God is Good

An interview with Bill Johnson:
What you know about God changes you. It defines your purpose. It defines your destiny. It shapes how you live. It shapes how you think most of all. Everything comes from your perspective on life. And the way you view God changes everything that you see about life itself on Planet Earth, what’s God’s assignment for our life. When we see He is good all revelation comes as an invitation for encounter. None of it is given to us just to make us smarter, just to increase our intellectual capacity. All of it is an invitation to encounter God in that area. So he says taste and see that the Lord is good. Taste is an experience. See is perception. You’ll perceive more clearly what you can experience and the Lord is inviting us to see and to taste, and to perceive his goodness on a whole different level. Everything comes from the goodness of God. Everything about him, He is as good as He is Holy. His love, of course, He is love. But that goodness of God, I think is the root system that everything comes from. And when you see that, when that becomes settled in my heart then there are things that I used to question that would happen, that I no longer question because I see everything is defined by his goodness. It’s not, his goodness isn’t  defined by circumstances. It's the other way around. And just seeing that brings a rest to my heart so that I can trust him in all situations. The enemy's whole thing is wanting me to become introspective. He wants me to be wrapped up in evaluating what I'm doing. And specially for those who have a great passion to know God, to live like Jesus, be like Jesus, it's an easy trap to fall into because when I look inward, I'm not looking where faith will increase. I actually look where faith will diminish because I become more self-reliant than I am God-reliant. So the Lord longs for us to turn our attention towards him. It's not that the issues of life that He's dealing with aren't important. They are, but He is dealing with them, not us. He is dealing with them and as we look to him we come into a place of rest, and faith comes out of rest, not striving. It's not the result of works, it's the result of surrender. And when that is our approach to our relationship with God, faith is much more normal and natural.
Why is it so important for people to know how good God is?
 Well it's vital because it changes who you are. It changes your perception on life. And if I mistake God's nature I will mistake how I live. It's the whole statement that's made. Whatever you misdiagnose you will mistreat. And so you'll always try to answer questions that people are asking. You'll always try to solve problems [thinking] that really God is not working or He's taking a different approach on, and so we become people who work extremely hard, but very, very ineffective, because everything comes out of the goodness of God. It's a vital thing to perceive because it changes how we view, even things we don't understand, it changes mystery. It changes loss. It changes the questions that we have. I have more questions than I've ever had. It's not that my knowledge increases where I've got all these answers. It's just I have the answers I need and the answer I need is that he is 100 percent always good and he is a perfect Father.
Jesus came to reveal him as Father. The greatest revelation that Jesus brought to us is really unveiled to us constantly in the Gospel of John is that Jesus is a father and he's a perfect father. He came to a planet of orphans to reveal the Father as Father. And once that becomes settled
then I may not know the answer to this problem or this challenge, but I know I'm approaching God who is good, who has already worked on my behalf to bring out a right solution.
This word trust is such an important word. You were in Brazil speaking and you got a call no son ever wants to get. You have meetings and miracles are going on, and you get a phone call. What were you informed?
I got a call that my dad had had what we thought was going to be a minor procedure. When they opened him up they found that he had pancreatic cancer, which is one of the worst kinds of cancer you can have. I was there with my really dear friend Randy Clark, joining him.
Now you have two great miracle ministries and your own dad calls, and he has an impossible situation. Just out of curiosity, what went through your mind when he said that to you?
It's time for a miracle. It's time for a miracle. So I got released from Randy to fly home immediately. I caught the next flight out and flew home, and then over the next several months spent many, many times ministering to him, praying for him, away from him as well in prayer, and just contending for that breakthrough, for that miracle.
So your dad died. What are your conclusions?
You know, I don't ask God why on these things. I just know he didn't cause the disease. I know he's big enough to use any problem, so he can turn any situation around, for his glory. And it's a win-win in this kind of a situation because my dad is a powerful man of God. He's a believer. To go home with the Lord, to remain on earth with us, to help us, it's a win-win
situation. So that part is settled.
How about the part of “God is good.” Is that really settled with you when your dad dies?
Yes, it is. The Lord wasn't really speaking to me about that then. But I will admit I've had to learn more about the goodness of God since that loss than all the years previous. It was something he was already working on in me to show me, but it really exploded after that. When my dad died we gathered around his bed. He was there in our home. We had our entire family. I forget now, 20 to 30 members surrounded his bed, and we began to give God thanks. We began to honor him for his goodness. We began to give him praise because he is the one who heals the sick. He raises the dead. He does all these things. And we just lifted our praise because I wanted…I know that in Heaven I'll never have a chance to give God an offering out of loss, out of pain, out of confusion. I'll never have that context in which to give him an offering in Heaven. I only have a chance to give that to him now. So as a family, we grabbed our moment. We made a covenant to walk in the anointing that my dad carried, which is primarily as a worshiper, and we made a covenant as a family to carry that mantle, and then we just offered up an offering. It was a sacrifice, but we offered the sacrifice of praise for his goodness, and it unlocked something for me.
