Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAdelia Campbell Modified over 9 years ago
1
10/30/20151
2
2 Of all of the attributes of God, none is rejected as easily as His wrath. 1. Many so-called "Christians" reject the wrath of God.
3
10/30/20153 a. Some are perplexed about it, still others wish it didn't exist. b. The atheist usually believes that evil - which he considers God's wrath to be, proves that there is no God especially a good and Holy one; "How can God's Holiness and Goodness be reconciled with His wrath and other evils in the world.
4
10/30/20154 2. It is shallow thinking or closed mindedness to conclude that God's goodness and holiness must cancel out His justice. a. Goodness and holiness demand justice. b. God would be neither good nor holy if He failed to render justice, who is ready to call a judge "good" that never renders a verdict to punish the evil doer? Only the criminal and evildoer would say that!
5
10/30/20155 c. God is a God of wrath - Deuteronomy 32:39, 41; Romans 1:28, Psalm 95:11, Ezra 5:12; Hebrews 10:31.
6
10/30/20156 God's wrath is free from injustice, unethical, and hasty qualities. 1. The wrath of man usually stems from his enraged sinful attitude or Ephesians 4:26; 6:1-4. 2. God's wrath should be looked upon as the natural expression of His nature: ABSOLUTE HOLINESS manifesting itself against the willful, highhanded, deliberate, inexcusable sin and iniquity.
7
10/30/20157 3. The sin of Adam and Eve illustrates God's Justice; a. After creating them, God gave them a positive divine law, which also included the penalty for violating the law - God's justice and goodness.
8
10/30/20158 b. The next test for God after giving this law is a test of His truthfulness - will He keep His word? c. A careful reading of the Bible reveals that God always revealed what was required, as well as the punishment for not doing what was required - this is true Justice
9
10/30/20159 Man's failure to understand the severity of God, may stem from mans failure to see the enormity and sinfulness of sin. 1. Men have a tendency to regard sin lightly to cover up its ugliness and make excuses for it. 2. The more we study God's holiness, the more we shall be able to understand the heinousness of sin. a. We will also understand, why even one sin is sufficient to separate us from God - Isaiah 59;1-2. b. Sin is rebellion against God's holiness, sovereignty and authority; therefore, it demands punishment.
10
10/30/201510 Therefore, we must conclude that the sum total of God's mercy is found in His giving Jesus Christ to atone for our sins. If we reject Christ we reject the mercy of God and the Almighty has no alternative but to punish us for the sins we have committed and ultimately for our disobedience.
11
10/30/201511 Furthermore, since He having informed us that the UNRIGHTEOUS will be cast into hell. He would be unjust if He did not reward the faithful who are clothed in CHRIST'S RIGHTEOUSNESS through the blood of Christ with an eternal home.
12
10/30/201512 The terrible nature of hell should serve to make man turn to God and no doubt that is one reason God has made hell so terrifying. A man who had been taught that there is no eternal punishment was once heard to say, "Well, if there isn't a hell I might as well go on living a life of sin because the worst that can happen to me is that I will cease to exist."
13
10/30/201513 No doubt many people would make NO effort to serve God if they were not aware of the awful consequences promised for a life of willful sin.
14
10/30/201514 Many a person, has wondered why a just God allows the wicked to prosper, and the righteous sometimes to suffer. This was the problem of Habakkuk. The prophet asked God' why He allowed evil to go unpunished.
15
10/30/201515 Jehovah replied that He was raising the Chaldeans to punish the Jews. Then Habakkuk asked why God would allow a terrible, evil nation like the Chaldeans to punish a country more righteous than it.
16
10/30/201516 The answer of God was that there would be a day of reckoning for all and that the Chaldeans would eventually be punished for their sins, for, as the editor expressed it. "God does not settle everything in September"
17
10/30/201517 David wrestled with the same problem. HE counseled, "Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him: don't worry yourself because of him who prospers in his way, because of the man who brings wicked things to pass. For evildoers shall be cut off: but those that wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit the earth. For yet a little while and the wicked shall not be.“ (Psalm 37: 7, 9, 10.)
18
10/30/201518 Jesus shows in the parable of the talents that God's retribution against evil will await the judgment (Matthew 13), and Peter assures us that ungodly men shall be brought to an accounting in that day. (2 Peter 3:7)
19
10/30/201519 THE POTTER AND THE VESSEL. In Romans 9 Paul raises several questions relating to justice. He asks why God hardened Pharaoh's heart when Israel was led out of Egypt by Moses.
20
10/30/201520 In answering Paul, compares the role of God in making man to that of a potter who makes a vessel. He shows that as the potter can make a vessel to suit himself, so God, being the creator, can use us as He sees fit. If God is TRULY God the creator and sustainer of all things then in reality, it is not our place to argue with our maker.
21
10/30/201521 Paul reasons that Pharaoh was a vessel fitted for destruction, that is, that he was of bad character, and that God simply used him to demonstrate His divine power. We know that when Pharaoh was placed in a certain set of circumstances his evil nature came to the fore. God may bear patiently with an evil man to display His power, but He never will make a good man do evil.
22
10/30/201522 WHY DOES GOD ALLOW MAN TO SIN? God, in placing man in the Garden of Eden, could have kept him from sinning by removing all temptation. Since death and suffering entered the world by sin, why did He not do this? The answer is found in the nature of man. God created us as free moral agents capable of choosing our own course, making our own decisions but He warns us that if we make the wrong decisions we have to live with the consequences.
23
10/30/201523 We all prize our liberty and our right to make our own decisions, even though they may not always be best. Rather than make us robots, God, in His wisdom, saw fit to give us the choice that we might serve Him willingly instead of by compulsion.
24
10/30/201524 We are made in the image of God, but if our power to choose and think for ourselves were removed, we would cease to be like Him.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.