Can anything limit God’s power?

He created the universe with simple commands.

God’s power is beyond understanding.

But when Jesus visited his hometown, he could not do any miracles there, except lay his hands on a few sick people and heal them (Mark 6:5)—his power constrained by unbelief.

When Paul was in Ephesus, the sons of a Jewish rabbi tried to cast out a demon, which trounced them. The story went viral, and, deeply convicted, the local believers confessed their evil deeds (Acts 19:18) and burned the scrolls they used for sorcery.

Notice the result. In this way, the word of the Lord spread widely and grew in power (Acts 19:20). The power of God’s word grew! Which means it was constrained before. What constrained it? The local believers were using sorcery and witchcraft.

The trappings of evil

My wife and I have enjoyed the privilege of ministry in many countries, but everywhere we went we noticed the prevalence of compromise. In Argentina, many churches worshiped a black mary. In Brazil, people painted witchcraft symbols on street corners. Candles, flowers, or dead chickens clustered by every bridge or river crossing.

In India, sexually explicit carvings in lurid colours plastered Hindu temples with demonic faces—angry eyes, protruding tongues, and distorted features. It didn’t take us long to recognise the trappings of evil.

So when we arrived in New Zealand, we were horrified to meet them again. Apparently they were acceptable because it was local art. Today, sexually explicit totem poles oversee river crossings and bridges, wearing the same hideous faces you find in Hindu temples. The same images sprout on the hilltops.

In Scripture, the Israelite kings turned a blind eye to the high places and what went on under every spreading tree. It led to the nation’s downfall and exile.

Good art is godly art

Godly art honours the Lord, his people, and his creation. To accept demonic images under the banner of art not only glorifies the devil, it even limits the power of God.

If they don’t wish to repent, let the ungodly remain in their sin. But there is no place for these things in the house of God. And if we are brave enough to remove them, like Gideon, what power would we see then?

Five Lessons from Job

1) Are you being sifted?

Jesus said to Peter, “Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail. And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”

Jesus knew Peter would deny him. He also knew he would return, because he’d prayed for him. Peter’s denial was the devil’s plan; God’s was purification.

In Job chapter 1, God allows satan to sift Job. The devil thought he’d won, but God had a better plan. Weeping may last the night, but joy comes with the morning (Psalm 30:5).

Jesus knows we will fail. But he has prayed for our return. Our suffering may be just be sifting.

2) We’re not copied in

Job had no idea how much God esteemed him, nor what the Lord was up to. Job had done his best, and it didn’t work out.

“You’re killing me!” cries the sacrificial pawn. It doesn’t see four moves ahead. God wants us to trust him.

Even the mighty prophet Elisha didn’t know the Shunammite’s son had died. “She is in bitter distress, but the Lord has hidden it from me and has not told me why,” he said (see 2 Kings 4:27). We’re not usually copied in to heaven’s emails.

3) Job’s friends were wrong

They spent 33 chapters counselling him. The Lord rebuked them, “You have not spoken of me what is right.” They could have fed him, tended his wounds, or chased off his mockers. We don’t need sermons when we’re hurting. It’s in our trials, we discover our true friends.

4)      We wouldn’t get it anyway

When Job finally saw the Lord, he said, “Surely, I spoke of things . . . too wonderful for me to know” (Job 42:3). Suffering and healing are simply beyond our limited comprehension. The Lord, “has given us a desire to know the future, but never gives us the satisfaction of fully understanding what he does” (Ecclesiastes 3:11 GNV). Chill out! He has a bigger brain than ours.

5)      Look what I did!

Job’s seven sons and three daughters partied big time. Afterwards, Job even offered sacrifices for them, in case they sinned. Wow. Could he have been tempted to glow at his perfect family, his rude health, and enormous wealth? All of us are at risk of sneaky “look-what-I’ve-done” hubris. MY family. MY business. MY investments. No, the Lord gave us all we have.

After the Lord allowed Job to be stripped to nothing, then rebuilt both his family and fortune, Job could only have said, “Look what the Lord has done.”