ROMANS 8:28
There may be
circumstances in your earthly lot which at this moment are peculiarly trying.
You look around and wonder how this or that circumstance will terminate. At
present it looks very dark – clouds and mists hang over it, and you fear lest
these clouds may break, not in showers upon your head, but burst forth in the
lightning flash and the thunder stroke! But all things are put in subjection under
Christ's feet! That which you dread cannot take place except by His sovereign
will – nor can it move any further except by His supreme disposal. Then make
yourself quiet. He will not allow you to be harmed. That frowning providence
shall only execute His sovereign purposes, and it shall be among those all
things which, according to His promise, shall work together for your good. None
of our trials come upon us by chance! They are all appointed in weight and
measure – are all designed to fulfill a certain end. And however painful they
may at present be, yet they are intended for your good. When the trial comes upon you, what a help it
would be for you if you could view it thus, “This trial is sent
for my good. It does not spring out of the dust. The Lord Himself is the
supreme disposer of it. It is very painful to bear; but let me believe that He
has appointed me this peculiar trial, along with every other circumstance. He
will bring about His own will therein, and either remove the trial, or give me
patience under it, and submission to it.”
The Subjection of All Things Under the Feet of Jesus.
I do not say
that sin works for good to an impenitent person. No, it works for his
damnation, but it works for good to them that love God… I know you will not
draw a wrong conclusion from this, either to make light of sin, or to make bold
with sin… If any of God’s people should be tampering with sin, because God can
turn it to good; though the Lord does not damn them, He may send them to hell
in this life. He may put them into such bitter agonies and soul-convulsions, as
may fill them full of horror, and make them draw nigh to despair. Let this be a
flaming sword to keep them from coming near the forbidden tree.
Thomas Watson
A Puritan Golden Treasury,
compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 282.
Most of the
time, we scratched our heads and wondered how the matted mesh of threads in
Romans 8:28 could possibly be woven together for our good. On earth, the
underside of the tapestry was tangled and unclear; but in heaven, we will stand
amazed to see the topside of the tapestry and how God beautifully embroidered
each circumstance into a pattern for our good and His glory.
Joni Eareckson Tada
Heaven: Your Real Home, Zondervan, www.Zondervan.com, 1995, p. 45. Used
by Permission.
Christian,
remember the goodness of God in the frost of adversity.
C.H. Spurgeon
God
is wonderful in His design and excellent in His working. Believer, God
overrules all things for your good. The needs-be for all that you have
suffered, has been most accurately determined by God. Your course is all mapped
out by your Lord. Nothing will take Him by surprise. There will be no novelties
to Him. There will be no occurrences which He did not foresee, and for which,
therefore, He has not provided. He has arranged all, and you have but to patiently wait, and you shall sing a song of deliverance.
Your life has been arranged on the best possible principles, so that if you had
been gifted with unerring wisdom, you would have arranged a life for yourself
exactly similar to the one through which you have passed. Let us trust God
where we cannot trace Him.
C.H. Spurgeon
A Feast for Faith, Isaiah. 28:29.
Scripture
speaks about God working everything together “for the good” of those who love
him (Rom. 8:28). But what is this “good?” It consists of believers being
conformed (changed and remade) to the image of Christ (Rom. 8:29). Thus, all
the experiences of life are intended, under the sovereign hand of God, to help
us to grow towards the great goal of the Christian life – Christ-likeness.
Sinclair B. Ferguson
Healthy Christian Growth, by Permission of the Banner of
Truth Trust, Carlisle, PA. 1991, p. 16.
How can all
things be worked together by God for good? The answer is at hand. It is because
God's ultimate purpose is to make us like Christ. His goal is the complete
restoration of the image of God in His child! So great a work demands all the
resources which God finds throughout the universe, and He ransacks the
possibilities of joys and sorrows in order to reproduce in us the character of
Jesus.
Sinclair Ferguson
The Christian Life, p. 21, 1997, by permission Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA.
God does deal
with our sins, but only in such a way as for our good. He does not deal with us
as our sins deserve, which would be punishment, but as His grace provides,
which is for our good.
Jerry Bridges
Transforming Grace, NavPress, 1991, p.
40. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com. All rights
reserved.
God never
allows pain without a purpose in the lives of His children. He never allows
Satan, nor circumstances, nor any ill-intending person
to afflict us unless He uses that affliction for our good. God never wastes
pain. He always causes it to work together for our ultimate good, the good of
conforming us more to the likeness of His Son (see Romans 8:28-29).
Jerry Bridges
Transforming Grace, NavPress, 1991, p.
139. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com. All rights
reserved.
