“Be careful not to forget the covenant of the Lord your God that he made with you; do not make for yourselves an idol in the form of anything the Lord your God has forbidden. For the Lord your God is a consuming fire, a jealous God.” (Deuteronomy 4:23-24)
Oprah Winfrey tells the story of a time when she first began to question the teaching of Scripture. She was sitting in a church, hearing the preacher talk about God’s attributes, such as His omnipotence and omnipresence. She continues,
“Then he said, ‘The Lord thy God is a jealous God.’ I was caught up in the rapture of that moment until he said ‘jealous,’ and something struck me. I was like 27 or 28 and I’m thinking, ‘God is all. God is omnipresent. And God is also jealous?’ God is jealous of me? And something about that didn’t feel right in my spirit because I believe that God is love, and that God is in all things… And that is where the search for something more than doctrine started to stir within me.”
The passage the preacher quoted is indeed in the Bible (Deuteronomy 5:9). In fact, there are many references to God’s jealousy in Scripture. “You shall worship no other god, for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God” (Exodus 34:14). God even grows angry when we spurn Him and go after worthless pursuits. “For the Lord your God is a consuming fire, a jealous God” (Deuteronomy 4:24).
On the one hand, I want to sympathize with Oprah. Our God? Jealous? Never! That’s because in our current cultural climate, “jealousy” usually carries a negative connotation. In many cases, it describes someone who has an unwarranted suspicion of anything and anyone that could threaten a cherished relationship. At the same time, we need to consider that this is the supreme God we are talking about. However we construe this word “jealousy” as it relates to God, we need to remember that He is the all-sufficient God who doesn’t need anything from us. After all, He is the Maker of everything. “If I were hungry I would not tell you, for the world is mine, and all that is in it” (Psalm 50:12).
Our tendency is to say, “My God is not like that… He’s like this…” The problem is that whenever we do that before carefully consulting Scripture, we are actually creating a god in our own image. Rather than listening to what God says of Himself, we place our own opinions above the authority of the Bible. Instead, we need to humbly come to God’s Word, expecting there to be many cases where our own thoughts and opinions will be challenged. Rather than assert that something can’t be true simply because it doesn’t sit right with us, we need to consider why God is described as “jealous.”
In order to understand what is meant by passages like these that speak of God’s jealousy, we have to first see that there are in fact both good and bad kinds of jealousy. For example, there is a petty jealousy a self-centered young man may feel when a slightly older man offers to carry a heavy suitcase for his girlfriend. The older man’s offer may be a simple, courteous response to seeing the young woman struggling with the heavy load. In this case, the young man is not thinking of his girlfriend’s needs. He is threatened by the courteous gentleman because he cares more about his status as the girl’s boyfriend than the girl herself.
This young man is persistently suspicious and insecure. He doesn’t want any other man to even show common courtesy to his girlfriend. His jealousy is like the unhealthy possessiveness of a terrier that growls and snaps at anyone coming near his bone, despite the fact that no one actually wants to steal the bone. Rather than protecting her, his unhealthy jealousy actually smothers the young girl. From the outsider’s perspective, it’s plain to see that the young man is consumed with self-love, rather than genuine love for the girl.
Now, what is an example of a good kind of jealousy? Think of a husband and wife at an office party. The husband notices that a good-looking young man, who is constantly bragging about his sexual exploits, has approached his wife. The young man is clearly hitting on his wife and even tenderly takes hold of her hand. Now, ask yourself, in this situation, is it wrong for the husband to feel a kind of jealousy? After all, he is passionately devoted to his wife, wanting nothing to come between them. His wife might even be quite pleased to see her husband tell off such a womanizer for trying to threaten their marriage.
If you’re still struggling with whether jealousy can ever be a good thing, imagine now that this same husband sees the young man make advances on his wife, then shrugs and passively walks away. What would you conclude? Clearly, such a husband doesn’t really love his wife!
When you think of God being jealous, think of a devoted husband who is passionately in love with his wife. God wants nothing to come between you and Him. As our Creator, He alone has the right to be the Lord of our lives. God is jealous for our affection, not because He is needy or insecure, but because He is passionate about our flourishing, which comes from being in a right relationship with Him.
False gods — such as fame, power, lust, or money — are persistently trying to steal our hearts away. Not only do these counterfeit gods threaten our relationship with the one true God, they only hurt us in the long run. In such cases, God indeed grows angry, but the heat of His anger displays the vibrancy of His love for us. Whenever we give something else our ultimate devotion, we are falling prey to idolatry. God made us for Himself, so nothing else will truly satisfy our longings like He will. “Know that the LORD is God. It is He who made us, and we are His; we are His people, the sheep of His pasture” (Psalm 100:3). As the all-glorious, all-satisfying God, He and He alone has every right to command our allegiance to Him.
I would want Oprah to understand that, yes, God is a “jealous God” (Exodus 20:5), but He’s jealous for us in all the right ways. We ought to thank God that He is the kind of God who is incredibly passionate about His relationship with us.
C. S. Lewis was born 121 years ago this Friday, November 29, 2019. I am one of many who can say that his writings have profoundly affected my life — even from childhood. I can still vividly recall my mom reading his classic series, The Chronicles of Narnia, to my brother and me as a child.Later in life, books like Mere Christianity and essays like The Weight of Glory left an indelible mark on my life. I have read and heard countless testimonies of men and women who note that his writings were instrumental in leading them to consider seriously the claims of Christ. In light of all that this Irish man has contributed to the cause of Christ and the world of literature in general, I thought it would be fitting to write a tribute in his honor.
The Making of an Imagination
First,
let me offer a brief biography of the man. Clive Staples Lewis was born in Belfast,
Northern Ireland, in 1898. Lewis’s mother died when he was only ten years old,
and the experience left a deep impression on him. As a result, the young Lewis
felt a deep sense of longing for what could have been. Lewis would later
describe this deep sense of longing for a better world simply as joy.
In
1917, Lewis enlisted in the British Army and was commissioned as an officer
during World War I. Although his war experiences dramatically shaped him as a
man, he deliberately strove to forget them. In fact, he devotes very little
space to his time in the Great War in his autobiography, Surprised by Joy. But with all the horrors and life-changing trauma
that war inevitably brings, why recount so little of the experience? Lewis
biographer Alister McGrath answers, “The simplest explanation is also the most
plausible: Lewis could not bear to remember the trauma of his wartime
experiences, whose irrationality called into question whether there was any
meaning in the universe at large or in Lewis’s personal existence in
particular.”[1]
This is all the more fascinating when one considers that Lewis was no pacifist.
Later in life, Lewis defended his own brand of just war theory, concluding that
in certain unfortunate circumstances, war is inevitable but always grievous.[2]
After the war, Lewis finished his schooling at Oxford, and eventually became an Oxford don. It is worth noting that while Lewis had a very tense relationship with his father, it was also likely his father’s death that spurred him out of his youthful atheism to reflect on spiritual realities.[3] While at Oxford, Lewis began his well-known friendship with J. R. R. Tolkien, the author of The Lord of the Rings.[4] In fact, the two mutually benefited from one another in incredible ways. When Tolkien grew discouraged about ever finishing his great fantasy epic, Lewis encouraged him to see it through, something for which I am immeasurably grateful. Furthermore, it was Tolkien who proved instrumental in Lewis’s conversion to Christ.[5]
Lewis
saw hints of the Christian story in nearly all the old pagan myths from various
cultures throughout history. This initially bothered him — was Christianity just
borrowing the grand themes of sacrifice and redemption from the pagans?
However, Tolkien helped him to see that these other myths merely accentuated
the innate longings we all have that Christ alone fulfills. Therefore,
Christianity is what Lewis called the “true myth” because it alone truly
happened in our space-time world and can satisfy the heart’s deepest longings.[6]
McGrath
calls Lewis an “eccentric genius”[7]
because he was an unusual blend of a clear-thinking, rational philosopher and
an imaginative lover of fables and ancient myths. Although he was a first-rank
Oxford scholar and professor, he took some flak from many of his peers for his
willingness to write popular works of fiction and Christian apologetics.[8]
Lewis
is perhaps best known for his classic The
Chronicles of Narnia, a fantasy series aimed at children and filled with
Christian themes. He wrote many other fictional works, such as The Screwtape Letters and The Great Divorce. However, the bulk of
Lewis’s published writings can be classified as works of theology, ethics, and
Christian apologetics. His best known apologetic work, Mere Christianity, is written with a skeptical British audience in
mind. In the first part of the short book, Lewis makes a case for Christianity,
and in the second part he explains what he believes are the chief issues
related to living a faithful Christian life.
Late
in life, Lewis met Joy Davidman, a woman who so enchanted him that he ended up
marrying her with the purpose of conferring her British citizenship in order
for her to avoid deportation.[9] To
Lewis’s great dismay, after only being married for about four years, their
blossoming romance came to an end. Joy died as a victim of cancer, the same
disease that had claimed Lewis’s mother so many years before. In November 1963,
Lewis himself was diagnosed with end-stage renal failure and ended up dying in
his own home, a week before his 65th birthday.[10]
A Man for All Ages
Part
of what makes Lewis still popular in evangelical circles today is his ability
to convincingly demonstrate how Christianity makes sense of our world. “I
believe in Christianity as I believe that the Sun has risen, not only because I
see it, but because by it I see everything else.”[11] His
arguments powerfully show how Christianity rings true when we are willing to
carefully examine the claims. Thus, his writings have proven instrumental in
bringing many skeptics to faith over the last half century.
Throughout
his writings, Lewis expresses his deep suspicion of the new and flashy brands
of theology. Ideas that try to be trendy often overshadow that which is tried
and true. “Novelty, simply as such, can have only an entertainment value.”[12] Just
because something entertains, suggests Lewis, does not mean it is either
helpful or true. That is a good word for us to heed in our entertainment-driven
culture.
For
Lewis, Christianity is not merely a matter of private devotion but a public
issue, because it encompasses our entire outlook on life. Lewis came to see
that atheism simply could not account for our world. Universal moral principles
that we all share make little sense if we are merely the product of our genes.
In Mere Christianity, Lewis argues
that we are all aware of a natural law of human behavior, a sense of justice
that we cannot ignore.[13] Since
we all recognize this inner law, there must be an authority higher than
humankind to whom we all are accountable. Only God could be the great Author of
the moral law we all find within ourselves.
The
“true myth” of Christianity is about the great Author entering into His world
in order to work out our redemption and restoration. Lewis likens the
incarnation of the Son of God to Shakespeare writing himself into one of his
plays. “Shakespeare could, in principle, make himself appear as Author within
the play, and write a dialogue between Hamlet and himself. The ‘Shakespeare’
within the play would of course be at once Shakespeare and one of Shakespeare’s
creatures. It would bear some analogy to Incarnation.”[14] In
fact, Lewis seemed to do just this when you consider to whom the professor (Digory
Kirke) bears a striking resemblance in The
Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.
