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A.W. Tozer Talks

The Foundations of the World are out of Plumb

Pastor and Author A.W. Tozer

May 3, 1953

You will find the Book of Psalms to be a very revealing book, for the Holy Spirit is in the Book of Psalms, and as has been said, the Spirit of Christ is in the Psalms. And many places in the Book of Psalms you will find the Holy Spirit looking down the centuries and making present tense statements, which were not present tense, but were future prophetic tense.

The “is” is sometimes way down the years, and this 82nd Psalm is that kind of psalm. Certainly, it has its local application to circumstances that gave it birth. But just as certainly there is more here than at first meets the attention, there is the groaning and the yearning of the Spirit of Christ which was in them, to quote Peter, who saw and here foretells conditions that are to be in later times. We have a picture here of God standing among the mighty angels, not sitting because He had risen.

If you are interested in this, you will find many places in the Bible where God stands, but almost always God sits. A judge always sits. It is a subject that stands. So that we find God sitting and men standing in His presence, that is as it should be. The great God sits quietly and calmly in His everlasting rest while men and angels stand before Him. But a few times we see God standing.

When our Lord Jesus Christ went to heaven, the Scripture says that He sat down on the right hand of the Father. We read of that very many places in the Bible, that Jesus Christ sat down on the right hand of God. His position is that of a seated one. Having completed the work on earth, He has now gone to sit down, waiting the time when His enemies shall be made His footstool.

But there was one exception to this, and that was when they were stoning Stephen to death. Stephen looked up, and his death-dimmed eyes became preternaturally bright, and he said, I see Jesus sitting, standing at the right hand of God. He had been sitting, now He is standing, as though he had become suddenly so keenly interested that He rose and was gazing down, in His divine excitement, watching His first martyr die.

Here we find God standing now, and He is standing among the mighty angels. Here is what He sees. He sees injustice, and oppression, and poverty, and ignorance, and darkness, and dying, and He sees it all over the earth. It says here that He judgeth among the gods. That gives some people a notion that there are gods, and that God recognizes these gods. The truth is very much otherwise. God does not recognize any gods.

He says, I am the Lord, and there is none other beside me. But the word “gods” here is elohim in the plural, and it is a reference to leaders and judges of the earth. It is, says Rotherham, God ascribing to those whom He has placed in high position, something of His own name, because they are His ambassadors. He gives them not the sword in vain. They are the judges and rulers of the earth. And God boldly calls them after His own name, and says, God standeth in the congregation of the mighty, He judgeth among the elohim, the judges, the rulers of the earth.

And what He sees there, I repeat, is injustice, and oppression, and poverty, not the poverty that a reluctant earth might impose upon a people who could not rest a living from her, but rather the poverty that comes from oppression and from injustice. And there was ignorance and darkness and dying. The sad thing about this all, my friends, is that it could be avoided. All of this could have been avoided.

Now, in this dark world in which we live, there are some things that can’t very well be avoided. And I suppose that we might as well get used to them and say, there be here; they were here when my grandfather walked the hills of Ohio or Indiana. And they were here when the red Indian roamed and hunted the buffalo there. And they were and will be and always have been, and we may expect them to be.

There will always be accidents, and there will always be diseases, and there will always be bereavement as long as the sun rises and sets. And there will always be the sad leave-taking when friend greets and shakes the hand of friend and tearlessly turns away with an agony that knows no respite in tears. There will always be the lightning that will flash out of the sky and smite the great oak, and the boy that lies sleeping under it. And there will always be the wild beasts and the rampaging river and the tornado and the tempest.

And my friends, you can take all of the accidents of the world and all of the adverse forces of nature and include in it all the diseases that mortal flesh is heir to and combine them together. And you will not have all told and added up as much sheer misery and pain as man imposes upon himself by his wicked deeds.

This is not merely a preacher talking. Let us look at over the last hundred years. There have been floods in Europe, and there have been earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. And there have been in Europe over the last hundred years epidemics and the outbreak of diseases. There have been storms and lightning flashes. Nature has shaken her fallen shoulders, and poor victims have died. No one with an ounce of brains would deny that nor attempt to deny it.

And nobody would dare to close his eyes if he has any regard to his own reputation for sanity, and say that nature is all gentle and tender, and that all is good, and good is all, and all is God, and God is all, and all is all, and none of that. We got to face facts, and we might as well be realistic.

Europe, just to choose one continent, has suffered greatly in the last hundred years, sporadically, now and again. There has been toil, and there have been tears, and there have been bereavements and losses. But ladies and gentlemen, it fell to the lot of one little undersized man, inconsequential in looks and build and weight, education and gifts, it fell to the lot of one little man to bring to the continent of Europe more suffering and agony and pain in four years’ time than one hundred years of the combined forces of misfortune was able to visit upon that same continent.

Korea has had her famines, and she has seen her people die. The snows and bitter cold of the winters have taken their toll, and diseases have taken their toll. But in the last two years in Korea, man has visited upon that peninsula more sheer misery and unbearable pain than all the unfortunate circumstances that nature might have visited in the last five hundred years.

God standeth among the mighty. He judges among the elohim, and He’s not pleased with what He sees. For He sees injustice and oppression and a poverty that’s imposed, and He sees an ignorance that can’t be excused and a darkness that shrouds the minds of men, and He sees dying and dying and dying.

Now he says, ye are gods, but you shall die like men, because you will bring down upon you your social structure. You will bring it down on your heads by the natural law of cause and effect. It will not be as the astronomers sometimes dream by a sideswipe from some wandering maverick planet. It will not be as the result of the insects taking over the earth as some naturalists prophesy morbidly.

It will be that man proves himself unfit to live and therefore must die like men, that he proves himself unfit to build and must watch his structure collapse around his ears. Your building, says the Holy Ghost, is worthless. It can’t last because all the foundations of humanity are out of plumb. And everybody knows that if you build a building upon a crooked foundation, your building will stand in imminent peril of falling. The higher you go and the heavier your superstructure, the more certain will be the collapse.

Now, the hope of the nations is deceitful. I wish that I might be able to be an optimist one time in my life if God would only allow me. I’d love to do it. I’d love to get up sometime and for 25 minutes or 45 minutes just stand here and spout optimism and tell you that I believe that the world is getting better. But I’d be a liar if I said it. The hope of the nations is deceitful. But the nations of the world, strangely, are seeking to make a sound, free world for themselves. And they’re promising it to the people.

I am not as old as I will be if I live ten years more. I’m older than I thought I was because I was in a restaurant tonight with my little girl. She’s 13 and looks older. And the waitress came up and wanted to know if that was my granddaughter. Imagine that, she needs glasses.

