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Octavius Winslow

Evening Thoughts — January 6

Octavius Winslow January, 6 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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January, 6 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about God's providence?

The Bible teaches that God's providence is His sovereign control and guidance over all creation.

In Scripture, God's providence is affirmed as His sovereign control over all events in the universe. Verses like Job 9:11-12 remind us that God's ways may be mysterious, but they are ultimately guided by His perfect wisdom and love. For instance, the story of Joseph illustrates how God used even the most difficult circumstances for His greater purpose, emphasizing that what seems adverse to us can serve His overarching plan of grace and goodness. Thus, acknowledging God’s providence encourages believers to trust in His guidance even when His ways are not immediately clear.

Job 9:11-12

How do we know God's love is present in our hardships?

God's love is evident in the way He guides and comforts us through our hardships.

Scripture repeatedly affirms that God's love undergirds His providential dealings with us, even in trial. The experiences of biblical figures such as Jacob and Naomi showcase the tension between perceived abandonment and the reality of God's unwavering love. Despite their distress, we are reminded that God's love cannot be obscured by the difficulties we face. Romans 8:28 encourages that God works all things for the good of those who love Him, illustrating that His love is the foundation for every circumstance. Our sufferings are not without purpose, and they are interwoven with His loving providence.

Romans 8:28, Job 9:11-12

Why is understanding God's mystery important for Christians?

Understanding God's mystery strengthens our faith and trust in His divine plan.

Recognizing the mysteries of God's dealings is critical for a robust faith. As seen in the lives of Joseph and Job, what seem like chaotic or painful experiences often serve a divine purpose beyond our comprehension. Accepting that God operates in perfect wisdom, even when we cannot see the reasons or outcomes, helps believers rest in His sovereignty. This trust fosters a deeper relationship with God, encouraging us to rely on Him amidst confusion. The acknowledgment that 'It is the glory of God to conceal a thing' (Proverbs 25:2) sparks humility and reverence in our hearts as we navigate the complexities of life.

Proverbs 25:2, Job 9:11-12

Lo, he goes by me, and I see him not: he passes on also, but I perceive him not. Behold, he takes away, who can hinder him? who will say unto him, What do you? Job 9:11-12

AND is this the way of the Lord with you, my beloved? Are you bewildered at the mazes through which you are threading your steps; at the involved circumstances of your present history? Deem yourself not alone in this. No mystery has lighted upon your path but what is common to the one family of God: "This honor have all his saints." The Shepherd is leading you, as all the flock are led, with a skillful hand, and in a right way. It is yours to stand if He bids you, or to follow if He leads. "He gives no account of any of His matters," assuming that His children have such confidence in His wisdom, and love, and uprightness, as in all the wonder-working of His dealings with them, to "be still and know that He is God." Throw back a glance upon the past, and see how little you have ever understood of all the way God has led you. What a mystery—perhaps now better explained—has enveloped His whole proceedings! When Joseph, for example, was torn from the homestead of his father, sold, and borne a slave into Egypt, not a syllable of that eventful page of his history could he spell. And yet God's way with this His servant was perfect. And could Joseph have seen at the moment that he descended into the pit, where he was cast by his envious brethren, all the future of his history as vividly and as palpably as be beheld it in after years, while there would have been the conviction that all was well, we doubt not that faith would have lost much of its vigor, and God much of His glory. And so with good old Jacob. The famine, the parting with Benjamin, the menacing conduct of Pharaoh's prime minister, wrung the mournful expression from his lips, "All these things are against me." All was veiled in deep and mournful mystery. Thus was it with Job, to whom God spoke from the whirlwind that swept every vestige of affluence and domestic comfort from his dwelling. And thus, too, with Naomi, when she exclaimed, "Call me not Naomi, call me Mara: for the Almighty has dealt very bitterly with me. I went out full, and the Lord has brought me home again empty." That it is to the honor of God to conceal, should in our view justify all His painful and humiliating procedure with us. "It is the glory of God to conceal a thing," as it will be for His endless glory, by and by, fully to reveal it all. But there is one thing, Christian sufferer, which He cannot conceal. He cannot conceal the love that forms the spring and foundation of all His conduct with His saints. Do what He will, conceal as He may, be His chariot the thick clouds, and His way in the deep sea, still His love betrays itself, disguised though it may be in dark and impenetrable providence. There are under-tones, gentle and tender, in the roughest accents of our Joseph's voice. And he who has an ear ever hearkening to the Lord shall often exclaim, "Speak, Lord, how and when and where you may—it is the voice of my Beloved!"

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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