Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Considering the Great Love of God

Episode Date: June 15, 2026

This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on September 10, 2000. Series: Four Ways to Live, Four Ways to Love. Scripture: Psalm 107:31-43. Today's podcast is broug...ht to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.

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Starting point is 00:00:04 It's possible to believe in God and yet not understand who he really is. Scripture provides a multifaceted description of who God is, a father, a friend, a spouse, and a king. When we reduce him to just one of these, we end up with a flattened, self-made version of God rather than the true God of the Bible. Today on Gospel and Life, Tim Keller begins a new series exploring God's multidimensional character and how understanding his complexity can bring us into a deeper relationship with him. The passage on which the teaching is based is Psalm 107. The Psalm, this Psalm is a whole. You can't just take a little piece out of it, though we are leaving off part of it.
Starting point is 00:00:52 But you have to see the main structure of it. And it's a long piece. And it'll be easier to understand the structure if you have multiple readers. So we're going to do something a little different than we usually do. And so we're going to read Psalm 107 versus 1 to 31. one and then the summary verse at the end 43. Give thanks to the Lord for he is good.
Starting point is 00:01:15 His love endures forever. Let the redeemed of the Lord say this. Those he redeemed from the hand of the foe. Those he gathered from the lands from east and west, from north and south. Some wandered in desert wastelands, finding no way to a
Starting point is 00:01:30 city where they could settle. They were hungry and thirsty, and their lives ebbed away. Then they cried out to the Lord in their trouble, and he delivered them from their distress. He led them by a straight way to a city where they could settle. Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for men, for he satisfies the hurstice, thirsty, and fills the hungry with good things. Some sat in darkness and the deepest gloom, prisoners, suffering in iron chains, for they had rebelled against the words of God and despised the
Starting point is 00:02:01 counsel of the most high. So he subjected them to bitter labor. They stumbled, and there was no one to help. Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, and he saved them from their distress. He brought them out of darkness in the deepest gloom and broke away their chains. Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for men, for he breaks down gates of bronze and cuts through bars of iron. Some became fools through their rebellious ways and suffered affliction because of their iniquities. They loathed all food and drew near the gates of death. Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble,
Starting point is 00:02:38 and he saved them from their distress. He sent forth his word and healed them. He rescued them from the grave. Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for men. Let them sacrifice thank offerings and tell of his works with songs of joy. Others went out on the sea and ships.
Starting point is 00:02:58 They were merchants on the mighty waters. They saw the works of the Lord, his wonderful deeds in the deep. For he spoke and stirred up a tempest that lifted high the waves. They mounted up to the heavens and went down to the depths. In their peril, their courage melted away. They reeled and staggered like drunken men.
Starting point is 00:03:16 They were at their wits' end. Then they cried out to the Lord in their trouble, and he brought them out of their distress. He stilled the storm to a whisper. The waves of the sea were hushed. They were glad when it grew calm, and he guided them to their desired haven. Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love
Starting point is 00:03:35 and his wonderful deeds for men. whoever is wise, let him heed these things and consider the great love of the Lord. This is God's word. Now, we live in a time in which there's all kinds of spiritual searching, and everybody seems to disagree about almost everything about God and almost everything about spirituality. But there's one interesting thing that in our modern society today, the polls show it, the research shows it, there's almost all, Well, not unanimity, but the tremendous consensus about God.
Starting point is 00:04:13 There's one thing. Almost everybody agrees with. Almost everybody. And even the people who don't believe in God, say, if there is a God, then, everybody agrees that if there is a God or whatever else God is, God is a God of love. And that's the reason why tonight I want to show you a Psalm, which is unbelievably relevant for us today. And here's the reason why, for three reasons, really.
Starting point is 00:04:38 Number one, it starts, this Psalm starts at a place where everybody today already believes and already agrees on that is. This Psalm is about the love of God. That's what the whole theme is, the unfailing love, the great love of God, okay? But look at verse 43. He says something very surprising. He says, whoever is wise, let him heed these things and consider the great love of the Lord. Now, nowadays, we don't think like that. We don't think of the love of God as something to be considered.
Starting point is 00:05:08 understand the word consider, you'll see even more, it's more even more interesting than that. Because the word consider means to puzzle, to stare at, to ponder, see, to figure out. Now you say, well, what do you need to figure out? And that's the point. The point is, he says, unless you have looked at the love of God to the point that it makes you puzzle and you see the richness of it and to the point where if the love of God has never moved you to ponder it deeply, you don't understand it. But there's a promise. Verse 43 says, whoever is wise, let him heed these things. Now, another way to translate this, literally it says, the wise ones heed these things. And what that means is, the word wisdom, wisdom in the Hebrew worldview, is not dated.
