Habakkuk 1:3-6
(ESV)
[3]
Why do you make me see iniquity,
and
why do you idly look at wrong?
Destruction
and violence are before me;
strife
and contention arise.
[4]
So the law is paralyzed,
and
justice never goes forth.
For
the wicked surround the righteous;
so
justice goes forth perverted.
[5]
“Look among the nations, and see;
wonder
and be astounded.
For
I am doing a work in your days
that
you would not believe if told.
[6]
For behold, I am raising up the Chaldeans,
that
bitter and hasty nation,
who
march through the breadth of the earth,
to
seize dwellings not their own.
In this first
chapter of Habakkuk the prophet struggles with two injustices. First, the
people of God are living in sin. They are not living by God’s Law. Habakkuk
knows that the Covenant under which they live says that God will judge his
people if they do not keep his law, yet he sees no judgment coming. How can God
let this go on?
The second
injustice comes from God’s response. He will not let this go on. He will send
the Chaldeans to judge his people. This throws Habakkuk into further confusion.
The Chaldeans are worse than God’s own people. How can he use such evil people
to judge his own people?
God has an answer
in the next chapter, but for now, suffice it to say that we tend to look at
life through a very narrow lens. If we do not see God answering now, we wonder
where he is. If ungodly people prosper, we wonder if God really has the control
he claims to have. God sees things through an eternal lens. When he says that
people will not get away with their sin, you can believe it. God is playing the
long game.
We can only see
the present and remember the past. God has the future in his hands. What we see
as ungodly people getting away with their sin, God sees as giving them just a
little more time to repent. They won’t get away with it in the long run. What
we see as a tragedy God sees as motivation to turn to him. Habakkuk can’t
believe that God would send the Chaldeans to judge his people. That is
unbelievable in his world. Yet God had a plan and they would not get away with
their violence forever. The truth is they were eventually destroyed by the
Persians. The Persians then allowed God’s people to rebuild their land. God
knew what he was doing.
In our own world
we give lip service to the God of justice, power, majesty, and glory, yet we
often live with the fear and consternation of Habakkuk. How can this go on?
Well, it won’t. The good news is that God promises, one day “every knee shall
bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God” (Rom 14:11-12). So then each
of us will give an account of himself to God.” It may look like the world is
spinning out of control and the ungodly have the upper hand, but the game is
not finished. One day all will be set right. Count on it.
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