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The Lord Or Luck Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 9, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: God cannot let a man be free to disobey His law and at the same time compel him to obey it. This is the price God was willing to pay to make a man with free will.
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A speculator, who won and lost money by instinct, was
discussing success with a business man who had done very
well. They were discussing whether success was attained by
planned judgment, or by mere luck. The business man said
judgment, but the speculator held out for luck. He pointed
out to the business man that he was a forty-niner, and that
that was an adventure, but he responded that it was not so
for him for it was planned. "Well then," said the speculator,
"You came to New York just when the investment of your
money would bring the highest returns, that was luck."
"No," insisted the business man, for it had been his own wise
judgment. After several more examples to which he
received the same reply, the speculator concluded, "Well,
you'll have to admit you are mighty lucky to have such good
judgment."
The whole issue of providence and chance; sovereignty
and free will; the Lord or luck, is a complex one, but one
that we must think about seriously since it governs much of
our attitude toward life and circumstances. Lack of thought
at this point causes many Christians to be very inconsistent
in their ideas. Sometimes we are like the professor who was
going to lecture on the III World War. He announced his
two major points in his introduction. First he said we will
consider why there will be no war, and second we will
consider what to do when it comes. Christians get into the
same fix when they say nothing is of chance, and then
condemn gambling because it is not of God. We want to
look at the sailors method of accusing Jonah as a starting
point to try and reconcile the concepts of luck and the
sovereignty of God.
I. IS LUCK REAL?
The sailors certainly did not think that casting lots was a
matter of luck. They wanted to know on whose account the
storm had come, and they believed that the gods revealed
their will through the lot. Since, however, this practice as
not in conformity with belief in the one true God, we must
recognize that their views amounted to superstition. These
sailors did not make this up for this occasion. It was a
practice of life, and they had doubtless made other decisions
by lot. Are we to suppose that all decisions of ancient or
modern pagans are guided by the Lord, as this one was? If
so, then we are led to the conclusion that superstition was
not wrong after all, and that the pagan world was guided by
God by superstition, as was His chosen people by revelation.
This conclusion is contrary to all the facts, for the vast
majority of pagan practices and superstitions were an
abomination to God. God did use this particular event of lot
casting to reveal His will, but certainly He did not do so in
all cases. Most pagan decisions were decided by what we
would call luck. They were events which were not decided
by God's will, but by chance causes which were not known
or predictable. In other words, many innocent people
suffered as being guilty not because God willed it but
because foolish men made their decisions on the basis of
chance. It was deciding which of two men accused of
murder would be guilty by the flip of a coin. People use to
determine guilt by binding a person up and throwing them
in the river. If they drowned they were presumed innocent,
and if they floated they were presumed guilty.
I cannot believe that all such folly has been the will of
God. It has, instead, been the result of blindness to His will.
I am convinced that all that happens in life is not God's will,
for if it was, it would be meaningless to pray thy will be done
on earth as it is in heaven. Jesus taught us to pray this,
therefore, it is clear that God's will is not always done on
earth as it is in heaven. This makes me question the easy
and superficial attitude of many Christians who say nothing
happens by chance, or there is no such thing as luck. If they
mean that nothing happens without a cause, then all can
agree, for every effect has a cause. But to say that all causes
are God' s will is to contradict the clear teaching of His
Word that sin is not His will, and the effects of sin are not
His will.
Events and things that happen that are not intended by
God, and are not caused by the will of man, is what I mean
by luck. Calvin believed that all that happens is the direct
will of God. He even rejected the idea of God's permissive