Starting point is 00:06:00 Wisdom is not just lots and lots and lots of information on your C drive. That's not wisdom. okay no matter how many gigabytes you stick on that C-drive that C-drive is not getting any more wise and uh in the Hebrew worldview no matter and no matter how much information you've got in your head that doesn't make you wiser wisdom in the Hebrew worldview is transformed character through encounter with the living God and therefore he's promising something he's saying if you ponder the love of God if you puzzle over it if you consider it sufficiently rightly properly if you consider it deeply, your life will be changed, your heart will be transformed. Now, that's quite an invitation, isn't it?
Starting point is 00:06:44 In fact, the Psalm is an invitation to do that. The Psalm is a guide to doing it. And so let's take the invitation up. You say, do I have a choice? Well, not corporately, but individually. You could just snooze, but come with us, okay? And here's what we learn. Where do we ponder the love of God?
Starting point is 00:07:03 what do we ponder about the love of God and how do we ponder it? Where is he calling us to ponder it? What are we pondered called to ponder and how? Now first where? And that might sound like an every odd question. Let me put it to you like this.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Where does the idea of the love of God come from? Where does the idea of a loving God come from? What is the source of that idea? Where can we go to ponder it? Now I know, I know from experience and I know therefore some of you are thinking this. A lot of people find that an irritating at worst or irrelevant question at best. And you scrunch up your brow and you say, wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:07:47 What do you mean, where does the idea of a loving God come from? It doesn't come from someplace. It's common sense. It's something I just know. I just know it. I just believe it. What do you mean? Where did I get it?
Starting point is 00:07:58 This is not the, you know, I didn't get it from somewhere. I just know it. And people just know it. Well, let's test that thesis out. It's a thesis. Let's test out the thesis that this idea of a loving God didn't come from somewhere. It's just something we know. You know, the polls show that vast majority of Americans believe God is a God of love. Do they just know it? Where did they get the idea? So the thesis goes, it's just common sense. Everybody knows it. You didn't get it from anywhere. All right, let's try the thesis out. First of all, let's look at history. If you look at history, do you see that people historically have just known that there's loving God? It's just commonplace.
Starting point is 00:08:40 It's something that you see coming up through ancient cultures in history. And the answer is no. Rudolph Otto, who was a very well-known historian of religion, I guess you might call him, even though he worked quite a long time ago, a sociologist of religion, I think you'd call him that now. And he wrote a very famous book called The Idea of the Holy, in which he studied ancient cultures. And I think, I don't think anybody would really overturn this now. He says, when you take a look at ancient cultures, you see almost one commonality. And that is that they all experience, people experienced when they came into what they considered the presence of the divine,
Starting point is 00:09:16 they experienced luminous fear or even terror. And all ancient cultures, we actually talked about this a couple weeks ago when we talked about the temple. All ancient cultures believed that the presence of the divine had to be mediated, that there was, it was threatening. You needed priests. You needed rituals. You needed sacrifices. You needed changes of consciousness.
Starting point is 00:09:39 You needed something. And the idea that is completely prevalent now, the idea that's completely prevalent now, and that is that if you want to talk to God, well, he's just a loving being, and you just lift your eyes to the sky, and you lift your mind to the sky, and you just speak to him.
Starting point is 00:09:54 That's an utterly new idea. You don't get that from history. People have not just known that. So where to come from? Well, you say, Let's take a look at the world religions. Did it come from the religions of the world? Is this common sense among the religions of the world?
Starting point is 00:10:11 Now, Christians, I think Christians under, well, not just, I think Christians are insensitive to the riches in other religions. And I don't want to encourage that kind of insensitivity, but we have to ask this question. Does the idea of a personal God with whom you can have a loving relationship come from, is it common, or does it come from just the great religions of the world? And the answer there is absolutely not. And if that surprises you, I'll tell you why. It probably surprises you.
