Some argue that passages which speak of God hardening human hearts (Jos
11:19-20; Ex 7:3; 10:1; Rom 9:18) demonstrate that God controls everything,
including people resistant to this declared intentions. He hardens whomever he
wills, they argue. He could just as easily have softened their hearts, but for
his own sovereign reasons he chose not to. Thus even the apparent conflict
between God and Satan and rebellious humans is part of his sovereign will.
It’s difficult to reconcile the notion that God hardens people’s hearts so
they won’t believe with Jesus unqualified love for the world. When we see
Christ—hanging in love on the cross to reconcile us to himself—we see the Father
(Jn 14:7-9). This self-sacrificial love is what God looks like. Christ is God’s
“exact imprint,” his enfleshed icon (Heb 1:3). How is this revelation compatible
with the frightful suggestion that God arbitrarily hardens people’s hearts to
keep them from coming to him?
Moreover, how do we reconcile a God who intentionally hardens people in
damnable wickedness with the biblical teaching that God “does not willing
afflict, or grieve anyone” (Lam 3:33)? Can we reconcile this frightful idea with
the consistent biblical teaching that God desires everyone to turn to him (1 Tim
2:3-4; 2 Pet 3:9) and that evil flows from humans’ own hearts (Matt 15:19)?
There is no adequate answer to these questions. Fortunately, there is no reason
to suppose that this is what these passages mean.
The root meaning of the Hebrew word translated “to harden” is “to
strengthen.” God hardens people by strengthening the resolve they have formed in
their own heart. For example, six times Scripture says “the Lord hardened
Pharaoh’s heart” (Ex 9:12; 10:1; 10; 27; 11:10; 14:8). But it also notes that
Pharaoh hardened his own heart seven times before the Lord took his action (Ex
7:13-14, 22; 8:15, 19; 32; 9:7). Similarly, centuries before God hardened the
Canaanites’ hearts (see Judges 11), he had been tolerating their freely chosen
wickedness and hardness toward him (see Gen 15:16). The unsurpassable love of
God strives to turn humans toward himself, but there is a point when they become
hopeless (Gen 6:3-8; Rom 1:24-32). At this point God’s strategy changes from
trying to change them to using them in their wickedness for his own providential
purposes.
God justly responds to people’s wickedness by strengthening their resolve
against him. In every instance where Scripture speaks of God hardening someone,
it’s an act of judgment in response to decisions these people had already made.
God simply ensures that these rebels will do what their own evil hearts desire
and not alter course for ulterior motives. But it’s altogether unwarranted to
suppose that God unilaterally hardens people’s hearts against himself in the
first place—all the while pretending to offer them the hope of salvation! When
God decides to harden someone’s heart, we can be assured that God wishes it
didn't have to be that way.
—Adapted from Is God To Blame
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