GOD-GLORY-PURSUED-GOD
For God to
fail or refuse to value Himself preeminently would implicate Him in the sin of
idolatry. Idolatry is honoring anyone or anything as god, instead of God. If
God were ever to act in such a way that He did not seek His own glory, He would
be saying that something more valuable than Himself
exists, and that is a lie. Worse still, it is idolatrous.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 98. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
How could we
describe God as righteous and good if He ever failed to pursue and preserve
what is supremely valuable and of greatest worth? That is why God must take
ultimate delight in His own glory or He would be unrighteous. It is incumbent
on everyone to take delight in a person in proportion to the excellence of that
person’s glory. Whose glory can compare with that of God’s? If God were not to
delight supremely in God He would not be God, or at least He would be an
unrighteous one and thus unworthy of our delight.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 98. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
God’s pursuit
of my praise of Him is not weak self-seeking but the epitome of self-giving
love! If my satisfaction in Him is incomplete until expressed in praise of Him
for satisfying me, then God’s effort to solicit my worship is both the most
loving thing He could possibly do for me and the most glorifying thing He could
possibly do for Himself. For in my gladness in Him is His glory in me.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 218. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
What is the
preeminent passion in God’s heart? What is God’s greatest pleasure? How does
the happiness of God manifest itself? In what does God take supreme delight? I
want to suggest that the preeminent passion in God’s heart is His own glory.
God is at the center of His own affections. The supreme love of God’s life is
God. God is preeminently committed to the fame of His name. God is Himself the
end for which God created the world. Better still, God’s immediate goal in all
He does is for His own glory.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 82. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights reserved.
If it is
right for man to have the glory of God as his goal, can it be wrong for God to
have the same goal? If man can have no higher purpose than God’s glory, how can
God? If it is wrong for man to seek a lesser end than this, it would be wrong
for God, too. The reason it cannot be right for man to live for himself, as if
He were God, is because He is not God. However, it cannot be wrong for God to
seek His own glory, simply because He is God. Those who insist that God should
not seek His glory in all things are really asking that He cease to be God. And
there is no greater blasphemy than to will God out of existence.
J.I. Packer
Hot
Tub Religion, Tyndale House, 1987, p. 38.
As the sun,
which would shine in its own brightness and glory though all the world were
blind, or did willfully shut their eyes against it, so God will be ever most
glorious, let men be ever so obstinate or rebellious. Yea, God will have glory
by reprobates, though it be nothing to their ease; and though He be not glorified of them, yet He will glorify Himself in
them.
Nehemiah Rogers
A Puritan Golden Treasury, compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 120.
So is God
selfish and vain [to pursue His own glory]? No, for while it would be sinful
for sinners (like us) to promote our own glory, it would be wrong if God acted
for any purpose less than His own glory. Giving preeminence to any purpose
other than Himself – since all things are less than God – would make God an
idolater. God can give us nothing
greater than Himself in all His glory, so it's to our advantage for God to
glorify Himself above all.
Don Whitney
What is the Purpose of God? Kansas City Star, 7/7/01, www.BiblicalSpirituality.org,
Used by Permission.
God never
pursues His glory at the expense of the good of His people, nor does He ever
seek our good at the expense of His glory. He has designed His eternal purpose
so that His glory and our good are inextricably bound together. What comfort
and encouragement this should be to us. If we are going to learn to trust God
in adversity, we must believe that just as certainly as God will allow nothing
to subvert His glory, so He will allow nothing to spoil the good He is working
out in us and for us.
Jerry Bridges
Trusting God, 1988, p. 25. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com. All rights reserved.
Because you
and I are in Christ Jesus, His glory and our good are
linked together. Because we are united with Christ, whatever is for His glory
is also for our good. And whatever is for our good is for His glory.
Jerry Bridges
Trusting God, 1988, p. 144. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com. All rights reserved.
Christ lives
in us to manifest His life through us. Christ in us accomplishes His own
purposes. Part of His purpose is intimacy with us, but His plan encompasses
more than that. He is working toward His own ends, and we are the vessels
through which He works. We are the visible manifestation of what God is doing,
with Himself as the ultimate goal, “that God may be all in all” (I Corinthians
15:28).
Dan Stone
The Rest of the Gospel, One Press, 2000,
Preface.
The bedrock
of missions is not the value of man. It is the spread of God’s glory. The
biblical commitment to evangelism and missions is rooted in God’s passionate
concern to make His name known.
Steve Fernandez
Missions and the Glory of God's Name.
A church that
says no to missions is not just saying no to men. It is not just a matter of
leaving men in their sins. It is saying no to God’s greatest concern: the
spreading of His glorious name among the peoples of the world. This is His
passionate concern; it must be ours.
Steve Fernandez
Missions and the Glory of God's Name.
