FALAITE ‘EPELELI 17, 2026
1 TU’I 15-17; PALOVEPI 19:21
Nothing in the earth below or the sky above can stop the march of the plans and purposes of God. Nothing.
‘Oku ‘ikai ha me’a ‘i lolofonua pe ‘i he langi ‘i ‘olunga te ne lava ke ta’ofi ‘a e palani mo e taumu’a ‘a e ‘Otua. ‘Oku ‘ikai ha me’a.
I was in the most vibrant, productive, influential, and exciting ministry period of my life. I had speaking engagements every weekend and several international trips each year. I was also writing a book a year. I was committed and determined, but I was not sovereign or without limits. All it took were some physical symptoms and a visit to the hospital, and my seemingly unstoppable plans stopped in an instant. I faced the fact that I would never again be capable of completing what I had committed myself to do.
Thankfully, God is not like me. Nothing can thwart his will, nothing can challenge his rule, and nothing can stop the march of his grand redemptive plan. The hope and spiritual security of every believer rest on the fact that our Lord cannot be stopped. His rule rules. This truth is clear and comforting in the following passage:
Now in the eighteenth year of King Jeroboam the son of Nebat, Abijam began to reign over Judah. He reigned for three years in Jerusalem. His mother's name was Maacah the daughter of Abishalom. And he walked in all the sins that his father did before him, and his heart was not wholly true to the LORD his God, as the heart of David his father. Nevertheless, for David's sake the LORD his God gave him a lamp in Jerusalem, setting up his son after him, and establishing Jerusalem. (1 Kings 15:1-4)
The Lord of heaven and earth had set a redemptive plan in motion from before the world was formed, and he would not turn from that plan, no matter what. Here he established the throne of Abijam and his son in Jerusalem, not because Abijam was a God-fearing king but because God would not let anything stand in the way of his great redeeming plan. Out of Judah would come the King of kings whose throne would never, ever end. Don't misunderstand; God was not ignoring Abijam's sin, acting as though it were nothing. Abijam's sin against God is clearly proclaimed in this passage. What God was unwilling to do was to turn his back on the redemptive plan and the covenant promises he had made to David. Think about it for a moment. If our sin could thwart God's sovereign plan of grace, then there would be no hope for us. Hope for covenant breakers is found only in the perfect covenant-keeping zeal of the Lord. When we are faithless, he will remain faithful, because he cannot deny himself or the promises of grace he has made. So when you place your hope on him, your hope is secure. In a world where so many things disappoint us, that's very good news.