But I’ve been around quite a while, and I have seen quite a number of men get elected. I’ve seen three presidents elected on the promise that there wouldn’t be any war. Or if there was any, they’d get over it right away.

When I was just old enough to be interested in such a thing, Woodrow Wilson ran for the presidency on the slogan, he kept us out of war. And we elected him with a great big majority. And he was hardly inaugurated when he had to declare war on Germany. And we had three years of World War I.

There was a silver-voiced gentleman whom I never followed, but whom I can’t help but admire because he certainly was a big man. And with his New York accent, he told the trembling mothers of America, I say to you again and again and again that your sons will never fight on foreign soil. Three of mine did. That was World War II.

And in our horror of dying and blood and woe and prison camps, the American electorate last fall turned in fury on the man they thought had put them in Korea and listened to the voice of the man who said, if I’m elected, I’ll go over. No, I admire the gentleman that said it. I think he’s just a good, honest American, and a good and big American. But he opened his mouth a little too wide when he told us, or gave us to understand that he could bring war to a end. One hundred days he’s been in the White House, and they’re still dying in Korea. It’s not his fault.

The only fault would lie in a man saying they can when the whole world is stacked against them. They can’t. Woodrow Wilson meant well, but the foundations of the world are out of joint. Franklin Roosevelt never meant to betray the mothers when he said again and again, they’ll not go overseas. They did go. And Ike Eisenhower’s honest, Kansas heart meant what he said, that the foundations of the world are out of joint.

How long has it been since they were promising us the four freedoms? How long since they said we’ll fight this out and finish it and then we’ll never have any more war? We’ll have freedom from war. I think at that time they called it war. Freedom, they said, from war, because we hate war. But war we’ve had, brother. Go and ask those poor Koreans.

My son who fought in Korea said, Dad, it was touching and almost unbelievable a wave of war would sweep over a hillside. And there would be a little hut, and you’d see the old Korean with his tired old wife and a kid or two, and he’d get his belongings on his back and disappear into the woods or cave someplace, and the wave of war would pass over.

As soon as the last retreating soldier’s neck was, back of his neck was seen, they’d be right back in where they’d been before. Next week, the wave would come back the other way and out would go the Korean to the hills with his sack full of possessions. And as soon as the backs of the necks of the soldiers seen back, he was in his little hut again.

Go to Korea and say, are you free from war? Go to Indochina and ask that question. Go to Laos, where they’re rapidly engaged in the terrible business of losing their nation to the Communists. Ask them, are you free from war? No. It was all big, windy talk, this talk about freedom from war. And they said we were to have freedom of religion.

I’m just reminding us of what they said, freedom of religion. But we have gotten more persecution and had more religious troubles since the war ended than we had for decades before. Go to Columbia and ask our missionaries, is there freedom of religion there? No, of course not. Go to Palestine and inquire. Arab and Jews quarreling. Go to India.

Nehru has lately come out with an edict that nobody dares make converts there. No freedom of religion. Freedom from want, they said. The orators and the silver-tongued boys that yodel down the airways, vote for me and we’ll fix up this business. Everybody will have enough. Go into the dark places of the earth and inquire.

Our missionaries say, and all the good people tell us, such a percentage, and it’s a large, high percentage, never have enough to eat from the time they’re born till they die. No freedom from want.

And then freedom for the masses. No freedom for the masses. We have the greatest freedom in America, and I thank God we do. But there’s no freedom in Czechoslovakia. There’s no freedom in East Germany. There’s no freedom in Yugoslavia, nor in Russia, nor in China, nor in Manchuria, nor in Austria, nor wherever the heel of the Communists has gone, there’s no freedom. Freedom is a mirage.

And the relative and conditional freedom which we have in this country has been at the price of everlasting vigilance and eternal warfare to keep ourselves free. But the foundations of the world are out of plumb.

And the temple of freedom rests upon a foundation. It isn’t something that simply grows up like a dandelion without planting and without cultivation. There are great foundations that are there, and if those foundations are crooked, the building will be crooked. It’s just a question of time till it collapses.

These foundations foretell the future of the temple. Any builder can stand up and look at a foundation and know theoretically what will happen without ever waiting around. We built this building, we had on our board a gentleman who’s still with us.

I don’t know whether he’s here tonight, Mr. Marx, a structural engineer. And he could look at a few marks on a piece of paper and tell you whether the thing was structurally sound or not.

Somebody wrote him all enthusiastically, his daughter Esther, from up in New York State, and she told him about the building that the Alliance district had built at Rome, Delta Lake at Rome, and gave him a description of it. And he made a few marks on a piece of paper and said that building won’t stand, that it’ll collapse.

And that year, somewhere, I think in December, when the heavy snows came, it collapsed. It went down so flat that even the seats went down with it. It was a big tabernacle. Even the seats flattened out. There wasn’t anything around there that wasn’t as flat as a hymn book. He never saw the thing; he just heard the description of it.

You don’t have to be there if you have any imagination, brother. All you have to do is project what you know into what you don’t know, and you have what you known. See what I mean?

So, you don’t have to wait around to see whether Democrats or Republicans come out on top. All you have to do to project and foretell the future is to say, look at your foundations. If your foundations are solid, your superstructure will stand. If they’re not solid or if they’re crooked or out of line, it’ll go down, it can’t help it. You needn’t be a prophet; you only need to be a man with a bit of imagination and information.

Now let’s look at the foundations of human society. Sketch them out here a minute as we go along. One of the first is faith in God. It’s absolutely essential to the sanity of the human race that men believe rightly concerning God.

Put these down, if you will, for they constitute the foundations of society. And if they’re crooked, society will be crooked. And anything built upon crooked foundations is bound to collapse.

The day in which we live, faith in God is a rarity. Somebody will say, no, I know better, Mr. Tozer. There are more Bible schools and more big evangelists and more coast-to-coast broadcasts and more FMs and shortwaves and more Bibles printed and all that. I know that there’s more faith in God than there used to be.

Well, maybe, faith of a kind. But what kind of God is it people are believing in now? I ask you. They say that there’s a resurgence of religion in America, that more people are buying books about religion and more people are going to church than used to go to church. One man said, greatly encouraged, that there was, I think, sixty-some percent belong to churches now and only ten percent belong to churches in the days of the founding fathers. Therefore, the difference between ten percent and sixty-some percent is the difference in how good we are compared with how good we were then.

My friends, it’s impossible to be very much wronger than that. Faith in God doesn’t simply mean to have an area of your hide somewhere that’s sensitive to religion. That doesn’t mean that. You can find more carnal, unborn-again, self-centered old maids than you could bury in Grand Canyon who have religion and they’re sensitive toward it.

You can find more stoop-shouldered, weary old beaten-up men like me who have some sensitivity toward religion. You can find it. You can find men that live like the devil but they’re sensitive toward religion. And if an evangelist sweeps through and the excitement gets big enough, they’ll go to the meeting and swell the crowd and give a dollar and get counted and get photographed and it’ll look big.

But the catch is here. After it’s all over, the moral standards of the community are right where they were before. And whatever does not raise the moral standard of a church, or the community has not been a revival from God.

We have become too chummy with God altogether. We have dragged God down to our level in place of painstakingly trying to help Him to bring us to His, humanly speaking. And the God we believe in is not the sovereign God who judges men.

And when we believe in that kind of God, we’ll change our way of living, and we’ll change it for the better. And we’ll repent and we’ll reform, and we’ll turn to God, and we’ll cease to do evil and we’ll begin to do good. And we’ll put away our evil from us and we’ll turn from the world and turn hard unto God.

Seek to crucify our flesh and put on the new man which is renewed in holiness. Faith in God is all but gone. When the Son of Man cometh, will he find faith on the earth? So don’t you be taken in by statistics that tell you that more people belong to churches now than belonged in the days of our fathers.

In the days of our fathers, everybody except a rare infidel now and then, and he had been taken. But everybody went to church. Grandfather got up. Grandmother got up. Married couple got up. Then they dug their babies and children out of their beds and all fixed them all up. And washed them off and put clothing on them they hated thoroughly. They got into their starched clothes, out of their ginghams. And marched off to church and sat together in church through sermons an hour to two hours long. And rode there in a buggy and rode back in a buggy. Hayburners, if you please, took their time about getting there. And almost everybody went to church.

But nowadays almost everybody goes to church Easter and Christmas, and for the rest of the time they don’t. That’s number one. Faith in God. Any hope for the nations that is not built upon faith in God is a false hope and will collapse.

Then there’s love for our fellow men. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God and thy neighbor as thyself, love for our fellow men. But in place of that we have quarreling and lying and exploiting and competing to a shocking degree.

But did you happen to notice this? Since the beginning of the world there never has been more hatred among nations than today. And that hatred doesn’t cross the color line always. In fact, rarely does. It’s within the race itself. The presence of specific races is not the source of our trouble. Our trouble is the disease of our own hearts.

And the white Russian hates the white American. And twice within 25 years the white German tried to kill and destroy the white Englishman. Occasionally there’s race flare-ups between races. But mostly it’s within their own racial strain. It’s not race, brethren, it’s sin. Sin, sin, sin, sin. And the foundations of the world are out of focus, out of plumb, because we hate instead of love.

Then there’s a mutual trust, and that’s very close to what I’ve been saying before. Mutual trust among men and nations. Where is there any trust among nations? Do you trust a communist? Does he trust you? No. I wouldn’t believe a communist if he stood on the stack of 150 Bibles and swore by the beard of Lenin. I wouldn’t believe him. He’s a liar. He’s a liar from the beginning. He’s been taught to lie. Lying has become his religion. And hell has become his heaven. Sin has done all this.

So, there’s no trust among nations. And friends, if you can’t have trust among nations, you can’t have a lasting edifice of any sort. I might mention the relation of parents to children. Children to their parents has gone so badly out of plumb in the last 50 years, under the prodding of John Dewey and the Columbia School, and old maid preachers that wear trousers and shave, but have enough manhood to be able to tell the truth. There’s no obedience to parents left anymore. The foundations are upside down and out of joint.

And as soon as the children are able to earn their own money, they turn on their parents, scorned in a great many instances. And until there has been established a proper relationship between the parent and the child, there never can be a foundation that is strong. And until we have a strong and level foundation, we never can have a safe superstructure.

The English couldn’t whip us. Some fellow took a ride one time and said, the British are coming. You remember that? One lantern, if they’re on, coming in canoes, and another lantern if they’re walking. Remember that? That was Paul Revere. The English couldn’t beat us. The Indians couldn’t beat us, and the Spaniards couldn’t beat us, and the Germans couldn’t beat us.

And I’m not a jingoist, but I don’t believe the Russians can beat us. But I’ll tell you what can beat us. Our kids can beat us. They can beat us by grieving God Almighty and outraging divine justice, by violating the right relation between child and parent, and upsetting the normal order. That can beat us, because God will withdraw His defense and we’ll be left as helpless as was Samson after his hair was cut, the right relation between men and women in their respective places. The world is sowing a field of thorns.

Now my friend John R. Rice has written a book called Bossy Wives, Bobbed Hair, and what was it? I haven’t read the book and don’t intend to. I think I sketched it when it first came. And I don’t follow my friend John on that, but I will just tell you this much.

God made man, and He made woman. In spite of Christine Jorgensen, He made them different from each other. And He not only made them different from each other, He gave them different functions in society. But we have all mixed it up. Mixed it all up now until we don’t know one from the other. We say, isn’t that funny, Mr. Tozer? He’s such a cute fellow.

Yes, our old boy’s telling you some things somebody ought to tell you. And the proper relation between the sexes. I’m not talking now about immorality, that’s another field. I’m talking now about the right social place for both. We have violated the Scriptures, and we have violated common sense, we have violated the laws of biology. And we’re going to reap, and don’t you think we’re not going to reap? The foundations of the world are out of plumb.

And then I think also of our rapport with nature. Dr. Mason said, and rightly said, and I thought so much of it I wrote it into an editorial right away. Man was born in a garden.

Now why didn’t God build a city? He could have done it, made it out of plastic. God could have done that. Let there be a plastic city, and it came to pass there was a plastic city, and the morning and the evening were the ninth day. God could have made a plastic city and trimmed it in chrome. He could have done it, and placed man in it. And said, here you are, get on to that escalator, go up nine stories and come to the stories, and come down the elevator. God could have made a plastic city and put man in it.

He could have gone better; He could have made it out of gold. But He didn’t, He made a garden; worms in it, flowers and fruit, and all of it makes a garden. God put man in a garden. I think it was Milton that said, God made the country and man-made the city.

Now, we are losing our rapport. You French speakers please forgive; I don’t know whether any other word to use there except that bad French. But we have lost our rapport with nature. We are born in hospitals, laid out in mortuaries, and buried in memorial parks. If anything goes wrong with it, we are shot full of mold, penicillin or something. People live and die and never get off the sidewalk. We’ve lost our power.

Mr. Chase tells about some artists from Chicago that went down in Brown County, Indiana, for a little vacation and do a little painting. They were city fellows, and they slept down there in a little house in the woods among the beautiful rolling hills of Brown County.

I suppose they all more or less felt the same way about it, but it was the job of one fellow to shamelessly tell how he felt about it. He said, these birds are driving me crazy. He said, listen to them, I can’t stand that. He said, listen to them, birds, birds. And he got on the train and came back and listened to the elevator. He couldn’t stand birds. God put man in the garden and man says, I can’t stand birds. So, he comes back to listen to the elevator.

Some fellow said, who was it? I believe it was here in Chicago. Somebody said that New York was the dirtiest city in the world and this fella indignantly denied it. He said, New York isn’t as dirty as Chicago. He said, let the person that said that New York was dirty in Chicago feel our air between her thumb and fingers. He said, just let her take a little of our air and feel it like that and just see how dirty it is. And yet there are people that love it and look on a whore with a lovely worm with a fur coat or a bird that drives them crazy.

Now, of course, those are extreme. That’s not true of many people. A great many people love nature. So, they get a basket full of sardines and pickles and olives and they go out and have themselves a picnic and commune with nature among the sardine can.

But we’re as artificial as it’s possible to be, nevertheless. We’ve lost our rapport with the garden or with that best thing after the garden, the field in which God’s cast us. So, we’re going to pay a price for that? Oh yes.

One of my favorite writers as a younger fellow, he still is when I don’t have much time for him anymore, was William Wordsworth. My heart leaps up when I behold a rainbow in the sky. So was it when my life began, so is it now that I’m a man, so let it ever be or let me die.

One of my boys told me that the kids in the college or university where he got his degree referred to Wordsworth as Nature Boy. When they had to study Wordsworth, they scornfully referred to him as Nature Boy.

But his heart leaped up when he beheld a rainbow in the sky. And was he that talked about the cataracts blowing their trumpets from the hills, praising the art that could catch that cloud before it disappeared and put it in on a canvas and hold it there. He loved the world around him.

And our fathers loved the world around us. Strong men, they didn’t have any chlorophyll in those days, but they weren’t so confined, and the embarrassment was not so great. The big out-of-doors helped them out so that they didn’t need the chlorophyll. Why reeks the goat on yonder hill who seems to dote on chlorophyll. But they sell us chlorophyll nevertheless and all the rest. And we’re a bunch of artificial zoo animals.

Emerson said, every once in a while, take off your shoes and go out and walk on the ground. It’s good for you. Get in on the floor with the earth. He might have had something there. Try that sometime in your fourth-floor apartment.

And then I got one left and I’m through. Are you glad?

And this is very serious, and it is basic righteousness, justice, and honesty. If the blood of Jesus Christ can’t cure a man’s dishonesty, it can’t guarantee his entrance into the kingdom of heaven.

Our Salvation Army friends sing a song, when I reached the pearly gates, I’ll then put in my plea, I was once a guilty sinner, but Jesus died for me. I believe that. I believe it with all my heart. Supposing Jesus Christ came to me and said, son, you’ve been a sinner, but I’ll justify you by my blood. And I said, thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you.

When it comes time for you to die or I come in the glory, you will enter into the presence of the Father with exceeding joy, all by my blood and righteousness. Thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you. Another thing, son, my blood is going to cleanse you and make you clean. And my spirit is going to enter you and help you to live a right life. Thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you.

But I found after 25 years of following Him that His blood didn’t cleanse. The Spirit couldn’t make you right, that Christianity didn’t have the power to make you live right. It didn’t. Now this is all hypothesis. I know better, of course. I’m talking from the other side for the moment.

So, I find after 25 years of praying and trying and reading and giving and listening to sermons, I find Christianity doesn’t work. And then you expect me to die in peace and say a Lord who lied to me once won’t lie to me again. The Savior that was too weak to save me from iniquity will be strong enough to take me boldly through the pearly gates. I wouldn’t believe it for a second yet.

A Savior that can’t save me from my sins now and here can’t have my confidence to save me from judgment in that great day. But he can do both, thank God. He can do both. I want no other argument. I want no other plea. It is enough that Jesus died and that He died for me.

I believe that. And I’m helped to believe it by the fact that that same Lord Jesus Christ can take a sinner and make a Christian out of him down here now, can clean him up and change him, put a new impulse within his heart and a new direction to his life and change him. He’s not a phony and he’s not selling you a bill of goods.

He’s promising you safety in the judgment and He’s proving that you’ll be safe in the judgment by demonstrating that right down here now He can give you a new heart and renew a right spirit within you. And the things you used to want to do, you don’t want to do. And the things you used to be careless about, you’re now doing with delight.

You used to hate your brother and now you love him. You used to be stingy and now you give generously to the Lord’s work. You used to be dirty-minded and now a dirty thought hurts you so bad you repent before God for it. You used to have sinful tendencies, but God’s cured them. God can lay solid foundations, ladies and gentlemen, He can. I don’t know whether He ever will for the nation of America or not. I doubt that very much.

I ought to be ashamed to say that. But I don’t know in this confused country of ours, the light we’ve had, the truth we’ve trampled under our feet, and the insults we’ve offered to God, the trying of God over the centuries.

Possibly we’ve sinned away our day and like Pompeii and Babylon and Assyria the future may see us pass from the scene if the Lord tarries. I don’t know that. But I do know that wherever righteousness is laid down by faith in God and Christ, there is a solid foundation. I do know that.

And I know that any religious individual, and I’m through in three minutes, less than three, any religious individual, anybody, that wants to be sure that his superstructure will stand in the eternal light of God only needs to build down upon the Rock, Christ Jesus. That’s all.

But if he builds on anything else, the foundations of his life are out of plumb. And no matter how high he goes; the collapse will only be the greater. So let us tonight, let us turn to Jesus Christ our Lord.

We’re units of society. I can’t help Chicago too much, nor the state of Illinois, nor the country, but as a unit of society, as one individual, I can lay my foundation solid down on repentance, down on the Book, down on high conceptions of the sovereign majesty of God, down on strong faith in the power of Jesus Christ to save me now and in the day of judgment. I can lay my foundations down on those, my building down on those foundations. So can you. Starting now, let us pray.

O Lord Jesus, we can feel the breath of hell on our necks. We hear his ugly, ominous growls. He hates us, and he hates our church, and he hates our people, and he hates us for God’s sake and Christ’s sake. And he hates to see foundations solid. He’ll undermine them. He’ll get us interested in something else, so we’ll lay crooked ones if he can. O God, we’re not scared in spite of it. We’re not frightened.

Jesus, Thou art our big Brother, our Lord. God has given Thee power in heaven and earth. All power is Thine. Thou hast made a show of principalities and powers and exposed them openly, defeated them and risen from the dead. Thou art seated at the right hand of the Majesty in the heavens. Thou hast sent Thy Holy Spirit here to the earth, and we thank Thee that He’s with us tonight and in us tonight.

Now we beseech thee, Lord Jesus, Thou wilt help us to go out and straighten our lives, straighten them reverently, tearfully if need be, before the throne of grace, with repentance and sorrow of heart and strong yearnings for righteousness and true holiness, so the foundations will be solid.

Lord, here’s a church. It isn’t a big one, but it’s a church. And we’re building on solid foundations. Eternity itself can’t eat away nor dissolve what we’re doing. But Father, look at our foundations. They’re crooked. They’re out of plumb.

O Lord, we tremble for that day when Thou wilt judge the deeds of every man. We shall stand and say, I wrought, I worked there in that church, I attended there, I went there.

O Lord, we pray that our church may be founded upon the solid foundations, so that all our money won’t be wasted, so that our prayers won’t be wasted, so that everything like the pieces of broken bread will be gathered up and nothing be lost.

Now we trust Thee to bless this Word spoken. We don’t claim anything for it, only that it’s true, that’s all. Send these friends out, we beseech Thee, to a week of strong faith and holy living and earnest prayer and Bible reading, worship, and faithful testimony, and honesty, and truth-telling, clean thinking, frugality with themselves and generosity with everybody else.

We ask this in Jesus’ name. Amen.

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Messages

Tozer Talks

“The Justice of God”

Sunday evening, October 5, 1958

Message #4 of #10 in Attributes of God Series

It is tremendously important that we know, that we know what God is like. This God we serve; what kind of God is He? What is He like? The answer to that question is more valuable to you and of greater importance perhaps than any other one question or answer that could be made or given. It was Tersteegen who said, O God, Thou art far other than men have dreamed or taught; unspoken in all language and unpictured in all thoughts. And Watts wrote, Earth from afar hath heard thy fame and worms have learned to list thy name, but oh, the glories of thy mind leave all our soaring thoughts behind.

Tonight, I want to talk about the justice of God. Let me read some scriptures. I just pick out a few, five or six. There are so many of them found in the Bible. Genesis 18, shall not the Judge of all the earth do right? That was Abraham. Deuteronomy 10:17, For the Lord your God is God of Gods and Lord of Lords, a great God; a mighty and a terrible which regardeth not persons nor taketh reward. Psalms 99, the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous all together. Psalm 92:15, to show that the Lord is upright; He is my Rock, and there is no unrighteousness in Him. Psalm 97, the Lord reigneth: righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne. Isaiah 28, judgment also will I lay to the line and righteousness to the plummet. Revelation 15:5-7, and I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art and wast and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus. For they have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them blood to drink; for they are worthy. And I heard another out of the altar say, Even so, Lord God Almighty, true and righteous are thy judgments.

Now, I want to talk tonight about God’s justice and tell you that if you know God, you know God who is absolutely and perfectly just. But we’re going to have to define justice a little bit. What do we mean by justice? Well, I’ve looked this up very carefully in order that I might not preach out of my own head, but out of the Scriptures. And I find that justice is indistinguishable from righteousness in the Old Testament. It’s the same word and with slight variations according to whether it’s a verb or a noun or something else, but wherever judgment, justice, just and so on. They’re all the same root word. It means uprightness, rectitude. And to say that God is just or that the justice of God is a fact, is to say that there is uprightness in God, that there is rectitude in God.

In Psalm 89 it says, justice and judgment are the habitation of His throne. In Psalm 97 it says, righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne. Justice and judgment, righteousness and judgment are said to be the habitation of God’s throne, so that justice and righteousness are indistinguishable one from the other. To say that God is just is to say that God is equitable; that He’s morally equal. I don’t want to sound dull, but if you go to the book of Ezekiel, the 18th chapter, you will find God sort of scolding Israel there. He says, in effect, or says pretty literally, you say the way of God is unequal. But He said, Are my ways unequal? No, O house of Israel. It is the house of Israel who has unequal ways.

Now, that word unequal there, simply of course means in equal, in equity. We talk about things being unequal, inequity. And you know that the word inequity and the word iniquity are the same word. You just change the letter, you have iniquity. It means that the iniquitous person is not morally equal. That he is not symmetrical morally; that he’s unequal to himself. And then, the word judgment as we have it so often in the texts that I have read; justice and judgment, righteousness and judgment are the habitation of thy throne.

And what is the judgment of God? It’s the application of justice to a moral situation. I wish you might put down some of these things. I may not say them ever again. But judgment is the application of justice to a moral situation. And it may be favorable or unfavorable. When God judges a man, He brings justice to that man’s life. And He applies justice to the moral situation which that man’s life created. And if the man’s ways are equal, then justice favors the man. If man’s ways are unequal, then of course, it is on the other side, and God sentences the man.

Now, I’d like to pass this on to you and I want you to get this. And I’d like to wake up some of the somnolent cells that lie within your head and say to you that justice is not something that God has. Justice is something that God is. But some grammarian says, no, now wait a minute, just is something that God is. No, justice is something that God is. God is love and just as God is love, justice is something that God is. You sometimes hear it said, justice requires God to do this. And I don’t doubt but what I will sometimes use expressions myself that are semantically improper for the reason that the human language is a tough thing. And when you talk about God, language staggers.

In an effort to describe God, the prophets of the Old Testament and the apostles of the New put such pressure on language that words groaned and squeaked under the effort to tell a story. Well, I suppose that even though I’m pointing the error of it out, I might be guilty also of sometimes using the words wrong. But, we must remember that justice is not something that is outside of God to which God must conform. We say justice requires God to do so and so.

My brethren, always remember, nothing ever requires God to do anything. If you have a God that is required to do anything, then you have a weak God who has to bow his neck to some yoke, and yield himself to pressure from the outside. But this is an error in speaking for it postulates a principle of justice that lies outside of God and to which God has to conform. Do you follow me along on that? That if I say justice requires God, justice forces God to do so and so, then I say, I think, well, justice is bigger than God. Justice lies outside of God. And God has to bow and do beacence to justice. But that is to think wrongly my friend, because that means that there is something bigger than God compelling God to do something.

If justice is a principle that required God to obey, there is no such principle in the universe as an abstract justice requiring obedience from gods and men. There is no such principle. If there is, who created it? Where did it come from? You see, there isn’t anything but didn’t come from God. And if it all came from God, then how can we say that there is above God a principle of justice? Who enforces that principle? Who created that principle? If there is such a principle, then that principle is superior to God for only a superior can compel obedience. If there’s anything that can compel God to do anything, then that something is bigger and greater than God; and we’ll have to stop saying Almighty God. We’ll have to sing, not-Almighty God. We’ll have to sing, almost Almighty God. We’ll have to sing mighty God while angels bless thee, but we can’t sing Almighty God while angels bless thee for there is nothing, there’s nothing above that which compels.

Now there’s nothing outside of God that can make God do anything. You’ll have to shake your head I suppose to get this, but there is nothing outside of God that can make God do anything. I wish we could keep that in mind. Unless the church of Christ begins to see this again, what I’m saying to you is the common doctrine of the Puritans. It was the common teaching of the Presbyterians 150 years ago. It was the common teaching of Methodists and all of them, but it has been lost in the shuffle and God has been made into a little God not worthy of being worshipped. Remember that all God’s reasons for doing anything come from within Him. They do not come from without Him. And there is no pressure group that can force God to do anything.

The newspapers are saying that the State Department and the President have had to modify their foreign, whatever they call it, because of public pressure. Well, even the President, sometimes even a king can be forced to do something by public pressure, but there isn’t any pressure that can force God to do anything. If there were, I might get on my knees and worship God, but I’d have my fingers crossed. If there is a God, if our God is a God that will yield to public pressure, that has a principle lying outside of Him to which He must yield, then He cannot be the God, He cannot be God quite. He can be almost God, but not quite God.

You see, I say again, that all God’s reasons for doing anything, lie inside of God. They do not lie outside of God to be brought to bear upon Him. They lie inside of God. That is, they are of what God is. God’s reasons for doing what He does are, they spring out of what God is. Nothing has been added to God and from eternity. And nothing has been removed from God, from eternity. Our God is exactly what He was before there was a created atom. And He will be exactly what He is when the heavens are no more. And He has never changed in any way, because He is the unchanging God.

Now, God being perfect, is incapable of either loss or gain, and He’s incapable of getting larger or being smaller. He’s incapable of knowing more or knowing less. God is just God. And God acts justly from within, not in obedience to some imaginary law. He is the author of all that law and acts like Himself all the time. If we can only get this into our heads. We’ve been lied to and cheated and sold down the river and skinned and fleeced and betrayed and deceived so much by even those that we look up to and respect, that we have come to project our cynicism to the very throne of God. And unknown to us, we have within our minds the feeling that God is like that too. 

Let me tell you that God always acts like Himself and that there is no pressure, no archangel, no 10,000 angels with swords, no cherubim or seraphim anywhere that can persuade God to act otherwise than as God. God always act as becomes Him. And He always will. And He had to redeem men within that mighty limitless framework. He could not change. If He changed, then He could not be God, for He would have to go from better to worse or from worse to better, and being God and being perfect, He would not go either direction. He had to remain God. So, the justice of God, the justice of God is sung here by the Holy saints of God. And the theologians, both Jewish and Christian, have declared that God isn’t just God, and they have made the justice of God to be one of His attributes.

Now, if the attribute, one attribute of God is justice, and God will always act that way, not by compulsion from the outside, but because that’s the way He is Himself; And if justice must always prevail. And if it lasts, justice will prevail, for justice, being an attribute of God, and God being the sovereign God who will prevail. If it is true that justice must prevail, and justice will prevail, then where do you and I come in? Where do we come in my friend? That’s the question.

There was an old theologian by the name of Anselm. He has long been put aside, and we don’t read Anselm any more. Many people can go through seminaries and never hear the name of the man at all. But Anselm was one of the great church fathers, the great theologians, the great saints, the great thinkers. He was called a second Augustine. And Anselm, asked God the question; he says, how dost Thou spare the wicked if Thou art just, supremely just? How dost Thou spare the wicked if Thou art just and supremely just?

Now, you know in this day, we have cheapened religion and cheapened salvation. We have cheapened our concept of God to a place where we expect to stumble in whistling and have God take us in. We expect that. We don’t worry about it much. we expect we got a marked New Testament and a tract and we expect to stumble in and up to the pearly gates and bat on the gate and say, well God, I’m here, because we’ve reduced God in our thinking. My Brethren, the old serious theologian asked God the question, how dost Thou spare the wicked? How canst Thou spare a wicked man since Thou art just and supremely just? We’d better get that figured out lest we presumptuously go to the gate of heaven and be turned away.

Well, the old brother comforted himself and he said this, he said, we see where the river flows, but the spring whence it arises we see not. He knew God could, but he didn’t know how He could. How canst Thou justify a wicked man and still be just he said. We see where the river flows, but whence it arises, we see not.

But, to the question itself, how canst Thou spare the wicked if Thou art just? There are two happy answers and I want to give them tonight. Those two happy answers, one of them is from the being of God as unitary. Now, there’s a word you don’t hear much anymore. You know, we write fiction and we sing choruses and we rock and roll on our way to glory, but brethren, we’ve got to answer some solid questions and we’ve got to know some things if we’re going to be good Christians. And so, the being God, is unitary. Now what does that mean? It means that God is not composed of parts.

Now, you’re not a unitary being. You’re a composed spirit, soul and body. You have memory and forgetfulness. You have attributes which were given you. Some things can be taken away from you and you still can remain. There are whole sections of your brain that can be destroyed, and you can still live on. You can have members cut out by surgery, and you can still live on. You can forget, you can learn, and you can still live on. That’s because you’re not unitary, that is, God made you and made means composed. God put two together; God put you together. He put the torso and a head on top of the torso and legs under the torso. And He put your bloodstream, your blood, the ventricles and veins and arteries and nerves and ligaments and all the rest.

Well, we’re put together like that you see, and you can take an amazing amount of a man away and he’s still there. But you can’t think of God like that, because the being of God is unitary. You see, the Jews always believed in a unitary God. Hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is one God. Now Israel was not only saying that there is only one God, that Jews taught the unitary being of God. Then the church teaches so far as the church teaches anything; the church doesn’t teach much of anything now. You can go to church a lifetime and not be a theologian. They ought to load your head down with good thoughts, good theological thoughts in one year. But nowadays, you can go a lifetime and not get much theology.

But saying that God, the being of God is unitary, that there is one God doesn’t mean only that there is only one God, it means that God is one. Do you see the distinction there. We must not think of God as composed of parts working harmoniously, for there are no parts. We must think of God as one. And, that because God is one, God’s attributes never quarrel with each other. Because man is not unitary, but made, because he’s composed. The man may be frustrated, he may be a schizophreniac and part of him may war with another part of him. His justice may war, his sense of justice may war with the sense of mercy.

The judge sits on a bench many a time and is caught between mercy and justice. He doesn’t know which to do. What is that famous saying of the man who said on the eve of war when he had to go out and fight for his country? He said to his fiancé that he loved and plan to marry, He said, I could not, I could not love thee so, if I love not duty more. There’s a man caught between the love of a woman he wanted to stay with and the love of duty that he wanted to discharge his obligation to. Do you see, that’s because man is made of parts. That’s why we have psychiatrists, brothers; just try to get your parts back together. They don’t do it you know. They don’t do it, but they tried to do it. And so, we give them credit for trying to do it. That’s why people go off on their, that’s why they blow their torch, because they have the different parts aren’t working harmoniously. But somebody says, ah, but God’s parts are working harmoniously.

I say again, God has no parts any more than the diamond has parts. Know that God is all one God and everything that God does harmonizes with everything else that God does perfectly, because there are no parts to get out of fix and there are no attributes to face each other and fight it out; but that all God’s attributes are one and together.

To think of God as the evangelist I say sometimes when I preach evangelistic sermons, I fall into the same semantic error. We think of God as presiding over a court of law and the sinner has broken the law of justice. There’s justice out there somewhere outside of God, a justice. And the sinner has sinned against that external justice. And the sinner is put in handcuffs and brought before the bar of God. And God’s mercy wants to forgive the sinner, but justice says, no, he’s broken my laws. He must die. And so, we picture dramatically God sitting cheerfully on His throne passing a sentence of death upon the man that His mercy wants to pardon but can’t because justice won’t allow it.

My brethren, we might just as well be pagans and think about God the way the pagans do. That’s not Christian theology. Never was and never can be. It is erroneous thus to think. For we’re making a man out of God. Thou thinkest said God, that I was all together such a one as thou art; Thou thoughtest I was like thee said God. You thought because your judges sit on a throne or on a bench we call it, and because they, their hearts want to pardon, but the law won’t permit them. And they’re caught in the middle, and they turn ashen white when they sentence a young man.

I’ve been told sometimes judges turn ashen white and clutch the desk before them with a bench before them when they sentence men to die. Something in them isn’t harmonizing. Their mercy isn’t harmonizing with their sense of justice. And justice on the outside standing there as a law says that man shall die while mercy says, please, please spare him. But to think thus of God, my brethren, is to think wrongly of God, because everything that God is, harmonizes with everything else that God is. And everything that God does is one with everything else that God does. I said harmonize there. Really, that’s not a good word, for harmony requires at least two. Harmony requires that there be two, but that they get together and for all the time be one. But there’s nothing like that in God. God just is. When you pray, say our Father which art in heaven. God just is.

Now, I say that the answer to the question, how can God being just yet acquit the wicked? The answer springs from the being of God as unitary. That God’s justice and God’s mercy do not quarrel with each other. The second is, from the effects of Christ’s passion. I want to use that word. I want to continue to use it, the passion of Christ. Passion now means sex lust, but passion, back in the early days meant deep, terrible suffering. It meant deep, terrible suffering. They call Good Friday passion tide. And we talk about the Passion of Christ. It is the suffering Jesus did as He made His priestly offering in His own blood for us.

Now I want you to think a little bit that Jesus Christ is God and that all I’ve said about God, I have been describing Christ. He is unitary. He has taken on Himself the nature of man, but that nature of man is man. But the God, the Eternal Word who was before man was and who created man, is a unitary being, and there’s no dividing of His substance, and so that Holy One suffered. And His suffering in His own blood for us was three things. It was infinite, and all mighty, and perfect.

Now, I’m not using words carelessly. I try not to use words carelessly, because I hate to hear them used carelessly. Infinite, and what does that mean? It means without bound and without limit, shoreless, bottomless, topless, forever and ever without any possible measure or limitation. And so, the suffering of Jesus and the atonement He made on that cross, under that darkening sky, was infinite in its power. That is, what He did there was absolutely infinite. And then, not only infinite, but almighty. It’s possible for good men to almost do something, almost do something.

I was kidded and from the time I was a tiny little boy until my parents died, I was kidded for something I said when I was a child. We were walking down the winding lane on the farm back in the state of Pennsylvania one evening just at sundown. And that’s the time the rabbits come out. My father had a gun and we were looking for rabbits. And I let out a little boyish yell and my father said, what’s the matter? And I said, I almost saw a rabbit. And I know that I never heard the last of that. I almost saw a rabbit.

Well, to almost see something, to almost do something, to almost be something is the fix people get in because they’re people. But Almighty God, never is almost anything. God is always exactly what He is. He is the Almighty One. And when He died on a cross, Isaac Watts says, God, the Mighty Maker died for man the creatures sin. And when God the Almighty Maker died, all the power there is was in that atonement.

My friend, you never can overstate the efficaciousness of the atonement. You never can exaggerate the power of the cross. And then, not only infinite and almighty, but perfect–perfect. That means the atonement in Jesus Christ’s blood is perfect. There isn’t anything that can be added to it. It’s spotless, it’s impeccable, it’s flawless. It is perfect as God is perfect.

So the question, how dost Thou spare the wicked if though art just is answered from the effective of Christ’s Passion? And that Passion, that holy suffering there, and that resurrection from the dead, cancels our sins and abrogates our sentence. Now, where did we get that sentence and how did we get that sentence? We got that sentence by the application of justice to a moral situation. You see, no matter how nice and refined and lovely you think you are, you’re a moral situation; you have been, you still are, you will be.

And when justice confronted you, that is when God confronted you, God’s justice confronted a moral situation and found you unequal; found you not just, but unequal; found that your ways were not equal, found inequity, found iniquity. And because He found iniquity there, God sentenced you to die. Everybody in Chicago has been or is under sentence of death. I wonder how people can be so jolly under sentence of death; how so careless under sentence of death. For the soul that sinneth it shall die.

When justice confronts a moral situation, which is a man or woman or a young person, or anybody morally responsible, then either it justifies that person, if that person corresponds to the justice of God, or it condemned that person, if that person is unequal and has inequity, iniquity in him. That’s how we got that sentence. And let me point out to you My friends, that when the justice of God, that is, when God in His justice, sentences the sinner to die, He does not quarrel with the mercy of God. He does not quarrel with the kindness of God. He does not quarrel with God’s compassion or pity, for they’re all attributes of a unitary God, and they cannot quarrel with each other. All the attributes of God concur in a man’s death sentence. Remember that. And the very angels in heaven cried out and said, worthy art Thou, true and righteous art Thou, because Thou hath judged, Almighty God. True and righteous are thy judgments.

