Coronavirus: Thoughts on God’s Responsibility & Purpose

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These are sobering, uncertain, and anxiety producing times. I can recall nothing this severe in my lifetime. The coronavirus is a danger unlike anything our nation has faced for many decades. Some have likened it to conditions during World War II, and I can well imagine that to be the case. Nearly everyone is concerned about scarcity of supplies as they survey empty store shelves. Many are afraid of sickness and possible death. Others are panicking about the sudden evaporation of their retirement accounts. Fortunes have vanished in a moment. Some fear the break-down of law and order with rioting and looting. Gun sales have soared over the past several weeks. News report usually begin with pandemic updates along with accusations, finger-pointing, and blame-shifting. As Christians, we need to listen less to the voices around us, and more to the wisdom of God. Thinking biblically is the best remedy for our fears.

Is God responsible for coronavirus?

That is a most important question, and the answer is, “Yes.” This answer does not eliminate secondary causes, but it is important to remind ourselves that ultimately, God is both the author and controller of these momentous events. Some Christians have been taught that Satan is responsible for the “bad things,” whereas God is the author of everything good. Realistically, we are unable to determine accurately what is good and bad. Oftentimes, the things that initially seem bad turn out to be great blessings, and some things that we label good lead to disaster. Who hasn’t known someone who was ruined by the sudden acquisition of wealth, and others whose struggle with poverty formed their strong and noble character. But beyond the fact that we don’t always know which events are bad and which are good, the most important fact is that God controls everything.

Acknowledging this does not eliminate instruments that God uses to accomplish His sovereign purposes, the secondary causes employed by the First Cause. Is the coronavirus an attack by Satan? Undoubtedly it is, for Jesus said that Satan was a murderer from the beginning. He delights in death and destruction, and unleashes it as often as he can, but only as God allows. Ultimately, Satan is merely the unwilling servant of Jehovah. His purpose is to oppose and destroy the people of God, but he can never succeed. Satan unleashes his fury and destruction, only to see his actions overruled by our sovereign God to accomplish His wise and eternal purposes. Why doesn’t he ever learn that it is impossible to damage God or His people? His hatred is such that he blindly rages on until the day God pronounces final judgment, and casts him forever into the Lake of Fire.

Let’s consider a few examples where God takes full responsibility for events that many would consider bad. When Moses balked at God’s assignment to confront Pharaoh because he had a speech impediment, God responded, “Who has made man’s mouth? Or who makes the mute, the deaf, the seeing, or the blind? Have not I, the Lord?” (Exodus 4:11) God is the author of physical infirmities.

In the Wilderness, God told Israel, “If you diligently heed the voice of the Lord your God and do what is right in His sight…I will put none of the diseases on you which I brought on the Egyptians” (Exodus 15:26). God declares Himself the author of disease, whether cancer or coronavirus.

Listen to this insight from the prophet Amos. “If there is calamity in a city, will not the Lord have done it?” (Amos 3:6) There are additional similar texts, but these should suffice. God is as much responsible for the “bad things” as the good.

Why has God ordained coronavirus?

If God is responsible, our natural inclination is to ask why? What is God’s purpose for such devastating calamity? The short answer is that nobody knows. No one can explain God’s reason with certainty, because no one but God knows the mind of God. The only way we can know God’s thoughts is if He reveals them to us. He has not revealed His purposes for COVID-19, no matter what insider information some may falsely claim.

But God has revealed His purposes for similar events in the past. What He has given us in the Bible is for our edification, and we can benefit by meditating upon some similar instances. Consider these words of God to Israel.

But it shall come to pass, if you do not obey the voice of the Lord your God…The Lord will make the plague cling to you…The Lord will strike you with consumption, with fever, with inflammation, with severe burning fever…they shall pursue you until you perish. (Deut. 28:15-22)

In Israel’s case, God promised severe diseases as judgment for failure to obey His Word. Can anyone rightfully declare that God does not act in a similar fashion today? Although it is foolish and unwarranted to claim to know exactly why God sent the coronavirus, it is just as foolish to claim that He did not send it as judgment for sin. How can anyone know that? In truth we do not know, but wisdom counsels us to examine our hearts for unconfessed sin.

Jesus publicly evaluated two tragedies that befell the Jews in His day. The first involved Pilate’s slaughter of a group of Galileans while offering sacrifices in the Temple, and the second, eighteen men who were crushed to death by the collapse of the Tower of Siloam. The response to both events was the same. “Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:1-5). God ordained these two events to provide lessons about repentance and judgment. Temporal judgments are illustrations of the greater eternal judgment to come. Did God send coronavirus to arrest the world’s attention and cause people to consider their sin before Almighty God? Is this epidemic designed to prepare hearts of repentance for the final Day of Judgment? It would be wrong to dogmatically assert this as the God-intended purpose, but it would be equally wrong to deny the possibility. Wisdom admonishes us to search our hearts, and to prepare our souls for the day when each one will give account to his Maker. God may have sent coronavirus as a messenger to awaken people to flee from the wrath to come.

What should be our response?

In the face of coronavirus, what should we do? First, we should acknowledge and embrace God’s sovereign rule of this universe. “The Lord has established His throne in heaven, and His kingdom rules over all” (Psalm 103:19). God is sovereign over everything. All people, all events, all nations, all rulers, all diseases. Some will deny this truth, but it is foolish to do so. Others grudgingly acknowledge God’s rule, but rail against God for His sovereign decisions, and reject His rule in their lives. This is equally foolish. The only wise course is to embrace His rightful rule. As Creator, He has every right to rule what He made. As righteous judge, He has the right as well as the responsibility to judge sinful rebellion. As gracious Lord, He has given His own Son to redeem those who embrace His rule, and trust in Jesus Christ alone for salvation. That should be our first response to this crisis.