In his essay Is Theology Poetry?, Lewis explains his view that theology must by nature include metaphor since we are speaking about a God that we can’t see, taste, or smell.[15] What theologians are trying to do, he explains, is draw a map charting a vast land that has not been exhaustively explored. And theology — this is important — is always meant to lead us to God, never to replace God. “Doctrines are not God: they are only a kind of map.”[16] This is a powerful reminder for every student of theology. Ultimately, our studies should lead us to worship and love our Lord and Savior — and they certainly can help in that endeavor. However, we must also be content in what God has revealed to us and not go beyond what Scripture has told us about Him. Even if we were granted 1,000 years to study theology, we’d only be scratching the surface of God’s infinite depths. “Oh, the depths of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways!” (Romans 11:33).
At
one point in his Letters to Malcolm,
Lewis scolds his fictional friend Malcolm for criticizing a woman named Rose
Macaulay for reciting prayers written by others rather than composing her own. Apparently,
such a practice lacked personal devotion to God in the eyes of Malcolm. Lewis
defends Miss Macaulay and playfully calls Malcolm “a bigot”. He then movingly
points out that we should not expect every Christian to worship in the same
way. “If grace perfects nature it must expand all our natures into the full
richness of the diversity which God intended when He made them, and heaven will
display more variety than hell.”[17]
Prayer, Lewis recognizes, is often very difficult for the believer. This is an
indication that we are not yet perfect. “If we were perfected, prayer would not
be a duty, it would be delight. Some day, please God, it will be. The same is
true of many other behaviours which now appear as duties. If I loved my
neighbor as myself, most of the actions which are now my moral duty would flow
out of me as spontaneously as song from a lark or fragrance from a flower.”[18]
According to Lewis, theology helps us recognize just how great and generous God
is, and prayer leads us to respond accordingly.
Lewis
recognizes that Christianity offers an understanding of life beyond the grave
that is shot through with infinitely more hope than all its competitors.
Believers are promised rewards — an “eternal weight of glory” (2 Corinthians
4:17) — far beyond compare with whatever small joys we may find in this life.[19]
In looking forward to our ultimate reconciliation with God, Lewis seems nearly incapable
of containing his joy. “To please God … to be a real ingredient in the divine
happiness … to be loved by God, not merely pitied, but delighted in as an
artist delights in his work or a son — it seems impossible, a weight or burden
of glory which our thoughts can hardly sustain. But so it is.”[20]
Scripture
speaks of a God of immeasurable grace who has chosen rebel sinners, sacrificed
His only Son for their redemption, secured them with the seal of His Holy
Spirit, and bestowed on them His fatherly love. As redeemed and adopted sons
and daughters, our Father sings over us in delight — despite the fact that we
have not earned this blessing (see Psalm 149:4; Zephaniah 3:17). It’s all by
grace! One day we will see this clearly when we see God as He truly is. “No
longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb
will be in it, and his servants will worship him. They will see his face, and
his name will be on their foreheads” (Revelation 22:3-4). Lewis reminds us how
much the church needs this biblically induced, captivating vision of heaven
today. Are we still longing for heaven as Lewis did, or have we become ensnared
by the worthless pursuits attached to this lost world (see 2 Timothy 4:10;
James 4:4; 1 John 2:15)?
Lewis
despised liberal theologies that strive to downplay the miraculous core of
Christianity. He saw them as not only caving in to secular ideologies but also
offering no hope to a world filled with death and suffering. While giving
advice to prospective defenders of the faith, Lewis wrote, “Do not attempt to
water Christianity down. There must be no pretence that you can have it with
the Supernatural left out. So far as I can see Christianity is precisely the
one religion from which the miraculous cannot be separated. You must frankly
argue for supernaturalism from the very outset.”[21]
The Gospel that saves is the very power of God, and we should never be ashamed
of it (Romans 1:16).
Some Respectful Disagreements
I
have been profoundly blessed by Lewis. His ability to integrate reason,
Christian principles, and imaginative thinking is astonishing. For all his
incredible gifts, however, there are areas in his writings where I found myself
strongly disagreeing with Lewis. I should clarify that while I disagree with
Lewis in these areas, I nevertheless respect and admire him as a theologian and
apologist. We all have our blind spots, and Lewis has significantly helped
several generations of Christian thinkers who have attempted to communicate the
gospel to the secular world in a winsome and engaging way.
The three areas, in particular, where I disagree with Lewis include his views on the atonement, Purgatory, and total depravity. I do not believe in Purgatory. The reason is simple: I can’t find support for it in Scripture. I don’t believe the Bible teaches it explicitly or even allows for it implicitly. For example, in Jesus’s parable of the rich man and Lazarus, Abraham tells the rich man in Hades, “Child, remember that you in your lifetime received your good things, and Lazarus in like manner bad things; but now he is comforted here, and you are in anguish. And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, in order that those who would pass from here to you may not be able, and none may cross from there to us” (Luke 16:25-26).[22] According to Jesus, each person is headed for one of only two fixed and eternal destinies, not a third, temporary one (see Hebrews 9:27). When it comes to the doctrines of the atonement and total depravity, however, I suspect that my disagreement with Lewis has more to do with his description of these beliefs than his actual position.
Lewis says that prior to coming to faith, he viewed the idea that Christ needed to suffer on the cross in our place as “immoral and silly.”[23] While he doesn’t say that he still holds this view, he doesn’t seem to give penal substitution much weight. He simply suggests that we focus on the fact that Christ’s blood has somehow washed away our sins and not bicker about how He has done so. While I appreciate Lewis’s ecumenical spirit, I’m also troubled by his glib approach to the atonement when he says we can feel free to “drop” whatever doesn’t work for us.[24] Frankly, I would rather go with the scriptural understanding than a pragmatic understanding of the atonement. And, I believe it does matter that we understand Jesus’ death in a penal, sin-bearing sense, as Scripture clearly explains (see Romans 3:21-26; Hebrews 2:17; 9:11-14, 25-28; 1 John 2:2; 4:10). This understanding of what Jesus accomplished on the cross ties directly to Purgatory. If Jesus truly suffered once for all for all our sins — as I believe He did — what purpose would Purgatory serve? “And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him [Jesus], having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This he set aside, nailing it to the cross” (Colossians 2:13-14).
However, I have to add that I do see Lewis conveying some kind of substitutionary view of the atonement in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Edmund is a traitor, and the “Deep Magic” of Narnia demands that a traitor be given the ultimate punishment. Aslan the lion, the Christ figure, wants to save Edmund, but he cannot deny the moral demands of the law his own father, the Emperor, wrote. So what does the great lion do? He dies in the place of Edmund, bearing the punishment that the young traitor deserves. This is an unmistakable allegory of what happened at the cross of Christ. Therefore, in the end, I think Lewis did hold to a substitutionary view, even if there were certain caricatures of the atonement that he clearly rejected.
Similarly,
I think that Lewis downplays the Bible’s teaching on man’s total depravity. At
times, however, he seems to misunderstand the doctrine by implying that man’s
ability to carry out good and generous acts rules it out. The doctrine,
however, is not that we are incapable
of anything good, like dying in someone else’s place for example (Romans 5:7).
Rather, it is that we are so thoroughly fallen that every aspect of our being has
been touched by sin (see Romans 3:23; Ephesians 2:1-3).
While some have questioned whether or not Lewis truly believed in Purgatory, despite the clear allusions we have of it in The Great Divorce, at least by the time he wrote Letters to Malcom his mind seems made up on this matter. When addressing the question of whether or not a Christian should pray for the dead, he states, “I believe in Purgatory.”[25] While dismissing various caricatures of the doctrine as a place of “retributive punishment” rather than “purification,” he seems to hold to a type of Purgatory that even believers like himself will experience. Some may argue that Lewis is only speaking of the believer’s translation to glory where he or she will be utterly free of sin. I doubt that, however, because Lewis addresses this subject in the context of what the dead now experience and why we ought to pray for them.
Lewis as a Spiritual Mentor
Despite
my few disagreements with Lewis, I cannot help but reiterate the way he has
molded much of the way I approach theology, ethics, and apologetics. His
winsome demeanor and beautiful prose make his writings a joy to read and
contemplate. There have been numerous occasions while reading him that I find
him articulating something I’d felt, but struggled to put into words.
For
instance, when explaining why he believes that the material world simply cannot
be all there is, Lewis points to the spiritual hunger common to all of us. Many
have called this Lewis’s argument from desire. “If I find in myself a desire
which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is
that I was made for another world.”[26]
As
we have seen, Lewis unabashedly believed in the supernatural realm. It is
encouraging to know that Lewis, an academic, refused to cave in to the
materialistic culture he indwelled. In fact, despite a growing vehemence to the
doctrine of hell in the Britain of his day, Lewis staunchly held his ground
declaring that Christ Himself clearly taught the reality of hell. In The Problem of Pain, he writes of hell,
“There is no doctrine which I would more willingly remove from Christianity
than this, if it lay in my power. But it has the full support of Scripture and,
specially, of our Lord’s own words; it has always been held by Christendom; and
it has the support of reason.”[27]
The underlying redemptive theme of Lewis’s theology could be expressed in this way: We are broken sinners who need to be remade by God. The way, however, in which this restoration of our true selves is accomplished is only through union with Christ by faith. As we come more into the presence of Christ, the more we are refashioned into what we were always intended to be.[28] Because Lewis views himself as just another pilgrim on the way to the glory we are destined for, he is very approachable as a spiritual mentor.[29] Time and time again, Lewis identifies himself as one who struggles in the very area he is proposing a solution.
In
Lewis’s understanding, humankind’s fundamental problem is not merely rejection
of God, but replacement of God with self. The only cure for our inherited
self-centeredness is self-surrender to God. “The principle runs through all
life from top to bottom. Give up yourself, and you will find your real self.
Lose your life and you will save it.”[30]
In this way, we open ourselves up to God, who alone can transform us by His
grace.
Lewis
draws our attention to why prayer is the only right response to a theistic
reality: God is never far from the believer. “We may ignore, but we can nowhere
evade, the presence of God. The world is crowded with Him. He walks everywhere incognito.”[31]
Therefore, regular prayer is a must for the Christ-follower, because it is in
prayer that we are acknowledging His ever-present nearness.
As our mentor, Lewis reminds us again and again that our enemy, Satan, seeks to obscure all thought of eternity and the supernatural. Throughout his writings, Lewis is continually trying to tear open the veil of modern secularism to reveal the supernatural world that has always been there. In works like The Screwtape Letters, Lewis reminds us that there are unseen forces continually at play in our lives.
The
modern mind attempts to do away with all things supernatural and reduce all
sense experience to what we can quantify in the laboratory. Yet Lewis repeatedly
reminds us that the spiritual world is no less real than the scientific. We
must never forget that we have an enemy seeking to muddle our view of the
world. Satan is both a deceiver and a strategist, desperately striving to bring
us down. “Be
sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a
roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Peter 5:8). In
fact, Satan would have us deny his reality if it meant we would also deny God’s
existence. He is perfectly content to be unknown rather than worshiped if that
means God receives no glory. Like the apostle Paul, Lewis argues that when we
know we have an enemy we want to take up the armor of God every day (see
Ephesians 6:10-18). For example, the modern believer might be tempted to assume
that his anxiety is the result of a chemical imbalance rather than consider
that Satan is assaulting him with troubling thoughts.
