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Tuesday, July 1, 2025

The Comfort of Knowing Providence: The steps of a man are established by the Lord when He delights in his way. Psalm 37:23

All People, But Especially Holy People, Are A Special Object Of God’s Providence.

God sees our suffering and distress, and He tenderly provides what He knows we need, even when we fail to understand what we need. Christians can persevere, knowing the Lord will provide His mercies as He has assured us in the promises of His covenant. This is the comfort of God’s providence.

We may take comfort in knowing that God is good, holy, wise, and powerful and that He preserves and governs all things by His providence. The justice and righteousness of God are the greatest comforts given to good people since the evangelical dispensation, for the Lord can no more deny His righteousness than He can deny Himself. We can take comfort in acknowledging and worshiping God, knowing He is constantly governing the world and leaving nothing to the capriciousness of what many call fortune or chance.

What satisfaction can there be for any clear-headed person who lives in a world deserted by its Creator? Wisdom without providence would drive anyone mad; the only advantage would be to an ignorant, senseless fool. Could there be any worse news than “Go ahead and be as religious as you will, but no eye above takes any notice of it”? Indeed, what could be more bitter to a rational person than the thought that God does not care about the affairs of the world?1 If this were the case, the door would be thrown open for the wicked to sin and the godly to despair!

The truth that God in fact reigns is as great a joy to the godly as it is a terror to the wicked:

The Lord reigns, let the earth rejoice; let the many coastlands be glad! (Ps. 97:1)

The Lord reigns; let the peoples tremble! (Ps. 99:1) 

 

Humanity Is a Special Object of Providence

Let us be comforted that human beings are a special object of providence. God provides for all His creatures but much more so mankind, who is uniquely the work of the Trinity and in whose creation He took special counsel: “Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness” (Gen. 1:26). This is the work of His heart: a being made according to His image and intended as a subordinate end of His whole creation, next to the principal—that of God’s glory. God is the preserver of man and beast, but principally of man, whereas beasts are subservient to the preservation and good of human creatures. 

 

God’s Saints Are Most Special to Him

Holy people are an even more special object of God’s providence. God preserves and provides for all things and all people. However, His eye is more peculiarly fixed on those who fear Him: “Behold, the eye of the Lord is on those who fear Him, on those who hope in His steadfast love” (Ps. 33:18).

His eye is so fixed that it is as though He has no thought about anything else.

God cares for all mankind, as all were created in His own image, even though that image has been corrupted by sin. But He cares much more for those in whom His image has been restored. If God loves Himself, He loves His image and His works.

A man loves the works of His hands, but much more does a father love His son, and much more does God love His own. Therefore, He will work for their good and incline well to them. God exercises a special providence over a righteous person and his ways: “The steps of a man are established by the Lord, when He delights in his way” (Ps. 37:23). It is a special providence because it is a delightful providence.

How cherished and joyful it is to be in covenant with God and to be under the care of His wisdom and goodness! He rules the world as its governor and has all things at His beck, yet He is our Father and friend. He will do his children no harm and will order all things to our good out of fatherly affection. He is the world’s sovereign but the Father of good people; He rules the heavens and the earth, but He loves his holy ones. Others are objects of His providence, but a righteous person is the end of it: “The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to give strong support to those whose heart is blameless toward him” (2 Chron. 16:9). 

 

Believers Must Bear Innocent Sufferings

Knowing that God orders all things, believers have sufficient grounds to persevere in their innocent sufferings and the storms they experience in this world. God is a righteous governor who orders all things and will reward His people for their suffering as well as for their service: “God is not unjust so as to overlook your work and the love that you have shown for His name in serving the saints, as you still do” (Heb. 6:10). He is the one who presides over the world, who sees all our calamities and is never mistaken as to their cause, and who has the will and power and wisdom to help. Ours would indeed be a miserable state if there were no sovereign power who heard our cries of distress and eased our consciences.

It is a comfort that there is a sovereign governor to whom we can pray and offer up our petitions. How the presence of a skillful pilot in a weather-beaten ship cheers the hearts of its fearful passengers! How dreadful it would be for them were the vessel left to the fury of the winds and waves without an able hand to manage it. God bridles and checks human passions in order to marshal them according to His pleasure. They are all but His instruments in His government and not lords over it. God can lay a plot with more wisdom for His servants’ safety than the enemy can for their destruction. He can counter the opposition’s plots with more power than they have to execute them. He can outwit their craft, overpower their strength, and turn their cruel designs against them as a knife into their own breasts. 