I'm going to tell you what it would do for me. What it would do for me, I would go after cancer, I would go after heart trouble, I would go after diabetes with a vengeance.
Exactly. You either run away from it in reaction to your pain, to your loss, or you run after it. It's like David picking up the stones and running at Goliath. Cancer has been the Goliath in the church, and we've got to pick up the stones and run at the problem instead of avoiding it. I agree.
Did you see an increase in the miraculous?
Yes. It was not immediately, like the next week or two weeks. Because I believe there's an important season of mourning. Mourning that's wrong takes you to unbelief. Mourning that's right brings you to a place of receiving comfort and healing, and that's what we did. We just took a brief time to mourn until we felt that things were settled in our heart and then began to pursue. And yes, so we've been seeing that.
You told me that your model is Jesus.
Yes.
What was, what did you learn from your model about healing, not necessarily with your dad, but what did Jesus model about healing?
Just in general, he healed everyone who came to him, number one, and he healed everyone the Father sent him to. He did not heal everyone who was sick, who was alive, because we know he healed the one man at the pool of Bethesda and there were many others around the pool. Tragically, our theology today tends to be built around what didn’t happen instead of what
God did do. But Jesus healed everyone who came to him, healed everyone that the Father directed him to. That's the only standard that I'm willing to follow.
So will you lower your standard any because of what happened?
Well I can't. I can't. I may do horrible at my assignment, but I can't change my assignment so that I feel good about myself. I have to accept the assignment God gave me, [which] is the standard that Jesus set. I have to embrace that. I can't lower the standard of Scripture to my level of
experience. I'm spending my lifetime trying to raise my level of experience to the standard of Scripture.
Now this revelation, God is good, Bill, you said God is better than we think. What did you mean by that?
Well you can't exaggerate God's goodness. It's impossible. If I could comprehend his goodness, I would be God, not him. He is far beyond everything we can possibly imagine, and so we have to, in our experience with his goodness, in that invitation to Divine encounter, as that increases in our life, we have to adjust our thinking. That's really what repentance means. Repentance means to change the way you think.
It's the remorse over sin, obviously, but it has to affect how I perceive reality. And that's what the Lord is looking for.
So what happens, and you can't stop the devil from planting thoughts. He plants a negative thought about God in your head. What goes on inside of you when that happens?
Well you replace it with truth. I don't give it much attention, to be honest with you. I don't want to flatter the enemy with success and feeling successful in anything. So I really work hard to give him as little attention as possible and just to feed myself with truth. I may prophesy. I may declare something true. I may declare a scripture that contradicts what the enemy said. Often times I'll just sing a song of praise. I'll sing spontaneously to the Lord in the very area that the enemy questions. If it's an area about not having enough for this next month or something, I
praise God for his abundance. And that's just what I do, is I go against what the enemy has done and do it with truth. Truth brings life.
Why is there such a conflict over this term, the goodness of God?
Because it's key to the Last Days' harvest. If the enemy can mess us up on our view of God then he has injured our capacity to represent the goodness of a perfect father.
Can you prove that in Scripture that it has to do with the End Time revival?
Yes, absolutely. Hosea 3:5 says, "In the last days the people will fear God because of his goodness."
 Psalm 67 is actually my most favorite passage on this area because it ends with nations coming to Christ. And it's through the process of the goodness of God being revealed upon his people.
Psalm 67: 1May God be gracious to us and bless us and make his face shine on us 2so that your ways may be known on earth, your salvation among all nations. 3May the peoples praise you, God; may all the peoples praise you.4May the nations be glad and sing for joy, for you rule the peoples with equity and guide the nations of the earth. 5May the peoples praise you, God; may all the peoples praise you. 6The land yields its harvest; God, our God, blesses us. 7May God bless us still, so that all the ends of the earth will fear him.
I think it must be the devil that tries to rob us of our destiny by challenging the goodness of God.
If we question His goodness, we'll question His promise. If we question His promise, we've undermined our own destiny.
It's just coming to our senses that God is good.

Yes. Faith, real faith, doesn't deny the existence of a problem. It just denies that problem a place of influence. It's not living in denial. It's not living as the ostrich, ignoring all the difficulties that are going on. It's just seeing them through the eyes of hope, seeing them through the intentions of purposes of a perfect father. When you taste of his goodness and you see that it is absolutely 100 percent constant then everything becomes redefined by that goodness.