“All my life You have been faithful
And all my life You have been so, so good
With every breath that I am able
Oh, I will sing of the goodness of God.”[1]
You may have heard the church call-and-response:
Leader: God is good, all the time.
Congregation: All the time, God is good.
But what do we mean by good? And can we truly believe God is good “all the time”? First, let’s define God’s goodness; then, let’s see why Scripture anchors that confession even in suffering.
Good is what God is. Arthur Pink notes the old Saxon root of “God” as “The Good.”[2] The Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible calls God’s goodness “the most comprehensive description of God’s moral character.”[3]
God’s goodness is expressed through His benevolence, mercy, compassion, patience, righteousness, holiness, justice, kindness, grace, and love.[4] Paul prays that God will bring to fruition “every desire for goodness” in believers (2 Thessalonians 1:11).
Affirming God’s goodness is easy when life is smooth; it’s harder in trials. Andrew Wilson writes that suffering can make even the phrase “God is good” hard to say out loud.[5] Scripture meets us there with psalms of lament (e.g., Psalms 3, 6, 10, 13, 22, 38, 42), where honest grief moves toward trust in God’s faithful love.
On Psalm 34, Wilson notes: “Many are the afflictions of the righteous… but the Lord delivers him out of them all” (Psalm 34:19). Evil is real, yet “none of those who take refuge in him will be condemned” (34:22).[6]
A.W. Tozer asks why the Eternal Son would bleed for us. His answer: God acts from His goodness and lovingkindness—He forgives again and again because that is who He is.[7] The cross proves that God’s goodness is not abstract; it is self-giving love.
Yes—I will sing of the goodness of God.