Does God have problems He has to solve? Are any of them difficult for Him, as 
problems are for us? He has one huge one--the rebellion of sin in His universe. 
You may say, "He is infinite, omnipotent; He can just zap His enemies and His 
problems are solved!"
But wait a moment: He can't do that unless He rules as a divine Autocrat, and 
in the process becomes "Satan" redivivus. For example, His people Israel were 
being cruelly enslaved in Egypt. How can He deliver them? Zap the Egyptians? 
No; He must go through a long, wearying process of sending ten plagues on 
Pharaoh; He must carry world opinion with Him. Most of all, God must make it 
clear to His own people Israel that He alone is their Savior, their Deliverer, 
or their hearts can never be truly reconciled to Him.

If they retain any sense of self-salvation, sin will still rule in their 
hearts. Even one percent of salvation by their own works will nullify the power 
of His Gospel as surely as one percent of arsenic mixed into a good dinner will 
spoil it.

But that lethal "one percent" (or more!) got mixed in at Mount Sinai when the 
people themselves wanted to invent the Old Covenant: "All that the Lord hath 
spoken we will do" (Ex. 19:8). We helped You deliver us from Egyptian slavery! 
Even if we didn't, we WILL do our part in this "bargain," this "deal," this 
transaction of Your Covenant. We'll sign on the dotted line! You can count on 
us, Lord!

All through Israel's long history this Old Covenant mentality predominated. 
After each revival and reformation it finally drove them to reject and crucify 
their Savior.

Now, does God have a problem with His church? The prophecies of Daniel, of 
Revelation, of Jesus in Matthew 24, of Paul in Acts 20 and 2 Thessalonians 2, 
all tell us "Yes!" The great Enemy who misled ancient Israel is still active. 
"Take heed that no man deceive you," says Jesus. "After my departing shall 
grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock," "there [shall] come 
a falling away, ... and that man of sin be revealed, ... who opposeth and 
exalteth himself above all that is called God," says Paul.

And again, the issue is self-righteousness. Theologians feel they must worm in 
that principle of salvation by works, in some way. They just can't have a 
Savior doing ALL the saving! Can you?

--Robert J. Wieland

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