Built For Greatness

Judgment of God: BFG Handbook Chapter 73 (The Heavenly Net is Wide, Yet No One Slips Through)

Keith Season 1 Episode 73

Discover the highlights of this chapter shaping the New Evangelization today: https://www.builtforgreatness.com/tao-te-ching-chapter-73-judgement-of-god/

The paradoxical nature of divine judgment stops us in our tracks and invites deeper contemplation. Drawing from chapter 73 of "Judgment of God" from the BFG movement, we journey through four profound paradoxes that challenge conventional thinking about how God judges, acts, and relates to humanity.

We begin with a striking contrast: "The bold who are brave will die by the sword. The bold who are careful will live." This isn't advocating fearfulness, but a thoughtful courage that combines bravery with wisdom—a principle Jesus demonstrated when rebuking Peter for drawing his sword in defense. We explore how this balanced boldness applies to relationships, leadership, and justice work in our daily lives.

The mystery of divine favor presents another challenging perspective: "Who knows the reason? Even the wise find this difficult." This confronts our human tendency to seek simple explanations for life's complexities. When suffering or injustice occurs, we're invited not to fixate on "Why me?" but to trust in a bigger picture beyond our comprehension—finding freedom in acknowledging our limited understanding.

Perhaps most poetically, we contemplate how God "conquers without contending, responds without speaking, cannot be summoned and yet is present." Divine action often works quietly, gradually, contrary to our expectations of dramatic intervention. This invites patience and trust in God's sovereignty and timing, a countercultural posture in our instant-results world.

Finally, we examine judgment as both inescapable and merciful: "The heavenly net is wide and vast, yet nobody can slip through it." Rather than inducing fear, this brings profound peace—knowing God sees everything, even what seems overlooked or insignificant.

What might shift in your perspective if you embraced these paradoxes? Where could you practice more wisdom in boldness, humility in uncertainty, patience in waiting, or trust in divine sovereignty? The journey continues with each small step toward deeper understanding.

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Speaker 1:

You know, there's this deep-seated thing in us, isn't there this need to understand how things work Fairness, justice, just the basic mechanics of the world. You've probably wondered about it yourself. We're diving headfirst into something really thought-provoking. We've got chapter 73 from Judgment of God. Built for God, the BFG movement.

Speaker 2:

Right, the BFG movement. They seem to be about presenting the gospel in a well, a contemporary way.

Speaker 1:

Exactly, and this chapter frames itself as a kind of Christian take on the Tao Te Ching a different expression, they call it of God's love aimed at restoring truth.

Speaker 2:

And what's really grabbed me about it, beyond the interfaith angle, is how it deals with divine judgment.

Speaker 1:

It uses these paradoxical statements yeah, not just laying it out straight.

Speaker 2:

No, it makes you stop and think OK, what does judgment really mean here? And it connects those thoughts back to Christian teachings.

Speaker 1:

Totally so. Our mission for this deep dive really is to unpack these ideas. They might seem surprising, maybe even challenge how you think about judgment.

Speaker 2:

And hopefully pull out some practical insights to things you can actually use day to day. That's always the goal, isn't it? Absolutely.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so it kicks off right away with this line about boldness. The bold who are brave will die by the sword. The bold who are careful will live.

Speaker 2:

Wow, yeah, that definitely makes you pause. Brave, dies, careful lives, but both are bold.

Speaker 1:

Right. It immediately made me think of, you know, the Christian idea of taking up your cross like in Luke. Well, it's not about being some kind of reckless action hero, is it? It's more that steady, faithful living. Maybe real courage isn't being fearless but being smart about how you act.

Speaker 2:

That's a great connection Considered faithfulness, not just impulse. It reminds me of Peter, actually Matthew 26.

Speaker 1:

Oh, when he draws the sword.

Speaker 2:

Exactly. He's bold defending Jesus, but Jesus rebukes him.

Speaker 1:

It suggests God's way isn't always about meeting force with force, you know? Yeah, definitely not the obvious reaction and the source material in its renewal part. It has this mindset principle boldness and caution in action.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so it's explicitly naming that tension.

