This is the third part in a series on the attributes of God. Below is a short summary. Due to recording error, there is no audio. You can hear the first two parts of the series here.
The Bible is very clear that the God we serve is a God of justice. This doesn’t just mean that He likes justice or executes justice, even though these are true statements. Rather, the God of the Bible is Justice in His nature. He is the perfect picture of the justice (or rightness) that we strive for in this broken, sin-marred world. He is infinitely right and never wrong. His decrees are always fair and never with sinful favoritism. His authority is final, because He alone stands as the judge of all:
“Righteousness and justice are the foundation of your throne…” – Psalm 89:14
“There is no other God like me, a just God and a Savior; there is none besides me.” – Isaiah 45:21
“Just and true are your ways, O King of the nations!” – Revelation 15:3
With that said, some may argue that God seems to be lacking in justice when it comes to those who are saved (born again through faith in Jesus Christ; Christians). Christians are just as guilty of living sinful lives, if not more so, as non-Christians. Yet it would appear that God has chosen to sweep that injustice under some cosmic rug. As if He is ignoring our sin.
I have met many Christians who seem to believe that this is what happened when they got saved – God simply chose not to bring justice for their sin. The Bible teaches that “the wages of sin is death (separation)” [Romans 6:23], yet Christians have been promised an inheritance in heaven with their Creator [Ephesians 1]. There seems to be a contradiction here. If God is just, the wages of sin is death, Christians sin… and receive eternal life; then God must not truly be a God of Justice.
This view could not be further from the truth. The Cross of Christ is the most beautiful and tragic display of justice in all of human history. God has not chosen to ignore the Christian’s sin. Rather, He chose to atone for it by Himself.
This is the third part in a series on the attributes of God. We began with a message called “God Is: Love”. Then we discussed the fact that “God Is: Holy”. You see God is just. He requires that sin be re-payed with death. However, His love compelled Him and His Holiness qualified Him, to take our place on the cross.
So, what does it mean that we serve a God of Justice?
First, your salvation was not cheap or free. There was an extremely violent and profound cost in order to set you free from Satan’s grasp. We often live like we have been given license to do what we want without any consequence. Remember, there is always consequence for sin… Jesus just bore the brunt of it for you. We must never forget that “you are not your own, for you were bought with a price” and must always seek to “honor God with your body.” [I Corinthians 6:20]
Second, you and I need to realize that we serve a God who cares deeply about the injustices of this world. We watched the following video in youth group this past Wednesday:
“Learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, plead the widow’s cause.” – Isaiah 1:17
In the movie, “The Book of Eli”, the main character, Eli (Denzel Washington), is faced with a unique task. In a world devastated by war and corruption, he has been charged by God to protect the last remaining Bible on the planet. He has to take this Bible “west, where there are people who will cherish it”. In one scene he is walking along what used to be an overpass in a big city, but is now just a dusty path across a barren landscape. He looks down and sees a husband and wife being attacked by a group of men. The husband is shot and the men begin to attack the woman (while the movie doesn’t show much, it implies that the men are raping her). Eli then ducks behind the median on the road and repeats the following phrase as the woman is being attacked:
“Stay on the path, this is none of your concern.”
As I was watching this scene I couldn’t help but draw a convicting comparison to the American church and, honestly, to my own life. For years, most of us neglected God’s call to stand against the injustice in our world. Most of us have become very good at convincing ourselves that the pain, oppression, and evil in this world are “none of our concern.” Whatever the excuse may be, we must understand if it concerns God, it is our concern. God has chosen to use you and me, His people, to bring justice – hope, freedom, peace, comfort, joy, love – to the dark places in our world. Thirty-thousand kids will die today as a direct result of poverty. Two million children are currently a part of the world sex-trade. In India alone, there are 15 million people who have been forced into slavery. Billions of people suffer from a lack of access to clean water. Wake-up Christian, this is your path.
If you skim through the Old Testament you will see a God who cares a lot more about justice than actionless worship (actionless isn’t a word, but it should be). In the New Testament Jesus says “Woe to you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! You tithe mint and dill and cumin, but have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness. These you ought to have done without neglecting the others.” [Matthew 23:23]
God desires a generation who will stand up for the things He cares about. Are you willing? It starts with awareness, but awareness without action is empty. It can start small – stand for the brokenhearted, oppressed, or fatherless on your campus, in your city, or within your family. However, don’t count out the possibility that God wants to take you to places and use you in causes you never could have imagined.
“In different times and in different ways, our heavenly Father offers us a simple proposition: Follow me beyond what you can control, beyond where your own strength and competencies can take you, and beyond what is affirmed or risked by the crowd–and you will experience me and my power and my love.” – Gary Haugen in his book Just Courage
