GOD-JEALOUSY
Let
it be remembered then, that jealousy, like anger, is not evil in itself, or it
could never be ascribed to God; His jealousy is ever a pure and holy flame. The
passion of jealousy possesses an intense force, it fires the whole nature, its
coals are juniper, which have a most vehement flame; it resides in the lowest
depths of the heart, and takes so firm a hold that it remains most deeply
rooted until the exciting cause is removed; it wells up from the inmost
recesses of the nature, and like a torrent irresistibly sweeps all before it;
it stops at nothing, for it is cruel as the grave (Cant. 8:6), it provokes
wrath to the utmost, for it is the rage of a man, therefore he will not spare
in the day of vengeance (Proverbs 6:34), and it overthrows everything in the
pursuit of its enemy, for “wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is
able to stand before jealousy?” For all these reasons jealousy is selected as
some faint picture of that tender regard which God has for His own Deity,
honor, and supremacy, and the holy indignation which He feels towards those who
violate His laws, offend His majesty, or impeach His character.
C.H. Spurgeon
A
Jealous God, Sermon 502, March 29, 1863.
Since
He is the only God, the Creator of heaven and earth, He cannot endure that any
creature of His own hands, or fiction of a creature’s
imagination should be thrust into His throne, and be made to wear His crown.
C.H. Spurgeon
A
Jealous God, Sermon 502, March 29, 1863.
Hide
yourselves under the banner of Jehovah’s jealousy. It is bloody red, I know;
its ensign bears a thunderbolt and a flame of fire; but hide
yourselves, hide yourselves under it, for what enemy shall reach you there? If
it be to God's glory to save me, I am entrenched behind munitions of stupendous
rock. If it would render God inglorious to let me, a poor sinner, descend into
hell; if it would open the mouths of devils and make men say that God is not
faithful to His promise, then am I secure, for God's glory is wrapped up with
my salvation, and the one cannot fail because the other cannot be tarnished.
C.H. Spurgeon
A
Jealous God, Sermon 502, March 29, 1863.
God’s name is
the epitome of who and what He is, and He says His name is Jealous. Jealousy is
not merely a passing mood with God. It is the essence of His person. He cannot
be other than jealous. Since He is the highest and greatest being there is,
infinitely holy and glorious, He must be passionately committed to preserving
His honor and supremacy. He must zealously desire exclusive devotion and
worship. To do less would make Him less than God. He said about Himself:
Richard L. Strauss
A Jealous God, www.bible.org, Copyright
©1996-2005, All rights reserved.
God is
sovereign and supreme over all. Were He to share His glory with other so-called
gods, He would be elevating them to a position that would not be consistent
with their true nature, and it likewise would be making Him untrue to His own
nature – less than the preeminent God He is. He must be faithful to Himself and
maintain His high and holy position, and He wants His creatures to attribute to
Him that degree of honor. Basically, that is what He means when He says, “I
shall be jealous for My holy name” (Ezekiel 39:25).
His jealousy does not grow out of insecurity, anxiety, frustration,
covetousness, pride, or spite, as ours usually does. It is the natural and
necessary by-product of His absolute sovereignty and infinite holiness.
Richard L. Strauss
A Jealous God, www.bible.org, Copyright
©1996-2005, All rights reserved.
No man with
any moral fiber wants to share his wife with another man, and neither does God.
He expects exclusive devotion from her. When she goes after other lovers, that
is, when she worships other gods and thus commits spiritual adultery, He is
said to be jealous.
Richard L. Strauss
A Jealous God, www.bible.org, Copyright ©1996-2005,
All rights reserved.
