PART 10
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Why have the critical duties of evangelism and being Jesus witnesses been divinely entrusted to ordinary people rather than angels?
This is the first question that came to me as I pondered issues that led to creating this webpage. I knew that if I could find the answer to why God chose us, not angels, to be his witnesses, I would be well on the way toward knowing why good Christians suffer.
You might need some background to see the connection.
I have long realized that Christians suffer on earth because they are not yet in heaven. You must be staggered by my intellectual powers in having figured that out. Nevertheless, its significant. Had we been whisked off to heaven, our suffering would be over. Why hasnt that happened? Clearly, regardless of how things seem to our short-sighted perspective, the all-knowing Lord is convinced we are needed down here. Why? Primarily it must be for the sake of those who, if they died this instant, would find themselves in serious trouble in the next life.
One reason why I say primarily rather than entirely is that, although many more of us should be in the frontline than currently are, a successful army is heavily dependent upon its support staff. By being on the spiritual war zone we call earth, we are exposed to opposition from human and spiritual enemies of God and to the consequences of living in a world that does not act according to Gods ways of love, selflessness, kindness, patience, goodness, self-control, wisdom and so on, but choose the ugly things that end up directly or indirectly hurting people, the environment and our gene pool.
This begs the question, however: why are Christians who are currently fulfilling an earthly mission not divinely placed in some sort of protective bubble, so that they are spared earthly suffering? The reason must be connected with why God has chosen us, rather than heavenly angels for critical roles in touching the lives of people down here.
We all greatly benefit from role models. The more someone differs from us, the harder it is for us to be inspired by their example to believe we can achieve similar things.
One of the biggest obstacles to people becoming Christians is that they wrongly but genuinely blame God for the suffering that evil (behavior that breaks Gods heart) brings to this planet, and they resent God for it. They need role models people who obviously adore God despite their suffering.
Im not suggesting either angels or humans forever in a bubble of divine protection (one might even say former humans) would completely fail; only that they would be less effective. Never forget the extremes our Savior went to in becoming fully human and agonizing on the cross to save people like you and me people he loves more than life itself and yet who deserve nothing other than hell. That same Savior wants nothing less than the best in the way of agents helping people accept the message of the cross. Like Moses before the burning bush, we might think others can do a better job (Exodus 3:11, Exodus 4:10-13) but God makes no mistakes in his choices.
Moreover, if Christians were divinely protected from suffering, non-Christians could, with some justification, accuse the Holy One of manipulating them by using suffering to force people to come to him and bribes to entice them.
Why was Jesus unimpressed when people wanted to make him king because he fed the crowd (John 6:12-15, 26)?
How impressed would you be by someone who didnt care about you but wanted to marry you for your money, or for the ease or status that marrying you might offer? If you want someone to marry you for love, not lesser things, can you conceive of how important this is for the God who said that us loving him and loving other people are the two most important things to him (Matthew 22:35-40)? We might want to be loved merely for selfish reasons but our Lord wants us because without love we will be morally depraved and never reach our God-given potential for greatness.
These people wanted Jesus, not because they wanted to be godly but for the physical things he offered, including protection and freedom from oppression (they wanted to make him king).
If Christians received physical benefits on earth, most people would want to be Christians for these things, not for spiritual reasons.
Most people who become Christians in order to enjoy the ease and prosperity and safety of a protective bubble would not be Christians at all. They would still be lovers of self, lovers of money, boastful, arrogant, . . . unthankful, unholy, . . . unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, fierce, . . . headstrong, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God; holding a form of godliness, but having denied its power . . . (2 Timothy 3:2-4). They might seem model Christians but they would be wolves in sheeps clothing; Bible-carrying thieves, sex fiends, pleasure junkies, back-stabbers and/or spongers.
If you whine that God isnt fair by sometimes letting us suffer as if we had not been divinely rescued from the consequences of our sin, remember how dramatically the cross proves our loving Lord asks nothing of us he would not do indeed has done for us. Even more sobering is that he alone was truly innocent. He alone is worthy of heavens bliss. We, on the other hand, contributed to this worlds sin and deserve never-ending suffering; banished forever from sin-free heaven. If, instead of recognizing this, we look down on sinners, we are in grave spiritual danger.
Most people who are angry at God think it is because God isnt loving enough; unaware that the real reason is that, by their standards, God is too loving. They have no idea that if our Lord were to act like they want him to, he would have to be an unjust God who plays favorites by being kinder to them than to those they disapprove of.
Most of us want a God who comes down hard on sin, except our own sin.
Like the Bible-loving righteous who crucified their Messiah, we are terrifyingly off-track if we imagine our sins are more minor or excusable than those of people we despise and that we deserve more mercy from God than them. Nevertheless, we are geniuses at dreaming up outlandish reasons why this should be so and why God should not tolerate a moment longer other peoples sins that directly or indirectly impact us.
