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God's Repentance Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 9, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The thief on the cross was only minutes away from an eternity in hell, and because he turned to Jesus in faith he was only minutes away from an eternity in heaven. Thank God for His unchanging nature that will change a lost man to a saved man in an instant,
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One of the attributes of God is His immutability. This
means that He is unchangeable. God cannot change because
He is perfect, and any change would be for better or worse.
If it was for better, it would mean He was not perfect before
the change. If it was for worse, He would not be perfect
after the change. God is constantly and consistently the
same. Mal. 3:6 says, "For I the Lord do not change." In
James 1:17 God is described as one "who does not change
like shifting shallows."
This attribute of God is great assurance for us who live in
the turmoil of constant change. Arthur H. Clough speaks
for us when he says,
It justifies my soul to know, that,
though I perish, truth is so;
That howsoe'er I stray and range,
whate'er I do, Thoudost not change.
I steadier step when I recall
that, if I slip, Thou dost not fall.
John Campbell Shairp expresses well the contrast
between our mutability and God's immutability.
'Twixt gleams of joy and clouds of doubt
Our feelings come and go;
Our best estate is tossed about
In ceaseless ebb and flow.
No mood of feeling, form of thought,
Is constant for a day;
But Thou, O Lord, Thou changest not;
But same Thou art alway.
The doctrine of God's immutability is obvious and
unquestioned in Scripture and theology. The book of
Jonah, however, brings us to a passage that appears to
contradict this doctrine, for it states clearly that God
repented and did not do what He said He would do. He
changed His mind, and did not fulfill the prophecy that in 40
days Nineveh would be destroyed. Is it really possible for
God to change His mind and repent, or did Jonah make a
mistake? He certainly knew the fact that God was
immutable, so how could he write about God changing, and
how could God inspire him to write what appears
contradictory? God certainly cannot be unchangeable and
at the same time change His mind-or can He?
If God cannot change then the contradiction becomes
even worse in the book of I Samuel where in chapter 15
verse 29 we read that God "is not a man that He should
repent." Then only 6 verses later in verse 35 we read, "And
the Lord repented that He had made Saul King over Israel."
Certainly no author, let alone an inspired one, could fail to
see the contradiction, unless there is, in fact, no
contradiction. Our goal is to show that there is no
contradiction in the changes that take place in the
unchangeable God. In so doing we will gain a greater
biblical concept of God, and fulfill Paul's prayer for
believers that they increase in the knowledge of God. Let's
look at some solutions to this apparent contradiction.
I. Some theologians feel the solution is to explain the
contradiction away by denying one side of the issue. They
say that God does not really repent as the text states. This
language is used to make it understandable to our finite
minds. In other words, God accommodates Himself to our
capacities to understand. He doesn't really change, but only
says so for our understanding. Calvin, for example, says,
"There is a twofold view of God-as He sets Himself forth in
His Word, and as He is in His hidden counsel. With regard
to His secret counsel, God is always like Himself, and is
subject to none of our feelings; but with regard to the
teaching of His Word, He is accommodated to our
capacities."
It is hard for me to accept this, for if it is true, it means
that our revelation of God is not what He really is. If God is
unchanging in His real self, but changeable in His revealed
self, then what He has revealed is not really revelation at all,
but only an artificial God whom men can understand. It
seems to me to be dangerous to talk about God as He is in
His secret counsel in contrast to His revealed self, for if it is
secret there is nothing we can know about it, and for all we
know it is identical with His revelation. It is a sure sign of
man made theology when we are afraid to think of God as
He revealed Himself, and have to go beyond revelation to
find some way to explain away what we do not like. This
sounds to much like saying I am going to explain how to play
monopoly to a child, but I will really explain tiddly winks
instead because it is so much easier to understand. If God is
not what He reveals Himself to be, then we do not really
have a revelation of God.