Showing posts with label horses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horses. Show all posts

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Tanks run out of Gasoline and Artillery have no Ammo

Reading in Ps 76.6 this morning. "At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, Both the chariot and the horse are cast into a deep sleep" (KJV). Chariots and horses were much feared weapons of war, especially to the Israelites who were sorely lacking in both. It would be the equivalent today of saying that, at the word of God "tanks run out of gasoline and artillery have no ammo." God speaks and mighty weapons are impotent.

Calvin: We are thus taught that all the gifts and power which men seem to possess are in the hand of God, so that he can, at any instant of time, deprive them of the wisdom which he has given them, make their hearts effeminate, render their hands unfit for war, and annihilate their whole strength.

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Safety Belongs to the Lord

"The horse is prepared against the day of battle," writes Solomon, "but safety is of the Lord" (Prov 21.31, KJV). The ESV translates it: "but victory belongs to the Lord." The Hebrew word can mean "salvation, rescue, deliverance," so it can mean either of the two translations, or more likely, both.

God's providence, as worked out in the Scriptures, is responsible for both victory and safety. This does not mean that we do not prepare, that we just sit back and expect God to win the victory with us doing nothing, "the horse is prepared against the day of battle." It means that ultimate victory and safety in any situation is firmly in the hands of God and of his providential care and conduct of history.

Here is what the New American Commentary says about these verses. "Verse 31 gives a concrete example, from a military setting, of what v. 30 describes abstractly. Readying a horse for battle is the application of technical skills in pursuit of a goal (in this case, military victory). Just as a trained, prepared army can be defeated if God wills it, so also all efforts at success in life (the goal of wisdom) without God are vain. The text does not demean practical skills (e.g., horsemanship), for that also is part of wisdom; but it says that all knowledge is hollow without God."