We love Him because He first loved us. — 1 John 4:19
In Dostoevsky’s novel The Brothers Karamazov, Ivan Karamazov refers to “the miracle of restraint” — God’s choice to curb His own power. The more I get to know Jesus, the more that observation impresses me.
The miracles Satan suggested to Jesus (Luke 4:3,9), the signs the Pharisees demanded (Matt. 12:38; 16:1), the final proofs I yearn for offer no obstacle to an omnipotent God. More amazing is His refusal to perform, to overwhelm. God’s terrible insistence on human freedom is so absolute that He granted us the power to live as though He does not exist. Jesus must have known this as He faced the tempter in the desert, focusing His power on the energy of restraint.
I believe God insists on such restraint because no pyrotechnic displays of omnipotence will achieve the response He desires. Only love can summon a response of love. “I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all peoples to Myself,” Jesus said (John 12:32). He said this to show the kind of death He would die. God’s nature is self-giving.
Why does God content Himself with the slow, mysterious way of making righteousness grow rather than avenging it? That’s how love is. Love has its own power — the only power capable of conquering the human heart. — Philip Yancey
That leaden night on which He was betrayed,
The One by whom the universe was made
Reclined with friends, took bread and stretched a hand
Of love to him who His demise had planned. — Gustafson
READ: Luke 4:1-13
Revenge restrained is a victory gained.
The Bible in one year:
• Numbers 16-18
• Proverbs 22:9-16