All Things are From God, Through
God, and To God. The Glory Is All His.
By John Piper
33 Oh, the depth of the riches and
wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how
inscrutable his ways!
34 For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who
has been his counselor
35 Or who has given a gift to him that he might
be repaid?
36 For from him and through him and to him are all things. To
him be glory forever. Amen.
Today we complete our six-year
journey through Romans 1-11. We've seen the terribly sinful condition of our
hearts and the hearts of all humanity in Romans 1-3:19; and the great work
of Christ on the cross to provide a righteousness and a sacrifice so that we
could be justified by faith alone apart from works of the law in Romans
3:20-5:21; and the mighty sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit to conquer sin
and make us secure in the love of Christ in Romans 6-8; and then the great
defense of the God's sovereign grace and promise-keeping faithfulness in
Romans 9-11, climaxing now with the stunning words in Romans 11:32,
God has
consigned all to disobedience, that he may have mercy on all.
Response of Praise for Romans 1-11
And in response to all this
revelation of the ways and judgments of God, Paul breaks into explicit wonder
and praise in Romans 11:33-36:
33 Oh, the depth of the riches and
wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how
inscrutable his ways!
34 For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who
has been his counselor
35 Or who has given a gift to him that he might
be repaid?
36 For from him and through him and to him are all things. To
him be glory forever. Amen.
This is where God wants us to be
when we have heard Romans 1-11. Amazed at mercy, and worshipping God through
Jesus Christ. This is the response that will make us able to live out the
practical moral demands of Romans 12-15.
Morality in the Christian life is
not simply the willpower to do right things, because God has the authority to
command them. Christian morality is the overflow of worshipping the sovereign,
merciful God. Christian life is the fruit of a mind and heart transformed by
seeing and savoring the all-sufficiency and sovereignty and mercy of God
revealed in Jesus Christ. That will become plain as soon as we turn to chapter
12.
Lingering Over the Praises of
Romans 11:33-36
But for now we linger one more time
over the praises of Paul's heart here at the end of chapter 11.
We saw last time that the riches and
wisdom and the knowledge of God are unfathomably deep (v. 33a). No matter how
far down into God's wealth or into God's wisdom or into God's knowledge you
go, you never get beneath God. There is no explanation for anything beneath
God. There is nothing beneath God. And there is nothing above God. And there
is nothing decisive over against God between his depths and his heights.
And that is why Paul says in verse
36, For from him and through him and to him are all things. And this truth
leads to the truth of verse 35, Or who has given a gift to him that he might
be repaid?. Answer: Nobody. In other words, you can't give to God anything
that is not already his. If you could, he would owe you. But you can't. So he
doesn't owe you anything. And never will. All things are from him and through
him. He is absolutely free.
This also leads Paul to say in verse
34, Who has known the mind of the Lord, or who has been his counselor?. Answer again: Nobody. In other words, not only
can't you give God a gift that
he doesn't already own; you can't give him advice he doesn't already know.
For from him and through him are all things.
Which leads Paul to say in verse
33b: How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways. In other words, since God's riches and wisdom and knowledge are very deep, so
that we can't give him anything he doesn't have, or tell him anything he
doesn't know, it is no wonder that we are often confounded, bewildered,
perplexed, and amazed by the ways and the judgments of God.
The final design and effect of it
all is at the end of verse 36: All things are not only from him and through,
but also to him. Therefore, To him be glory forever. Our lives are to
be lived willingly to the glory of God. Or we will serve his glory unwillingly
in our damnation. We are created and called to make the beauty and greatness
of God known in the world. Our reason for being is to make much of God, and
bring all the nations to confess that Jesus is Lord to the glory of God the
Father (Philippians 4:11).
An Outline of This Message: Five
Steps
So that is the outline of the
message today:
Based on what we saw last time, that
God's riches and wisdom and knowledge are unfathomably deep; therefore:
1.
All things are from him and
through him; therefore
2.
No one can give a gift to God
so as to make him a debtor; and
3.
No one can give any counsel
to God about how he should do things;
which is why
4. His ways and judgments are
unsearchable and inscrutable to our finite minds; so that, finally,
5.
We should give all glory to
God, and be content with an utterly dependent Christ-exalting happiness in
God.
Let's take these five steps one at
a time.
1. All Things Are From, Through,
and To God
First, because God's riches and
wisdom and knowledge are unfathomably deep, verse 36 is true: From him and
through him . . . are all things. I take this to mean that the ultimate
origin or the ultimate cause or the ultimately decisive reason for everything
is God. Everything is dependent for its existence on God at its beginning and
all the way along (from him and through him).
Ephesians 1:11 puts it like this:
[God] works all things according to the counsel of his will. Romans 9:16
puts it like this: So then it depends not on human will or exertion,but on
God, who has mercy. Proverbs 16:33 puts it like this, The lot is cast into
the lap, but its every decision is from the Lord. All things are from him
and through him means that there is no explanation for what is or
what happens that is deeper or more decisive than God. This is what
we mean when we say that God is absolutely sovereign.
The devil is not co-eternal with
God, and he is not ultimately independent of God. His existence and all that
comes from it so much of the evil in the world depends on God's willing him
to exist and allowing him moment by moment to do what he does. God sees it
coming and he permits it to happen. And since he does nothing aimlessly or
capriciously, there is always a purpose for what he causes to happen
directly and what he permits to happen
indirectly. So in that sense we can say that even the evil and the
calamity of the world (e.g. Romans 11:7-10) are included in verse 36,
All
things are from him and through him.