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
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
25. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
That which
should distinguish the suffering of believers from unbelievers is the
confidence that our suffering is under the control of an all-powerful and
all-loving God; our suffering has meaning and purpose in God’s eternal plan,
and He brings or allows to come into our lives only
that which is for His glory and our good.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
32. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
The good that
God works for in our lives is conformity to the likeness of His Son. It is not
necessarily comfort or happiness but conformity to Christ in ever-increasing
measure in this life and in its fullness in eternity.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
120. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
Paul and
James both say that we should rejoice in our trials because of their beneficial
results. It is not the adversity considered in itself
that is to be the ground of our joy. Rather, it is the expectation of the
results, the development of our character that should cause us to rejoice in
adversity. God does not ask us to rejoice because we have lost our job, or a
loved one has been stricken with cancer, or a child has been born with an
incurable birth defect. But He does tell us to rejoice because we believe He is
in control of those circumstances and is at work through them for our ultimate
good.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
175. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
To derive the
fullest comfort and encouragement from Romans 8:28 we must realize that God is
at work in a proactive, not reactive, fashion. That is, God does not just
respond to an adversity in our lives to make the best of a bad situation. He
knows before He initiates or permits the adversity exactly how He will use it
for our good.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
207. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
Nothing can
be more consoling to the man of God, than the conviction that the Lord who made
the world governs the world; and that every event, great and small, prosperous
and adverse, is under the absolute disposal of Him who doth all things well,
and who regulates all things for the good of his people.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
214. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
[God] is at
work in all the circumstances of your life to bring out the good for you, even
if you had never heard of Romans 8:28. His work is not dependent upon your
faith. But the comfort and joy that statement is intended to give you is
dependent upon your believing it, upon your trusting in Him who is at work,
even though you cannot see the outcome of that work.
Jerry Bridges
The Practice of Godliness, NavPress, 1996, p.
116. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.com,
All rights reserved.
God
will not permit any troubles to come upon us, unless He has a specific plan by
which great blessing can come out of the difficulty.
God is able
to cause all things people do to us, even the bad things, to work together for
our good (Rom. 8:28). That isn’t to say that all things are good, but that God
can orchestrate the evil into a symphony of glory.
Sam Storms
One Thing, Christian Focus, © Enjoying God Ministries, 2004, p. 155, www.enjoyinggodministries.com.
Used by Permission.
Whatsoever is
upon you is from the Lord, and whatsoever is from the
Lord, to you it is in mercy; and whatsoever comes in mercy ought not to be
grievous to you. What loss is it when the losing of earthly
things is the gaining of spiritual things?
All shall be for your good, if you make your use of all.
Richard Greenham
A Puritan Golden Treasury,
compiled by I.D.E. Thomas, by permission of Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA. 2000, p. 13.
An evidence
that our will has been broken is that we begin to thank God for that which once
seemed so bitter, knowing that His will is good and that, in His time and in
His way, He is able to make the most bitter waters sweet.
Nancy Leigh DeMoss
A Place of Quiet Rest, Moody, 2000, p. 70.
It should
fill us with joy, that infinite wisdom guides the affairs of the world. Many of
its events are shrouded in darkness and mystery, and inextricable confusion
sometimes seems to reign. Often wickedness prevails, and God seems to have
forgotten the creatures that He has made. Our own path through life is dark and
devious, and beset with difficulties and dangers. How full of consolation is
the doctrine, that infinite wisdom directs every event, brings order out of
confusion, and light out of darkness, and, to those who love God, causes all
things, whatever be their present aspect and apparent tendency, to work
together for good.
J.L. Dagg
Manual of Theology, Gano
Books, 1982 edition of original 1857 edition published by The Southern Baptist
Publication Society, p. 86-87.
The crux of
the human problem, according to Israel's faith, is not the fact of suffering
but the character of man's relationship to God. Outside the
relationship for which man was created, suffering drives men to despair or to
the easy solutions of popular religion. Within the relationship of
faith, suffering may be faced in the confidence that man's times are in God's
hands and that “in everything God works for good with those who love him, who
are called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28).
Bernard Anderson
I hear men praying everywhere for more faith, but when I
listen to them carefully, and get to the real heart of their prayer, very often
it is not more faith at all that they are wanting, but a change from faith to
sight. Faith says not, “I see that it is good for me, so God must have sent
it,” but, “God sent it, and so it must be good for me.” Faith, walking in the
dark with God, only prays Him to clasp its hand more closely.
Phillips Brooks
If God is
able to make everything that happens to us work together for our good, then
ultimately everything that happens to us is good. We must be careful to use the word ultimately.
On the earthly plane things that happen to us may indeed be evil… Yet God in
His goodness transcends all these things and works them out to our good. For the Christian, ultimately, there
are no tragedies.
R.C. Sproul
Taken from:
Essential Truths of the Christian Faith by R. C. Sproul, Copyright © 1992
(Sproul), p. 50, Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. All
rights reserved.