Dangerous Questions- Madison Flowers
Canto Twenty, Lines 25-30
“I leaned upon an outcrop of the bridge
And surely I wept; I wept so, that my guide
Said, “Even now, with
all the other fools!
Here pity lives the best when it is dead.
Who is more wicked than the man who longs
To make God’s
judgment yield to human force?”
This question in the last line stopped me in my tracks. Who
is Dante to question God’s authority to punish His creation how He sees fit?
Who is Dante to question God’s righteousness? Or maybe I should say, who am I
to question God’s righteous judgment? I don’t know about you, but sometimes I will
be reading through the Bible and I question some of the orders God gives His
people while they are at war. Now I don’t mean I question His authority or His
power or His ability to make all these things come to fruition. I just mean
that sometimes when the Lord commands His people to ransack a village and He
tells them to kill every living thing, children included, I wonder why (see the
battle of Jericho in Judges 6). I mean, they are children after all, are they
really that guilty?
But questioning the Lord is a dangerous game to play. If one
is a Bible-believing Christ follower, then it is clearly stated that God is
good (see Psalm 107:1; Psalm 145:9) and that God is righteous (see Psalm 7:11;
Psalm 116:5). We must trust in the fact that He knows what He is doing, and it will
all work out for the good of those who love Him and, most importantly, for His
glory.
I’ll leave off with this verse for those of you like me, who
always have questions.
“For My thoughts are not your thoughts,
Neither are your ways My ways, declares the LORD.
For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
So are My ways higher than your ways
And My thoughts higher than your thoughts.”
-Isaiah 55:8-9
commented on Gray and Zelda's posts
commented on Gray and Zelda's posts
I completely understand where you are coming from. Sometimes I see the things God asks us to do and question if that is as really pure as we are supposed to strive to be. However, God is incapable of doing wrong. So whatever he does, must be right. But does that mean if murder is defined as wrong, but God murders, does that make it righteous? Is it because he is playing out to His will? This a difficult question. I do believe that everyhting God does is right and true, but it is hard to accept sometimes. I guess we will have to wait and ask him ourselves.
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