Speaker 1:

And the aim it gives is wisdom in boldness, balancing courage with careful discernment.

Speaker 2:

I like that. It draws a line between just being reckless and being thoughtfully bold. Reckless is impulse, maybe harmful. Thoughtful boldness has wisdom behind it.

Speaker 1:

Which fits so well with Christian ideas about seeking prudence, seeking wisdom.

Speaker 2:

It does and the real world application they mention is key. I think that feeling when you want to jump in immediately.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, Been there.

Speaker 2:

Right, but this suggests pausing being thoughtful in relationships, leadership, even social justice stuff. Like stand up for what's right, sure, but do it with respect and thought, not just steam rolling.

Speaker 1:

Constructively. And they bring in Proverbs 3, trust in the Lord, and James 1, ask God for wisdom, anchoring it. Then it shifts to the aim principle Aim for wisdom and discernment and boldness and caution.

Speaker 2:

So not just having the mindset but actively aiming for it Right, moving from idea to intention, the goal being boldness that's really moderated, tempered by thought.

Speaker 1:

And the explanation digs into that evaluating risks, benefits planning, seeking advice before acting boldly.

Speaker 2:

It's deliberate, not spontaneous combustion.

Speaker 1:

Which feels super practical for anyone listening. Those big choices, career relationships go forward, yes, but maybe not with your eyes closed.

Speaker 2:

Exactly. And again scriptures pop up Proverbs 2 on God giving wisdom, proverbs 3 on safeguarding judgment. It keeps reinforcing the source of that wisdom.

Speaker 1:

Then comes the practice principle. Practice discernment in boldness and caution.

Speaker 2:

Where the rubber meets the road. Yeah, put the thoughtful boldness into action.

Speaker 1:

Confident but guided. The explanation talks about choosing when to be bold, wisely, using foresight.

Speaker 2:

So it's strategic courage, not just any courage.

Speaker 1:

And the examples are things like career moves, starting projects, leading teams. You need boldness, but you also need responsibility. Research.

Speaker 2:

You do. And those verses again James 1.5, proverbs 3.56,. Just keeping that foundation in view.

Speaker 1:

Now this response section is fascinating. It draws parallels with other faiths on this balance. Well, it mentions Matthew 10.16, wise as serpents, harmless as doves classic Christian image for this.

Speaker 2:

Definitely Wisdom and innocence together.

Speaker 1:

But then it brings in the Quran 16.125, about inviting others with wisdom and good instruction.

Speaker 2:

Okay, similar theme.

Speaker 1:

And Hinduism via the Bhagavad Gita, detachment and self-control, tempering action, and Buddhism's right action advocating moderation Suggests maybe true strength isn't just raw power.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's guided power.

Speaker 1:

And the final verse they drop in is Proverbs 4. Get wisdom Pretty direct.

Speaker 2:

Can't get much clearer than that. Okay, so that's the boldness paradox. What about the next point? The mystery of divine favor.

Speaker 1:

Right. This one also stops you in your tracks. One is not favored by heaven. Who knows the reason. Even the wise find this difficult.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that hits hard because we want to know the reason, don't?

Speaker 1:

we Totally, and it immediately made me think of Isaiah 55. God's thoughts aren't our thoughts. His ways aren't our ways.

Speaker 2:

Right. It pushes back against that easy cause and effect we often look for like I did good, so I get blessed. Maybe it's not that simple.

Speaker 1:

Maybe that discomfort, the why, is actually part of deepening faith.

Speaker 2:

Could be Loving your enemies. That really throws a wrench in the simple reward system idea of favor.

Speaker 1:

It does. God's favor seems rooted in this massive love and justice, way bigger than our human scorecard.

Speaker 2:

And the renewal section here has the mindset understanding and accepting the mystery of life, aiming for humility.

Speaker 1:

Humility when we just don't get it. The explanation talks about trusting God's will, even without the answers.

Speaker 2:

Which is easier said than done, but crucial, a faith that doesn't need all the blueprints.