But let's not say more than we
should here. There is another sense in which we must not say that all things
are from God. For example, think of 1 John 2:15-16,
Do not love the world or the
things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is
not in him.
16 For all that is in the world the desires of the flesh and
the desires of the eyes and pride in possessions is not from the Father but
is from the world.
Here John says that the desires of
the flesh and the desires of the eyes and the pride in possessions is not from God. So in one sense
all things are from God. But in another sense these evil things are not from God.
I take this to mean that sin does
not come from God's nature. That is, it's not an extension or aspect of
God's nature or character. God is holy, and there is no unholiness in him.
God is light, and in him is no darkness. The darkness and unholiness of sin do
not arise as part of God's nature or character. They don't come from him in
that sense. Sin can be from God and through God in the sense of ultimate and
decisive cause, but not in the sense that sin comes from his nature or
character. God wills that sin be, without himself sinning. It is not a sin
when God, with infinite wisdom and holiness, ordains that sin exist. Sin is from him
as the one who ordained it, but not from him as an
_expression of his nature.
Here's an imperfect illustration of
the difference. You can get a black eye in two ways. You can be hit in your
eye with a white snowball, and your eye will turn black. Or you can be
injected above your eye with a hypodermic needle full of black dye, and your
eye will turn black. In the second case the darkness comes from the nature of
the dye. In the first case the darkness does not come from any darkness in the
snowball.
All I want you to see from that
illustration is that there are two different ways to think about something
being from God. All things are from God in the sense that he ordains all
that comes to pass. But all sinful acts are not from God as an _expression of
his nature.
The practical upshot of this is that
we are utterly dependent on God for all things and that we are
utterly responsible and guilty for the evil in our hearts. The effect this
should have is deep humility. 1 Corinthians 4:7, What do you have that you
did not receive? If then you received it, why do you boast as if you did not
receive it? The fact that all things are from God and through God, excludes
boasting.
2. No One Can Give a Gift to God
so as to Make Him a Debtor
Second, this implies verse 35: Or
who has given a gift to him that he might be repaid? Answer: No one. Since
all is from God and through God, he owns all things and we can never give him
anything that is not already his. Which means that we can never put him in our
debt. There is absolutely no negotiating with God. We have no bargaining
position. We are utterly owned and we are squatters on his territory. Every
breath we take is a gift. Every virtue we perform is grace. God is not
served by human hands as though he needed anything, for he himself gives to
all men life and breath and everything (Acts 17:25).
3. No One Can Give Any Counsel to
God About How He Should Do Things
Third, Paul gives one specific
example of how we can't give God anything to obligate him or enrich him. Verse
34: For who has known the mind of the Lord, or who has been his
counselor? Answer: Nobody has known his mind in such a way as to be his
counselor. We know something of his mind because of revelation. Paul has given
us 11 chapters of the mind of God. We are meant to understand it. But no one
knows the mind of God in a way that can become his counselor.
So the specific thing you cannot
give to God here is counsel. And this is the one thing that sinners presume
most often to give God: counsel. They don't offer love or delight or faith or
hope. They offer counsel. They tell God outright or by implication: I don't
like the way you run the world; I think you should do it like this. The world is filled with God-advisers. The one thing Paul explicitly says we
cannot give, and dare not give, is what proud sinners most often give: they
tell God how he should run the world, and warn him that if he doesn't run it
their way they won't believe in him. As if a diabetic child should say to his
pediatrician: Don't give me any more shots. And if you stick me with that
insulin needle again, I'm never coming back. As if that were a threat to
God!
Don't advise. Don't threaten God.
Trust him. All else is suicide.
4. His Ways and Judgments Are
Unsearchable and Inscrutable to Our Finite Minds
Fourth, since all is from God and
through God so that we can't give him what is not already his and can't be
his counselor, therefore (according to verse 33b), no wonder we are often
confounded and perplexed by the ways and the judgments of God. How
unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways! This does not
mean that God is totally unintelligible. The mysteries of God are being
revealed in Scripture. And the Holy Spirit is given to us to illuminate our
understanding (1 Corinthians 2:14-15). But now we see in a mirror dimly, but
then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have
been fully known (1 Corinthians 13:12).
5. To God Be the Glory Forever
Which leads us finally (fifth) to
the conclusion of the whole matter the paragraph and the 11 chapters. Not
only are all things from God and
through God, but, as verse 36b says, To him are all
things. To him be glory forever.
Do you love the thought that you
exist to make God look glorious? Do you love the thought that all creation
exists to display the glory of God. Do you love the truth that all of history
is designed by God to one day be a completed canvas that displays in the best
way possible the greatness and beauty of God? Do you love the fact that Jesus
Christ came into the world to vindicate the righteousness of God and repair
the injury that we had done to the reputation of the glory of God? Do you love
the truth you personally exist to make God look like what he really
is glorious? I ask again: Do you love the fact that your salvation is meant
to put the glory of God's grace on display? Do you love seeing and showing
the glory of God?
This is why God created the
universe. This is why he ordained history. This is why he sent his Son. This
is why you exist. Forever to see and savor and show the glory of Christ, who
is the image of God. The question at the end of Romans 1-11 is. Do you
embrace this calling as your treasure and your joy?
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