Starting point is 00:10:44 It probably surprises you because in this culture, people desperately want to believe, desperately want to believe that all religions are the same. I haven't completely figured out why, but I'll tell you what the effect is. One of the practical effects of believing it, all religions are alike is that you don't actually have to listen carefully to any of them. You don't have to really listen for what they're saying. Oh, I know it. You know, we all believe in a loving God and if you just live in a certain good way and all that, you know, you can find you're all going up the mountain in different paths and so on. We want to believe that desperately. So we don't have to
Starting point is 00:11:20 listen. So we don't have to listen to their voice. So we have to listen to what they say. And if you do, if you listen, here's what you're going to find out. Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Hinduism, they don't believe in a personal God. And they don't believe in a personal God. In fact, in original Buddhism, love itself, not just they don't believe in a loving God, but love itself is part of the illusion of individual selfhood that you have to get beyond to get to enlightenment. And if you go to Islam, and over the years I always thought, well, Islam, like Christianity, believes in a loving God, a merciful God.
Starting point is 00:11:57 And I was in a dialogue back in the 80s with a number of Muslim people. and my Muslim friends tried to show me. They actually said, you're not listening. Remember, it took me quite a while to figure this out. They said, you're not listening. You're pushing us into your mold. I said, God is almighty. In our understanding, they said,
Starting point is 00:12:14 God is almighty, but he is not a friend or a father. And God is merciful, but you cannot have a personal love relationship with him. Listen. And so the point is, the idea of a personal loving God that you can have a personal relationship is absolutely not out there amongst the world religions either. Well, somebody says, did we get it from, perhaps people, we just got it from just, modern people get it just from reflecting on life, reflecting on the world, you see the stars, you see the heavens, you see the ocean, you see the streams, you see the rivers. And when you look out there and you see all that beauty, you just know that there's a loving God behind it.
Starting point is 00:12:50 Oh, really? Better look more carefully. One very, very intelligent and brilliant, actually, a woman, writer, did that once years ago and won a Pulitzer Prize for it. Danny Dillard, wrote a book called Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. It's a fascinating book. And she lived by a stream in the mountains of Virginia, and she just wrote what she observed. And she says, actually, that she had originally expected that she was going to learn the ways of nature and conform her life to it. That she was, you know, she's my age, you know, so she's baby boomer and maybe a little older. And of course, we all had this idea, you know, in college. She wrote this like when she was 27 or something like that, that somehow she's going to get back to nature
Starting point is 00:13:34 and just get in tune with nature and getting in step and in sync with nature. And what she found appalled her because she did look and she did watch and she did observe nature. And she saw nothing but violence, absurdity, and waste. I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:13:51 By the way, we're not bashing environmentalists here. Just listen, will you please. When she saw a praying mantis, a female praying mantis as she was mating eating the head off for mate while they were mating. And that's something they always do, by the way. She was particularly shaken when she saw a giant water bug
Starting point is 00:14:11 latch itself onto a frog, inject it with a venom that literally turns the inside of the frog to mush and then suck it out. And she watched the frog just collapsed. Saw the eyes go dim and then saw the skull collapses as his brain turned to broth and out it came.
Starting point is 00:14:28 She never got over it. She never got over it. And she started studying what the book say about evolution. And she figured, you know, she saw it, she'd seen it, and then she studied it, and this is what she wrote. She says, don't believe them when they say how economic and thrifty
Starting point is 00:14:43 nature is. Say you are the manager of the Southern Railroad. You figure you need engines for a stretch of track. That's a mighty steep grade. So at fantastic effort and expense, you have all your shops make 9,000 railroad engines. And you send all 9,000
Starting point is 00:14:59 out onto the railroad tracks without switches. So they crash, collide, derail, jump, jam, and burn. And at the end, you have three engines left, which is all you really needed. So you go to your board of directors and you show them what you've done to get those three great engines. You know what they're going to say? Is this any way to run a railroad? She says, but is that any way to run a universe? Because that's how the universe is run. Evolution, she says, loves death more than it loves you or me or anyone. I had thought to live by the side of the creek in order to shape my life to its free flow. Get this. But I seem to have reached a point where I must draw the line. I must part ways with the only world I know. Look,
Starting point is 00:15:43 cock robin may die the most gruesome of slow deaths and nature is no less pleased. The sun comes up, the creek rolls on, the survivors still sing. But I cannot feel that way about your death, nor you about mine, nor either of us, even about the robins. We value the individual supremely and nature values him not a wit. It looks as if I might have to reject this Creek life unless I want to be utterly brutalized. What she's saying is, if you look out at nature, if you look at the world, if you just look at the world,
Starting point is 00:16:15 look at disease and death, look at wars, look at the world. She says, you might perhaps discern with unaided reason and reflection. You might discern a power behind it, being a powerful creator, you might discern that, but you're never going to discern a loving God. Never. So if you look into history, if you look into the world religious, and if you just look at nature in the world around, you would never come up with the idea of a loving God. Where did it come from?