To begin to grasp the gravity of one minor sin, see One Sin. The Jesus who was so tender toward those who were crushed with sorrow over their own sin (Scriptures) is the same Jesus who tore strips off the self-righteous who looked down on others (Scriptures).
We are best able to see Gods heart when it is portrayed in human flesh.
Look up at the stars. Are they shaken from their place if you sin? asked one of Jobs friends. Your sin or good living affects you, not God. Thats my loose paraphrase of Job 35:5-8. Prior to Jesus, we might have philosophically speculated along those lines, but not after God was born. By becoming fully human, Jesus achieved so very much in revealing God to us. We have no idea, for example, of the extent to which angels are capable of feeling pain or human emotions. Through Jesus agony on the cross, however, we know that God is in no sense aloof but very personally and profoundly affected by human sin and human suffering.
Likewise, by us remaining fully human and subject to the frailties and suffering of sinful humanity, we can portray God more powerfully than any angel or human in a protective bubble.
The more you familiarize yourself with the Old Testament prophets, the more you will see that, soaring above their miracles or the accuracy of their prophecies, it is their very humanity and vulnerability that moves us. There is Jeremiah who wept over and over and over because of his nations sin. There is Elijah, who slumped into such depression that he wanted to die. For three years Isaiah went stripped and barefoot as a sign (Isaiah 20:3). Hosea married an adulterous woman (Hosea 1:2; 3:1) to demonstrate what God suffered. In order to emphasize the seriousness of his warnings, when Ezekiels precious wife, described as the desire of your eyes suddenly died, the Lord forbade him to as much as shed a tear or show any sign of mourning (Ezekiel 24:16-17). Similarly, Jeremiah was required to suffer the shame and loss of being childless and unmarried (Jeremiah 16:2). These things tug at our hearts. Our shared humanity recognizes the depth of their suffering and the seriousness of their plight, thus amplifying their message; touching us in ways that blissfully aloof beings could not.
If, for our sake, our innocent Lord became fully human and subject to suffering that sinful people are exposed to in fact, suffered more than most is he asking too much for us to remain fully human on this sin-ravished planet a little longer in the hope of us helping people who need salvation as desperately as we once did?
Ponder the implications of this revealing story:
Matthew 18:23-35 . . . the Kingdom of Heaven is like a certain king, who wanted to reconcile accounts with his servants.
When he had begun to reconcile, one was brought to him who owed him ten thousand talents. But because he couldnt pay, his lord commanded him to be sold, with his wife, his children, and all that he had, and payment to be made.
The servant therefore fell down and knelt before him, saying, Lord, have patience with me, and I will repay you all! The lord of that servant, being moved with compassion, released him, and forgave him the debt.
But that servant went out, and found one of his fellow servants, who owed him one hundred denarii, and he grabbed him, and took him by the throat, saying, Pay me what you owe!
So his fellow servant fell down at his feet and begged him, saying, Have patience with me, and I will repay you! He would not, but went and cast him into prison, until he should pay back that which was due.
So when his fellow servants saw what was done, they were exceedingly sorry, and came and told to their lord all that was done.
Then his lord called him in, and said to him, You wicked servant! I forgave you all that debt, because you begged me. Shouldnt you also have had mercy on your fellow servant, even as I had mercy on you?
His lord was angry, and delivered him to the tormentors, until he should pay all that was due to him. So my heavenly Father will also do to you, if you dont each forgive your brother from your hearts for his misdeeds.
This parable is sympathetic and realistic, in that the amount the servant was owed his loss; how much his act of kindness had cost him was substantial. There is no glossing over it. The original hearers would have gasped. It would take a normal workingman years of hard, sacrificial saving to accumulate this pile of money (Details). The servant genuinely had something to complain about.
The shattering thing, however, is that the amount representing how much his sin had cost his Lord and how indebted he was to God was more than half a million times more.
For anyone so in debt to be so ungrateful and act so contrary to his Lords generous heart is a crime against humanity and a slap in the face to God. Sinners are so precious to God that, as the parable emphasizes, to fail to respect and help them with a fraction of the enormity of love that God has shown us, will not go unpunished.
Elsewhere, too, Jesus stressed that if we cannot be compassionate and forgiving toward those who hurt us, we disqualify ourselves from the divine mercy on which our salvation hinges (Examples).
The Story So Far
There are more answers to come. We will see how suffering can benefit the sufferer as well as observers. The impact on observers, however, is of immeasurable significance. To save lives is something good people are willing to risk and endure much to attempt. Physically saving someones life, however, is merely delaying his death. Christians alone can be used of God to truly save lives.
![]() Not to be sold. © Copyright, Grantley Morris, 2018, 2019. For much more by the same author, see www.net-burst.com No part of these writings may be copied without citing this entire paragraph.
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Bible Versions Used
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