Monday, May 11, 2015

Bowing Under God's Persevering Rod

11 MAY

Nebuchadnezzar the king, unto all people, nations, and languages, that dwell in all the earth; Peace be multiplied unto you. I thought it good to show the signs and wonders that the high God hath toward me. How great are His signs! and how mighty are His wonders! His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and His dominion is from generation to generation. Daniel 4:1-3

SUGGESTED FURTHER READING: Luke 15:3-7

Nebuchadnezzar here predicts the magnificence and might of His own monarchy, sending His announcement to all peoples and nations and languages that dwell on the earth. No doubt the king believes He has sufficiently paid the penalty of His former ingratitude and now ascribes glory to the one true God. Yet we also know how often he relapsed into his own superstitions and never really said farewell to them. We also see how often king Nebuchadnezzar had to be chastised before he profited by the rod of the Almighty.
Likewise, we need not be surprised if God often strikes us with His hand, since experience usually proves us to be dull, and even utterly slothful. When God, therefore, wishes to lead us to repentance, He may be compelled to continually repeat His blows, either because we are not moved when He chastises us with His hand, or we seem roused for a time, then return again to our former dullness. He is therefore compelled to redouble His blows.
We see ourselves in this story of Nebuchadnezzar as in a mirror. But the singular benefit is that, after God repeatedly chastised the king, he finally yielded. We do now know whether this confession proceeded from true and genuine repentance. I must leave that undecided. Yet without the slightest doubt, Daniel cited this edict of the king to show that the king was eventually so subdued that he confessed the God of Israel as the only God and bore witness to this among all people under his rule.

John Calvin

FOR MEDITATION:

We are now learners and should not be angry with God when He perseveres in chastening us to repentance. If He were not so patient and insistent, we all would have wandered far from Him long ago. Is He chastising you today? What lesson can you learn from it?

365 Days With Calvin
Selected and Edited by Joel R. Beeke

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