Are
You not from everlasting, O LORD my God, my Holy One? We shall not
die. O LORD, You have appointed them for judgment; O Rock, You have
marked them for correction. You are of purer eyes than to behold
evil, And cannot look on wickedness. Why do You look on those who
deal treacherously, And hold Your tongue when the wicked devours A
person more righteous than he? – Habakkuk 1v12-13
Poor
Habakkuk. He looked around him and saw the miserable condition of
Judah. It was a wicked and vile place. So God gave him a solution –
He would send the Chaldeans to punish them!
But
that didn’t make any sense – the Chaldeans were even more wicked
than Israel!
What is
a guy supposed to do when God isn’t making any sense? More on that
tomorrow, but for now I want to look at a special part of the
passage. It is a truth that is real even when we don't understand it.
'God is of purer eyes than the behold evil. God cannot look at
wickedness.
It is
precisely for this reason that God sent His Son to the cross and at
that vital moment hid His face from His own Son. Because God is of
'purer eyes than to behold evil' Jesus could not sense the Father's
face and cried out 'Why have you forsaken me?'
Not to
long ago I read the novel 'The Help.' We are with Beth and Ronnie and
last night the Armed Forces Network showed the film. Toward the end
one of the maids has been fired for her role in writing the book
about how black servants were treated in the Old South. As she leaves
the little girl she cared for is pounding on the window screaming for
her as she walks away.
That
image reminds me of something of what it might be like to be
forsaken. Man's sins separate him from the God who is too pure to
look on evil. Man could never look to God for deliverance apart from
the sacrifice of the Perfect One who accepted being forsaken for our
sake.
Yes,
God is too pure to look on evil, but He sent His Son to cover sin
over so that we can have communion with Him.
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