Forgiveness
is an essential component to Lewis’s view of the Christian life. However, he
does not adopt a “Pollyanna” kind of perspective here. He recognizes that for
those who have been deeply wounded by the sin of another, forgiveness is both
difficult and painful. In his Letters to
Malcolm, he gives his friend the “good news” that, after thirty years of
attempting to do so, he has finally managed to forgive someone who wronged him.
Lewis delights in the fact that — “even in dry old age” — he has managed to let
go of resentment. He gives us hope that we are all works in progress and that
even a deeply ingrained “evil habit” can be “whisked away” by our Lord, whom he
calls “the great Resolver.” [32]
It’s a beautiful picture to see that even the wise Lewis still had the humility
in his later years to discover anew the joy of forgiveness.
In
one essay, Lewis identifies a common misunderstanding that Christians have
concerning forgiveness — particularly, the forgiveness we receive from God. He
writes, “I find that when I am asking God to forgive me I am often in reality
(unless I watch myself very carefully) asking Him to do something quite
different. I am asking Him not to forgive me but to excuse me. But there is all
the difference in the world between forgiving and excusing.” Lewis goes on to
explain that when we try to excuse our sin, we are actually hindering ourselves
from receiving true forgiveness — the very thing we, as sinners, most need.
Like a patient who comes to the doctor presenting his true ailment in order
that he may be truly healed, Lewis says, we must come to God ready to confess
our sin openly rather than attempt to paper over it with excuses. I find his
perspective to be immensely helpful for myself personally and for the way I disciple
others. This is such a central issue for how one relates to God, and it delves
into the vital question of whether or not we truly believe that God forgives
even the worst of sins.
Conclusion
I
hope that this tribute to Lewis has merely whetted your appetite. I encourage
you to read his writings. Don’t believe those who tell you that he is too hard
to understand. In fact, he writes in a very understandable and friendly manner.
If nothing else, you ought to read TheChronicles of Narnia. I assure you —
they aren’t just for children!
[1] Alister
McGrath, C. S. Lewis — A Life: Eccentric
Genius, Reluctant Prophet (Colorado Springs, CO: Tyndale House Publishers,
2013), 50.
[2] C. S.
Lewis, The Weight of Glory And Other
Addresses (New York: HarperCollins, 1949, 1980), 64-90. I should note that
in his essay “Why I Am not a Pacifist”, he seems to be more concerned with
rebutting faulty arguments pitched by pacifists than with promoting a just war
theory, but the former easily leads him to the latter. Elsewhere, Lewis makes
it clear that war is an outrageous evil, directly resulting from our
estrangement from God. See C. S. Lewis, Mere
Christianity (New York: HarperCollins, 1952), 49.
[27] C. S.
Lewis, The Problem of Pain (New York:
Macmillan, 1962), 118.
[28] Joe
Rigney was helpful in coming to this understanding of Lewis’s theology in Joe
Rigney, Lewis on the Christian Life.
[29] For
example, Lewis writes, “The truth is, I haven’t any language weak enough to
depict the weakness of my spiritual life.” Lewis, Letters to Malcolm, 151.
“Now, brothers and sisters, I want to remind you of the gospel I preached to you, which you received and on which you have taken your stand. By this gospel you are saved…” (1 Corinthians 15:1-2a, NIV)
Recently, my wife Whitney and I welcomed our son Ryan into the world. A newborn baby is truly a wonder to behold. Their soft hands are already grasping for another hand. Their mouth already seeking nourishment. Their eyes slowly opening and struggling to focus for the first time on the big bright world around them.
With Ryan’s arrival, we have noticed our older two boys (Logan and Weston) acting up a bit more than usual. I don’t think there’s any surprise here. Children often need time adjusting to the arrival of a new sibling. It’s a new era for them. The truth has gradually dawned on them, on a completely new level, that they are not in fact the center of the universe. I find myself wanting to teach them over and over, “It’s not all about you.” Many a parent can relate to this.
Parents rightly see the need to discipline and correct their misbehaving
children. But here’s the question I want us to consider: In the midst of discipline,
are we teaching our children the gospel of Jesus Christ? Is our method of
correction, discipline, and instruction working to support or deny the truth of
the gospel? Does the message we are conveying sound more like self-salvation or
divine rescue?
No one has to teach their child to be selfish. Parents know firsthand that we all come into this world with a self-centered bent. We want what we want, and we want it now. It’s a shocking truth to learn that the world and everyone we know is not in orbit around us. Even as adults, however, we tend to live as if the story of the universe is all about us. But the gospel of Jesus Christ tells us a better story. It tells us that we were made for a much higher purpose than to live for ourselves. According to Scripture, we exist for God. To worship Him, love Him, and honor Him. It is only in living according to our God-given purpose rather than our self-made plans that we find true and lasting joy. This is precisely the goal of the gospel, the Bible’s central message.
Over and over, Scripture reminds us that we are on this planet to worship and enjoy God. “So whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31, NLT). Anything less will leave us empty, beaten up, and dissatisfied. When we live for God rather than self, our actions correspond to our design.
You may remember watching the animated Disney classic Pinocchio as a child. It’s a fascinating story of a puppet that comes to life when his maker wishes upon a star that his little marionette whom he named Pinocchio might become a real boy. That night, a glowing blue fairy partially grants his wish by bringing Pinocchio to life. However, he remains a wooden puppet. Pinocchio awakes and — humorously — is shocked to be alive. The blue fairy tells Pinocchio that if he proves himself “brave, truthful, and unselfish,” Geppetto’s wish will come true. She also assigns the loyal little locust, Jiminy Cricket, to be Pinocchio’s constant companion and voice of conscience.
The tale follows Pinocchio and Jiminy on their many adventures as the puppet sets out to discover what life in the world is really like. While Pinocchio is loved by his “father,” Geppetto, he soon discovers there are many in this world who want to lead him astray. He also learns how easy it is to make wrong choices. I doubt there is another Disney movie that is so chock full of moral lessons and aphorisms, like when the blue fairy says, “You see, Pinocchio, a lie keeps growing and growing until it’s as plain as the nose on your face.”
In the film’s darkest moments, Pinocchio and a friend are lured to Pleasure Island, a place where selfish boys can live it up — smoking, drinking, gambling, and doing whatever else they want — all without the moral restraints of parental authority. Unfortunately for Pinocchio and his friend, the island is cursed so that all the naughty boys who travel there transform into donkeys and are eventually sold into slave labor. One boy-turned-donkey desperately cries out for his mother. In a menacing tone, the island’s owner says, “You boys have had your fun. Now pay for it!” Pinocchio barely escapes, but his friend does not.
In a final act of courage, Pinocchio tries to rescue Geppetto from the belly of a sperm whale that swallowed the puppet maker while he was searching for Pinocchio. While Geppetto and Jiminy Cricket survive the whole ordeal, Pinocchio is killed. At the end of the film, there is a touching moment when Geppetto weeps over his broken puppet lying on the bed. Suddenly, the fairy not only resurrects him but transforms him into a real boy. “Father, I’m a real boy!” Pinocchio shouts in amazement. Apparently, Pinocchio’s final act of bravery proved him worthy of life.
In many ways, Pinocchio is something of a parable for how the modern world understands Christianity. Many today, even in the church, see Christianity as a moral prescription for life. God’s law is a list of dos and don’ts that we are to follow. We can think that, like Pinocchio, we must prove ourselves worthy of life. This way of thinking makes sense to us, but it stems from a wrong view of God.
We can think of God as if He were like a giant fairy, watching over our
every move, evaluating our lives to see whether or not we really deserve to be
accepted as His child. If we know we’ve blown it — spending too much time at Pleasure
Island — we can hear God demanding that we pay up for all that we’ve done. Many
people today live with this view of God, persistently uncertain of whether they
have done enough or are good enough to go to heaven. Even if we see God as
kindhearted and encouraging like the fairy, urging us to listen to our
conscience, we can think it’s ultimately about us being good enough to meet God’s
expectations.
American sociologist Christian Smith called this version of Christianity “Moralistic Therapeutic Deism.”[1] It essentially boils down to this: God is there for us when we are in a bind, but generally lets us go through life relying on our conscience (rather than His Word). The main thing God cares about is that we try to live a good life and be decent individuals, because heaven is the reward for good people when they die. Makes sense, right? The only problem is that this is nothing like the Christianity of the Bible.
What’s wrong with the above description? Well, for starters, there’s no mention of how Christ fits into that version of Christianity! In Moralistic Therapeutic Deism, Jesus is merely an add-on to Christianity, rather than the hub and center around which everything turns. At best, such a view sees Jesus as a good example or a wise teacher. Certainly, He was the supreme example and wisest teacher ever to live, but to reduce Him to these descriptions is to try to have Christ without the cross. It turns a blind eye to the bleeding and dying man staked to the cross. It ignores the miraculous triumph of the empty tomb. It downplays Jesus’ own radical claims: “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6).
Here’s the challenge for Christian parents. It is far easier to skip the gospel and address the moral behavior of our children with rewards or threats. “If you obey, I’ll give you…” “You’d better not disobey me, or else…” Honestly, I catch myself relying on this tactic all the time. I’m certainly not saying that all our rules should be thrown out or that we should stop disciplining our kids. Both of these are essential and sadly not practiced by many parents today.
But when we discipline our kids, are we pointing them to the truth of the gospel? Are we merely addressing their outward behavior, or are we striving to address their heart? The heart is the epicenter for all our children’s thoughts and motives. “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it” (Proverbs 4:23). Jesus said that all our evil thoughts and actions spring from our sin-riddled hearts (Matthew 15:19). If all we ever use is rewards or threats in our discipline, we are actually encouraging our kids to ask the self-centered question: “What’s in it for me?”
Whether we like it or not, we are teaching our kids a gospel not just with what we say but with how we act. The only question is whether the gospel we are giving is the true gospel of Jesus Christ or something else. When I discipline my son for stealing cookies or talking back to Whitney or myself (speaking hypothetically, of course), I want him to know that what he’s doing is a serious problem. And this problem has to do with the sin in his heart. He needs to know not only that his sin saddens me, but that it saddens God, too (Genesis 6:6). I also want him to understand that Jesus loved him so much that He did something about the sin in his heart. In fact, He suffered and died for it, so that God can forgive him and scrub his heart clean of all that sin (1 John 1:8-2:2). My son needs to know that no matter how good he strives to be, he can never work off his guilt. Only Jesus can do that. Beyond this, I want him to know that he’s not alone. “Daddy has sin in his heart, too, and needs Jesus just as much.”
I want my sons — even at a very young age — to recognize their great need to be reconciled to God. The Bible says, “It’s your sins that have cut you off from God” (Isaiah 59:2, NLT). “So we are Christ’s ambassadors; God is making His appeal through us. We speak for Christ when we plead, ‘Come back to God!’ For God made Christ, who never sinned, to be the offering for our sin, so that we could be made right with God through Christ” (2 Corinthians 5:21, NLT). We need to explain to our kids that what makes sin so serious is that we were made for a relationship with a holy God. At the same time, our kids can be confident of their standing with God through faith in Jesus (Romans 8:1; Philippians 1:6).