Starting point is 00:16:46 I will tell you where it comes from. It tells you right here. If you want to ponder the love of God, consider these things. What are these things? Over and over, you heard us say it. One of the reasons why we had the multiple readers. his wonderful deeds in history, the deeds of God, as they revealed in the Bible. See, the psalmist is saying, he doesn't say,
Starting point is 00:17:11 ponder the great love of God by looking at nature. Ponder the love of God by looking at history. Pond of the love of God, no, what does he say? There is a God who's revealed himself to Abraham and to Moses. There is a God, and by the way, you can read this. This is great art. This is great art. Who are these four groups of people?
Starting point is 00:17:28 Well, in some ways, these four groups of people, the wanderers, the prisoners, the people who are sick, the people on the sea, there are all of us. They're the kinds of situations we all face. We'll look at that in a second. But they also are what the children of Israel had to go through. In other words, they were literally wandering, but God appeared to them in clouds and fire and took them to the promised land. They were in prison, but God parted the Red Sea. In other words, only, Only in the Bible does the original idea of a loving God come in to human consciousness. When I say the only place you're going to find a God of love is in the Bible, I don't mean that everybody today who believes in love of God must have gotten from the Bible. I'm saying that the source for human thinking of the very idea of a love of God would not have occurred to people. It wouldn't have come from other sources. It came from the Bible.
Starting point is 00:18:22 And here's why. Because the Bible gives us a framework. In the Bible, God says this. He says, I created the world good, but the world has sin and therefore fallen and nothing works right. Nature is red in tooth and claw. People are each other's throats. I created, but the good creation has fallen, but I'm breaking back into the world to heal it and redeem it. Okay, got that?
Starting point is 00:18:51 Creation, fall, redemption. The Bible says that is the framework through which you need to understand everything that happens. Good creation, sin and fall, in breaking redemption. And here's why you have to do that. Only in that framework does a loving God make sense. Why was Annie Diller so confused? She talks, I just don't have the time here tonight, maybe later on in the fall I can get back to it. She's very confused.
Starting point is 00:19:19 She says, God did this? Well, here's the point. If you only have a God who created the world, if you have creation, not fall. If God created the world this way, he's not a loving God. If you take the idea of a loving God out of the framework of creation, fall, redemption, it just doesn't make sense. Or if you don't just have creation, but you have creation in fall. What if God created things good and things have fallen, but now God has just left us go? God's just let us do it.
Starting point is 00:19:47 God's just let it go on. God hasn't come back in. God hasn't come back in in the person of his son. God has not re-engage. God has gotten involved. You still don't have a loving God. if you have only creation, if God just created the world this way, he can't be a God of love. It makes no sense.
Starting point is 00:20:04 Or if he created the world and it fell and he's not breaking in in some miraculous way. If he's not coming in in the person of his son, for example. If he's not breaking in and speaking and revealing himself. If he's not doing that, you see, loving God makes no sense. But here's what we have today. Where did the modern Western world get the idea of a loving God? It came from the Bible. But it's taken the idea of a loving God.
Starting point is 00:20:28 out and it's just spread it everywhere. Everybody believes it. But they've left everything else behind. The Bible, of course, isn't the way the Western world thinks of things anymore. So it has this idea of a loving God and you pull it away from the framework of the Bible and no one, everybody's so bummed out. If God's a God of love, why doesn't he answer my prayers? I prayed and prayed and prayed and prayed and prayed and my child died of cancer. I prayed and prayed. How could God be a God of love? Everybody is sold this bill of goods. It's plundered from the Bible. It's taken out of the Bible without the rest of the framework. It's hard to believe in a love of God, even inside the framework. Inside the framework, it says, I created the world. It has fallen,
Starting point is 00:21:10 I'm breaking back in to redeem it. Well, there's still a lot of questions. Like, okay, all right, why haven't you done it yet? Why are you taking so long? Why are you doing it in a particular way? But at least in that framework, it explains why the world that nature is red in tooth and claw. And it also proves that God is not away from all the suffering. So if you don't believe in Jesus, if you don't believe in the incarnation, if you don't believe in the God of the Bible, then the idea of a loving God makes no sense at all. Marriage is one of the most significant human relationships there is, but is also one of the most difficult and misunderstood.
