Habakkuk’s
prophecy applies to a specific time and place and people. God was preparing to
use the wicked Chaldeans to teach Judah a lesson. Habakkuk, and other faithful
people, had to be questioning God’s plan.
Like
Habakkuk, our vision is limited to the things that are past and to the events
of right now. We see wicked people becoming powerful – in business, in
politics, even in religion – and we all but bow down to their gods ourselves. We
think nothing can stop them. Not that we think that God couldn’t; we just don’t see
him doing anything about it. The truth is, we can’t see what God is arranging and we have no clue who or what he
will use to accomplish victory over evil. While God may seem to be “strangely silent
and inactive,”* he hears and answers our prayers – just not in the
way we think he will.
Today, we see many examples of guilty men whose strength is
their god. We don’t have to be prophets like Habakkuk to predict that our
society is doomed if God doesn’t intervene. America is not God’s chosen nation
but the Church is his Bride and he is orchestrating our rescue. We don’t know
what form our deliverance will take but we need to be faithful even when he
uses “strange
instruments to correct His people.”*
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