Just as a
husband cannot be indulgent of adultery in his wife, so also God cannot and
will not endure infidelity in us. What would we think of a man or woman who
does not experience jealous feelings when another person approaches his or her
spouse and threatens to win his or her affection? We would regard such a person
as deficient in moral character and lacking in true love.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 302. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
Jealousy is
central to the fundamental essence of who God is. Jealousy is at the core of
God’s identity as God. Jealousy is that defining characteristic or personality
trait that makes God God. Whatever other reasons you
may find in Scripture for worshiping and serving and loving God alone, and
there are many of them and they are all good, paramount among them all is the
fact that our God burns with jealousy for the undivided allegiance and
affection of His people… At the very core of His being, in the center of His
personality is an inextinguishable blaze of immeasurable love called jealousy.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 293-294. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
To say that
God is jealous certainly does not mean that He is suspicious because of some
insecurity in His heart. This kind of jealousy is the result of ignorance and
mistrust. Such is surely not true of our all-knowing God. Nor does it mean He
is wrongfully envious of the success of others. Jealousy that is sinful is most
often the product of anxiety and bitterness and fear. But surely none of this
could be true of our all-powerful Creator – God. Sinful jealousy is the sort
that longs to possess and control what does not properly belong to oneself; it
is demanding and cares little for the supposed object of its love.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 295. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
Divine
jealousy is thus a zeal to protect a love relationship
or to avenge it when it is broken. Jealousy in God is that passionate energy by
which He is provoked and stirred and moved to take action against whatever or
whoever stands in the way of His enjoyment of what He loves and desires. The
intensity if God’s anger at threats to this relationship is directly
proportionate to the depths of His love… Jealousy in God is not a “green-eyed
monster” but a “red-faced lover” who will brook no rivals in His relationship
with His people.
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 295. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.
Envy
is not a synonym for jealousy. Synonyms can be used interchangeably; envy and
jealousy can’t. If you don’t believe me, try substituting the word “envious”
for “jealous” in the phrase: “For I the Lord your God
am a jealous God.” Jealousy is possessive and protective; it can be good or
bad. God’s jealousy – His possessiveness of His people – is a good thing; it
protects us from being plucked out of His hand.
Carol J. Ruvolo
Envy and Kindness, Tabletalk, May 2008, p.
21, Used by Permission.
The jealousy
of Yahweh is His profoundly intense drive within to protect the interest of His
own glory (Exodus 20:4-6; Ezekiel 39:25), for He will admit no derogation from
His majesty.
Raymond
C. Ortlund
Whoredom: God’s Unfaithful Wife in Biblical
Theology, Eerdmans, 1996, p. 29, n. 15, www.eerdmans.com.
[God
was] jealous for your salvation as He brought the gospel to you in one way and
another, through one person and another, through one means and another, until
finally He broke through in the power of the Holy Spirit and brought you to
living faith. What is more, He is jealous for you now, jealous for your
spiritual welfare, jealous for you in every temptation and trial, jealous lest
you should be robbed by covetousness, compromise, worldliness, prayerlessness
or disobedience in any shape or form. He is jealous that you should have that
fullness of blessing, those riches of grace that He longs to bestow upon every
one of you His people.
John Blanchard
Truth for Life: A Devotional Commentary on the Epistle of James, Evangelical
Press, 1986.
God is not jealous like an insecure employer who fears
that his employees might get lured away by a better salary elsewhere. God’s
jealousy is not the reflex of weakness or fear. Instead God is jealous like a
powerful and merciful king who takes a peasant girl from a life of shame,
forgives her, marries her, and gives her not the chores of a slave, but the
privileges of a wife – a queen. His jealousy does not rise from fear or
weakness but from a holy indignation at having His honor and power and mercy
scorned by the faithlessness of a fickle spouse.
John Piper
The Lord Whose Name is Jealous, October 28,
1984. www.DesiringGod.org.
Used by Permission.
The jealousy of God for your undivided love and devotion
will always have the last say. Whatever lures your affections away from God
with deceptive attraction will come back to strip you bare and cut you in
pieces (Eze. 16:38-40). It is a horrifying thing to
use your God-given life to commit adultery against the Almighty. But for those
of you who have been truly united to Christ and who keep your vows to forsake
all others and cleave only to Him and live for His honor – for you the jealousy
of God is a great comfort and a great hope. Since God
is infinitely jealous for the honor of His name, anything and anybody who
threatens the good of His faithful wife will be opposed with divine
omnipotence.
John Piper
The Lord Whose Name is Jealous, October 28,
1984. www.DesiringGod.org.
Used by Permission.