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Fatalism Or Faith Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 20, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: America is Christian in its thinking in that we are a nation that says folly does not need to be repeated. We can learn from our mistakes and go on to change the future for the better and prevent tragedies that otherwise would be inevitable.
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A young man driving through the rich part of the city could not believe his eyes when he saw a
sign on a Mercedes Benz that said, "For Sale $100.00. He pulled into the driveway and went to the
door, and he asked if the sign was correct. The woman assured him that it was. He asked, "Is there
something wrong with the car?" She told him that it ran perfectly. He whipped out his checkbook
and bought it on the spot. As he stuck the title into his pocket he asked the lady, "Why are you
selling this car so cheap?" She said, "Well, I'll tell you. My husband ran off with his secretary a few
days ago, and he just wired me from Hawaii this morning asking me to sell his car and send him the
check."
Nobody gets everything they ask for or hope for, and in cases like this we can say thank God.
But the fact is, the good guys don't always get what they want either. Paul wanted all who heard
him on Mars Hill to repent and become followers of Christ. But the text says that there were only a
few who responded. This was no second Pentecost with three thousand coming to Christ. Only a
handful came, and so we see that the best of evangelists with the best of skills, and sharing the best
of messages, do not always achieve the best of success. Nobody gets what they want all the time-not
even God.
Jesus wept over Jerusalem saying, "I would have gathered you as a mother hen gathers her
chicks under her wing, but you would not." Jesus wept for the rich young ruler because He loved
him and wanted him to be a follower, but he turned and went away." If God always got what He
wanted, there would be no disobedience to His will. If God got His will done in all lives, then His
will would be done on earth as it is in heaven, but we know this is not so, for there would be no need
to pray for it if it was so.
If even a sovereign God, who has all power, does not get all he does desire, then it is obvious
that he chooses this as a possibly. In other words, the only way an all powerful God could not get
His will done is by a sovereign choice to let it be possible that His will not be done. If He chooses
this, then even the not doing of His will is His will. If God says, "I do not want anyone to murder
another human, but I will let men be free to defy my will and do it anyway," then you have God's
will being done even in murder but lets keep in mind that we clearly have two levels of His will.
God's first priority is that nobody murder, for this is His command. His will, in the sense of
what He wants to be, is that nobody murder another person. But He does not in His sovereign power
do what He could do, and that is to make sure that by sheer force nobody ever breaks that command.
What He does is permit men to do what He does not want. When they do this it is called His
permissive will. His priority will is what He wants, and His permissive will is what He allows
whether He wants it or not. These two wills are often opposites, for the priority will is always right
and just, but the permissive will can be neutral or evil. If I eat an apple rather than an orange, that is
God's permissive will. He leaves the choice to me. I do not please Him more by eating one or the
other. But if I choose to steal an apple from the store, God will permit it, but I am out of His priority
will, for I have broken His law. It is His will that I be free to do so, but it is not His will that I
actually do so.
So what we have here is the fact that everything is God's will in some sense, but the sense may
be radically different. It is God's priority will that I not steal, but it is His permissive will that makes
me free to steal. To be in God's will means to be in His priority will, and that means to be doing
what He wants me to do. The distinction of these two wills is vital to a biblical theology, for if one
does not make this distinction it leads to fatalism. Fatalism is the belief that all events are
determined by necessity or by fate, and so everything is God's will.