The Ways of Providence

Luke 13:1-9

One of the greatest ships ever built was the famed Titanic. Although advertised worldwide as unsinkable, it hit an iceberg on its maiden voyage in April 1912 and sank, taking hundreds of passengers to the bottom of the sea.

G. Campbell Morgan, the great English preacher, lamented the loss of a personal friend who went down with the ocean liner. Preaching at Wesminster Chapel in London on "The Loss of the Titanic," he made an observation that every thinking man ought to consider:

"There is a Providence watching over the affairs of men, controlling even the choices that are made in human freedom, not to immediate results, but to ultimate and final issues. I say there are quantities of facts and qualities, of which we are ignorant, all of which must be taken into account if we are to have an accurate interpretation of providential dealings."

Morgan was addressing himself to the question that must have stirred many hearts that April day: Where does the providence of God enter into such a catastrophe as this?

I. Providence:

II. "Acts of God"

The Jews reporting bad news from the Temple to Jesus clearly believed that, while Pilate perpetrated the crime, he was simply the messenger of God's judgment. Jesus did not say anything to contradict this view.

If all events whatever are in God's sovereign disposal, and if not so much as a sparrow or a human hair perishes without His knowledge and permission, we can be certain that the our lives are more particularly under His providential care.

In this sense God is the Author and Disposer of all events, operative in all that comes to pass in the world, directing all things toward an appointed end. This is the meaning of God's providence. God's hand in the glove of History.

We may not, and cannot, always under-stand His ends. But, learning from the Lord Jesus, we can trust God in the hour of crucifixion, when the crowd of friends has thinned out and darkness overwhelms us. Because in the resurrection light all will be made clear. There is a life of fuller freedom beyond this present one, when the paths we trod will be seen with better eyes.

"Farther along we'll know all about it...Farther along we'll understand why."

“For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.” (1 Cor 13:12)