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Starting point is 00:22:22 Now here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's teaching. Take it away that framework and you'll never ponder it. Now, what's that mean practically? It's very simple. If there's anybody in this room's been trying to find a loving God by communing with your own heart or communing with nature, if you said, well, the Bible's full of sort of fables, we can't accept that anymore,
Starting point is 00:22:42 but I want to believe in a loving God. You're doomed. I am not able at this point. I'm not trying to prove that the God of the Bible is true. And I'm not even saying that apart from the Bible, you can't find any kind of God, and nobody believes in God. unless you believe in the Bible, nobody knows anything about God.
Starting point is 00:23:02 I'm just trying to say, only in the Bible do you have a framework that makes sense of a loving God. A loving God. Only if you look at his wonderful deeds. Only if you look at his self-revelation, embedded in history. Only if you heed these things, are you going to find that loving God? So what am I making a case for? Am I proving that the Bible's true? No, I could try to do that some other time, I suppose.
Starting point is 00:23:26 But what I'm trying to prove is that you need to try the Bible. You need to come here and listen to a taught or go to a small group or come to go to some other church where it's taught. You need, though, to ponder the love of God in the Bible or you're not going to find, you're not going to have an encounter with a God of love. That's the first point. It's pretty critical, okay? It's actually a good point to make at the very beginning, in a sense, of a new year, if you consider September the beginning of the new year. Okay? Why do you need to stick with the scripture?
Starting point is 00:23:57 Why do you need to read the narratives? Why do you need to take heed of these things? Even if you're not sure about them, you have no alternative. If you want to find a loving God, okay? Number one. Number two, much more brief. Where do you ponder love of God? In the Word, actually.
Starting point is 00:24:14 In the scriptures, in the narratives of his great deeds in self-revelation. What do you ponder? Now, I thought, and I still believe that the best way to understand, what the psalmist is trying to show us is you have to look at the poem as a whole and it's really brilliant you have to look at this artistic structure of the poem now what is the artistic structure two things you see you've got four utterly different groups of people and yet every single one of them gets the same treatment the beginning of each stanza see some wandered it and we're homeless right and what do they need need a father. You say, what do you mean? It talks about a city here. The homeless people, they need a city.
Starting point is 00:25:03 Well, you got to remember something. Nowadays, people go to cities to get away from their families. But back then, you couldn't have a family unless you were in a city. You looked for a city to have a family. What do you mean? Well, you couldn't have a family. You couldn't have a home without stability, without safety. You had to get behind walls. Otherwise, the animals would come get you. Otherwise, the marauders and the robbers would come get you. And these were people who were looking for a city, but what they really were looking for was a home. They were homeless. And they needed stability. They need safety. And God loves them as a father. That's the first stanza. The second stanza, some sat in darkness in the deepest gloom, prisoners suffering in iron chains.
Starting point is 00:25:43 Okay, now, what do you have here? Prisoners. Condem prisoners. What do they need? They don't need a father. You know, father come and, you know, here's some sandwiches. What do they need? They need a king. They need a liberator. They need a general. They need someone at the head of an army, and that's what they get. Okay? That's what they get. He cuts through the bars of iron. Okay, that'll look at the third group. Some became fools through the rebellious ways and suffered affliction because of their iniquities. Now, these people are sick. It's a little interesting. It's very interesting, actually. Because these people, it says they're sick. They loathe all food, verse 18. And that means that they are, they really are dying. They are wasting away physically. But it's as the reason. result of foolishness, verse 17. These are more like people who've ruined their lives, ruin their bodies through overwork or addiction or something. And look what heals them. What they need is a healer. But what they're actually getting in a sense is a counselor. Because what heals them, look carefully. He sent forth his word. They get some kind of word. They get some kind of advice
Starting point is 00:26:50 that heals them. They get some kind of loving, healing counselor. So the first group needs a father. The second group needs a king. The third group needs a loving, a nurse, a counselor, a person at the side. And the fourth group, of course, they go out to sea and they're in the perfect storm. Okay, this is, you know, others went out to sea and ships and look carefully, you see. It says, they mounted up to the heavens and they went down to the depths. That's the 100-foot wave. And what do they need?
Starting point is 00:27:18 They need an omnipotent creator who's also their friend. They need an omnipotent friend. Now, what's intriguing about this, look at this. Father, king, lover, creator, friend, someone who's got power over the hurricane, Lord of the Storm. Incredibly different, and yet the same words, give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for men. Every time, extreme diversity and yet the same unfailing love. What's the point? The point is this.