 

Knowing We Are Secure Gives Comfort to Believers

With knowledge of God’s care comes a particular security that our needs will be met. If God takes care of the hairs on our heads, which are ornamental and superfluous, why should we doubt that He takes care of our necessities? If He is the guardian of our follicles, which fall away without our being aware, will He be careless of us when our whole lives are in the balance? Will God reach out with provision for His beasts, yet deny it to His children? How would you judge a father who feeds his servants and starves his sons, or a man who supplies his enemies but has no food for his friends?

The unjust as well as the just are warmed by God’s sun and refreshed by His rain. Shall God not have a providence for those who have a special interest in the Mediator, who intervened in order to sustain the standing mercies we forfeited by sin? If He blesses with these blessings those who are the objects of His curse, will He not bless those who are in His special favor? “Fear the Lord, you His saints, for those who fear Him have no lack! The young lions suffer want and hunger; but those who seek the Lord lack no good thing” (Ps. 34:9-10). 

 

A follower of Christ shall have what he needs, but not always what he thinks he needs. Providence supplies our necessities, not our desires. He satisfies our wants, not our wantonness. If something is not a necessity, we should not desire it; when it is a necessity, He will provide, and we shall not be without it. When God does not grant a request, it may be that He has withheld from us a desire that would not be as beautiful as we expected, but everything is made beautiful in its season (Eccl. 3:11). If someone does not lack God’s kindness to redeem him, he will never lack God’s kindness to provide for him.

Christians have been given the assurance of the promise of providence by covenant, while others have an interest only in common providence. God was a provider before, and now He has made Himself your debtor. You may have prayed for His providential care before with a common faith, but now you pray with a deeper, earnest understanding, for in His promise He has given the believer the key to the chest of His providence: the “promise for the present life and also for the life to come” (1 Tim. 4:8). The promise of this life is to satisfy not our desires but our necessities; the promise of the life to come is that we shall have whatever we want and whatever we desire.

We may also take comfort in the knowledge that God works a special providence over those who are mired in miserable circumstances, for He is called “the helper of the fatherless” (Ps. 10:14). This is the argument the church used to plead its return to God: “In you the orphan finds mercy” (Hos. 14:3). What greater comfort is there than this: that there is One presiding in the world who is so wise that He cannot be mistaken, so faithful that He cannot deceive, so filled with compassion that He cannot neglect His people, and so powerful that He can make stones into bread if He please!

Furthermore, we can take comfort in this: God does not govern the world only by His will as an absolute monarch but also by His wisdom and goodness as a tender father. It is not His greatest pleasure to demonstrate His sovereign power or inconceivable wisdom, but His greatest pleasure is to display His immense goodness to which His other attributes are subservient. God’s purpose in creation is His purpose in governance: the communication and diffusion of His goodness. We may be sure that God will do nothing except that which is for the best, His wisdom appointing it with the highest reason and His goodness ordering it to the most gracious end. And because He is the highest good, He not only wills good but wills the greatest good in everything He does.

What greater comfort can there be than that we are under the care of an infallible, unwearied, and righteous governor! Infallible because of His infinite wisdom, unwearied because of His incomprehensible omnipotence, and righteous because of His unbounded goodness and holiness.

 

Study Questions

1. According to Charnock, what difference is there between the providence God exercises toward all people and the providence he exercises toward his people?

2. How ought believers to pray in light of God’s providence as discussed in this chapter?

3. What does Scripture say about God’s providence toward people in difficult circumstances? Is this comforting to you?[1]

 

[1] Charnock, Stephen. 2022. Pgs 109-114 Divine Providence: A Classic Work for Modern Readers. Edited by Carolyn B. Whiting. Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing.

 


1 It was an excellent speech of a Stoic: “There is no life in a world empty of God and providence” (ouk esti zon en to kosmo keno theon kai pronias).

[1] Charnock, Stephen. 2022. Divine Providence: A Classic Work for Modern Readers. Edited by Carolyn B. Whiting. Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing.