This morning I read with joy an account of God’s abundant grace in the life of my friend Stacey. On her blog she wrote about God’s grace despite her long-lingering doubts about His goodness. “For the past couple of years, until not long ago actually, I was constantly plagued by doubts and uncertainty in the goodness of my God. I was confused and always questioning God, unable to read my Bible without doubting and virtually demanding explanation. … I would read, I would question. I would pray, I wouldn’t find comfort. Doubts and fears and uncertainties assailed me almost daily! It got to the point where I was actually afraid to read my Bible and pray, and I wouldn’t just so I could avoid questioning God.”
I know these doubts and confusions. I think all Christians do, really. I find that they tend to arise in my heart when I read or ponder particular passages of the Bible. One such story that came to mind recently is the story of Uzzah. You know the tale well, I’m sure. Uzzah is accompanying the ark of the covenant as it is brought towards Jerusalem after so many years away (1 Corinthians 13). The people rejoice as they see this manifestation of God’s presence being brought back to its place in their midst. “David and all Israel were rejoicing before God with all their might, with song and lyres and harps and tambourines and cymbals and trumpets.” As they come to a certain threshing floor, the oxen stumble and the cart lurches. Uzzah, the driver of the cart, puts out his hand to steady the ark lest it fall to the ground. God reacts instantly, striking down Uzzah. Uzzah dies right there beside the cart in the presence of the people. Rejoicing must have turned to mourning and terror. David was so terrified by this act of God that he would not bring the Ark to Jerusalem, but instead placed it in the home of Obed-edom the Gittite, where it remained for months.
This act of God seems so harsh, so arbitrary. Wasn’t Uzzah just seeking to serve God by keeping His ark from crashing to the ground and perhaps becoming damaged? Was this not just a simple mistake that God should have chosen to overlook? What would compel God to act to harshly? Was it that bad of a mistake?
There are many who look at this passage and, asking “What does this tell us about God?” conclude that He is arbitrary, impulsive and unjust. And reading just this passage one could easily come to such a conclusion. Doubts may well linger.
On Sunday evening I heard a sermon that clarified this passage for me in such a helpful way. The story of Uzzah was not the point of the sermon and the preacher only just touched on it. But he quoted R.C. Sproul and what Sproul said just clicked in my mind. Suddenly it all made sense.
It is clear in the Old Testament that God gave laws regarding the ark. Every Israelite would have known what was expected of him—he would have known that he had no business touching it. Uzzah violated those laws. But there must be more to it! After all, Uzzah was helping God, by protecting the ark. How could he allow that sacred object to fall from the cart and smash to the ground, getting covered in the filth of the threshing floor? How could he allow the ark to be so defiled?
Yet here is where Uzzah went wrong; this is where we see what he did as an act of arrogance rather than compassion. The purpose of the laws regarding the ark were not to protect it from contact with mud. Rather, the laws were given to protect it from contact with sinful human hands. It was not the filth of the ground that would defile the ark, but the filth of human sin. Sproul wrote about this in his book The Holiness of God and also spoke of it in a recent keynote address at a Desiring God conference. Here is how they summarized this portion of his address on their blog:
Consider now the story of Uzzah. The ark of the covenant was being carried in a cart. This was not the way it was designed to be carried. It should have been on the shoulders of priests. When one of the oxen stumbled the ark looked like it was going to fall. Uzzah keeps it from tipping in the mud. God’s reaction was not, “Thank you, Uzzah!” No, God killed Uzzah instantly. Uzzah believed that mud would desecrate the ark, but mud is just dirt and water obeying God. Mud is not evil. God’s law was not meant to keep the ark pure from the earth, but from the dirty touch of a human hand. Uzzah presumed his hands were cleaner than the dirt. God said no.
There was nothing arbitrary about it! Mud is simply water and dirt coming together in obedience to God. There is nothing in mud that can cause it to defile God’s ark. But Uzzah was a sinful human being defiled by sin who arrogantly supposed that his hands were cleaner before God than the dirt and water. And God was forced to strike him down for an act of such spiritual arrogance.
In The Holiness of God Sproul writes, “Uzzah was not an innocent man. He was not punished without a warning. He was not punished without violating a law. There was no caprice in this act of divine judgment. There was nothing arbitrary or whimsical about what God did in that moment. But there was something unusual about it. The execution’s suddenness and finality take us by surprise and at once shock and offend us.” The reason we are shocked and surprised and offended is simply that we do not understand as we should God’s holiness, justice, sin and grace. Were we to better understand the character of God we would see immediately why God had to act as He did.
Stacey found the character of God behind the words of the Old Testament and behind the acts of God they describe. “I am still reading the minor prophets and where I once would have only seen wrath, I now see abundant grace and mercy, where I once would have been suspicious of God, I am now delighting in him, where I once would have been demanding answers from God, I am now examining my own heart for sin, where I once met with frustration and emptiness, I now find life for my soul.”
To understand the character of God is to understand His acts. To understand the character and acts of God is to find life for the soul.




Comments (10) »
1. michael dewalt
July 30, 2008
10:15 AM
what DG conference Sproul recently speak at?
2. Eddie Wilbanks
July 30, 2008
10:30 AM
I remember listening to Sproul preach from this passage. I think I downloaded it from his web site… well worth the effort to find it !!!
3. BS Dinkins
July 30, 2008
11:25 AM
I watched a video of Dr. Sproul preach on that very instance once when he was addressing our human desire or understanding of “fairness.” I realized then that separate from grace we often see God’s actions as unfair. My fleshly tendency is to cry out for fairness. But, the truth is, none of us want God to look on us with fairness. The cross wasn’t fair, and thank God it wasn’t! What we really want is mercy. And here we find ourselves, carried back to a proper view of self, sin, judgement, salvation, Lordship, and holiness.
4. Simple Mann
July 30, 2008
12:25 PM
That’s so encouraging! I am glad that your friend has persisted in faithfully reading the Scriptures to discover God’s character. I read and responded to a comment yesterday from someone who wrote, “I would rather know God than know theology.” This is a popular and dangerous deception of the soul.
Restated: “I would rather know God than ‘the study of God’”. Or, I would prefer to know God without knowledge of Him. That is sort of like saying I would rather know a language than all of its vocabulary and grammar. You cannot truly know the one without the other. Theology, quite simply, is the study of God. To know God’s character, His attributes, His precepts, and His grace—one must study what has been revealed about Him and by Him, and this is Theology. There’s no getting around it. You may no more learn a language by opening your mouth and making random sounds than learn about God without studying what has been revealed about Him through Scripture.
Peace & Blessings,
Simple Mann
5. Michele
July 30, 2008
5:52 PM
Another helpful sermon is at SermonAudio.com….. “Steadying the Ark” by Vance Havner. An excellent insight into ‘ole Uzzah.
6. Logan
July 30, 2008
10:12 PM
I remember witnessing to an Atheist who had handed me an anti-Christian tract that said that this story proved that God was a merciless, arrogant tyrant. The Atheist, condescendingly listened as I gave my response.
“Don’t you understand? God was proving a point, dirt is not sinful, man’s hands are. God was showing the world, even to this day, that the ground we step on is innocent while we are guilty.”
Needless to say, my answer was far too spiritual and not scientific enough for him.
Leonard Ravenhill spoke on this story in a sermon (that’s where I got my answer), but I can’t remember the name of it…
This story is just one of countless stories that don’t make sense unless you look at it from God’s point of view. Take the entire book of Job for example, unless God comes in at the last couple of chapters, the story is broken by ignorance.
7. Heather
July 31, 2008
8:51 AM
This was a truly wonderful explanation. Our culture does not have a grip on the holiness of God or the stink of our sin. Though I am saved and loved by my Lord and Savior I cringe in shame when I consider my sinfulness before Him. I was happy to read Stacey’s account at the end of the commentary. When we understand His character we can rejoice that He has made a way for us instead of strike us dead.
8. Craig E.
July 31, 2008
10:00 AM
What an encouraging post! I always had trouble with this passage, but Sproul’s quote has opened my eyes. God Bless!
9. David Giarrizzo
July 31, 2008
1:16 PM
Thanks for the post. Good thoughts! Talking about the filth of human hands reminds me of a recent song by Switchfoot’s Jon Foreman on his album “Fall”. No human is without fault (Rom. 1). I appreciate the contrast that Foreman alludes to in this song, the contrast between the sin-stained hands of all men and the holy, just hands of God.
“Equally Skilled”
How miserable I am
I feel like a fruit-picker who arrived here
After the harvest
There’s nothing here at all
There’s nothing at all here that could placate my hunger
The godly people are all gone
There’s not one honest soul left alive
Here on the planet
We’re all murderers and thieves
Setting traps here for even our brothers
And both of our hands
Are equally skilled
At doing evil
Equally skilled
At bribing the judges
Equally skilled
At perverting justice
Both of our hands
Both of our hands
The day of justice comes
And is even now swiftly arriving
Don’t trust anyone at all
Not your best friend or even your wife
For the son hates the father
The daughter despises even her mother
Look, your enemies are right
Right in the room of your very household
And both of their hands
Are equally skilled
At doing evil
Equally skilled
At bribing the judges
Equally skilled
At perverting justice
Both of their hands
Both of their hands
No, don’t gloat over me
For though I fall, though I fall
I will rise again
Though I sit here in darkness
The Lord, the Lord alone
He will be my light
I will be patient as the Lord
Punishes me for the wrongs I’ve done
Against Him
After that, He’ll take my case
Bringing me to light and to justice
For all I have suffered
And both of His hands
Are equally skilled
At ruining evil
Equally skilled
At judging the judges
Equally skilled
Administering justice
Both of His hands
Both of His hands
Are equally skilled
At showing me mercy
Equally skilled
At loving the loveless
Equally skilled
Administering justice
Both of His hands
Both of His hands
10. Eagle
July 31, 2008
4:27 PM
Great song… good beat… and you can dance to it!!!