
Why God Tells Us He
Delights in His Children
By John Piper
August 23, 2006
The question is not whether God delights in his children.
He does. The question is twofold: One, what is it about us
that he delights in? And two, why does he tell us that he
delights in us? What effect does he want it to have? (When
I say “God,” I mean all that God is for us in
Christ. I mean the triune, Christian God.)
First, notice some of the texts that speak of God’s
delight in his people and his praise of them.
Zephaniah 3:17, “The Lord your God
is in your midst, a mighty one who will save; he will rejoice
over you with gladness.”
Psalm 147:11, “The Lord takes pleasure
in those who fear him, in those who hope in his steadfast
love.”
1 Peter 1:6-7, “In this [salvation]
you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary,
you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested
genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that
perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to
result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of
Jesus Christ.”
Romans 2:29, “But a Jew is one inwardly,
and circumcision is a matter of the heart, by the Spirit,
not by the letter. His praise is not from man but from God.”
1 Corinthians 4:5, “Therefore do
not pronounce judgment before the time, before the Lord
comes, who will bring to light the things now hidden in
darkness and will disclose the purposes of the heart. Then
each one will receive his commendation from God.”
To answer our questions above we also need to see the truth
that God commands us to delight in him.
Psalm 37:4, “Delight yourself in
the Lord, and he will give you the desires of your heart.”
Philippians 4:4, “Rejoice in the
Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.”
Romans 5:2, “Through him we have
also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we
stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God.”
Psalm 43:4, “Then I will go to the
altar of God, to God my exceeding joy.”
Psalm 70:4, “May all who seek you
rejoice and be glad in you! May those who love your salvation
say evermore, ‘God is great!’”
Psalm 63:3, “Because your steadfast
love is better than life, my lips will praise you.”
Note: Those last two texts show something crucial. One says
that when you love God’s salvation you don’t
say mainly, “God’s salvation is great!” You
say, “God is great!” And when you experience
the steadfast love of the Lord, you don’t mainly say, “My
lips will praise your steadfast love.” You mainly say, “My
lips will praise you!” In other words, in all these
texts the command is to delight in God himself, and all other
blessings we enjoy should lead us to God himself as our final
and fullest satisfaction.
Therefore, in answer to our first question my answer is:
At root, what God delights in about us is that we delight
in him.
One way to get at this is to say the obvious: God approves
of what is right. He rejoices in our thinking and feeling
and doing what is right. So we should ask, What is right—ultimately?
What makes something “right”?
My answer is: “Rightness” is thinking and feeling
and acting in a way that expresses in true proportion the
value of what is most valuable. Rightness is thinking, feeling,
and doing what flows from a true perception of the supreme
value of God. It is seeing truly, savoring duly, and showing
consistently in action the infinite worth of God.
Therefore, we are doing what is right when we are understanding
the truth of God’s value for what it is, and feeling
it proportionately to his universal supremacy, and acting
in ways that express God’s supreme value. That is what “right” means.
Therefore, when we say God rejoices in our thinking and feeling
and doing what is right, we mean that he delights in our
seeing, savoring, and showing his own supreme value. God
values our valuing him. God delights in our delighting in
him.
Now the second question we asked above is: Why does he tell
us this? Should we be glad to hear it? Yes, we should be
glad to hear it. But why? What is the bottom of our joy in
hearing it? It is possible to hear it, and be glad to hear
it, in a way that is devastating.
The proper reason to be glad that God delights in our delight
in him is because it confirms that our delight is truly in
God. This fixes our gaze more steadfastly on him and deepens
our joy in his beauty. But there is a devastating way to
respond to God’s commendation of us. What if we hear
God’s praise and are drawn away from delighting in
God to delighting in God’s delighting in us? What if
we hear his praise as a tickler of what we really enjoy,
namely, being made much of? What if the bottom line of what
makes us happy is not God himself, but God’s attention,
God’s praise? If that is the bottom line, then we are
not delighting in God, but only using delight in God to get
commendations. That would be devastating. When God’s
delight in us lures us to delight in being delighted in,
we are ceasing to do the very thing God delights in.
The teaching that God delights in us is very dangerous.
Very true. And very dangerous. The reason it is so dangerous
is that we are fallen and the chief pleasure of our fallen
nature is not sex but self-exaltation. Our sinful nature
loves to be praised for what we are and what we have done.
The remedy for this is not to make God the praiser, and
think all is well. All may not be well, but deadly. God’s
praises of us will do us good, if we hear them as confirming
that we are truly delighting in him. God’s praise of
our delight in God is meant to help us to keep on delighting
in God, and not be distracted by anything. God forbid that
his praise of our delight in him would lead us away from
delighting in him to delighting in being praised by him.
Hear me well. We do delight in being praised by God. But
not the way a carnal mind would. God’s praise of us
is not the bottom of our joy. We should not let his praise
distract us from the very thing he is praising—namely,
our delight in him. We delight in being praised by God because
it confirms and increases our focus on him, rather than distracting
us from him. Even his merciful approval of our imperfect
delight in him makes him more beautiful in himself. May those
who hear the words, “Well done, good and faithful servant,” say, “How
great and merciful is our God!”
The relationship between what I have said here and the doctrine
of justification by faith is that God looks upon his children
through the lens of Christ’s imputed righteousness.
That means two things: One is that God counts us perfect
in Christ. The other is that he can still see us becoming
in practice what we are positionally in Christ. The lens
of imputation secures our invincible right standing with
God. It also warrants God’s delight in our imperfect
delight in him. That is, even though we are counted perfectly
righteous in Christ, God can still see our actual sinning
and the fruit of the Spirit in our life. That is why he can
be delighted in us to greater or lesser degrees. We know
this because he both reckons us as perfectly righteous (Romans
4:4-6) and disciplines us for sin in our life (1 Corinthians
11:32).
Therefore, God’s delight in our delight in him varies
in proportion to the affections of our heart, but is possible
only because God imputes to us Christ’s perfect righteousness.
Longing with you to delight unwaveringly in God,
Pastor John Piper
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