Speaker 1:

And the real world application is right there, dealing with suffering, loss, injustice, instead of getting stuck on. Why me? It's about trusting a bigger picture.

Speaker 2:

Finding peace in the uncertainty maybe, and the verse of support that Isaiah 55 again in Romans 8.28, all things work together for good. That's a big anchor.

Speaker 1:

Huge anchor. Okay, then, the aim is aim for humility and understanding life's mysteries. Actively embrace the mystery, Acknowledge our limits.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, letting go of the need to know everything, trusting God's wisdom is greater, humbling ourselves before the unknown.

Speaker 1:

The application follows, trusting that bigger picture when things are confusing or painful from down here makes sense and proverbs 3 and isaiah 55 reinforce that. Lean, not on your own understanding than the practice, practice humility and acknowledging life's mysteries, actively accepting. We won't figure it all out and the explanation is almost freeing.

Speaker 2:

Not everything needs to be figured out.

Speaker 1:

Maybe accepting that lets us trust more deeply so the real world practice is resisting that demand for immediate answers in tough times, Leaning on faith, trusting God's in control even if the path is foggy. Isaiah 55, again, constant reminders and the response section again finds echoes elsewhere. Proverbs 3, christianity.

Speaker 2:

And the Quran 3.191, the Bhagavad Gita on devotion, leading to understanding the Dhammapada in Buddhism on the mind shaping reality.

Speaker 1:

It's like all these paths acknowledge something beyond our full grasp, a shared sense of human limitation before the divine or the ultimate.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, recognizing, we're not the ones holding all the cards, and the application is simply practice, humility and challenges. Trust, a higher power.

Speaker 1:

Tied up with Isaiah 55 and James 4. Humble yourselves before the Lord. Okay, let's shift again the nature of how God acts Right.

Speaker 2:

The descriptions are amazing Conquers without contending, responds without speaking, Cannot be summoned and yet is present.

Speaker 1:

So poetic it instantly brought Psalm 46. Be still and know that I am God.

Speaker 2:

God's power doesn't need a big fight scene. It, god, god's power, doesn't need a big fight scene. It's inherent, like an author's control over the story.

Speaker 1:

Subtle but total, that story in First Kings with Elijah. God wasn't in the wind, the earthquake, the fire.

Speaker 2:

But in the still small voice.

Speaker 1:

Exactly Divine action can be quiet, almost invisible sometimes.

Speaker 2:

So the renewal mindset is God's sovereignty conquering without contending, aiming for trust in God's unhurried, complete control.

Speaker 1:

Unhurried. That's key. The explanation stresses God's absolute sovereignty, but His work is often quiet, gradual, not our pace at all.

Speaker 2:

Which makes the real-world application so relevant for us right Trusting God's timing in this crazy, fast world, finding peace when things feel uncertain.

Speaker 1:

Knowing work is being done, even if we don't see it. Psalm 46 again and Isaiah 40. Waiting on the Lord renews, strength, powerful promises.

Speaker 2:

Then the aim Aim for patience and trust in God's sovereignty, actively resting in His timing.

Speaker 1:

Resisting that urge to push to force our own schedule onto things, trusting the bigger plan.

Speaker 2:

The real world. Practice is learning to wait for change, healing whatever it is, resisting the urge to take over, which is hard. But Psalm 46 in Ecclesiastes 3, he has made everything beautiful in its time. Remind us of that divine timetable.

Speaker 1:

Then practice, practice, patience and trust in God's timing, actively waiting.

Speaker 2:

And the explanation highlights God's wisdom and patience. We're invited to reflect that Resist forcing things or getting discouraged while we wait.

Speaker 1:

So the application is keep praying, keep bringing things to God, but then release the outcome. Trust his timing.

Speaker 2:

Sounds like it Resting in his wisdom, and Psalm 27, wait for the Lord and 2 Peter 3 on God's patience, provide that encouragement.

Speaker 1:

And again the response section finds connections Psalm 27, Quran 2.153, Hindu karma, yoga, Buddhist right, effort and mindfulness.

Speaker 2:

All pointing towards accepting a larger process, an unfolding that's not entirely in our hands, especially during times of waiting.

