The Severity of God
If thou hadst not
Been stern to me,
But left me free,
I had forgot
Myself and Thee.
—Ben Jonson
God’s
severity is not a popular subject today. We want a deity that lets bygones be bygones,
that excuses sin with an avuncular, “boys will be boys.” But love devoid of
judgment is nothing but sentimental and insipid kindness and God is not merely
kind. C.S. Lewis said: “Love is something far more stern and splendid than mere
kindness.”
Kindness
doesn’t care whether its object is good or bad, helpful or harmful, but love
cares. God is love and perfect love
will not stand by while we destroy others and ourselves. He will strike at our
sin and if our hearts are entwined with it they will break in the process. We
may lose everything we have—our health, our homes, our reputations, our
fortunes—everything but the God who loves us.
“It is bastards who are spoiled,” C. S.
Lewis wrote, “The legitimate sons, who are to carry on the family tradition,
are punished. It is for people whom we care nothing about that we demand
happiness on any terms: with our friends, our lovers, our children, we are
exacting and would rather see them suffer much than be happy in contemptible and
estranging modes. If God is Love, He is, by definition, something more than mere
kindness. And it appears, from all records, that though He has often rebuked us
and condemned us, He has never regarded us with contempt. He has paid us the
intolerable compliment of loving us, in the deepest, most tragic, most
inexorable sense.”
Love in action can be a harsh and
terrible thing, but it is always redemptive. Its wrath drives us to the end of
ourselves and draws us back to God. Like the Prodigal, we come back home, because
there is no other place to go. Then God can begin to restore us and undo the
damage we have done.
Sin is sweet. It has its allure and
pleasure—but it also has its tragic aftermath. Thus God must come after us; he
cannot help himself. As long as peaceful, gentle methods work he will gladly
employ them. “He does not willingly bring affliction or grief to the children
of men” (Lamentations 3:33). But if we resist his love we will experience his
fatherly discipline. He will let us have our fling and we will experience in
our bodies and souls the results of our folly. He will not give up until he has
broken the heart of our resistance.
“God opposes the proud, but exalts the
humble,” scripture affirms. A broken and humbled heart he will not despise.
When we have come to the end of ourselves he is there to “save us to the
uttermost,” as the King James Version put it (Hebrews 7:25). God saves from the
“guttermost to the uttermost,” my father used to say.
There is nothing too hard for God to do; nothing he will not do. He knows how to use our pain and heartbreak to draw us back to his love. He also knows how to use the wounds we have afflicted on others to draw them to his healing. The wrong we have done can be set right; the results of our sins gloriously redeemed. That’s the God we have—the only God worth having.
DHR