10/20/13

From Jim McGuiggan... GOD AND WRATH

GOD AND WRATH





“Anger” is a response and not a constituent element of a person. Anger isn’t built into us as if it exists in some compartment waiting to express itself; it isn’t there every nanosecond of our existence. We may be cheerful one moment and angry the next; we may be angry for days or weeks but it is a response to some situation that doesn’t sit right with us.
Associated with anger are terms like displeasure, protest, rebuke—the kind of activities that are sometimes called “negative”. We don’t go around all the time displeased, protesting and rebuking because anger doesn’t exist where there is nothing to trigger it. Sometimes people are angry and we don’t know why (sometimes they don’t know why) but because we don’t know why doesn’t mean there isn’t a reason.
If A is angry we don’t expect her anger to result in sweet talk and gentleness though she may control her anger and speak amiably but then it isn’t her anger that is producing the friendly speech—it is something else. Because anger includes the notion of displeasure we don’t expect it to be associated with a pleasing response but when the situation is resolved the anger that exists because of the troubling situation disappears/dissipates.
Without entering into a linguistic debate we have reason to believe that God responds in what we call “anger” (an older word would be “wrath”). The human family has behaved and can behave in a way that displeases God and leads him to express himself in protest, rebuke and chastisement. His anger is not like ours in any of the tragic ways our can show itself. Our angry response can be vindictive, vengeful, over-the-top or something like that. That’s not because anger is a bad thing but because we are sinful people and we can abuse even things that are not bad. God’s anger is always warranted, is not spiteful or vengeful and always has an overarching redemptive purpose. [He deals with individuals, of course, but even when dealing with individuals he is working within his intention and purposes related to the human family as a family.]
We’re not to think of God as restless and ceaselessly foaming at the mouth, eager to blast the transgressors into oblivion; the kind that has to be bribed into a good mood or a kind attitude—Jesus has brought a final and glorious end to such thinking as he confirmed the OT witness to God’s commitment to humanity’s blessing in a new creation.
Rabbi Heschel has taught us that God’s wrath exists in order to destroy what generated the wrath to begin with. It isn’t a divine sulk or supernatural spite that lashes out at those who displease him. It is God working to uproot the trees of wickedness we plant within us or around us; uprooting them even when it brings us pain. It is God putting us to grief for our own individual sake and/or the sake of the family as a whole. Walter Moberly has taught us, the wrath may be experienced as mere retribution but it isn’t intended as mere retribution it has a redemptive purpose that is never to be severed from the welfare of the family as a family. [A disruptive child, refusing pleas and reasoning, may be sent to his room and experience it merely as punishment but he is being excluded 1) for the benefit of the other children and 2) in hope that he will experience a change of mind and cease his disruptive ways.]
It’s probably a mistake to speak of human repentance or Jesus’ saving life and death as “satisfying” the wrath of God because that suggests “wrath” has some kind of standard that must be met; it gives it a kind of autonomous existence—something that exists alongside God that must be placated. Wrath doesn’t exist apart from God! Wrath is God responding; God’s anger is God being angry. If we’re to satisfy anything we’re to satisfy God who is such a being that he has the capacity for anger at unrighteousness and has the capacity for seeking the redemption of the transgressors and not just their punishment.
Transgression is not external to the transgressor. Sin is a sinner expressing him/herself and when God deals with sin in an individual he must deal with the individual because sin is nothing other than the sinner in action—sins and sinners can and must be differentiated but when sins are being dealt with they must be dealt with “in” the sinner. [I recognize that “sin” is a much more complex reality than I’m sketching here but it’s nevertheless true that a surgeon who deals with a patient’s tumour doesn’t operate on the bench the patient lies on. Whatever else God does in working with a person’s sin he must work with the sinning person.]
God’s wrath is our assurance that oppression, abuse and immorality in all their forms are contrary to his character and will. The people who cannot be angered by anything are not more saintly because that’s true—they have something missing in them that should frighten and/or repulse us.
A person who would be perpetually wrath-filled would be a nightmare. The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is well illustrated by Jesus himself when sometimes we see him anger-filled and at other times we find him filled with joy and pleasure. The balance is there in perfection.

©2004 Jim McGuiggan. All materials are free to be copied and used as long as money is not being made.

Many thanks to brother Ed Healy, for allowing me to post from his website, the abiding word.com.