In every generation, there is a danger of losing or distorting the gospel. Most often this drift from the gospel is well intended. After all, it’s not wrong to want to see our kids live good and moral lives. Pinocchio is a story that resonates with some of our most basic moral intuitions. But what our kids need to see is that there is a much greater story, a powerful story ofredemption, that is taught in Scripture and centered around Jesus Christ. Teaching our kids to be good boys and girls is too small a goal. We need to teach them to be Christ-centered, Christ-exalting, and Christ-loving kids. We want their obedience to be rooted in love, not self-centeredness.
Above all else, Jesus-following parents need to embrace the truth that they are in the disciple-making business.
Photos Courtesy of Pixabayand Disney.com
[1]
Christian Smith and Melinda Lundquist Denton, Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2005).
“When I consider your
heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set
in place, what is mankind that you are mindful of them, human beings that you
care for them? You have made them a little lower than the angels and crowned
them with glory and honor.” (Psalm 8:3-5, NIV)
Have you ever reflected on the purpose of your existence?
Have you ever sensed deep within your bones that this short life cannot
possibly be all there is — that there must be something more?
Where did we come from? Are humans merely biological
machines, or is there something more to us? Why is there something rather than
nothing?
Throughout the centuries, humanity has asked these perennial
questions related to our origins. We are persistently curious about where we
came from. What got this whole thing
going anyway? It is for this reason that inquisitive children ask their
parents, “Where do babies come from?” Atheists and theists alike agree that our
meaning is rooted in our origins. Our past is the key to our future.
Having said that, I fear that our culture often discourages honest reflection on the deeper purpose of life. The vast majority of Hollywood scripts and commercial advertisements suggest that true happiness and pleasure is found in the here and now. It is not just our culture, however. Something in us prefers immediate gratification to thoughtful reflection. We seem hesitant to consider what may lie beyond the horizon of our material world. Nevertheless, despite our endless pursuits, there remains the nagging sense that we were made for something transcendent.
In the words of A. W. Tozer, “The yearning to know what
cannot be known, to comprehend the Incomprehensible, to touch and taste the
Unapproachable, arises from the image of God in the nature of man. Deep calleth
unto deep, and though polluted and landlocked by the mighty disaster
theologians call the fall, the soul senses its origin and longs to return to
its Source.”[1]
Cosmically
Irrelevant?
Consider the alternative: “Man is the result of a
purposeless and natural process that did not have him in mind.”[2]
Now really, can anyone actually believe this? Can anyone truly live as if they
are the result of a mindless, purposeless, and accidental process? Harvard
professor James Wood writes of an atheist friend who at times awakes in the
middle of the night with a piercing anxiety:
“How can it be that this world is the result of an
accidental big bang? How could there be no design, no metaphysical purpose? Can
it be that every life — beginning with my own, my husband’s, my child’s, and
spreading outward — is cosmically irrelevant?”[3]
Even for the atheist, this bleak picture of existence is a tough
pill to swallow. For life to be utterly devoid of meaning seems impossible. I’m
reminded of a line from the film On the Waterfront,
spoken by Marlon Brando’s character, Terry Malloy. Terry longs to be a prizefighter,
but one obstacle after another prevents him from achieving his dream. He tells
his brother, “I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I coulda been somebody,
instead of a bum, which is what I am.” We all want to be somebody in this world.
We want to matter. Yet, the atheistic worldview mocks the whole human race for being
caught in some grand delusion.
When nearing his death, Apple’s co-founder Steve Jobs said, “I’m about fifty-fifty on believing in God… For most of my life, I’ve felt that there must be more to our existence than meets the eye… It’s strange to think that you accumulate all this experience, and maybe a little wisdom, and it just goes away. So I really want to believe that something survives, that maybe your consciousness endures.”[4]
Photo Courtesy of Wikipedia
Most of my friends know that I am an avid Seattle Seahawks fan. My friends and I have joked about how the four preseason games that precede the regular NFL season are a waste of time to watch. After all, many of the stars play for only a small portion of each preseason game and the wins and losses have no bearing on the regular season and postseason. Even when aired on national television, the fact that these games are merely preseason seems to suck all of the magic and drama right out of the stadium.
Now think about this: if you really are the accidental byproduct of nature and you are ultimately headed for non-existence, then it is not just NFL preseason games that are meaningless. Everything is ultimately meaningless. Whenever we push the transcendent out of our thinking, life becomes, in the words of Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” If there is no God, we have no basis for ultimate meaning in life, and we are compelled to agree with Shakespeare’s Macbeth that life “is a tale told by an idiot full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”
Without God,
we have no explanation for how the universe came to be, and we have no reason
to think our lives have more value than the bug squished against your
windshield.
On the other hand, what if the Bible got it right, and we
are the creation of an all-wise and beneficent Creator who molded us and
designed us with a purpose, namely, to know Him?
How you answer the question of origins has profound
implications for what it means to be human and for understanding our ultimate destiny.
Ancient Wisdom for
Today
To solve this perplexing enigma, we need to return to the ancient wisdom of Genesis, the biblical book of beginnings. However, before we consider the sacred text, I think it is important to consider some of the biases that inevitably effect the way we read Genesis.
Despite the oft-repeated motif that science and religion are
forever at war, this view is misguided for several reasons. Everyone comes to
the evidence of nature with certain presuppositions, and these presuppositions
color our interpretation. Science is based on observations of natural processes
today, but this does not explain the origin
of those natural processes.
Metaphysical naturalism is the worldview that nature is all
there is. Carl Sagan articulated this view when he famously began his
television series Cosmos with the
line, “The cosmos is all there is, or has been, or will be.”
In contrast to this
nature-is-all-there-is perspective, Scripture begins with the radical claim “In
the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Gen. 1:1).
In response to all false worldviews
which would have nature be eternal or be god itself, the Bible claims that the
cosmos had an absolute beginning and that God created it, and therefore stands
outside and over it. Therefore, God — not nature — is the eternally
self-existent ultimate reality.
“Before the
mountains were brought forth,
or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are
God.” (Psalm 90:2, my emphasis)
“To whom then will you compare me, that I should be like him? says the Holy One. Lift up your eyes on high and see: who created these? He who brings out their host by number, calling them all by name, by the greatness of his might, and because he is strong in power not one is missing.” (Isaiah 40:25-26)
M31 Spiral Galaxy. Photo Courtesy of Jason Ware, NASA
Imago Dei
Genesis not only tells us how God created the universe in
general, but also how He created the first human beings. After creating all the
other creatures, great and small, God speaks within His own Trinitarian
council, “Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may
rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and
all the wild animals, and over all creatures that move along the ground”
(Genesis 1:26). The Bible is very clear that the first humans did not descend
from apelike creatures. [5]
Instead, God directly fashioned them and breathed life into their nostrils (see
Genesis 2:7, 21-22).
In creating human beings, God’s purpose was to have a creature uniquely designed to image — or reflect — His character and nature in a way no other creature could. Unlike all the animals, we alone have the ability to reason and reflect on our own existence. All it takes is one visit to the zoo to witness the striking differences between a human being and every other creature. You will never find a chimpanzee writing a sonnet, a dolphin studying algebra, or an orangutan making laws by which his fellow apes should live. Human beings alone are morally accountable to God. We all know this intuitively. After all, no one ever charges the lion who preys on a zebra with murder.
Bearing God’s image has many implications. Because God is
personal, we are personal. Thus, we can relate to one another with language.
And, I would argue, we experience the fullness of our humanity when we have
learned to love as God loves.
Ostensibly, we are but specks in a vast and uncharted universe, and yet the Bible everywhere affirms humanity’s sacred value. There is even a strange dignity to us because God created us to “rule” (Hebrew, radah רָדָה, v. 26). As God’s image bearers, we are called to represent God’s good and loving rule over His world. Lastly, the Imago Dei (image of God) means that we all have a profound sense of morality deeply embedded in our soul. Intuitively, we know that it is evil to violate another human being, and that we all possess intrinsic worth.
This is why the Deist Thomas Jefferson could pen the
following words in the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these Truths to be
self-evident, that all Men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.” All
of this makes sense in light of the fact that we have been “crowned… with glory
and honor” (Psalm 8:5).
Some time ago, my friend Matt and I were in conversation with a university student who identified herself as an atheist. We’ll call her Madison. [6] We discussed with Madison the evidence for and against God.[7] “If there is no God, then you and I have no more intrinsic worth than a bug, since we are all here by accident,” I pointed out. She shrugged. “I’m okay with being a bug.” Later on, in a moment of transparency, Madison gave one reason for doubting the existence of a good God: such a God had apparently allowed men in her life to mistreat her. I expressed sincere sorrow over what they had done and affirmed her intuition that what these men had done really was evil. I also told her that their sinful actions grieved the heart of God, too (see Genesis 6:5-6; Isaiah 63:10). “Madison, I don’t think you are just a bug. You were made by a God who loves you more than you know. And no one should ever treat you as if you were a bug.”
Modern atheists find themselves in a conundrum. They want to
deny God, but they are also innately aware their lives have value — something only
possible with a sovereign Creator.
The Inner Clue of
Meaning
Genesis also explains why God is our authority: He authored us. We belong to God by His
divine Creator’s rights. When an author writes a book, she owns that book and
thus it bears her name. In the same way, a musician has rights over the song he
composed. We have laws about trademarks, copyrights, and patents because
we recognize that the maker has ownership over what he has made. Because we
belong to God, we are accountable to Him.
When the religious leaders questioned Jesus about paying taxes to Caesar, He asked to see an imperial coin. “Whose image and inscription are on it?” Jesus asked. The men, who were really just seeking grounds to accuse Jesus of insurrection, replied, “Caesar’s.” With a twinkle in His eye, Jesus responded, “Then give to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s” (Matthew 22:15-22). What was Jesus’ point? That which bears the image of the Creator — a human being — belongs to the Creator.
This is the foundation for what makes you valuable. It is what gives your life infinite purpose. You were made by God… for God. The gospel of Jesus Christ unlocks the mystery of your existence, because it explains you to yourself. Our yearning for something more comes down to this: Having a relationship with God is what life is all about. The ultimate potential you crave for is bound up in knowing Him.
According to the Bible, when our first parents, Adam and Eve, chose to go their own way and defied His authority over them, this broke that priceless intimacy with the God of infinite love. Jesus Christ, the God who came to earth and clothed Himself with human flesh, makes reconciliation possible. Death is the penalty for sin, but God wanted to save us from what we justly deserved (Romans 6:23). Therefore, God resolved to send His own Son to die in our place. In order to do that, the Son of God needed to become human. In coming to save those who bear the image of God, Jesus came as the supreme “image of the invisible God” (Colossians 1:15).
The Bible says that Jesus, the God-man, “bore our sins in His own body on the tree,” because they separated us from our Creator (1 Peter 2:24). “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit” (1 Peter 3:18). When we repent of our sin and trust in Christ’s saving death and death-conquering resurrection, God restores us to the fellowship with Him we were originally created for. Meaning, as it turns out, is not some trick of the mind or useless fiction. It is the inner clue pointing you back to the Source from which you came.
[1] A.
W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy (Indo-European
Publishing, 2018), 9.
[2] George
Gaylord Simpson, The Meaning of Evolution,
revised edition (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1967), 345.
[3]
James Wood, “Is That All There Is? Secularism and Its Discontents,” New Yorker, August 14, 2011.
[4]
Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs (New
York: Simon & Schuster, 2011), 571.
