Pondering Questions God Asks in The Bible?


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What Is Your Name?

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Genesis 32:27 to Jacob…
The Context; Jacob was on his way back to the place where he called home, and where he feared he would meet his estranged brother Esau. Camped for the night, Jacob went off by himself to a place where God, in the form of a man, wrestled with him to the point of dislocating Jacob's hip. Whether it was faith or proud tenacity we do not know (both things were common with Jacob), but Jacob refused to quit wrestling "unless you bless me." In response, God changed Jacob's name to "Israel" because Jacob had "striven with God and with men and have prevailed." That attitude, that behavior would prove to be both great heartache and great blessing for Jacob who would be the father of the God's people the Israelites.

God Asks Us: What is your name? no longer Jacob, but Israel..
jne Names are meaningful. Some people grow into their name, some grow out of it. Some people bring honor to their name, some people bring shame. David Roper wrote a book entitled "Fools God Uses." It is about Jacob, the son of Isaac, the grandson of Abraham, the brother of Esau. None of those men were great by their own doing. They each give us examples of how not to live. Jacob, whom God renamed Israel and made him the father of the twelve tribes of Israel, spent much of his life serving himself, being true to his name Jacob (supplanter). There were things he did right, (read his story in Genesis) but, like most all of us, did many foolish things. But God, in His Powerful, Merciful Sovereignty turned Jacob into Israel ("prince") as He continued to faithfully fulfill His Covenant with Abraham. Reading the whole story of God's promises to Abraham, there is only one conclusion we can honestly draw. The outworking of our salvation (the promised seed of the woman through the offspring of Abraham to the birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ) is all God's doing and He gets all the glory. And what a privilege to be a fool God uses and blesses in the process. Jacob needed to know that God had plans for him, and through him, far greater than he could accomplish by himself. Do I know that too?

WHY GOD ASKS QUESTIONS?

It is easy to read the Bible and see only stories and rules. Even if a person can see the Bible as a revelation of Who God is and what He is like it can be difficult to fully realize that in the Bible God invites us to the amazing adventure of an eternal and perfect relationship with Him.

How often do we wish we could ask God questions and have Him give us a plain answer? God, why did You let my father die? God, why am I not getting well? God, why aren’t my plans working? And the questions go on and on and on. The questions aren’t always doubting or complaining, but sometimes simply curiosity. I assume that it is a surprise to most of us that in the Bible God asks us more than 500 questions.

Why does God ask us questions? Surely if God is GOD He knows the answer to all His questions. God does not need us to inform Him of our circumstances, thoughts or motives. God’s questions are always in a context and the reason for them is to prompt us to think more seriously about our lives. So really, the reason God asks us questions is because He cares so much about us.

More than just seeking to probe what we know or think, God's questions can:
>> motivate our curiosity.
>> prompt us to reevaluate the way we think and behave.
>> help us see things from a different perspective.
>> help us dig deeper into really important issues.
>> help us discover what we truly believe.
>> demonstrate that God is dynamically interested in us.
God asks us questions because He wants us to grow.
How important are God’s questions to you?

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all content by J Neil Evans
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