Speaker 1:

It is fascinating. So the application is trusting that unfolding in prayer, career relationships, seeing a bigger timing at play.

Speaker 2:

And Ecclesiastes 3, a season for everything plus Romans 8.28. Tie that together. Trust the process God's working in it Okay.

Speaker 1:

Final piece, this idea of inescapable but merciful judgment.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that paradox Again it says God does not rush things and yet fulfills that patience we just talked about.

Speaker 1:

Right, then it hits with. The heavenly net is wide and vast, and yet nobody can slip through it. Whoa.

Speaker 2:

That's a powerful image, the net. It connects to Christian ideas of final judgment, like in Romans 14 or Revelation 20. Everyone is accountable.

Speaker 1:

And this is crucial held in tension with God's grace right. The net might be inescapable, but mercy is still central.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely a central point Justice and mercy together. The renewal mindset is the unstoppable will of God, trusting his power and justice.

Speaker 1:

The explanation says nothing escapes God's notice. His plans will be fulfilled. There's a certainty there.

Speaker 2:

And the application is finding peace in that Knowing God sees everything, even the small stuff, even what feels overlooked.

Speaker 1:

That's comforting. In Matthew 10, god knowing the sparrows, and Romans 8, nothing separating us from his love. Those verses give that deep security.

Speaker 2:

Then the aim. Aim for confidence in God's unfailing control, finding assurance in his authority.

Speaker 1:

The explanation is blunt. God is in complete control, total sovereignty.

Speaker 2:

Which can be a huge source of peace, especially in crises when everything feels chaotic, remembering that ultimate control. In Romans 8.28 and Matthew 10,. Again, god works for good, he knows the details. Constant reassurance, then practice. Practice confidence in God's sovereignty, actively choosing to trust His control in every area.

Speaker 1:

The explanation suggests everything unfolds according to His purpose and embracing that brings peace, even when life's stormy.

Speaker 2:

So the application is trusting him through challenges, personal work, relationships, knowing there's a plan, even if it's hidden.

Speaker 1:

In Romans 8.28, Psalm 115,. Our God is in heaven. He does whatever pleases him, affirming his authority.

Speaker 2:

And finally the respond section one last time. Romans 8 for Christianity.

Speaker 1:

Quran 94, Bhagavad Gita on devotion, Dhammapada on the mind's power, all hinting at trust in a higher power's oversight.

Speaker 2:

It's amazing how that core belief in divine control and protection echoes across different paths. A universal comfort, maybe?

Speaker 1:

Seems like it. So the application is actively practice faith and confidence in God's plan, especially when things feel uncertain.

Speaker 2:

And Isaiah 46, god's plan standing firm, and Matthew 10, his detailed knowledge, powerful closing thoughts on that sovereignty.

Speaker 1:

One of the big takeaways for everyone listening we've seen this really complex picture of judgment.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, not just punishment. It's this weave of divine wisdom incredible patience, inescapable justice, but always shot through with mercy.

Speaker 1:

And those recurring themes, the balance of boldness and caution.

Speaker 2:

The humility needed when facing mystery.

Speaker 1:

Trusting God's timing, not ours.

Speaker 2:

And that deep confidence in his sovereignty.

Speaker 1:

And it's really striking how these ideas pop up across different spiritual traditions, isn't it In the respond sections?

Speaker 2:

It really is.

Speaker 1:

It hints at maybe some universal truths about how things work or how we relate to the ultimate which leads to a big question for you listening how might this wider view of judgment as wisdom, patience, justice and mercy shift how you see your own life, your own actions, your trust?

Speaker 2:

It's worth pondering when could you maybe use a bit more wisdom in your boldness?

Speaker 1:

Or more humility when you don't have the answers.

Speaker 2:

Or practice more patience or lean more into trusting that bigger plan.

Speaker 1:

Exactly so maybe the final thought is what specific part of this deep dive resonated most with you right now?

Speaker 2:

And what might be one small step you could take to explore that resonance a bit further. It's always a journey, isn't it?