[5]
More and more fossil and DNA evidence supports this divergence between the
great apes and human beings. See Marvin Lubenow, Bones of Contention (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1992, rev. ed.,
2007); Jon Cohen, “Relative Differences: The Myth of 1%,” Science 316:1836, 2007.; Jeffrey Tomkins and Jerry Bergman,
“Genomic monkey business — estimates of nearly identical human-chimp DNA
similarly re-evaluated using omitted data,” Journal
of Creation 26(1):94-100, 2012, or online at https://creation.com/human-chimp-dna-similarity-re-evaluated.
“By faith we understand that the
universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out
of things that are visible.” (Hebrews 11:3)
On Christmas Eve, 1968, the crew of Apollo 8 had the unique privilege of becoming the first human beings to see the far side of the moon. Coming out of their fourth orbit, these astronauts — Frank Borman, James Lovell, and William Anders — were mesmerized by the breathtaking view of earth, with all its beautiful and vibrant colors. It stood in stark contrast to the barren landscape of the moon in the foreground. In that captivating moment, the crew thought it was only fitting to read reverently from the majestic first verse in the Bible: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1).
Thus begins the grand story of Scripture. How different this account is from all the ancient pagan creation myths. For example, the Babylonian epic, Enuma Elish, speaks of the gods warring with one another and finally forming the worlds out of the carcasses of slain gods. In contrast, this God of Genesis, Yahweh, does not need already existing matter to create His universe. There is no battle raging in Genesis 1. God simply speaks, and a vast universe stretches into existence.
That phrase “the heavens and the earth” is called a merism, where two ends of a spectrum are
used to encompass the whole. In Genesis 1:1, we are meant to take “the heavens
and the earth” as the entire cosmos being created by the one God. Modern
science has now caught up to Genesis in recognizing that there had to have been
an absolute beginning to the universe, but for many centuries the consensus
among secular scientists was that the universe was eternal. In contrast,
Christians and Orthodox Jews have always believed that only God is eternal.
“Before the
mountains were brought forth,
or ever you had formed the earth and the world,
from everlasting to everlasting you are God.” (Psalm 90:2)
God Speaks and Things Happen
“And God said, ‘Let there be light.’ And there was light”
(Genesis 1:3). God merely speaks and things burst into existence. This same basic
pattern is followed throughout the whole first chapter (see verses 6-7, 9, 11,
14-15, 20-21, 24, 26-27). And what’s the point? I think Psalm 33 best captures
this.
In Psalm 33:6, we read: “By the word of the LORD the heavens
were made, and by the breath of His mouth all their host.” Verse 9: “For He
spoke, and it came to be; He commanded, and it stood firm.”
The whole point is that creation was instantaneous, just
like the miracles of Jesus. Jesus did not need to take that water from the
wedding in Cana, run to grab grapes from a local vineyard, press them down, and
wait for the whole process of fermentation to be completed before He finally
made wine. No, the whole point of this first “sign” was that Jesus transformed
the water into wine in a moment (see John 2:1-11).
In the same way, God did not need long ages of stellar
evolution before creating the first star.[1]
Genesis offers no rhetorical flourish when describing the creation of those
massive gas giants with all their incredible combustion. Almost as an
afterthought, we read, “He also made the stars” (Genesis 1:16, NIV).
This instantaneous creation by His word displays God’s infinite creative power. All He has to do is exhale, as it were, and galaxies spin into space, whole worlds take shape, and all the various living creatures fill the earth. Just imagine how much power this Creator must wield!
Photo courtesy of DesktopBackground
God of Infinite Power
Yahweh is not like the gods of the ancient cultures, who
needed humans to be their slaves because they were too tired.
“Have you
not known? Have you not heard?
Yahweh is the everlasting God,
the Creator of the ends of the earth.
He does not faint or grow weary;
His understanding is unsearchable.” (Isaiah 40:28)
Nor did He need to kill other gods in order to form the worlds. It
is simply the awesome power of Almighty God on full display. This is the God we were made to
know and with whom we have to do (Hebrews 4:13).
You and I were made to bow down and worship such a God. And after
considering His infinite power, this only makes sense.
“Worthy are
You, our Lord and God,
to receive glory and honor and power,
for You created all things,
and by Your will they existed and were created.” (Revelation 4:11)
Wired for Glory
But more than that, we were created to know Him. This is the greatest privilege imaginable: to know the Creator. That is why we ought to consider what the Bible says about Him. For knowing God is the key to finding true and abundant life. From the beginning, humankind was designed to be in relationship with this infinite Creator. We are wired for glory. That is why we hunger for glorious experiences, achievements, and relationships. But everything else will ultimately leave us empty and unsatisfied until we come to know the One who authored our life.
“And this
is eternal life, that they know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom
you have sent” (John 17:3).
Eternal life is found in repenting of sin against this Creator and trusting in Jesus Christ alone as Savior from that sin. I invite you to open your Bible and discover this awesome God for yourself.
[1] As an aside, the current theory of stellar evolution that is widely accepted in the secular academy is that stars are born from the elements produced by already existing stars. The problem for the atheist is how those first stars came to be. While the current theory among secular scientists is that the first stars formed from a collapsing cloud of gas, this theory has numerous problems. See Rod Bernitt, “Stellar Evolution and the Problem of First Stars,” https://creation.com/stellar-evolution-and-the-problem-of-the-first-stars. Even the agnostic astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson has admitted: “Not all gas clouds in the Milky Way can form stars at all times. More often than not, the cloud is confused about what to do next. Actually, astrophysicists are the confused ones here. We know the cloud wants to collapse under its own weight to make one or more stars. But rotation as well as turbulent motion within the cloud work against that fate. So, too, does the ordinary gas pressure you learned about in high-school chemistry class. Galactic magnetic fields also fight collapse: they penetrate the cloud and latch onto any free-roaming charged particles contained therein, restricting the ways in which the cloud will respond to its self-gravity. The scary part is that if none of us knew in advance that stars exist, front line research would offer plenty of convincing reasons for why stars could never form.” Neil deGrasse Tyson, Death by Black Hole: And Other Cosmic Quandaries (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2007), 187.
“I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring
and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel.” (Genesis 3:15)
The Bible, from its very beginning, makes sense of the world. It explains why we are both beautiful and wonderful — because God created us in His image — and why we are also deeply flawed and tragic, and indeed why our whole world is in a constant cycle of triumph and failure — because of our sin. Yet, from the beginning of Scripture we are promised a Savior. In only the third chapter of the Bible, our first parents, Adam and Eve, rebel against their Maker by eating the forbidden fruit in act of open defiance. Their generous Creator, Yahweh, gives them the entire Garden of Eden, inviting them to indulge freely in all its variety of delicious fruits.
However, a serpentine traitor and enemy of Yahweh — a one-time captain of the Lord’s hosts — beguiles the human couple by casting God in a negative light as a miser who withholds His very best from them. Charmed by the hiss of the snake, they take of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil — the only tree off limits. In choosing the fruit, they really choose themselves over God and His good authority. Just as they were warned, the consequence of rejecting the Author of life was and always will be death (Genesis 2:16-17). Their revolt against God left a path of destruction in its wake, and we are still feeling the aftershock of humanity’s fall from glory today. Despite our numerous achievements, all of human history is pockmarked with war, famine, disease, suffering, and death — the residual effects of separation from our Creator.
The Snake Crusher
And yet, we cannot miss that in this very chapter — Genesis 3 — the Lord shines the ray of hope into the darkest moment in the storyline of Scripture. No sooner does God bring Adam and Eve under His just curse in Eden than He promises a future “Seed” that will undo the damage wrought by the serpent who tempted them into rebellion. In fact, although the promise is for humanity, He gives the statement in the form of a judgment directed to the serpent: “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed; He shall bruise you on the head, and you shall bruise him on the heel” (Genesis 3:15, NASB).[1] The Hebrew term for “seed” here is zera` (זֶרַע) and can be translated as “offspring” or “descendant.”
Writing roughly four thousand years later, the Apostle Paul recalls this precise passage when he tells the Roman Christians, “The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you” (Romans 16:20). Even in this statement there seems to be an assumption that in order for us to be reconciled with this “God of peace,” the serpent, Satan, must be crushed underfoot. Tracing this idea back to Genesis 3:15, we see early hints that this “snake crusher”[2] is also the Savior who will reconcile us back to God, the one we have been running and hiding from (see Genesis 3:8).
Tracing the Promise of a Seed
As we continue in
the story of Genesis, we come to Abram, the man Yahweh calls out of pagan
idolatry to worship Him as the one true God (Joshua 24:2ff.). In calling Abram,
God also made some grandiose promises to him. “Go from your country and your
kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you,” Yahweh told
him. “And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your
name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you,
and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the
earth shall be blessed” (Genesis 12:1-3). God elaborates on this astonishing
promise: “To your offspring [zera` (זֶרַע)]
I will give this land.”
In the next
chapter, the Lord shows Abram the land of Canaan and reiterates the promise:
“Lift up your eyes and look from the place where you are, northward and
southward and eastward and westward, for all the land that you see I will give
to you and to your offspring forever” (13:14b-15). Once again, the word zera` (זֶרַע), “seed,” is used (here translated “offspring”).
Given the narrative structure of Genesis, we have an early hint here that the
seed of the woman (3:15) is connected to this seed of Abram (13:15). As Abram
grows older, he begins to doubt that any offspring will actually come from his
loins (15:3). God responds to Abram’s doubt by upping the ante: “Look toward
heaven, and number the stars, if you are able to number them… So shall your
offspring [zera` (זֶרַע)] be” (v. 5).
When Abram and his wife Sarai attempt their own scheme
for getting Abram an offspring by having Abram sleep with their maidservant,
Hagar, the result was disastrous. A boy Ishmael is born, but a vicious family
feud ensues and God declares that Ishmael is not the “seed” that was promised.
Instead, the seed line is to come from Sarai’s womb, despite the fact that she
is nearing 90. As it turns out, through a miraculous conception, Sarai (now
called Sarah) and Abram (whose new name, Abraham, means “father of many
nations”) have a son named Isaac. God assures Abraham that “through Isaac shall
your offspring [zera` (זֶרַע)] be named” (21:12).[3]
This promise of a seed to come is repeated throughout the remaining narrative of Genesis (24:7, 60; 26:3-4, 24; 28:4, 13-14; 32:12; 35:12; 48:4). Interestingly, King David is also promised a seed [zera` (זֶרַע), “offspring”] who will both come from his body and reign from his throne forever (2 Samuel 7:12-13). We know Solomon, David’s son and immediate heir, only partially fulfilled this promise (vv. 14-15) because Solomon no longer sits on the throne (v. 16) and his kingdom certainly did not last forever (vv. 12-13). Psalm 89 also makes clear that this ultimate Seed of David will reign in an eternal kingdom (see Psalm 89:4, 29, 36). So after Solomon, Scripture leaves the reader expectantly awaiting this true or ultimate Son of David yet to come. In other places this descendant of David is called “a Righteous Branch” (Jeremiah 23:5; 33:15) and “the Stump of Jesse”[4] (Isaiah 11:1). At times, this promised Seed is simply called “My servant David” (Ezekiel 34:23-24; 37:24; cf. Jeremiah 30:9) as if shorthand for “Son of David.”[5] It is clear by now that the Seed is referring not merely to a generational line of descendants, but more specifically to an individual descendant of both Abraham and David.
