Proverbs 16:33
The lot is cast into
the lap;
but the whole disposing
thereof is of the LORD.
The Simple Meaning of Verse
- A “lot” –
- Probably
stones, sticks, or broken pieces of pottery which were thrown down, and a
predetermined meaning was attached to how they landed.
- Sometimes
they were blindly picked out a container.
- The
names might be written on the stones and the name on the stone chosen
determines the winner.
- “Lap” =
bosom; breast; fold in a garment; a hollow area; floor of a chariot –
several meanings.
- It may
refer to the place where the lot landed…
- It may
refer to the bottom of an urn into which stones were cast and out of
which they were drawn…
- The exact
manner in which this practice was carried out may have varied… but it was
a common practice in those days.
- Similar
practices exist today in various forms.
- The lottery
is a casting of lots – randomly chosen numbers to determine the winner
- Flipping
of a coin…
- Drawing
straws or sticks or cards…
- The main
point of the passage is not the exact process, but the outcome.
- The disposing
thereof is of the Lord.
- Disposing:
a decision; a judgment; a sentence; the act of deciding a case;
- Used in Deut.
1:17 – the judgment is the Lord’s.
- I
Kings 20:40 –
translated judgment (meaning decision)
- Num.
27:21 – Umim
– used for making judgments or decisions.
- The
LORD controls the outcome.
- The
final sentence… determination… judgment… or decision… is in the hands of
God.
- The
point is that God is sovereign over the tiniest details in this world…
from the flipping of a coin to the outcome of casting of lots…
- When a
lot is cast or a coin is flipped, we think of the outcome as mere
chance.
- Ecc.
9:11 - I
returned, and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor
the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches
to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time
and chance happeneth to them all.
i. That is the thinking of the man
“under the sun” – apart from God.
ii. That is the thinking of the natural
man in the natural realm
- In Prov.
16:33, Solomon says that it is not just random chance, but
Jehovah God who determines the outcome… a sovereign God who providentially
controls the most minute detail of life on earth: from raising up
the next world emperor to the casting of a lot…
God DID Use the Casting of Lots to Reveal His Will
- The
casting of lots was used to determine which goat would be the sin offering
and which goat would be the scape goat. (Lev. 16:9-10)
- The
casting of lots was used to determine the portioning of the land of Canaan among the twelve tribes. (Num. 26:55; Josh. 18:6,11)
- The
casting of lots was used to reveal who was guilty of sin and Achan was
brought to justice. (Josh. 7:16)
- The
casting of lots was used by David to determine which of the sons of Aaron
would serve in what capacity in the service of the Lord. (I Chron. 24:3-5)
- All
throughout the history of Israel, God used the casting of lots to reveal
His will.
- In fact, Israel even has a religious FEAST dedicated to the “lot”.
- The Feast
of Purim: pur is the Babylonian term for “lot.”
- The
wicked Haman cast pur (lots) to determine how and when to destroy the
Jews out of the land. (Esther 3:7)
i. The Persians were extremely
superstitious… and relied on fate… the god of chance.
ii. Interestingly, God’s name never
appears in the book of Esther.
iii. Instead, God works behind the
scenes… invisibly… overseeing all… turning chance on its head… and demonstrating
Himself to be sovereign over chance…
iv. The pur was cast by Haman to
determine evil against Israel.
v. But what Haman did not realize was
that when the lot is cast, the whole disposing thereof was of the LORD God of Israel!
- The
whole book of Esther is about incredible chances…
i. by chance Esther became queen
instead of Vashti…
ii. by chance he chose a Jewess!
iii. By chance the man who discovered the
plot to kill the king happened to be the uncle of Esther…
iv. Esther took a CHANCE by walking into
the royal throne uninvited…
v. By chance there just happened to
some gallows made by Haman to be used to hang Haman!
- The Book
of Esther explains that the feast of Purim is a celebration of
God’s miraculous deliverance of His people from Haman.
i. What appeared to be an event of chance
was, in reality, the sovereign intervention of God.
- The
world is not governed by time and chance, but by the Lord God who
created, sustains, and governs the entire universe… including determining
how a coin lands… and how the lot is cast.
- God
CONTROLLED the outcome of the casting of lots.
- This was
true in the many instances we saw in the OT.
- In fact,
the Lord controlled the outcome of such lots even when cast out of superstition
or in unbelief!
i. The casting of lots was used by superstitious
pagans to determine who was responsible for the storm at sea… and the lot
fell on Jonah. (Jonah 1:7)
ii. The casting of lots was used by
Saul to determine who was guilty of violating Saul’s order not to eat… and
Jonathan (the guilty party) was revealed through the lot. (I Sam. 14)
iii. Lots were cast by the unbelieving
soldiers for the garments of Christ… and the disposing of that was
controlled by the Lord. (John 19:24)
iv. God is sovereign over the outcome of
the casting of lots whether they are cast by the High Priest, by David, or
unbelieving pagans!
- There
were some other unusual ways in which God revealed His will in
the OT.
- Umim and
thummim
- Ephod
- Dreams;
visions;
- Fleece –
a miracle was required for this one.
- Circumstances:
such as when Abraham’s servant, sent out to find a wife for Isaac, said,
“which ever woman says, “Drink and I will give thy camels drink also”
will be the one! And that’s how God led him to Rebekah!
- Should
the believer today cast lots to
determine the will of God?
- Is that
the message of this passage?
- Should
we flip a coin to determine who teaches the SS class?
- Should
we roll the dice to select a new pastor?
- Should
we draw straws to determine which job to take?
- Should
he put out a fleece to see if we should opt for surgery?
- I am
convinced that MANY believers today put out fleeces of all stripes in
determining God’s will.
- I know
that there is a lot of superstition used in it too.
- Is there
ever a time when we should use such a practice? I think the answer is YES.
- Prov.
18:18 - It
might be used not to determine God’s will, but perhaps to end a debate
on a matter of no spiritual consequence.
- Who goes
for the donuts…
- Or
choosing a winner in a VBS contest when there was a tie…
- It is
FAIR because it takes the outcome OUT OF our control… and thus removes
all bias. It ends the debate.
- But it
should NOT be used to determine God’s will in serious matters of service,
morality, or other important issues.
- Fleeces
and casting of lots were used all throughout the OT.
- The
casting of lots was used – even in the New Testament, to who would
replace Judas among the apostles… and the lot fell on Mathias. (Acts
1:26)
- And
notice that Acts 1 is the very last occurrence of the practice in the NT.
- It is as
if God had them use the lot here in determining His will and recorded in
the very last verse before the church age begins…
- In the
next verse (Acts 2:1…) we have the coming of the Holy Spirit to indwell
believers… to lead believers…
- And
there in not one more mention of lots after this.
- I don’t
think that is an accident… it was mere CHANCE that put verse 1:26
immediately before 2:1!
- This was
God’s sovereign and providential choice.
- Today,
we have the completed canon of Scripture.
- We are
looking at “principles to guide us in the age of grace” in SS.
- And we
are all indwelt by deity.
- Today,
we have something much better than casting lots, drawing straws, or
rolling dice.
- Today,
sons of God are recognized by the fact that they are led by the Spirit…
not by straws, dice, or lots.
- “For as
many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of
God.” (Rom. 8:14)
- And as
believers, things that others might consider mere chance, we should see as
the Lord working behind the scenes… He is LORD of all… sovereign over
every tiny event… and should be praised as such.