Beyond that, Christians should meditate upon God’s many gracious promises to His people. “And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28). Christians can rest peacefully, knowing that whatever God intends for the coronavirus, His purpose for His dear children is good without the slightest mixture of ill. “Nothing moves and nothing harms us while we trust in Him” (Thomas Kelly, 1769-1854). We should pray for our friends and loved ones, our nation, and the world. Pray that God will use this crisis to bring many to Himself. We should also seize this opportunity to demonstrate the love of Christ to those around us. We can be generous, kind, and helpful to those in need.

Our God reigns! There is no reason for any child of God to fear. God promises to take care of His own. We can rest secure in His loving embrace, and we can look for occasions to minister truth and grace to others. Perhaps, in the goodness of God, He will use coronavirus to bring genuine spiritual revival to America. Who knows? If so, who would not rejoice and call this virus a great and gracious good!

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Greg Barkman 2018 Bio

G. N. Barkman received his BA and MA from BJU and later founded Beacon Baptist Church in Burlington, NC where has pastored since 1973. In addition, Pastor Barkman airs the Beacon Broadcast on twenty radio stations. He and his wife, Marti, have been blessed with four daughters and nine grandchildren.

Discussion

Greg, thanks for the perspective. It’s not the one we’re getting from our culture, so we need to keep intentionally realigning our attitudes.

I’m going to disagree a bit with one point…

It would be wrong to dogmatically assert this as the God-intended purpose, but it would be equally wrong to deny the possibility.

It might be equally wrong to deny the possibility. But I believe that possibility is not equally likely. The reason I think COVID-19 is unlikely to be a specific judgment is that in Scripture, when God uses a natural disaster as judgment, He always declares that to be its purpose. When it’s a teaching tool, the Teacher tells us that’s what it is and what we’re supposed to learn (sometimes not until afterwards, but usually before or during). But we don’t have a prophet telling us this is a judgment—or a covenant (as in the case of Deuteronomy) telling us in advance that disobedience will have this specific result.

That said, all human suffering is judgment for sin, in a nonspecific way. Because the world is cursed, even the “random” sufferings are an expression of wrath and holiness. They just aren’t linked to the specific sins of specific individuals or groups.

And general sufferings can certainly be humbling, disorienting, and the cause of a lot of painful facing of painful truths. So… the pandemic could certainly be meant to be an instrument of awakening for many.

So maybe I’m saying the same thing, just a little differently.

Anyway, on suffering in general… I already loved this text more than most—easily in my top 10, probably top 5. Lately I love it even more:

For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us. For the creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. (ESV, Rom 8:18–23)

Never gets old, does it?!

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

Here’s some keen commentary from N.T. Wright = Christianity has no answers for COVID-19. He tells us to lament even though God has no purpose in anything. What a loser.

Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.

So why do many continue to fawn over N. T. Wright? (Not much spiritual discernment in the broader world of Evangelicalism!)

G. N. Barkman

Here’s what I wrote on FaceBook:

N.T. Wright’s article is probably the dumbest, most un-Christian thing I’ve read in a long time. He says, “It is no part of the Christian vocation, then, to be able to explain what’s happening and why.” Wrong!

No discerning Christian should buy this man’s books. This is what happens when you don’t actually believe the Bible. His article closes with some fluffy drivel that means nothing; like a grande mocha frappuccino for your soul. It sounds great, but doesn’t do anything good for you. This man is a very poor representative for Christianity.

HINT: for those who have always wondered, this is what liberal Christianity sounds like …

The wife of a former pastor in our congregation (long before my time) responded and defended Wright. She asked if I definitively knew what God was doing.

how do you explain what is happening and why? I have had seasons in my life where I had no idea what was happening. I especially did not know why. Am I misunderstanding you to say that you know?

I replied:

Wright is wrong because he paints a picture of GOD not in charge, of GOD not knowing. He tells people to lament, even though God allegedly has no purpose. That is why Wright’s article is just paganism with some Christian sprinkles on top.

HER:

I read the article and cannot say I agree with you. “If two people always agree one of them is not necessary.”

ME:

Don’t worry! Wright said what he said: “Some Christians like to think of God as above all that, knowing everything, in charge of everything, calm and unaffected by the troubles in his world. That’s not the picture we get in the Bible.” Wright’s god is purely reactive; a mother hen saddened by an intrusion she’s helpless to predict, prevent or protect her brood from. In short, Wright’s god is apparently helpless, sobbing in the corner, impotent in his smallness. Other than that, he and I are on EXACTLY the same page …

HER (wanting to end the convo and escape):

I think it is a misrepresentation of Wright to say that is how he sees God. Obviously both of us are necessary. Blessings

ME:

Blessings to you! If the guy titles his article “Christianity Has No Answers about the Coronavirus” this is likely a clue to his view of God. In this case … it’s not so good. Revisionist Christianity is like cotton candy; it tastes good at first but it has no substance at all. Wright has been a master at it for some time now …

Wright is the master of the strawman attack. His book Justification is a case in point. What drivel. The man is no conservative.

Tyler is a pastor in Olympia, WA and works in State government.