The Seed of the Woman
At this point, it is worth reviewing the original promise
of Genesis 3:15. The attentive reader will remember that the promised Seed is
said to come from the “the woman.” This is very odd considering that the “seed”
normally comes from the man.[6] Thus, Genesis 3:15 presents something of a conundrum.
Despite it being the first reference to a promised Seed, it does not fit with
the normal Jewish understanding of zera` (זֶרַע).
We find a clue concerning how the promised Seed could
come from a woman in Isaiah 7. There, Yahweh gives a prophetic sign through
Isaiah to Ahaz, a king of Judah with a shaky faith in God. In fact, Isaiah says
the prophecy is for the whole “house of David” (v. 13). The prophet then says,
“Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall
conceive and bear a son, and shall call His name Immanuel” (v. 14).
Significantly, `Immanuw’el (עִמָּנוּאֵל)means “God with
us.” A virginal conception was as common in Isaiah’s day as it is today. It would
therefore constitute a legitimate divine sign that this little baby is “God
with us.”
Now we come to the New Testament, which details the
arrival of one called Jesus of Nazareth. In the opening narrative of his
Gospel, Matthew describes both the conception and birth of Jesus, making the
clear argument that Jesus is the fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy.[7] “When His mother Mary had been betrothed to Joseph,
before they came together she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit”
(Matthew 1:18). An angel tells Joseph, Jesus’ adoptive father, to name the
child “Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins” (v. 21). Matthew
then comments, “All this took place to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the
prophet: ‘Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call
his name Immanuel’ (which means, God with us)” (vv. 22-23).
Additionally, Luke’s Gospel records what the angel Gabriel told Mary, who wondered how she could bear a son as a virgin: “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be called holy — the Son of God” (Luke 1:35). It is remarkable that Gabriel also connects Mary’s virgin-born son with the prophecy given to David: “He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to Him the throne of His father David, and He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of His kingdom there will be no end” (vv. 32-33).
The Promise Keeping God
All that we have seen from Scripture boils down to this startling conclusion: Jesus of Nazareth is the Promised Seed “of the woman” of Genesis 3:15. He is the virgin-born God-man of Isaiah. He is the Son of David, who will reign on His throne forever. He is the Seed of Abraham, who will bring blessings to the nations. The Apostle Paul makes this connection, too: “Now the promises were made to Abraham and to his offspring [Grk. sperma, σπέρμα]. It does not say, ‘And to offsprings,’ referring to many, but referring to one, ‘And to your offspring,’ who is Christ” (Galatians 3:16, emphasis added).[8] Thus, the Promised Seed of Genesis 3, first spoken of in only the third chapter of the Bible and hinted at across the pages of the entire Bible, could only be speaking of the Lord Jesus Christ.
So, how did this Promised Seed crush the head of the serpent under His feet (Genesis 3:15)? Not only did Jesus overcome every temptation of the devil (Matthew 4:1-11), but we are also told that the “reason the Son of God appeared was to destroy the works of the devil” (1 John 3:8b). If Satan’s power is bound up with leading us into sin and condemning us for that sin, then Christ bearing our sin and guilt away on the cross would spell his undoing. Indeed, this is the message of rescue we find in the New Testament: “And you, who were dead in your trespasses… God made alive together with Him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This He set aside, nailing it to the cross. He disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them in Him” (Colossians 2:13-15).
The “rulers and authorities” here refers to the spiritual forces of darkness. Jesus went to the cross so that “through death He might destroy the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil” (Hebrews 2:14). As our guilt is removed in Christ, the ancient serpent loses all ground for accusing us, and we are rescued from our great enemy. God has been telling His people for ages of this One who would be bruised that we might be healed (Genesis 3:15; Isaiah 53:5). What a marvel it is that our gracious God would pursue us in love even as we ran from Him and promise us One who would “save His people from their sin” immediately after we, in Adam, first turned our back on Him. Just as He always will, God kept His promise.
[1] I am unsure why the NASB does not capitalize the “him” in this sentence, following its convention of capitalizing divine pronouns.
[2] I first saw this term used of
Satan in the children’s book The Biggest
Story: How the Snake Crusher Brings Us Back to the Garden by Kevin DeYoung
and Don Clark (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2015).
[3] Hebrews 11:17-19 recalls Abraham’s great
faith in this divine promise, emphasizing his recognition that Yahweh can do
all things — including raising Isaac from the dead were he to sacrifice his
beloved son to the Lord.
[4] Jesse was David’s father, so the
prophecy carries the same meaning as promising one from the Davidic line.
[5] It is clear from Isaiah 9:6-7 that
this promised Son of David who will reign on David’s throne will be both God
and man.
[6] For example, in Genesis 38:8-9, we read that Onan was to have sex with his dead brother’s wife in order to raise offspring on his behalf. Onan, knowing that the “seed” [zera` (זֶרַע), “offspring”] would not be his, spilled his “seed” [zera` (זֶרַע)] on the ground (v. 9). Also see Leviticus 15:16-18, 32; 22:4, where the ESV translates zera` (זֶרַע) as “semen.”
[7] Matthew intentionally begins his
Gospel with: “This is the record of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the son of
David, the son of Abraham” (Matthew 1:1).
[8] Similarly, Luke records Peter
making this same connection in Acts 3:25-26 when he preaches to the Jerusalem
crowds.
“Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making His appeal through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God. For our sake He made Him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.” (2 Corinthians 5:20-21)
“God’s
power is at its greatest not in his destruction of the wicked but in his taking
all the wickedness of the earth into himself and giving back love.”[1]
I
recently heard in the news about the unfortunate strife that led to the
collapse of a sports team with a lot of talent. Various sports commentators
discussed who was to blame for the team’s gradual demise. One television
personality even gave out certain percentages of blame to various persons
involved in the whole debacle. Before long, various teammates and coaches began
to voice who they thought should be blamed. Interestingly, not one person pointed
his thumb at his chest and said, “Yeah, it’s all my fault.”
Masters at Blame Shifting
Have you ever noticed how powerful your need to justify your own actions is? Why is that so often we are quick to blame in others what we would gladly excuse in ourselves? When the other team cheats or the other person lies, they need to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. But when our team gets caught cheating or we get found out, we shrug and quip, “Well, everybody does it.” Why is it that whenever we are accused of something, our gut reaction is either to go into hiding or fight with all our might to clear ourselves of all blame? Deep in our bones, we know that we cannot shoulder our own guilt. Our troubled conscience testifies to this. We need a way out.
We attempt to write off our guilty feelings as nothing more than social conditioning, or perhaps our parents’ strict disciplinarian methods fobbed off onto our psyche. We tell ourselves that we are not really that bad. After all, it is those other people in our lives that are the real problem. We both subtly and not so subtly affix guilt to our parents, our spouse, our boss, or our children. We even manage to paint them in a negative light with an “understanding” tone. We are masters at blame shifting. Can anyone really argue that this is not true of the human heart? We are constantly scouring the universe for someone else to be the scapegoat, when in our heart of hearts we know we are blameworthy.
The unwillingness to own up to our guilt seems to be a perennial problem. Remember what Pontius Pilate did after sentencing Jesus to death? He washed his hands before the crowds, as if to clear himself of all guilt for the blood of this righteous man. Very similarly, Shakespeare has Lady Macbeth desperately trying to wash her hands clean after her part in the murder of Duncan. “Out, damned spot! Out, I say!” she wails. “Here’s the smell of blood still; all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand.”[2] We see this same dynamic when politicians or corporate executives plead ignorance when investigators catch them in a scandal.
So what does this self-justifying strategy say about us? It says something about our moral condition. The Bible explains our own condition to us. We are made in God’s image, and that is why we know right from wrong (Genesis 1:26-27). We know that guilt demands punishment. We know this. And yet, we also know that we have not even lived up to our own standards of right and wrong — let alone God’s standard of perfection. Scripture makes it clear that every human being finds him or herself in this quandary: we are both those who know what we ought and ought not to do and those who know we have failed to live up to these moral obligations. So, what are we to do about this predicament?
The Intolerable Burden
When we come face to face with the Law of God, we all know we fall short. “Now we know that whatever the law says it speaks to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be stopped, and the whole world may be held accountable to God” (Romans 3:19). When a shameful thing we have done or said in the past rises to the surface in our mind, we sense the weight of our guilt all over again. We can identify with Thomas Cranmer, when he wrote in The Book of Common Prayer:
“Almighty God, Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ, Maker of all things, Judge of all men, we acknowledge and bewail
our manifold sins and wickedness, which we from time to time most grievously
have committed, by thought, word and deed, against thy Divine Majesty,
provoking most justly thy wrath and indignation against us. We do earnestly
repent and are heartily sorry for these our misdoings. The remembrance of them
is grievous unto us; the burden of them is intolerable.”
In John Bunyan’s allegory, Pilgrim’s Progress, the protagonist Christian bears an “intolerable” burden on his back. The great load represents the weight of his own sin, which grows more burdensome as he reads from a book. “He opened the book, and as he read, he wept and trembled.”[3] That is what Scripture does: it exposes our guilt so that we suddenly see the sinfulness of sin. But — and this is of infinite importance — it does not leave us to wallow in our guilt. It is right at this point that we begin to see our genuine need for the gospel of the crucified and risen Messiah. Our guilt demands punishment, and the more we know of God’s holiness, the more we are desperate to be free… and the more we long to be made new.
God’s Great Love
“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ,
he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. All
this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to Himself and gave us the
ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to
Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the
message of reconciliation” (2 Corinthians 5:17-19).
In a world where we are persistently trying to shift the blame to someone else, God Himself shifted the blame from us to His own Son, Jesus Christ. Why? What could possibly lead a loving Father to do this? God “did not spare His own Son but gave Him up for us all” (Romans 8:32). To spare us from eternal judgment, He could “not spare His own Son.” The only way not to count our trespasses against us was to count our trespasses against Jesus. For God to overlook sin would mean that He would cease to be holy and just. God would cease to be God, and that could never happen. In order for God to uphold the moral order of the universe, He must deal justly with our great offense against Him. Someone had to go through the fire of judgment. God’s great love went out to meet the demands of His perfect justice.
Therefore, the Son of God bowed His head to the Father’s will and did just that. The very “punishment that brought us peace was on Him, and by His wounds we are healed. We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to our own way; and the LORD has laid on Him the iniquity of us all” (Isaiah 53:5-6). Jesus received the cruelty of man and the wrath of God both without protest. Our Lord never once disobeyed His Father. He was utterly pure, spotless, and clean. “Yet it was the will of Yahweh to crush Him” (v. 10). He willingly laid down His life in obedience to His Father’s command.
The Free Gift
“God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we
might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21, NIV).
We long to be in the right before men and women. However, our most urgent need is to be in the right before our Maker. In biblical language, what we need most is righteousness. The marvelous truth of the gospel is that we have God’s own righteousness offered to us through the cross. As Martin Luther put it, a “great exchange” took place at the cross. Christ took our sin, so that we might receive His righteousness. He bears our guilt, and we are clothed in His perfection. Out of His abundant love and mercy, God urges you to lay down your defenses and receive the forgiveness He purchased with His Son’s death.
