The jealousy of God is often misunderstood. It can seem to
some that God’s jealousy is the unwarranted begging of a needy megalomaniac for
attention. For some the jealousy of God is something like the ruthless
demanding of a drill sergeant to obey. Yet the jealously of God is nothing of
the sort. His jealousy is neither unwarranted nor ruthless. His jealousy is, in
fact, the relentless love of father for his children.
“I the Lord your God am a jealous God” (Exodus 20.5). What then, is God jealous for? Hear the words of the prophet Isaiah:
“I the Lord your God am a jealous God” (Exodus 20.5). What then, is God jealous for? Hear the words of the prophet Isaiah:
“I
am the Lord; that is my name;
my
glory I give to no other,
nor
my praise to carved idols.”
God is jealous chiefly for His own glory. He relentlessly
upholds it. God declares in Ezekiel, “I will vindicate the holiness of my great
name, which has been profaned among the nations” (Ezekiel 36.23). God’s glory
and His name are closely related. Therefore, in God’s acting to initiate a new
covenant for the salvation of His people, God is concerned supremely with
upholding His glory. But that does not mean that God is unconcerned with our
joy. It means that the only way for us to find and experience eternally lasting
joy is for God to be supremely concerned with His own glory. God’s jealousy for
His glory is the fountain out of which His jealousy for us flows. Because God
is utterly and completely committed to displaying His glory in His extension of
grace to sinners, He jealously calls and keeps His people. God is jealous for
His glory in and through His people.
The jealousy of God for His people is laced with grace and
drips with love because the Jealous One is the fountain of infinite, unending
joy. The psalmist understood this when he wrote of God, “In your presence there
is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore” (Psalm
16.11). God alone is the supreme treasure of the universe. Therefore, it is for
our joy that He is jealous. In His jealousy for us is an invitation unfound and
unmatched in all of creation to joy. Out
of His great love for us, He is jealous for our affection because He knows that
only in Him will our joy be full. Only in Him will the desires of our hearts be
met. Only in Him will the longings of our soul be fulfilled. If God did not love us, He would not be
jealous for us. He would be content to abandon us to lesser affections. He
would be unmoved seeing our persistent, joyless idolatry. And yet out of an
eternally deep reservoir of love flows a river of jealousy that sweeps His
people up in a flood of joy.
Nowhere is this clearer than the cross. There the jealousy
of God for His own glory overflowed into joy for sinners. As we continue to set
our face to Jerusalem, remember and rejoice that God’s jealousy is our joy.
Well said - this is always one of the aspects of our faith that from an outside, or even an unlearned inside, point of view seems so harsh to the mind. This truth, that God is for God and always will be, is the foundation to our salvation because in God being for His glory He will remain faithful to us, even when we are unfaithful. His faithfulness to His glory and to the glorification of the Son is our only hope on the day of judgment.
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