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Never Change
GOD, immutability of
If you were riding a bike into the wind, then
stopped and turned around, you might think that the wind changed because it
went from hindering you to helping you. In actuality it didn't change, you did.──
Unknown.
GOD, immutability of
Repenting means revising one's judgment and
changing one's plan of action. God never does this; he never needs to, for his
plans are made on the basis of a complete knowledge and control which extends
to all things past, present, and future, so that there can be no sudden
emergencies or unlooked-for developments to take him by surprise. "The
counsel of the Lord stands for ever, the thoughts of his heart to all
generations" (Ps. 33:11). What he does in time, he planned from eternity.
And all that he planned in eternity, he carries out in time. And all that he
has in his Word committed himself to do, will infallibly be done. Thus we read
of the "unchangeable character of his purpose" to bring believers
into full enjoyment of their promised inheritance, and of the immutable oath by
which he confirmed his counsel to Abraham, the archetypal believer, both for
Abraham's own assurance and also for others (Heb. 6:17-19). So it is with all
God's announced intentions. They do not change. No part of his eternal plan
changes.
It is true that there is a group of texts
(Gen. 6:6-8; 1 Sam. 15:11; 2 Sam. 24:16; Joel 2:13-14; Jon. 3:10) which speak
of God as repenting. The reference in each case is to a reversal of God's
previous treatment of particular men, consequent upon their reaction to that
treatment. But there is no suggestion that this reaction was not foreseen, or
that it took God by surprise, and was not provided for in his eternal plan. No
change in his eternal purpose is implied when he begins to deal with a person
in a new way.── James Packer, Your Father Loves You, Harold Shaw
Publishers, 1986.