So that you’ll never find in heaven a group of holy beings finding fault with the way God conducts his foreign policy. In Washington, you will find people who are not pleased with the way Eisenhower and Foster Dulles are conducting theirs. But God Almighty is conducting His world and every moral creature says true and righteous are thy judgments. For Thou art justice and justice and judgment are the habitation of Thy throne. So that when God sentences a man to die, mercy concurs and pity concurs and compassion concurs and wisdom concurs, and power, everything that’s intelligent in God concurs in the sentence.

But oh, my brethren, through the mystery of atonement, I wonder if I’ve ever known myself the wonder, the wonder of it? Through the mystery of atonement, the soul that avails itself of that atonement. The soul that throws itself out on that atonement, for that soul, the moral situation has changed. God has not changed. You see, Jesus Christ did not die to change God. Jesus Christ died to change a moral situation. When God’s justice confronts an unprotected sinner, that justice sentences him to die; and all of God concurs in the sentence.

But when Christ, who is God, went on to the tree and died there in infinite agony, in a plethora of suffering, in a fullness of agony; when this great God died there, He suffered more than they are suffering in hell. He suffered all that they could suffer in hell. The agony of God for everything that God does, He does what all of God is, so that when God suffered for you, my brother, God suffered to change your moral situation. And the man who throws himself out on the mercy of God, has had the moral situation change. God doesn’t wink and say, well, we’ll excuse this fellow. He’s made his decision; we’ll forgive him. He’s going into the prayer room, we’ll pardon him. He’s going to join the church, we’ll overlook it. No, no, when God looks at an atoned for sinner, He doesn’t see the same moral situation that He sees when He looks at a sinner who still loves his sin. When God looks at a sinner who still loves his sin and rejects the mystery of atonement, justice condemns him to die.

When God looks at a sinner who has accepted the blood of everlasting covenant, justice sentences him to live, and God is just in doing both things. And when God justifies a sinner, everything in God is on the sinner’s side. All the attributes of God are on the sinner’s side. It isn’t that mercy is pleading for the sinner and justice is trying to beat him to death as we preach here sometimes make it, but all of God does all that God does. So when God looks at a sinner, I repeat, and sees him there unatoned for, at least he won’t accept the atonement and doesn’t apply to him the moral situation is such that justice says you must die. When God looks at the atoned for sinner who in faith knows he’s atoned for and has accepted it, justice says you must live. And the unjust sinner can no more go to heaven than the justified sinner can go to hell. Oh, brethren, why are we so still? Where are we so quiet? We ought to rejoice and thank God with all our might.

Now, I have said that justice is on the side of the returning sinner and somebody wants a verse. They want me to be reasoning here: they want a verse for it. All right, I’ll give it to you, 1 John 1:9, If we confess our sins, say it with me, if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just. Do what? And cleanses from all unrighteousness. He is faithful and what? Just! Justice is over on our side now, because the mystery of the agony of God on the Cross has changed our moral situation.

So, justice looks and sees equality, not inequity, and we’re justified. That’s what justification means. Do I believe in justification by faith? Oh, my brother, do I believe in it! David believed in it and wrote it into the 32nd Psalm. It was later quoted by one of the prophets. It was picked up by Paul and written into Galatians and Romans. It was lost for a while and relegated to the dustbin and then brought out again to the forefront and taught by Luther, then the Moravians and the Wesley’s and the Presbyterians–justification by faith, and we stand on it today. And when we talk about it, it isn’t just text you manipulate, you know.

Oh, the text manipulators, God bless them. They had better tack or knit. But, we manipulate texts. That’s no way to look at it. We ought to see who God is and see why these things are true. We’re justified by faith because the agony of God on a cross changed the moral situation. We’re that moral situation. It didn’t change God at all. The idea that the angry scowl went off of the face of God and He began grudgingly to smile. It’s a pagan concept and not Christian.

So remember, that God is one. And not only is there only one God, that one God is unitary, one with Himself, indivisible. The mercy of God is simply God being merciful and the justice of God is simply God being just. And the love of God is simply God loving. The compassion of God is simply God being compassionate. It’s not something that runs out of God, it is something God is; all the three persons of the Trinity are.

Well, old Anselm, my old friend. He’s got a third argument. I’ve given you two. How God can be just and He is just and still justify a sinner? He had another argument. I’ll give it to you. He said, compassion flows from goodness and goodness without justice is not goodness. He said, you couldn’t be good and not be just. Is that right? And I preached last Sunday night about the goodness of God. And if God is good, He has to be just. And if God is just, then he has to be just. And he says this, when God punishes the wicked, it is a just thing to do, because it consists with the wicked man’s desserts. But when God pardons a wicked man, it’s a just thing to do, because it consists with God’s nature.

So, we have God: the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost always acting like God. Your wife may get up grouchy. Your best friend may turn a cold face on you. In the White House next election, we will have a change of course. And we may have a change to a great deal worse or better. We can get better or worse down here. The situation in the Far East, at least for seven days, we won’t have war. Very good. We’ve called it off, for seven days. Very good. Things change, but always God is the same. As always and always and always, God acts like God. And God does always according to His attributes of love and mercy and justice.

Aren’t you glad you’re not going to sneak into Heaven through a cellar window? Aren’t you glad that you’re not going to get in like some preachers get degrees? You know, pay $25 for them somewhere in a college degree factory. Aren’t you glad that you’re not going to get into heaven by God’s oversight. God is so busy with His world, so busy and you sneak in. You’re there a 1000 years before God sees you. Or you were a member of a church that God said, well that’s a pretty good church. Just take them in. And so, you went up and went in and when the Lord came. And then later on when they begin to look around, they found the rotten spots and maybe you’ll be thrown out.

There was a picture one time of a man who appeared, do you remember without a robe? And after he got in, they said, what is he doing here? And they threw him out. Bound him hand and foot and lugged him out and threw him into outer darkness. But there will be nothing like that in God’s kingdom, because God, the All-wise One, knows all that can be known and He knows everybody and knows you. And God the All-just One, will never permit the unequal man in there. Why walk ye along with two unequal legs said Elijah. That’s unequal, inequal, inequity, iniquity. And the man who’s iniquitous will never get in–never. All of this cheap talk about St. Peter giving us an exam, you know, to see if it’s all right; it is all nonsense.

The Great God Almighty, who’s always one with Himself, looks at the moral situation, and He either sees death or life; and all of God is on the side of death or life. If it’s iniquity, inequity, unatoned, uncleansed, unprotected, sinner in his sin, there’s only one answer and all of God says death and hell. But if he beats his breast and says, God have mercy on me a sinner and takes the benefits of the infinite agony of God on a cross, God looks on that moral situation and says life, and all of hell can’t drag that man down; just as all of heaven can’t pull that man up. Oh, the wonder and the mystery and the glory of the being of God.