While
we are anxiously striving to justify ourselves day after day, the gospel is about God justifying us for
all time. The Apostle Paul explained it this way: “But now apart from the
law the righteousness of God has been made known, to which the Law and the
Prophets testify. This righteousness is given through faith in Jesus Christ to
all who believe” (Romans 3:21-22, NIV). Read that last sentence again. Divine
righteousness comes to us as a free gift through simple faith. All we must do
is turn from sin to God, entrusting ourselves to the tender and secure hands of
Jesus.
We do not pay off the great debt we owe. Jesus takes that debt for us. Oh, sweet release! Complete divine forgiveness is offered to us as a free gift! What could possibly be better news than this? The cross answers the great question, “How can I, a sinner, be made right with a holy God?” The answer: through faith in Jesus Christ and His sacrificial death on the cross for us.
Jesus really did die on Calvary for all our sins, but He did not stay dead. The tomb is still vacant. “Fear not,” He says, “I am the first and the last, and the living one. I died, and behold I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of Death and Hades” (Revelation 1:17b-18). As we approach the celebration of our Lord’s death and resurrection from the grave, let us remember the chief need for every person on the planet is that we be reconciled to the God of love. “Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making His appeal through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God” (2 Corinthians 5:20).
[1] J.
N. Oswalt, “Isaiah,” in New Dictionary of
Biblical Theology (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), eds. T.
Desmond Alexander and Brian S. Rosner, 222.
“I form light and
create darkness,
I make well-being and create calamity,
I am the LORD, who does all these things.” (Isaiah 45:5-7)
Just how sovereign is the God of the Bible? When one
considers the endless stream of chaos, violence, and injustice reported on both
local and national news stations, it could be very hard to believe that God really
is in control.
The Bible describes God as infinitely loving,
righteous, and good (Psalm 34:8; 145:17; 1 John 4:8). In fact, Scripture reminds us that if there is
one thing we can absolutely count on, it is that every single good thing we
have has come to us from the loving hand of our Father in heaven (James 1:17).
Friendship. Love. Family. Income. Health. A loving community of believers. The
food in our stomach. The mocha I drank this morning. The car I drove to work
in. Even the seemingly insignificant trivialities in life that brighten my day.
They all come to me as undeserved gifts from a Father who delights to shower me
with His love. This is important for me to remember, because apart from God’s
grace, I would quickly lapse into the worst kind of pessimism.
That being said, what are we to make of all this
evil and perversity in a world run by a good and holy God? In light of all the
suffering in the world, atheists such as Richard Dawkins frequently say the burden
of proof is on those who claim an all-powerful deity exists. Psalm 115:2 says
that the nations may taunt, “Where is their God?” But our response will always
be, “Our God is in heaven and does as He pleases” (v. 3). However, if we are
honest, we can admit it is sometimes difficult to see this.
Repeatedly, Scripture reminds us of God’s
all-pervasive sovereignty. “The Lord has established His throne in the heavens,
and His sovereignty rules over all” (Psalm 103:19, NASB). “The Most High rules
over the kingdom of men and gives it to whom He will and sets over it the
lowliest of men” (Daniel 4:17). In fact, God’s sovereign control is so
meticulous that every roll of a dice or flip of a coin is determined by Him
(see Proverbs 16:33). Thus, God decides the outcome of every NFL game that goes
to overtime.
Why So Much Suffering?
But the question remains: If God really is in
total control, why is the world so filled with evil and suffering? Upon a
moment’s reflection, one can see that this is a tragedy-stricken world. We see
bitter racism, hostile international aggression, lawsuits filed between those
who once professed undying love for each other, and terrible diseases
afflicting little babies. How are we to make sense of this conundrum? This
question quickly flees the realm of the theoretical when either you or someone you
love is struck by grief, tragedy, or betrayal.
In the biblical worldview, we are reminded that
all suffering, disease, and death is the result of Adam’s fall into sin (see
Romans 5:12). Although he was one man, that rebellion had a cataclysmic effect
on all creation. We may downplay the seriousness of sin, but it always has
consequences that extend even to the creation we inhabit. The natural world is
subject to frustration, in “bondage to corruption,” and “groaning together in
the pains of childbirth until now” (Romans 8:20-22). Adam led the way, but by
extension, the whole human race is described as being in revolt against our
Maker, suppressing the truth that He is righteous and we are not (Romans
1:18-21; 3:10).
It is into this broken world that God sent His
dearly beloved Son to suffer alongside us as a human being and ultimately bear
the infinite debt we owed for opposing God’s design and purpose, so that we
might be totally forgiven and reconciled to Him (2 Corinthians 5:18-21). God
loved us even when we hated Him (Romans 5:8-11). Jesus, the God-man, can
“sympathize with our weaknesses,” pain, and frustrations, because He lived as
one of us, “yet without sin” (Hebrews 4:15). In other words, God has proven
through the cross that He has not abandoned us. Because of Christ’s atoning
work, one day He will usher in a new creation where there will be no more pain,
tears, or death (Revelation 21:1-5). We must cling to this unspeakably precious
truth. At this point, you may be thinking, That
is all true, but what about the suffering we still have to deal with today?
“I Am Yahweh, Who Does All These Things”
Many have proposed the solution is admitting
God’s limited ability or knowledge, but Scripture everywhere rules that out.[1] Apparently, our comfort in
suffering cannot be that God tried His best, but was simply unaware or unable
to do anything about it. Remarkably, God often emphasizes the extent of His
sovereignty in the very context in which the most heinous evil is described
(see Genesis 45:5-8; 50:15-20; Acts 2:22-23; 4:27-28). Isaiah makes this very
point when he quotes God declaring how He will equip the ungodly King Cyrus to
accomplish His purpose.
“I am the LORD, and there is no other,
besides me there is no God;
I equip you, though you do not know me,
that people may know, from the rising of the sun
and from the west, that there is none besides me;
I am the LORD, and there is no other.
I form light and create darkness,
I make well-being and create calamity,
I am the LORD, who does all these things.”
(Isaiah 45:5-7)
Notice God intentionally describes the full spectrum over which He has control: “I form light and create darkness, I make well-being and create calamity, I am the LORD, who does all these things” (v. 7). The Hebrew word for “calamity” is ra (רָע) , which is most often translated “evil.” Although we may hesitate to credit God with having perfect control over all evil, our Lord is not. God seems to be going out of His way in Isaiah 45:5-7 to declare His sovereignty in all its fullness. Both good and evil occur according to His providential will. God is obviously not the direct cause of evil — He is spotless and holy. Nevertheless, He indirectly permits every instance of evil. If He did not, He would not really be sovereign. In fact, if something happened outside of His control, He would not truly be Yahweh, the God of Scripture. That is the whole point of saying, “I am Yawheh, and there is no other. I form light and create darkness; I make well-being and create calamity; I am Yawheh, who does all these things” (vv. 6b-7). God is the one who purposefully “works all things according to the counsel of His will” while nevertheless remaining perfectly righteous in all His ways (Ephesians 1:11).
The Greatest Comfort in Suffering
So, what’s the point? Just this: there is untold comfort in knowing and
believing that God really is in control over all of creation. When pain and
suffering rock our world, we can easily feel like we are drowning in a current
of chaotic emotions. Fighting desperately to keep our head above water, we can
struggle to believe that God is even real in those moments. Isaiah says Yahweh
is a God who at times seems to hide Himself (Isaiah 45:15).
However paradoxical it may seem
initially, the thing that will bring us the most hope and solace in the midst
of our suffering is the reality of God’s absolute control – the truth that
nothing can ultimately thwart His sovereign will. No matter how many times we
get knocked to the ground, we can know that our King is never knocked off His
throne. That is why we can trust Him when He says, “Turn to me and be saved,
all the ends of the earth! For I am God, and there is no other” (v. 22).
This is not a provisional salvation, but an assured “everlasting
salvation” (v. 17). If God truly is sovereign, then we can bank on
His promise to use every instance of evil in our life to bring about His good
purposes. We can be certain that our suffering is not meaningless. “And we know
that for those who love God all things work
together for good, for those who are called according to His purpose” (Romans
8:28). Perhaps no truth is more comforting while we walk through pain and
suffering than knowing that in the midst of all the chaos and confusion, God is
working for our ultimate good and His everlasting glory.
Obviously, His moral will can be resisted by His
rebellious creatures.[2] We’re
not merely pawns on the cosmic chessboard, but free moral agents who are
responsible for the choices we make. Yet, even this is only because He, the
omnipotent Creator, allows us to go our own way. God’s providential plan
for the universe — even His meticulous sovereignty — can never be
thwarted by human evil. Think of it: He can even choose to rescue His people
through a wicked man like Cyrus, who doesn’t even know Him (Isaiah 45:1, 4-5).
That is why He is a God worthy of our total allegiance and worship (v. 23).
When suffering afflicts us, we are often surprised by it, but God never is surprised by our suffering. And that is the truth that will be our lifeline pulling us through the agony of hardship.
[1]
“Ah, Lord GOD! It is you who have made the heavens and the earth by your great
power and by your outstretched arm! Nothing is too hard for you” (Jeremiah
32:17; also see v. 27; Matthew 19:26; Luke 1:37). “Even before a word is on my
tongue, behold, O LORD, you know it altogether” (Psalm 139:4; also see Jeremiah
23:24; Daniel 2:22; Matthew 6:4).
[2]
Think of any time we break one of the Ten Commandments, which are an expression
of His holy will for human life.
“‘To whom then will you liken Me that I would be his equal?’ says the Holy One” (Isaiah 40:25).
Theologian A. W. Tozer once said, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” That is a thought-provoking statement, isn’t it? There seems to be a whole world of ideas resting on Tozer’s conclusion. He went on to say, “For this reason the gravest question before the Church is always God Himself, and the most portentous fact about any man is not what he at a given time may say or do, but what he in his deep heart conceives God to be like. We tend by a secret law of the soul to move toward our mental image of God.” [1]
In other words, our view of God will always influence what we, His image-bearers, aspire to be — whether we are aware of it or not. How we answer the single question “What is God like?” tells us a great deal about ourselves. As many have put it, we become like what we worship.
So what is your view of God? Is He stern and demanding? Is He persistently jovial like Santa Claus? Is He loving? Is He distant? Is He everywhere but still hard to find? Is He even real? Is He disappointed all the time? Or what about this one: is He so incredibly compassionate that He is willing to suffer with you and even die for you? I wonder how you might answer any one of these questions. When you stop to think about it, to ask such questions is to put your finger on the most fundamental issue of life. What is God like? What could possibly be a more important question to consider? The purpose of the entire universe hinges on God’s existence, nature, and character.
In the Beginning
The Gospel of John begins with this astounding claim about Jesus of Nazareth: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him was not anything made that was made” (John 1:1-3). Then John tells us that this Word who “was God” did something we struggle to even wrap our minds around. “And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen His glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth” (v. 14). The unseen Creator (v. 3) and Son of God (v. 14) made Himself visible to the world.
