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A Theology Of Problems Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 3, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: History began with a problem. Problems are more universal than sin, for Jesus had no sin but He had problems. Even before sin, Adam and Eve had a problem. Their problem was, should I obey God or not?
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A woman who wanted her apartment painted while she
was out of town was very fussy. She insisted that the ceiling
be painted the exact shade of her ash tray. The painters
after trying to mix this exact shade unsuccessfully finally hit
upon a solution to their problem. They painted the ash tray
with the same shade they used to paint the ceiling. When the
woman returned she was delighted with the perfect match
they had made.
Problems sometimes can be solved so easily, to the liking
of everyone involved, but unfortunately, paint does not cover
them all. Dr. Paul Tournier, the famous Christian psychiatrist,
says people come to him all the time for help in
solving their problems, and he discovers they are caught in
unsolvable vicious circles. They need faith to experience
God's grace, but they need God's grace to find faith. They
need forgiveness in order to love, but they need love in order
to forgive and be forgiven. Self-confidence is needed in
order to succeed, but success is need to give them
self-confidence. The list can go on and on to the point that it
leaves problem solvers wishing they had chosen math rather
than people, for all math problems do have answers, but
how do you solve the problems of people?
Sometimes it seems like you can't win. Like the little boy
who came home from school and told his mother he was in a
fine fix. The teachers says I have to learn to write more
legibly, and if I do she will find out that I can't spell. Even
kids feel the vicious circle. The reason advice columns are
so popular is because everybody is looking for solutions to
their problems. Marriage, family, sex, relationships of all
kinds, the world cries out, "Help me with my problems!"
And an array of experts are striving everyday to find
answers to that cry. The most thought word in the English
language, if not the most uttered, is help!
If you give a little thought to the professions of life, you
discover they almost all revolve around problems. If there
we no medical or physical problems, the doctors, nurses, and
hospitals, with all of the surgeons and specialists would have
no reason for their existence. They exist to solve problems.
If there were no legal problems, the lawyers and judges would
be out of a job. If there were no problems with crime
and fire, policemen and firemen could all be laid off. If
there were no problems with the mental and emotional
stress of life, the psychologist, psychiatrist, and counselors
could all close shop. If cars, trucks, and planes, never
developed a problem, the mechanics would all be useless. If
ignorance was not a problem, teachers and universities
could call it quits. We could go on and on making it clear
that just about everything that life is about is some form of
problem solving.
The entire Bible is a problem solving book. It tells us that
God has a major problem.
How can He save fallen man who has disobeyed His will?
The whole revelation of God is dealing with this problem.
Jesus came to be the great problem solver. He healed people
of their physical, mental, moral, and even social problems.
He then died on the cross to solve, once and for all, the
problem of sin, and make it possible for all sin to be
forgiven. He then rose from the dead to solve the greatest
problem in man's mind, how can I live forever? The Gospel
is God at His best in problem solving, but even that does not
end it all. Problems are what the rest of the New Testament
is all about. The problem of weak Christians, baby
Christians, backsliding Christians, rebellious Christians,
and unsanctified Christians.
We could go on and on listing the problems the New
Testament deals with, but the specifics are not our focus at
this point. This survey is to help us get the over all picture
of the Bible and life so we can see the book of Ruth in its full
context. Ruth is a book about real life, the real life of real
men and women. The result is, it is a book which is problem
oriented from the very first verse. It is one continuous battle
to find sense in a world that so often seems senseless. The
first problem of the book is:
1. A FEDERAL PROBLEM. The government of Israel in
those troubled times was very poor. Every man did what
was right in his own eyes. The judges were spectacular, but
no one person can make a good government, and so people
were at the mercy of circumstances, and had little control
over their lives.
2. A FAMINE PROBLEM. Nature became a foe rather