Useful Idiots

With All Due Respect

Joseph’s submission to the sovereignty of God allowed him to see the pain his brothers had inflicted not merely through his own perspective alone, but through a perspective that saw God working through their evil actions. He recognized that in all the circumstances of life, big and small, good and bad, God had been inexorably bringing the currents of his personal history to a providential conclusion. His brothers might have been idiots for selling him into slavery twenty plus years before, but they were useful idiots in the hands of the Providential Ruler of all mankind.

Going Deep // Focus: Genesis 45:5

Don’t be upset, and don’t be angry with yourselves for selling me to this place. It was God who sent me here ahead of you to preserve your lives.

Useful idiots! With all due respect (it’s odd that we use that term when we’re about to disrespect someone), that’s what I would call Joseph’s brothers. Or I could clean it up a bit and call them unwitting but useful instruments in the hands of a sovereign God.

Twenty plus years after they had sold him into slavery, the brothers are now standing before Joseph, and they don’t even recognize him. They have been blinded by two decades of thinking he had long since died, their perspective jaded by the haunting fear, endless guilt and corrosive shame of what they had done. (Genesis 44:16) Finally, when Joseph’s identity is revealed, the brothers expect him to exact revenge, make them pay dearly and do to them what they had done to him.

But Joseph was cut from a different cloth than these lousy brothers. His submission to the sovereignty of God allowed him to see the pain they had inflicted not merely through his own perspective alone, but through a perspective that saw God working through their evil actions. Joseph recognized that in all the circumstances of life, big and small, good and bad, God had been inexorably bringing the currents of his personal history to a providential conclusion.

Joseph’s submission to the sovereignty of God is revealed three times as he discloses himself to his brothers with words to this effect: “Don’t beat yourself up; it was God, not you, who sent me here. You had a plan and God had a plan, and God’s plan trumped yours. You were simply unwitting but useful instruments in his hands.” (Genesis 45:5,7,8). Joseph’s brothers might have been idiots for selling him into slavery twenty plus years before, but they were useful idiots in the hands of the Providential Ruler of all mankind.

The bottom line to Joseph’s story is that God is in control. He turns what is meant for evil to our good, extracts glory for himself even in the most impossible circumstances, and no matter what, always, always, always fulfills his sovereign purposes. He is in control! He is the Sovereign God of the universe, the Providential Ruler over the affairs, big and small, of all mankind, the Incomparable One who works all things for his glory.

And here’s the kicker: He works all things not only for his own glory—but for your good! That’s right—for your good. Now why would the Sovereign, Providential, Incomparable One bother with little old you? Simply because you’ve surrendered your life to him; and when you did that, you, perhaps even unwittingly, signed up to be on his sovereign benefits plan.

So here’s the deal: If you have a few idiots making your life difficult, just remember, in God’s hands they are useful idiots.

Going Deeper With God: Here is a prayer you might want to offer today: “Sovereign Lord, today I express my trust that you will use what was hurtful to me for your glory and my good. I will refuse to allow bitterness and unforgiveness to take root in my spirit. Rather, by faith I will choose to see you actively at work in me.”

Romans 8: Bottom Line—We Win!

Read Romans 8:28-39

 

Bottom Line: We Win!

And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who
love him, who have been called according to his purpose.
~Romans 8:28

Digging Deeper: Romans 8 has to be one of the most uplifting chapters in the entire Bible. And this section, Romans 8:28-39, is the summit of encouragement.  I hope you will read all twelve of the section’s verses today—and perhaps every day for the rest of the week.

I’m not sure what I would do without the theology of Romans 8:28—that God causes everything that happens to me, both good and bad, to work to my good and His glory. How disheartening—even depressing—life would be if we were nothing more than the helpless victims of the circumstances life flings our way.  But no, God causes good to come to me through my circumstances!

Now please understand, Paul isn’t saying that God causes all things, but that He causes all things that occur in my life to work as instruments of His purpose for me.  God sovereignly orchestrates every single event in my life to my benefit both in this world and in the one to come. On the one hand, leverages my successes, accomplishments and blessings for good, and on the other hand, He turns suffering, sickness, and yes, even my sin for good as well.

But keep in mind that He gets to define what is beneficial and good for me.  After all, He is God and I am not.  And what He has defined as good for me is found in the very next verse, Romans 8:29,

For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed
to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the
firstborn among many brothers.

For the time being, put aside your questions about predestination and focus on the word “conform.” The word in the Greek text is the same from which we get our word, “morph,” or “metamorphosis.”  What is the good that all things are being divinely leveraged in your life?  Simple, yet profoundly this: That you are being chiseled by circumstances and events and interactions each and every day into the very likeness of Jesus Christ.   And that is the highest good possible, my friend, because that’s the one thing that lasts for both time and eternity.

That is God’s great and unstoppable purpose for you.  He is committed to that as much as He is committed to anything in this universe.  So therefore, “if God is for you, who can be against you?” (Romans 8:31)  If God was willing for His Son to die such a horrible death on the cross just to morph you into that which was worthy of eternal life, what else could prove both the depth of His indescribable love and the irresistibility of His divine purpose for you? (Romans 8:32)  Is there anything in all of creation that can stop God’s love or thwart God’s purpose in remaking you into the image and likeness of Jesus?  Nothing…nada…zero…zilch…zip! (Romans 8:33-39)

The fact is, “in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.” (Romans 8:37)  How is that? God is using “all these things” as his divine chisel to morph you into an uncanny likeness of His Son.  What’s the bottom line: We win!  And I mean, really win in the only way that counts—which is looking, thinking, acting and being just like Jesus!

You are a winner!  Go with it!
 

“There is nothing that is more dangerous to your own salvation,
more unworthy of God and more harmful to your own happiness,
than that you should be content to remain as you are.”
~Francois Fenelon

This Week’s Assignment:

  • Read Romans 8:1-39
  • Memorize Romans 8:1-2, “Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, because through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death.”
  • Memorize Romans 8:38-39, “For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”