This little prophecy really speaks important truths  into our  life. It addresses  the problem of God’s silence and seeming inactivity  at 
times when you would have 
expected  Him to act. 
How  should we 
understand God’s dealings with us in the process of history? Is history
in the hands of God ? 
Or is He simply a remote deity that  may be compared  to  a
watchmaker  making a watch, winding  it
up  and 
throwing  it into the desert waiting for its time to run out, remaining essentially uninvolved with
the watch?
Or is He involved in
history?  Is He “Yahweh – Jireh“, the Provider, or is  He  like
many Namibian fathers  that not take care of their children  and  who are not involved in their lives?
I do not have
to persuade you, that the  Scriptures
portray God  as a caring, loving,
heavenly Father.  He  not only has made the world (Gen. 1:1; John 1:3) but  He  also “sustains
all things by the power of His  Word,”
(Hebr.  1:3). 
The Psalms  are filled with affirmations of His
providential love and care for all His creatures.  
He is involved in the  history of the world  (e.g. Psalm 2).  
He 
knows His people, even before they are born (Psalm 139).   
He 
deals with   stubborn and
rebellious generations (Psalm 78:8). 
He cares for the  birds of the air  and the lilies of the field (Matt. 6). 
He is 
the God of all the earth (Psalm 24:1) 
and  of the Universe (Psalm 19). 
He is the God of the Macro-cosmos and the Micro cosmos. He is the God of the
infinity of space,  and He is the God of
the atoms,  electrons , quarks [1]etc. 
Presbyterian theologian   RC Sproul once said,  “There is no ‘maverick molecule ‘ in the
Universe’. He indwells all things and all things hold together in Him-
that is how intimately God relates  to
all created things.
Here’s the question.  If God 
is so involved in this world how come  He feels
so far away at times? Many people would argue   that   great tragedies  in the world  (tsunamis,  earthquakes,  epidemics and  diseases, famines,  man’s  unrestrained cruelty) would indicate  that
God doesn’t really  care about this world which He has created.
This is where  Habakkuk finds himself. If you had asked Habakkuk
at this point  whether he felt that God was caring
for Him or for his country, the nation of
Israel, He would have perhaps initially said, "I don’t know ! He seems to have abandoned us! 
This  sentiment is discerned in  1:2-3, “O LORD,
how long shall I cry for help and you will not hear? Or cry out to you
“Violence” and you will not save? Why do you make  me see iniquity, and why do you look idly at
wrong?”
SITUATION
IN ISRAEL IN HABAKKUK’S TIMES
Habakkuk  is a contemporary of Jeremiah (which dates
this  writing roughly  between 605-600 BC).  This is a time when Israel is at an all - time spiritual low, and it showed in her  moral and spiritual life.   Habakkuk was greatly troubled by  what he
was seeing.  As a prophet he knew that
the spiritual state of his nation was due to their own neglect of God.  Israel had forgotten her  God. She was following other gods. Sin and immorality are
rampant. In justice prevails (1:3). Destruction and violence abounds  in society. This always happens when the   law  is disregarded.  Listen to how  Habakkuk puts it in 1:4,  
“So the law is paralyzed, and justice never goes forth. For the wicked surround the righteous; so justice goes forth perverted.” There was serious spiritual apathy, which went hand in hand with a general moral, judicial and political decline.
“So the law is paralyzed, and justice never goes forth. For the wicked surround the righteous; so justice goes forth perverted.” There was serious spiritual apathy, which went hand in hand with a general moral, judicial and political decline.
THE
PROBLEM
At this point  Habakkuk  did not understand why God allowed it all.
He  had been praying  to  God for help (1:2)  but God did not answer! This
is the  problem, and  this  easily becomes 
a snare to many people. Why does a good God  not
intervene  when the wicked surround the
righteous?  It was not that
Habakkuk wasn’t  wanting  God to deal with sinful Israel.   He was not defending  the evil 
in the nation. He was  after all
a prophet of God, and he had this   oracle
(lit. a burden) on his heart and mind.    His problem was this: Why is God  not acting ? 
Why is He so quiet? 
I wonder whether  you 
perhaps feel the  same at times? I confess
that as a  pastor  with a burden for this nation, I often feel
like this. I  know that 
many Christians are overwhelmed at the rampant
evil in our society and they are asking,  “why does God not do anything  about this ?”
THE
ANSWER 
The answer is   in coming. God is not
sleeping  on the job. The
answer  to what He is going to do is for the  next semon Right now  we simply want to deal with the  state of mind in  which we find ourselves when we   perceive  that  God does not appear  to act  when we think  that He should. We need to talk about  our response to God's seeing inactivity. 
