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Arthur W. Pink

THE DECREE OF GOD
is His purpose or determination with respect to future things. We
have used the singular number as Scripture does (Rom 8:28; Eph 3:11),
because there was only one act of His infinite mind about future
things. But we speak as if there had been many, because our minds
are only capable of thinking of successive revolutions, as
thoughts and occasions arise, or in reference to the various objects
of His decree, which being many seem to us to require a distinct
purpose for each one. But an infinite understanding does not proceed
by steps, from one stage to another: “Known unto God are all
His works, from the beginning of the world” (Acts 15:18).
The Scriptures make mention of the decrees of
God in many passages, and under a variety of terms. The word “decree”
is found in Psalm 2:7, etc. In Ephesians 3:11 we read of His “eternal
purpose.” In Acts 2:23 of His “determinate counsel and foreknowledge.”
In Ephesians 1:9 of the mystery of His “will.” In Romans 8:29 that
He also did “predestinate.” In Ephesians 1:9 of His “good pleasure.”
God’s decrees are called His “counsel” to signify they are consummately
wise. They are called God’s “will” to show He was under no control,
but acted according to His own pleasure. When a man’s will is the
rule of his conduct, it is usually capricious and unreasonable;
but wisdom is always associated with “will” in the Divine
proceedings, and accordingly, God’s decrees are said to be “the
counsel of His own will” (Eph 1:11).
The decrees of God relate to all future things
without exception: whatever is done in time was foreordained before
time began. God’s purpose was concerned with everything, whether
great or small, whether good or evil, although with reference to
the latter we must be careful to state that while God is the Orderer
and Controller of sin, He is not the Author of it in the same way
that He is the Author of Good. Sin could not proceed from a holy
God by positive and direct creation, but only by decretive permission
and negative action. God’s decree is as comprehensive as His government,
extending to all creatures and all events. It was concerned about
our life and death; about our state in time, and our state in eternity.
As God works all things after the counsel of His own will,
we learn from His works what His counsel is (was), as we judge of
an architect’s plan by inspecting the building which was erected
under his directions.
God did not merely decree to make man, place
him upon the earth, and then leave him to his own uncontrolled guidance;
instead, He fixed all the circumstances in the lot of individuals,
and all the particulars which will comprise the history of the human
race from its commencement to its close. He did not merely decree
that general laws should be established for the government of the
world, but He settled the application of those laws to all
particular cases. Our days are numbered, and so are the hairs of
our heads. We may learn what is the extent of the Divine decrees
from the dispensations of providence, in which they are executed.
The care of Providence reaches to the most insignificant creatures,
and the most minute events—the death of a sparrow, and the fall
of a hair.
Let us now consider some of the properties
of the Divine decrees. First, they are eternal. To suppose
any of them to be made in time is to suppose that some new occasion
has occurred; some unforeseen event or combination of circumstances
has arisen, which has induced the Most High to form a new resolution.
This would argue that the knowledge of the Deity is limited, and
that He is growing wiser in the progress of time—which would be
horrible blasphemy. No man who believes that the Divine understanding
is infinite, comprehending the past, the present, and the future,
will ever assent to the erroneous doctrine of temporal decrees.
God is not ignorant of future events which will be executed by human
volitions; He has foretold them in innumerable instances, and prophecy
is but the manifestation of His eternal prescience. Scripture
affirms that believers were chosen in Christ before the world began
(Eph 1:4), yea, that grace was “given” to them then (II Tim 1:9).
Secondly, the decrees of God are wise. Wisdom
is shown in the selection of the best possible ends and of the fittest
means of accomplishing them. That this character belongs to the
decrees of God is evident from what we know of them. They are disclosed
to us by their execution, and every proof of wisdom in the
works of God is a proof of the wisdom of the plan, in conformity
to which they are performed. As the Psalmist declared, “O Lord,
how manifold are Thy works! in wisdom hast Thou made them all” (Psa
104:24). It is indeed but a very small part of them which falls
under our observation, yet, we ought to proceed here as we do in
other cases, and judge of the whole by the specimen, of what is
unknown, by what is known. He who perceives the workings of admirable
skill in the parts of a machine which he has an opportunity to examine,
is naturally led to believe that the other parts are equally admirable.
In like manner we should satisfy our minds as to God’s works when
doubts obtrude themselves upon us, and repel any objections that
may be suggested by something that we cannot reconcile to our
notions of what is good and wise. When we reach the bounds of the
finite and gaze toward the mysterious realm of the infinite, let
us exclaim, “O the depth of the riches! both of the wisdom and knowledge
of God” (Rom 11:33).
Thirdly, they are free. “Who hath directed
the Spirit of the Lord, or being His counsellor hath taught Him?
With whom took He counsel, and who instructed Him, and taught Him
in the path of judgment, and taught Him knowledge, and showed to
Him the way of understanding?” (Isa 40:13-14). God was alone when
He made His decrees, and His determinations were influenced by no
external cause. He was free to decree or not to decree, and to decree
one thing and not another. This liberty we must ascribe to Him who
is supreme, independent, and sovereign in all His doings.
Fourthly, they are absolute and unconditional.
The execution of them is not suspended upon any condition which
may, or may not be, performed. In every instance where God has decreed
an end, He has also decreed every means to that end. The One who
decreed the salvation of His elect also decreed to work faith in
them (II Thess 2:13). “My counsel shall stand, and I will do all
My pleasure” (Isa 46:10): but that could not be, if His counsel
depended upon a condition which might not be performed. But God
“worketh all things after the counsel of His own will” (Eph 1:11).
Side by side with the immutability and invincibility
of God’s decrees, Scripture plainly teaches that man is a responsible
creature and answerable for his actions. And if our thoughts are
formed from God’s word the maintenance of the one will not lead
to the denial of the other. That there is a real difficulty in defining
where the one ends and the other begins is freely granted. This
is ever the case where there is a conjunction of the Divine and
the human. Real prayer is indited by the Spirit, yet it is also
the cry of a human heart. The Scriptures are the inspired Word of
God, yet they were written by men who were something more than machines
in the hand of the Spirit. Christ is both God and man. He is Omniscient,
yet “increased in wisdom” (Luke 2:52). He was Almighty, yet was
“crucified through weakness” (II Cor 13:4). He was the Prince of
life, yet He died. High mysteries are these, yet faith receives
them unquestioningly.
It has often been pointed out in the past that
every objection made against the eternal decrees of God applies
with equal force against His eternal foreknowledge.
Whether God has decreed all things
that ever come to pass or not, all that own the being of a God,
own that He knows all things beforehand. Now, it is self-evident
that if He knows all things beforehand, He either doth approve
of them or doth not approve of them; that is, He either is willing
they should be, or He is not willing they should be. But to
will that they should be is to decree them. (Jonathan
Edwards).
Finally, attempt with me, to assume and then
to contemplate the opposite. To deny the Divine decrees would
be to predicate a world and all its concerns regulated by undesigned
chance or blind fate. Then what peace, what assurance, what comfort
would there be for our poor hearts and minds? What refuge would
there be to fly to in the hour of need and trial? None at all. There
would be nothing better than the black darkness and abject horror
of atheism. O my reader, how thankful should we be that everything
is determined by infinite wisdom and goodness! What praise
and gratitude are due unto God for His Divine decrees. It
is because of them that “we know that all things work together
for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according
to His purpose” (Rom 8:28). Well may we exclaim, “For
of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory
forever. Amen” (Rom 11:36).
This article is taken from Author Pink's
marvelous book, The Attributes of God.
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