by jimwalton » Tue Dec 10, 2013 7:06 pm
Hi. Thanks for your response. Yeah, I did read the text. Let me help you understand some of the nature of prophecy, the character of God, and the way he works.
First of all, the predictive element in biblical prophecy has to be kept distinct from causation, or else it ceases to be predictive. Prophets weren't predicting anything, but merely giving the word of the Lord. The prophecy is God's message, not the prophet's. If predicting is understood to preclude causation, then God cannot predict, for he is the first cause and the final cause. Rather than regarding prophecy as prediction, it is more helpful to consider it as “God’s syllabus.” The syllabus for a course doesn’t “predict” what will happen in each class period of the term, but presents the instructor’s plans and intentions for each period. The significance of the document is that the instructor is in a position to carry it out. Likewise, when a judge passes a sentence on a convicted criminal, he is not “predicting” what will happen to that person. Rather, he is decreeing what ought to be done and is in a position to see that it is done. In prophetic literature, God is declaring his intentions and decreeing his judgments.
Secondly, often the way God works in such prophecies is not by causing the events mentioned, but by withdrawing his hand of protection. The idea is that these terrible things would be happening far more often, but God protects his people and their environs so that it doesn't. Such a view is mentioned about 6 times in the first 12 chapters of Isaiah. In a prophesy such as this one, God "causes" such things just by pulling back his hand. Then Absalom, who was this kind of person anyway, does what he has always wanted to do. God "gave them to him" by stopping to protect David, and Absalom chose to do what he did. Absalom is the perpetrator. God knew it would happen, because he knew about Absalom's intentions and purposes. What God is saying to David is, "Because you did this, I'm going to stop protecting you in these areas, and you'll see the real unfiltered consequences of your own actions and your own example."
You are wrong to perceive that God delivered David's wives to be raped in broad daylight. He didn't "deliver" them in the sense of making people do these awful things. He "delivered" them in the sense that he pulled back his protective wall. Then Absalom did what he intended to do. And yes, this was done in broad daylight, not by God's command, but by Absalom's pride and power-play that God didn't make him do.
Hope that helps. I'm certainly willing to talk about it more.