There is, of course a
presupposition  behind our question:  Why does God not act? That is due to
the fact that we  use the Bible in a  particular way.  Dr Martyn Lloyd Jones [2] drew my
attention to this fact. He writes,   
“We tend to use the Bible as a text book of personal salvation. Many people seem to think that the sole theme of the Bible is our personal relationship with God. Of course that is one of the central themes… but that is not the only theme in the Bible. Indeed, we can go so far as to say that the Bible puts the question of personal salvation into a larger context. Ultimately the main message of the Bible concerns the condition of the entire world and its destiny; and you and I, as individuals, are a part of that larger whole…”
“We tend to use the Bible as a text book of personal salvation. Many people seem to think that the sole theme of the Bible is our personal relationship with God. Of course that is one of the central themes… but that is not the only theme in the Bible. Indeed, we can go so far as to say that the Bible puts the question of personal salvation into a larger context. Ultimately the main message of the Bible concerns the condition of the entire world and its destiny; and you and I, as individuals, are a part of that larger whole…”
The problem occurs
when we look at  our world  from   a 
limited, self- centered 
perspective and when we fail to take into account the   grand message of the Bible  concerning the world and its destiny. This is the problem
which we find in Habakkuk’s mind at this time. He could not reconcile what he was seeing, with what he was
believing.
A similar
example  of this sort of perplexity is found in  Psalm
73.  There the Psalmist confesses that he had almost stumbled. His feet had almost slipped. He had a
faith crisis  when  he 
considered how the wicked always seemed to prosper, while God  fearing men like  himself 
always seemed to struggle. In fact he seems to begin to believe by and
by that 
his faith had been all in vain. The  more he tried to work this out
in his mind, the more depressed he became. But thankfully the turning point   came for him in  Psalm 73:17, “… until
I  went into the sanctuary of God ; then
I discerned their end…”. 
It was not until he had  understood the big
picture  i.e.  God’s perspective   on the entire  matter, that he began to  see the true future of the wicked. That  new perspective changed  everything for
him, even though  the  prosperous and  arrogant people  in that 73rd  Psalm seemed  at this stage to  have continued  in the same frame of mind.
WHY THIS PROPHECY IS  SO VALUABLE TO US AT THIS TIME 
1.       
We  need   a grand perspective of God’s  plan
for  the world  in
history. Does God’s silence and His choosing not to answer our
prayers ( according to our desire) have anything to do with the fact that He is  not involved  with this world? Habakkuk will teach us that  this is not so. We shall learn that God’s silence and His non-answers
to  our prayers are still to our benefit.
 And, for that  matter 
aren’t you  glad that God  does not answer every one of your often self centered and self focussed  prayers that tend to exclude eeryone and everything else?  For that matter too, aren’t you glad
that  He did not answer Jesus’ prayer in
the garden : ”Lord let this cup pass from
me?”
2.       
Secondly, Habakkuk will teach us , that things in history sometimes get worse before they may get
better.  The divine surgeon has to cut
before He heals. We  may be assured that  He always heals 
His people – even if only beyond the curtain of death.
3.       
Thirdly,  Habakkuk will teach us something about the apparent discrepancy between what we see and what we believe. Habakkuk was greatly troubled by what he saw. The
problem was that he could not reconcile what he saw with what he believed.  He knew that God  had  to
punish his nation. That was clear to him. He knew that God is holy and that
his eyes were too pure to behold sin. But what he could not understand was that God could  use 
means, which to Habakkuk’s mind
were  unthinkable. In this case we  shall discover that God will use the
Babylonians, a nation of idolaters  and
ruthless people – to punish His chosen  Hebrew
nation!
Now this all serves as an introduction.  We may need  to  prepare ourselves to correct our stereo- typical thinking of God. Habakkuk  was guilty of
stereo-typical thinking. The
value of reading the prophet Habakkuk  is that we might obtain
new insights into the  nature of God’s  often perplexing working in this world.  And perhaps we
will begin to understand why  things are
as they are in the world.   There is wonderful
scope  to broaden our spiritual horizons
in this book. And perhaps a few of us will make a quantum leap in our
understanding as we begin to understand the 
nature of  the sovereignty of
God.  There is wonderful
scope to  learn  true humility. There is wonderful scope to live more by faith and  in dependence upon His grace. 
[1] A quark  is an elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nuclei
[2] Martyn
Lloyd Jones:  Faith tried and
Triumphant  (IVP) , p.4 

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