Saturday, January 16, 2010

The Fullness of His Goodness

And the LORD God said, It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him a help meet for him (Genesis 2:18.)

God created a lack of good that we might know the fullness of His goodness. Here Adam was as good as any man has ever been, save our Savior. After much benediction in chapter one, here in chapter two is a malediction, “It is not good that the man should be alone”. It is an orchestrated condition in the order of God, “the good” experiencing the “not good” to bring about the perfect good.

God, in this verse, reveals His concern for Adam’s need and His intention to supply His need: “I will make him a help meet for him.” Yet with an infallible objective to supply, God does not supply in the most immediate way. God contemplates our needs constantly. He has in mind at all times what He desires to do for us. This is the relationship with God we were created to enjoy. Like a man contemplates what he wants to do for a woman, God has us on His mind. And He gives it to us so that we will know Him, so we will love Him, so we will see His glory. Such requires His arrangement, His plan, His time, and His way, His will, and His work that we may come to know the fullness of His goodness.

He situates Adam in a position to view his own need and his Lord's supply of his need. Adam must first look for provision where it cannot be found, to come to know where all he needs can always be found. And there among the animals, his needs were not provided for. Provision comes not from that which is below but from above. In our day of great disdain for order; moreover God’s order, we do well to note that the river never flows up from the valley but down from the mountain.

Man alone is not good, yet it was good that God made him alone for therein God made opportunity to glorify Himself. And herein the question, “Why do bad things happen to good people?” is answered in the only instance where a common man can truly be said to be good. Simply put, His people are not yet as good as they can be and they need experience the fullness of God’s goodness that they may become better and better.

And that is God, working the “not good” all together for “the good,” that we may experience His goodness. He has for us a holistic intent. Jeremiah writes, “For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the LORD, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.”

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Shattering the Images

Thou shalt not make thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the waters beneath the earth. (Deuteronomy 5:8)

What drives the worship of men? Is it not what they want; that is, what they want to be. Yes the Israelites made golden calves. But why? Because they really believed God looked like a cow? No! Because they wanted to become a nation like Egypt, they did what Egyptians did. The image of a perfect, prestigious and powerful nation was resident in their minds and they pursued and worshipped that image until it manifested two things: golden calves and the anger of God. They did not worship bulls they worship Egypt. Yet they did not worship Egypt, they worshipped the likeness of Egypt, which likeness they wanted to assume.

The real image resides where the graven image originated: in the mind of the worshipper. More existential than the idol itself, is what one believes about the graven image, for this mental idol drives the worship of any physical idol: what one sees himself as, or where one conceive herself as being: the possession, the posture, the prestige. A young man plagued by the abandonment of his dad is on the search for his perfect dad which reality resides only in his mind. Yet it drives his rebellion toward all authority figures. A longing to be married guides a woman into promiscuity, as she stares at herself being married to each man she encounters. That adulterous guy who always imagined himself to be the lady's man has never settled down in his own marriage, wagering the wellbeing of his family, as he exploits woman after woman. And where did that image come from? It was made up of three components: lack, want and hurt. And that idle is often walled in by the sentimental belief that lack, want, and/or hurt legalizes the idol.

Like Christ, the image demands faithfulness, shamelessness, and yet therein is found not the bliss and satisfaction imagined, but only the momentary pleasure of sin that quickly fades into a lifetime of pain. One is sold a scourge, the curse, an endless cycle of hurt, a hopeless hope, shameless shame, and a dead dream that will let him die desperately wondering and looking outside the will of God for fulfillment in a place where it can never be found. Oh yes he will find something: wasted time, wasted opportunities, wasted relationships, wasted resources, wasted efforts and energy. Driven to exponential sins by an idolatrous image that is now set before God, above God.

We, the saints, the warriors of God, must with the power of Christ destroy this false god that has gained dominion over the life of this man or woman. And replace that image with the image of Christ. Paul writes "Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ." It has been made number one, above Christ and to the consequential detriment of the person.

War must be waged to destroy that image as God destroyed the statue of Dagon in the pagan temple. And who is this person, but the temple of the Holy Spirit in whom God will stand alone in? God will cleanse and claim every place of worship by the entrance of His presence, for therein is light and thereby darkness is gone. The glory of Christ is revealed and the pretention of the idol is exposed and the power of the idol is expelled.