Calvary Chapel of Jonesboro
 
I will also laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your dread comes, when your dread comes like a storm And your calamity comes like a whirlwind, When distress and anguish come upon you.  Proverbs 1:26-27

As we look at the wisdom of including negative messages in teaching - and not just trying to accentuate the positive at all times - these verses almost slap us in the face.  That is because what they say to us about God seem to contradict much of what is taught about Him.  They definitely do not fit the normal way that people want to think of God.  Yet, these verses are part of God's revelation of Himself to us in Scripture.  We would do well to read such verses - and allow ourselves to be instructed by them.

God says to those who reject His counsel and His reproof that He will laugh at their calamity and mock them when their dread comes upon them.  As I said at the outset of these verses, they do not seem to fit very well with the average person's view of God.  Yet, these are accurate verses that describe the God that we serve.  God is not a pushover, and He is not One who sits in a corner crying and grieving when He is rejected or ignored.  He remains the Lord of the universe Whose power and majesty cause men to cower in fear and terror.  He is also a God Who, according to the book of Psalms, is angry every day with the wicked.  So it should not shock us to learn that when He is ignored and mocked by the wicked - that He too mocks at their calamity when their wicked behavior comes upon their own head.  This is not the only place such language is used of God.  In Psalm 2:4 we read, "He who sits in the heavens laughs, the Lord scoffs at them."  We read in Psalm 37:13 that, "The Lord laughs at him, for He sees his day is coming."

There will be a day when God's vengeance will fall upon the wicked in humanity.  There will be a day when His perfect justice and righteousness will be dealt out with absolute purity.  That is a day about which the wicked should tremble - for there will no longer be any mercy - but judgment will fall and it will be passed out with shocking accuracy.  Those who think God will never act with vengeance should only have to look to the cross of Christ to know that God will judge those who are guilty of sin.  The joy for those of us who know His grace is that what Jesus paid upon the cross pays for our judgment in full.

God also knows that the longer one remains in rebellion - the more judgment will be coming like a storm.  God warns in these verses of a dread that will come like a storm - of calamity that will come like a whirlwind.  Mankind will be promising peace and good fortune to each other - yet they canont stop the hand of God that is gong to fully act in justice and judgment.

Four words are used to describe what it will be like when God's judgment falls upon those who persist in their rebellion.  The first word dread.  This meant a terror or trembling that would come upon men as they were being prepared to come in to the very presence of the Lord.  Next is calamityshich speaks of a time of disaster or trouble.  Then there is distress and anguish.  These two are put together.  Distress speaks of a specific episode of trouble and anguish.  This trouble is a kind that man cannot rescue someone from though the power of mankind.  One needs God in this incident - and without Him, there will be no deliverance.  How poignently this speaks of our spiritual situation before God.  How perfectly represented is our sinful state before a Holy God and the corresponding reality that we need a Savior Who is far more than just a man. 

Man may mock now - but there will be a day when the tables are turned upon the mockers and those who now laugh at the Lord.  This is not a day that I look forward to or treasure in any way.  It is a day that should seriously sober every one of us and make us realize the absolute necessity of knowing that our sins are taken away because of what Jesus Christ has done for us at the cross.  May God give us the wisdom to tremble before a holy God - rather than to take the position of fools who mock at Someone Whose power they cannot even begin to grasp. 

 
 
Do not rejoice when your enemy falls, And do not let your heart be glad when he stumbles; Or the LORD will see it and be displeased, And turn His anger away from him. Proverbs 24:17-18

Here is a reminder to be gracious and merciful to our enemies.  We should have mercy on our enemies - even when God is the One who is bringing the judgment upon them.  That may seem a little strange to us at first, but if you will give me just a few moments, you will soon see why this is wise for us.

When we are walking with God, we will have enemies.  That is a given in our fallen world.  But when God displays His anger toward someone - we should not be on the sidelines cheering for their judgment.  We can cheer God's justice - but we should do so with a measure of fear and trembling.  The reason for this is because we need to remember who WE are.

We are beneficiaries of God's mercy - not His judgment.  If God were to judge us for our actions - we would quickly learn that we too, apart from His grace, are His enemies.  There is something to grasp - and it is important that we keep it fresh in our minds.  Were it not for what God did in Jesus Christ, we would be under His wrath and anger as well.  It is only because of Jesus Christ and His death on the cross that we are not currently under God's anger.  Therefore, we do not need to rejoice when our enemy stumbles and falls.  We need to remember that except for the grace of God, we would be enemies as well. 

To dance and sing over someone's destruction also is not what God desires from us.  Paul was mercilessly persecuted by the Jews as he preached the gospel.  He faced opposition in many cities - and in one he was dragged out and stoned.  They sought to have him condemned in court once he was arrested by the soldiers of Rome - and that arrest was because of their wrongful accusation of him.  Yet how did Paul respond to them?  Did he desire their destruction?  Did he cheer when they were judged and destroyed?  Paul's response in Romans was that he wished himself accursed for their sakes - if only that would result in their salvation.  That does not sound like someone who is rejoicing over the anger of God against his enemies.  That sounds like someone who grasps that he is the chief of sinners.  That sounds like a man who grasps that apart from grace he took would be accursed, damned if you will because of his sin.  And it was this grasp of spiritual realities that led Paul to respond with mercy - not rejoicing over his enemies and their position before God.

The Lord sees when men rejoice over the stumbling and falling of their enemy - and it displeases Him.  He is judging with a righteous judgment - but we have no standing upon which to take joy in another's fall.  We all would face the same fate as they, were it not for a merciful God.  When God watches us rejoice over someone else's destruction - He is displeased.  The Bible also tells us that He will turn away His anger from them.  What is pretty frightening is that most likely His displeasure might be refocused - on us! 

When I consider this passage - I remember a historical event from 2 Kings chapter 6.  Elisha was prophet at the time, and it enraged the king of Aram that Elisha knew his secret war counsels and would warn Israel where Aram was about to attack.  The king of Aram sent his army to surround Elisha in order to capture or kill him.  Elisha saw the armies of Aram surround his city and prayed that God would strike the entire army with blindness.  God answered Elisha - and he told the blind army to follow him.  He led the army into the center of Israel's territory where they were now surrounded by Israel, who readied themselves for the slaughter.  But when Elisha prayed that their eyes would be opened - the king of Israel asked if he should kill Aram's armies?  I love God's response in this matter.  Elisha told the king of Israel not to kill them - but to make a feast for them - showing them the ultimate mercy.  This ended their hostilities. 

What a great picture of God's ways.  God is angry with us due to our sins - He is angry every day with the wicked.  But . . . He does not bring judgment - but shows mercy.  It is His mercy that leads us to repentance - and He desires for us to show the same mercy to our enemies that He shows to us.  What a glorious picture of His grace this leaves us.  Therefore we should not rejoice at the fall of our enemy.  We should pour love on them in Jesus name, no matter what their response.  This is wisdom.  This is God's way.  This is the power of God that brings men to salvation - and to a change in how He views them.  What He desires is for us to rejoice in mercy - and tremble at the display of His anger.  It is a solemn reminder of what could have been ours, if we had not been saved by His grace.