Starting point is 00:27:53 these different love personas. You hear that term? These different love personas. Father, king, lover, friend. Extremely different. But they are equally basic. They are equally ultimate.
Starting point is 00:28:13 They are equally essential to who he is. They are equally as unfilling love. Now, you say, so? So? So. This is what you're supposed to ponder, and this is very, very difficult. This last year I was in a Bible study with the woman who was at the time in a searching mode. And at the end of one of the studies, the question was, what did you learn tonight?
Starting point is 00:28:38 What did you learn during the study? She closed the Bible and she closed the book and she said, well, I've learned tonight that God is a complex character. Now, because she's a literary critic and an art critic, I believe, from what I can tell, she was talking actually more technically. She wasn't just saying, boy, he's confusing. Oh, no. Here's what do we mean. You go to a movie in the summer, blockbuster movies, and all the characters are cartoon characters.
Starting point is 00:29:04 The good guys, the bad guys. They're all stereotypes. They're getting blown away. And you just laugh. Why? Well, you're not engaged with them because they're not realistic characters. They're one-dimensional characters. You know, I mean, they're not portrayed as complex characters. Real people are complex. Real people have all kinds of apparent contradictions in them. And when you have art, it's not necessarily bad art, it's just everybody knows it's a cartoon. In a cartoon, you have one-dimensional characters. And what she thought when she got into the Bible, she expected a one-dimensional God. She expected either a God who, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:38 the God that some people say is in the Bible who just loves everyone and accepts everyone, you know, friend, lover, or more likely she expected to find the king who smites those who disobey him. but she found out he was both or he was neither or he was all of those things he was real he was a complex character
Starting point is 00:30:01 and this is the second point the psalmist is saying what we have a tendency always to do is to reduce God we have a tendency to think of them as a friend mainly and a lover mainly and not as a king and as a sovereign we don't like the idea of punishment we don't like the idea of
Starting point is 00:30:19 We don't like the idea of eternal punishment. We get rid of that. He's a lover. He's a friend. Or some people, plenty of people. See God as a king, as a sovereign. He's very majestic. He's very holy.
Starting point is 00:30:29 And the idea of a friend is sort of secondary. I mean, you know, it's not really the main thing. Nobody holds these things altogether. And this is what this man is saying. This is what the psalmist is saying. He is saying, you have to see them all equally ultimate. Do not prefer one over the other. Andrew Greeley in the mid-80s,
Starting point is 00:30:47 a very, very interesting and famous extensive research on what people's views of God were. Andrew Greeley said that 75% of Americans said they greatly prefer to think of God as a friend rather than a king. Now, I'm not bringing that up to say tut, tut, tut, you know, about the fact that, you know, why don't you see him as a king? The whole point is they prefer. Everybody prefers. And the psalmist says, don't you dare? Because that you reduce him. He'll never be real to you. He'll never be someone you encounter. unless you let him be complex. And what that means is when you do read the Bible, you can't throw parts out that you don't like.
Starting point is 00:31:25 Because then you have a cartoon God. A God that you're not going to be engaged with. You're not going to be any more engaged with them than you are in the next Sylvester Stallone film. You know, everybody, you don't say, oh, the poor villain he got blasted. Oh, the poor, you know, no, you don't. You say, ha-ha. You know, look at that.
Starting point is 00:31:43 Wow, special effects. they're cartoon characters. And that's one of the reasons. That's one of the he's saying, if you ever want to actually encounter the living God, you're going to have to actually let him be the complex character he is. Do not make any one of these love personas. Father, king, lover, friend,
Starting point is 00:32:07 don't let any of them become the ultimate. Now, lastly, now you say, well, what does that mean? Let's get practical. How does pondering God like that really change you? And here's the answer. First of all, if you let that happen, and almost none of us do, all of us fall off the horse on one side of the other,
Starting point is 00:32:30 all of us fall off the beam on one side of the other, none of us keep that all together. But if you do, the first thing that's going to happen is you'll start to see the impossibility of God's love. God's love will never change your life until you see it as impossible. Let me show you what I mean. The typical way in which we try, why do people not hold on to all of these persona? Why do we tend, for example, to see him more as a king and as a power or more as a lover and a friend? Why is it nobody holds it together?