The purpose
of Jesus' death was to glorify the Father. To be willing as the Son of God to
suffer the loss of so much glory Himself in order to repair the injury done to
God's glory by our sin showed how infinitely valuable the glory of God is. To
be sure, the death of Christ also shows God's love for us. But we are not at
the center.
John Piper
The aim of God in creating and redeeming us is the
delight He Himself enjoys in seeing His creatures delight in Him. As Edwards
said, “[The] glorifying of God is nothing but rejoicing in the manifestations
of Him.” In other words, the purpose of the knowledge of God is the enjoyment
of God because “God is most glorified in you when you are most satisfied in
Him.”
John Piper
God is the
one being in the universe for whom self-exaltation is
the ultimately loving act. And the reason is easy to see. The one and only
Reality in the universe that can fully and eternally satisfy the human heart is
the glory of God – the beauty of all that God is for us in Jesus. Therefore God
would not be loving unless he upholds and displays and
magnifies that glory for our everlasting enjoyment
John Piper
The Driving Convictions Behind
Missions, Nov. 2, 1996.
God’s own
glory is uppermost in His own affections. In everything He does, His purpose is
to preserve and display that glory. To say His glory is uppermost in His own
affections means that He puts a greater value on it than on anything else. He
delights in His glory above all things… God’s overwhelming passion is to exalt
the value of His glory. To that end He seeks to display it, to oppose those who
belittle it, and to vindicate it from all contempt.
John Piper
Desiring God, 1996, p. 43, Used by
Permission, www.desiringGod.org.
God would be
unrighteous (just as we would) if He valued anything more than what is
supremely valuable. But He Himself is supremely valuable. If He did not take
infinite delight in the worth of His own glory He would be unrighteous. For it
is right to take delight in a person in proportion to the excellence of that
person’s glory.
John Piper
Desiring God, 1996, p. 43, Used by
Permission, www.desiringGod.org.
Interest is
to magnify the fullness of His glory by spilling over in mercy to us. Therefore
the pursuit of our interest and our happiness is never above God, but always in
God. God’s greatest interest is to glorify the wealth of His grace by making
sinners happy in Him.
John Piper
How could we
expect God to be consumed with anything less than His own perfect, holy being?
For God to be consumed with anything else would be idolatrous. It would be
exalting the creature above the Creator. God’s goal is to exalt Himself and His
own glory. He intends to magnify His great name. “For from Him and through Him
and to Him are all things. To Him be glory forever”
(Rom. 11:36).
Edward T. Welch
When People are Big and God is Small, P&R
Publishing, 1997, p. 154. Used by Permission.
God glorifies
Himself toward the creature also in two ways: 1. By
appearing to...their understanding. 2. In communicating Himself to their
hearts, and in their rejoicing and delighting in and enjoying the
manifestations which He makes of Himself... God is glorified not only by His
glory being seen, but by its being rejoiced in. When those that see it delight
in it, God is more glorified than if they only see it. His glory is then
received by the whole soul, both by the understanding and by the heart.
Jonathan Edwards
For it appears,
that all that is ever spoken of in the Scriptures as the ultimate end of God’s
works, is included in that one phrase, the glory of God.
Jonathan Edwards
The moral
rectitude of the disposition, inclination, or affection of God, chiefly consist in a regard to Himself, infinitely above His regard
to all other beings.
Jonathan Edwards
The Works of Jonathan Edwards, By
Permission of Banner of Truth Trust, Carlisle PA.
1974, 1:98.
If
God did not insist that we worship Him alone, we would have to conclude that He
is evil, or at least two-faced, since He would not be directing us to the one
thing we desperately need.
Scott Hafemann
What Does it Mean to Know God? by Scott Hafemann taken
from The God of Promise and the Life of Faith by Scott Hafemann, copyright
2001, Crossway Books, a division of Good News Publishers, Wheaton Illinois
60187, www.crosswaybooks.org, page
41.
The
great, and glorious end for which God decreed the after-being of sin, is His
own glory: and the ends subordinate thereunto are not a few. Particularly, God
decreed the futurition of sin:
1.
That He might have occasion of glorifying His
infinite wisdom, love, and grace in the redemption and salvation of a company
of lost sinners through the death and sufferings of His own dear Son.
2.
That His patience and long suffering in
bearing with and forbearing sinners, might be magnified,
admired, and adored.
3.
That He might be honoured
and glorified by the faith and repentance of His people, and their walking
humbly with Him.
4.
That His justice might be illustriously
displayed and glorified in the eternal damnation of reprobate sinners for their
own sins and abominations, sin being the cause of their damnation, though not
of their reprobation.
Thomas Boston
Of the Decrees of God, Commentary on the Shorter Catechism.
For human
beings self-worship is the worst sin, for God it is the epitome of His
righteousness.
Daniel Fuller
The Unity of the Bible, Zondervan, 1992, p.
120.