Poetic justice

Lord God Almighty, true and righteous are Your judgments. – Revelation 16:7  

A group of rowdy teenagers spray-painted obscenities on the brick walls of a local high school. The police charged them with malicious destruction of property. The judge sentenced them to probation with no jail time-but only if they could get every bit of paint off the walls, including the cracks between the bricks. It took them days!

Another judge gave some vandals the opportunity to learn all about drywalling — by repairing a home they were found guilty of ransacking.

I admire judges like these who hand down punishments that fit the crimes!

Our Lord also has a sense of poetic justice — a way of making sure the guilty get paid back in a way that suits what they’ve done, sometimes in a way they least expect. Think of Haman, who was hanged from the same gallows he built for Mordecai (Esther 7:7-10). In the future, as Revelation 16:6 tells us, those who “have shed the blood of saints and prophets” will be given “blood to drink. For it is their just due.” In these examples, the guilty are punished in a way that fits their crimes.

In Revelation 16:7, we read, “Lord God Almighty, true and righteous are Your judgments.” We can be glad they are not only poetic, but right! — David Egner

 

                                     

The best of judges on this earth

Aren’t always right or fair;

But God, the Righteous Judge of all,

Wrongs no one in His care. – Egner

 

READ: Revelation 16:1-7

 

God’s judgment may not be

immediate, but it is inevitable.

The Bible in one year:

Revelation 16-18

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