom of heaven, the church from being established (Matthew 16:18), or seeing to it that it endures forever (Daniel 2:44). God is in full control of the moment when He determines to send His Son, along with His mighty angels, to mark the end of time and to reward the righteous and punish all the wicked. God will be in full control of the proceedings at the Judgment Day, and He has the power to execute the sentence that is delivered unto every man. There will be no protests or court of appeals to nullify or render it void. Are we surrendering ourselves completely to God?