Starting point is 00:33:02 Because we sense there's a contradiction. We sense that there's an impossibility. We sense that it can't be all of these things. And we try to solve the contradiction ourselves. So the typical traditional values approach, the typical conservative approach, is that typical conservative approach, to say this. Let's say, well, God is a king, and if I live a good life, then he'll love me. There's no impossibility about that kind of love, right? And it also won't transform you. It also won't amaze you. It won't lead you to say, give thanks to the Lord. There won't be no
Starting point is 00:33:36 praise. There'll be no gratitude. Oh, no, not a bit. Because you'll say, well, of course he loves man, but lived a good life. That's where you've made the king and the power and the creator more than the grace and the love and so on the other side. Then there's the liberal sort of postmodern approach. And the liberal postmodern approach is to say, well, if there is a God, he accepts everyone. We don't believe in hell. We don't believe in judgment day. Now that approach also says, I've got love.
Starting point is 00:34:05 I got the love of God. That's not impossible love. There's nothing impossible about that kind of God loving us, right? But it won't transform you. It won't lead you to thank you. and praise. It won't lead you to amazement. It won't lead you to say, oh, that men and women would see the grace of God. That's what this Psalm is all about. It won't happen. Until you see that his love is impossible because he's all these things, until you see the contradiction, until you say it's
Starting point is 00:34:34 impossible, until you're troubled by it, until you're perplexed by it, you'll never be changed by it. You say, what do you mean? Well, let me just give you one example. A perfect example of how this refuses to choose one side of the other and sees the impossibility of it. Look at the second stanza. Some sat in darkness in the deepest gloom. Prisoners suffering in iron chains. Okay. And they cry out. Look down here in verse 13. Then they cry to the Lord in their trouble and he saved them from their distress. He brought them out of darkness and deepest gloom, broke away their chains. You say, okay, so what's so weird about that? This is an astounding passage. whose bars are these?
Starting point is 00:35:17 Whose gates are these? Whose chains are these? Look, they sat in darkness and deepest glooms, prisoners suffering in iron chains, but why are they chained? For they rebel against the words of God. And they despise the counsel of the most high. They're in prison.
Starting point is 00:35:34 Now you start to realize, they're in prison, immediately you're beginning to realize that this is looking at a spiritual condition. These people are in prison because they broke the word of God. And look, so he's subject. them to bitter labor. They're in his prison. They're behind his gates. They're behind his bars. And they cry out to him and he cuts through them. What do you mean? He cuts through his own bars. He cuts through his own gate. He say, wait a minute. This is really weird. Yes, it is.
Starting point is 00:36:03 Here's why it's so weird. If he was just a friend, if he was just this big loving God, you might say if he was the liberal God, he never would have put him in. He would have said, well, you're my friends and you did wrong, but I'm sure, you know, let bygones be bygones, and besides that, everybody has to find out what's right or wrong for them, and, you know, he'd never put him in. But if it was a conservative God, if he was a king only, he'd put them behind bars and they'd say, what are he talking about? He would say, you're guilty.
Starting point is 00:36:28 I can't let you out. If he's only a king, he can't let them out. If he's only a friend, he would never put them in. But he puts them in, and then he cuts through his own bars. Now you say, how could that be? That's impossible. That's a contradiction. Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Now you're on the road. to change life until you see the contradiction, until you see the impossibility, you'll never be amazed at his love. If you work it out yourself, if you resolve it toward traditional values, or you resolve it toward liberal kind of relativism, if you resolve the love of God in one way or the other, you'll never be changed by it, don't you see? You never be amazed.
Starting point is 00:37:04 The psalmist is amazed that he would cut through his own bars, that he would do all this. Of course he's amazed. Of course he can't believe it. until you see the impossibility you'll never be changed. You know, somebody says, oh, I don't get it.
Starting point is 00:37:21 How could he be both king and a friend? How could he be both the one that puts him in the jail and then the one that cuts him out? I don't get it. How could that be? You're lucky? You are so lucky. You live in the right age of the world. Because, you know, the psalmist had no idea how could be, and he was still transformed by it. He just knew that this is God.
Starting point is 00:37:41 This God gives us an impossible. love. A love that's utterly impossible. A love that it can't happen. A love that we've got to have. We've got to have his unfailing love, but it just can't happen. And yet, he does it anyway.