At this point, our minds, hungry for answers, begin to bump up against their limits. How does the infinite, all-powerful God of perfect majesty become a helpless and tiny human baby, completely dependent on His young mother? John does not say the Word ceased being the infinite God; instead, He added humanity to His divinity. In this way, the God of the universe made Himself approachable, tangible, and truly knowable. To the average Joe, this Word-made-flesh would have looked so ordinary. He did not hover above the ground everywhere He went. His face did not emit a paranormal glow. And He certainly wasn’t ensconced in an effervescent cloud everywhere He traveled. Instead, this God-man not only appeared every bit as human as you and me, He actually was.
In verse 17, John elaborates: “For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.” The great deliverer Moses revealed certain things about who God is, through the law. The law expressed God’s goodness, justice, and holiness. It also expressed His compassion. When Moses brazenly pled with God to show him His glory, God rejected his request — at least partially (Exodus 33:18-20). Essentially, God told him, “I can’t do that, Moses. You’d die if you came into contact with the fullness of My glory.”
Yahweh, Yahweh
Therefore, God revealed Himself to Moses in a different way, by pairing His eternal Name “Yahweh”[2] (which He first revealed to Moses back in Exodus 3) with a description of His character. God took Moses up onto a mountain and “covered” him with His hand while the full radiance of His divine being passed by. The quivering Moses would only be allowed to witness the tail end of God’s glory so that he could live another day. But in that mountaintop experience God Himself proclaimed to Moses — and, by extension, to us — what He is like.
“Yahweh, Yahweh, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the children’s children, to the third and fourth generation” (Exodus 34:6-7).
Here, in the law (or Torah), God’s perfect character is revealed. Yahweh tells us He is merciful, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love, faithful, and forgiving. Yet, here is where we meet one of Scripture’s classic paradoxes. Right after saying He is both ready and eager to forgive sin, God tells us He “will by no means clear the guilty” (v. 7). How are we to make sense of this? Doesn’t a willingness to forgive imply a willingness to clear the guilty? No, and here we see the coming together of two fundamental truths about God. He is more gracious, loving, and forgiving than we could ever dare to imagine. However, He is simultaneously more just, holy, and pure than we ever thought possible. So where does this leave us? How do we solve this apparent enigma?
Scripture repeatedly affirms that we have a big problem, and that is our sin. The Bible tells us “there is no one who does not sin” (1 Kings 8:46). Although we are prone to think of ourselves as good people (Proverbs 20:6), God knows our hearts. And His verdict is clear: “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us” (1 John 1:8). When we consider all this, there seems to be one disturbing conclusion: we are the guilty of Exodus 34:7. Therefore, we each have much at stake in understanding how God can be both forgiving and just.
Grace and Truth
Jumping back to the first chapter of John’s Gospel, let’s see that statement in verse 17 once again. “For the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.” Now think about this. Grace and truth are really the twin concepts above that we are trying to reconcile. God is supremely gracious by nature and eager to forgive sin. On the other hand, if even a human judge decided to let a serial killer go free because he showed himself sufficiently sorry, you would not accept that. You would not call such a judge extraordinarily forgiving; you would call him corrupt. Why? Because to let the murderer go would be unjust.
Similarly, overlooking sin would be unjust because it would be treating the serious crime of rebellion against the King of Heaven as a minor infraction, which it is not. It would not be in keeping with the truth. John is telling us that grace and truth are fully realized, revealed, and reconciled in Jesus Christ alone. In a sense, the paradox of God’s statement about His own character in Exodus 34 has been hanging in tension all through Scripture — that is, until the arrival of Jesus.
In Jesus, God’s character is embodied and illuminated with vivid and vibrant colors in high definition. “No one has ever seen God; the only God, who is at the Father’s side, He has made Him known” (John 1:18). In the original Greek, it actually says that Jesus has exegeted or fully explained God. That is, in Jesus we see what God is really like. That is why Jesus can later refer to Himself as “I Am” (Yahweh) (8:58) and even tell His disciples, “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father” (14:9).
Look at Jesus
But again, how can God both forgive sin and not overlook sin? How can grace and truth be reconciled? When Jesus first began His earthly ministry, John the Baptist heralded Him as “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (1:29). With that statement, John pointed ahead to the cross, where Jesus, like a sacrificial lamb, would lay down His life for the world. 700 years before Christ’s crucifixion, the prophet Isaiah wrote:
“But He was pierced for our transgressions; He was crushed for our iniquities; upon Him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with His wounds we are healed.” (Isaiah 53:5)
We can be forgiven of our sin, but only if we believe in the One who bore our sin for us and was punished in our stead. That is why God’s character is never more vividly portrayed for all the world to see than in the cross of Jesus Christ, where both His astounding love and His perfect justice are on full display. As the psalter so beautifully writes, “Lovingkindess and truth have met together; Righteousness and peace have kissed each other” (Psalm 85:10). Scripture says that when we place all our trust in Christ’s sacrificial death and victorious resurrection, we are forgiven, cleared of all guilt, and found righteous in Christ (Romans 10:9-10; 2 Corinthians 5:21; Galatians 2:16).
So how do we know what God is like? Look at Jesus. More specifically, look at Jesus on the cross. There, on Calvary, with hands outstretched to embrace a world that has rejected Him, we see what God is like.
Photo credit: Rose Barraza
[1] A. W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy (Zeeland, MI: Reformed Church Publications, 2017), 1.
[2] In most English translations, the Hebrew name of God, “Yahweh,” is translated simply as “the LORD” (all caps), but a closer translation is more like “I Am” or “He Is.” In other words, Yahweh is the self-existent, eternal, and personally present Creator.
“Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God” (Romans 13:1).
You might be wondering if I really have the gall to tell you how you should vote in the sense of recommending for whom or what specifically you should vote. But that is not my intention here. In fact, to do so would undermine much of what I have to say in this post. Instead, my aim is to challenge followers of Jesus Christ to consider thoughtfully both the manner and mindset with which they will vote this year.
It is a painful truism to say that our nation is deeply divided, particularly in the sphere of politics. Rarely has our nation witnessed such stark and severe polarization between conservatives and liberals. In the United States, one’s “political party” has practically become a euphemism for which side of the nation’s battle lines you have decided to take your stand. In the wake of the 2016 presidential election, a seemingly endless stream of vitriolic verbal attacks were lobbed back and forth like hand grenades on social media. In the midst of all the upheaval, many simply tried to duck for cover, fearing the next venomous insult might strike them.
How did it come to this? While the two-party structure has been in place in the United States since before the Civil War, rarely has so much hatred been spewed between the two parties. Like a sailor struggling to cross the deck of a ship being rocked by an intense storm, the nation feels unsteady. The Right and the Left have become ideological fortresses so cemented in their way of thinking that there seems to be no signs of fruitful dialogue. As a nation, I fear we have lost the art of civil persuasion. Instead, we have resorted to mindless mud-slinging and sardonic put-downs. Simply put, we need help.
I want to encourage you to think carefully about who you are as a Christian and how this should utterly transform the way we approach the voting booth. To do this, we need to look at Scripture. God has offered us the help we so desperately need in these politically trying times.
Christians Should Vote Biblically
The Christian’s source for truth and wisdom is Scripture. Therefore, in every area that we vote, we should be asking, “What does the Bible say on this matter?” The Bible is an ancient book, but it is never outdated. “All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17, NIV). That statement is as true today as it was when Paul wrote it. It is because of that first clause — all Scripture is God-breathed — that everything else follows. We can be fully “equipped for every good work” (including voting) because our God has actually spoken to us and not left us to work out everything according to our own fallible wisdom. Political opinions come and go. Cultural controversies have their day in the sun. But “the word of our God will stand forever” (Isaiah 40:8, ESV). On any issue we vote on, we should make it our goal to seek biblical wisdom on the matter.
Your Identity Is in Christ, Not a Political Party
This world is constantly trying to stuff people into certain categories, be they social, political, economic, or ethnic. You must be this and not that. But the cross of Jesus Christ forever stands as a witness against this way of thinking. “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). Your most fundamental identity is not dictated by whether you check the red or the blue box. Rather, it is found in Christ alone.
Don’t fall into the trap of thinking of yourself most fundamentally as belonging to either the Republican party or the Democratic party. Recognize the deeper and eternal reality underneath all those transitory layers. Here’s an important question to consider: At the absolute core of who you are, do you identify more as an American or as a follower of Jesus Christ? Just remember that earthly kingdoms, by their very nature, will not stand forever. Only the kingdom of God will last into eternity.
Your Vote Is Important, but Not Ultimate
When Jesus stood before Pilate, bleeding and in chains, the Roman governor viewed his own power as ultimate. Did he have to answer to Caesar? Of course, but Caesar was over 1,000 miles away. When Jesus refused to respond to his interrogation, Pilate was indignant.
So Pilate tried another tactic, reminding Him who was in charge here. “You will not speak to me? Do you not know that I have authority to release you and authority to crucify you?” (John 19:10). In today’s vernacular, Pilate was confidently asserting, “Just remember, I’m the big cheese around here.” As is often the case for those in seats of power, Pilate hoped Jesus would at least acknowledge his supremacy.
Instead, Jesus calmly turned to him and replied, “You would have no authority over me at all unless it had been given you from above. Therefore he who delivered me over to you has the greater sin” (v. 11). Wow. In other words, “Pilate, you wouldn’t even be standing in this position unless My Father had given it to you. You are actually a servant of God’s greater purposes in spite of yourself.” This is true of every government official according to Romans 13:1: “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God.”
Our votes are important, but they are not ultimate. Why? Because human governments are not ultimate. God alone is sovereign over the nations (see Psalm 2). As Daniel said of the one true God while living in a land full of false gods, “Blessed be the name of God forever and ever, to whom belong wisdom and might. He changes times and seasons; He removes kings and sets up kings; He gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to those who have understanding” (Daniel 2:20-21). The only reason anyone is in any government position at all is because God determined it so. “He removes kings and sets up kings.”
Pilate was a wicked man willing to slaughter Jews in order to reassert his power (Luke 13:1). Yet Jesus says that God had good purposes for this evil man in office. Voting matters, but only because God can use even the most heinous persons to accomplish His mission in the world. Human freedom does not nullify the sovereignty of God. So vote, but vote with the recognition that ultimately you do not place anyone in any position of authority. That is the job of our sovereign God alone, and we should be thankful for that.
Vote with the End in Mind
Politicians promise many things. After a while, many of these promises seem a bit empty. However, there are promises found in Scripture that the follower of Jesus can bank their life on. The brightest, fullest, and most audacious hope one can ever dream of is found in the pages of Scripture. I’m talking about resurrection, the ultimate goal of the Christian life. On that Day, when the curtain rolls back, the world will see Jesus for who He truly is, and His kingdom will be unveiled and finally consummated in full. It will be said, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away” (Revelation 21:3-4).
Even today, however, Jesus rules from His throne in heaven. He’s not in the tomb; He hasn’t been for nearly 2,000 years. From the moment He conquered death in history, Jesus “must reign until he has put all his enemies under his feet. The last enemy to be destroyed is death,” (1 Corinthians 15:25-26). As we vote this year, followers of the risen Lord must vote with this hope in mind. This settled peace and assurance will keep us from angry name-calling and hostile aggression whenever the volatile topic of politics comes up. Ultimately, we are not awaiting our candidate’s election. We are awaiting the trumpet blast, and the return of our now reigning Lord (v. 52).