The Limiting of a Limitless God
Pastor Ricky Kurth
How many times have you heard it? You tell someone that God is no
longer giving men the power to speak in tongues or heal the sick, and
you hear the response: “You’re limiting God. God can do whatever
He wants.” If you’re not sure how to reply to this accusation,
here’s an approach you may find helpful:
God limits Himself. He limits Himself in a couple of
ways. First, He is limited by His holiness. God can do
anything He wants, but He cannot sin (cf. Tit. 1:2). The
righteousness of His holy nature prevents Him from doing anything
that even remotely approaches unrighteousness. Thus our limitless God
is limited by His own holy nature.
But God also limits Himself by His Word. While
He can do anything He wants, He cannot flood the world again because
He has given His Word that He won’t. Remember the promise He
made to Noah?
“…I will establish My covenant with you; neither shall all flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood; neither shall there any more be a flood to destroy the earth” (Gen. 9:11).
After three thousand years passed with no additional
worldwide flood, God compared His faithfulness to this promise to His
faithfulness to Israel:
“For this is as the waters of Noah unto Me: for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth; so have I sworn that I would not be wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee.
“For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but My kindness shall not depart from thee…” (Isaiah 54:9,10).
All those who teach that God washed His hands of
Israel after they murdered His Son, and will never have anything
further to do with her, and took all her promises and gave them to
us, are guilty of charging Him with breaking this most solemn vow
(Cf. Isa. 49:15; Jer. 31:35-37). God can do anything He likes, but
He cannot forsake Israel, for He has given His Word that He
won’t, and someday they will once again be His people (Hosea 1:9-11
cf. Rom. 9:25,26).
And He cannot give anyone
spiritual gifts, such as prophecy and tongues, after vowing that
these gifts would “cease” and “vanish away” in the present
dispensation once the Bible was complete (I Cor. 1:8-10). So don’t
let anyone tell you that you are limiting God when you insist that
these gifts, which are conspicuously absent in this dispensation
anyway, are gone. In so saying, we are simply acknowledging a
dispensational limit that God has placed on Himself.
265: There is Therefore Now No Condemnation - Lesson 1 Part 1 Book 23
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