Starting point is 00:37:58 And that was enough to change the Psalmist, even though he doesn't know how that could be, but you and I do. We know how. We ought to be much more change than he is. We ought to be much more godly than he is. We ought to be much more happy than he is. We ought to be much more joyful than he is. Why? We know how. We know how. How? How? The reason
Starting point is 00:38:16 he can take us out of the deep darkness and deep gloom is because on the cross, darkness and deep gloom came down on his son. The reason he can take us home is because Jesus said, foxes have holes, birds have nests. The son of man doesn't have a place to put his head. The reason that we can be healed in our affliction is because he has borne our infirmities. The reason that we can have the calm,
Starting point is 00:38:45 the stilled storm is because he was the great Jonah who was thrown into the belly of wrath, the belly of justice of God. In other words, Jesus Christ, see, on the cross, and only on the cross, do you have a complex God? Do you have a real God? Do you have a non-cartoon God? A God who gives you impossible love that transforms your life. Do you get that? Because if you don't believe in the cross, you say, I don't believe in this idea of blood and wrath and Jesus having to die on the cross. All right, if you don't believe in the cross, then either you think God is a king, and if you're good enough, God will take you to heaven, right?
Starting point is 00:39:17 So it's a one-dimensional cartoon God of the conservative brand or else you believe, I don't believe in God, I don't believe that he needed anyone to die, I believe he just loves everybody. That's, you see, one-dimensional cartoon God of a liberal brand?
Starting point is 00:39:34 Only on the cross is God allowed to be complex. Only on the cross is God allowed to be real. So the first thing is, do you see the impossibility? And do you see how Jesus Christ made the impossible possible? do you see how Jesus Christ cut through the bars? He is our lover, but he is our king.
Starting point is 00:39:55 He is the stiller of the storm. He is the wonderful counselor. He is everything. And once you see that, how do you receive that love in your life? It's very simple. Every single time, all they do is cry. You notice that? The first group, it's not their fault that they're homeless,
Starting point is 00:40:12 and the last group, it's not their fault that they're on the high seas, right? and they're in the storm. They're blameless, but they cry. The second group are guilty. The third group are stupid. They're idiots. And all they do is cry. Because now the love of God does not come on the basis of your merit.
Starting point is 00:40:33 It doesn't come on the basis of your pedigree. It doesn't come on the basis of whether you're from the east, the west, the north, of the south. That's what verse three is all about. It doesn't matter who you are. Now comes to who. The only requirement now for the love of God, The only requirement is that you see you can't possibly fulfill the requirements. All you need is nothing.
Starting point is 00:40:50 If you come with something, you'll never get it. All you need is need. All you need is nothing. If you don't think you're a Christian, you don't know you're a Christian, if you're not a Christian and you know it, this is how you do it. Consider the great love of God. See the impossibility of His love.
Starting point is 00:41:11 See it resolved in Jesus Christ. Let that dawn on you. Find it in the biblical narratives of what God, His wonderful, deeds through Jesus. If you're a Christian tonight and you find that you yourself are not people of praise, if you say, there's not much joy in my life, I'm not like this psalmist. Go back to the sources. Maybe you have a cartoon God. Maybe you're not looking at life in terms of creation, fall, and redemption. Maybe you're not looking at life and seeing God as both a friend, a father, and a king, and a friend and a lover. Maybe you're missing one of those. Maybe you've got a cartoon
Starting point is 00:41:43 God. In the next four weeks, we're going to look at each one of those. God is Father? God is lover, God is king, God is friend, and that'll probably strengthen us. Okay? Consider the great low of God. Let's pray. Give us, Father, what we need tonight for these next few minutes to pray, to grasp this deeply. Help us to see that everything that ails us, everything, whether we're in a problem that we didn't have anything to do with, or whether we're very, very guilty for the mess we're in.
Starting point is 00:42:15 whether we're merchants on the high seas or whether poor nomads. No matter who we are, we need the same thing, the unfailing love of God, and that will not come to those who believe that they are owed it. It will not come to people who believe that they can merit it. It will not come to people who believe that it was costless. It will come to those who see the impossibility and the freeness of your love and the complexity and richness of it. So we ask now that you'd help us to see these things and grasp these things and be changed
Starting point is 00:42:49 by what we see. We ask that now in Jesus' name. Amen. Thanks for joining us here on the Gospel and Life podcast. If you were encouraged by today's teaching, you can help others discover this podcast by rating and reviewing it. And to find more great gospel-centered content by Tim Keller anytime. Visit gospelandlife.com. Today's sermon was recorded in 2000.
Starting point is 00:43:18 The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017 while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.

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