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Friday, July 02, 2010

How Do You See God?

One of the greatest effects of sin's curse when Adam fell in the Garden of Eden was the way it tainted humanity's view of God. Until he sinned, Adam had walked through the garden with God every evening. What a time of intimacy that must have been!

But everything changed when sin entered in. Immediately Adam was filled with fear of God and hid himself. He imagined that God would come storming down upon him in anger and judgment because of His sin. He couldn't have been more wrong. God came that evening for His daily walk. There is no evidence that He came in anger with intentions to condemn Adam. He came for His walk! I wonder what would have happened if Adam had come running out to God from his hiding place and have cried out, "Father, I've done a terrible thing! Help me!" I can only imagine. However, that was not to be. From this moment onward, Adam wouldn't see God clearly again, but would only see a distorted caricature of the true God.

From this day forward, he would smear his own sense of guilt and self-condemnation on the face of God. Adam's sin didn't change God at all, but it radically changed Adam. From now on, He would see God as a Punitive Judge who is first and foremost interested in how we behave. He lost the awareness of the reality that our God is not a harsh Judge but a loving Father whose interest and concern is our welfare. He doesn't hate sin because of its moral implications. He hates it because of what it does to those He loves.

The whole Adamic race would, from that day forward, show all the signs of sin's infection. They would no longer see God as Love but rather would see Him as a Legalist who scrutinizes their behavior for infractions that needed to be judged.

God isn't into punishment. Is there a punishment for sin? Of course, but sin brings its own punishment. The wages (punishment/penalty) of sin is death but be sure that it is sin that punishes, not our Father. (Discipline is another subject. That has to do with being "discipled" when our Father allows us to experience sin's consequence for the purpose of lovingly teaching us its dangers.) Our Father's heart is to pour out His love on us. After all, God is love and Love can do nothing that is unloving or He would contradict His own nature.

Legalism would have us believe that in a world where God isn't out to punish us for our sins, people will go crazy sinning. They think that the only thing that regulates our behavior is Marshall Law imposed on us by heaven. Behave or else. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Paul wrote, "The love of God compels me." It isn't punishment but Agape that motivates us toward godly lifestyles. The need of mankind today is to understand the love of God. When we understand that His interest in us is that we fully live the life He intends, which can never be motivated by fear, we will begin to find the rest that Adam knew before He sinned.

(This blog is excerpted from this week's Sunday Preaching broadcast now online at www.gracewalk.org.)

8 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for this post and for your blog. It brings tears to my eyes to think that Adam, and the rest of us, have a distorted view of God.

    He is love. I want to be like Paul and say, "The love of God compels me." I'm learning more and more about this Christian life. I am so thankful for your books and for others who are teaching me.

    Sheryl

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  2. Steve,

    I love your writing...totally on board with you here. But what do you do with passages like Rev 14:9-11? esp v.10.."in his presence" is particularly disturbing to me. I tend to just throw my hands up and say, "Well, I just don't understand that...and probably never will. I'm just going to have to trust that You are love Father, b/c of your revelation of love in Christ, and b/c you say you are, but You sure don't make it easy with stuff like this." What do you do with stuff like that Steve?

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  3. I do the same thing you do - I grapple with it :) We know our Father is LOVE so when we encounter anything in Scripture that appears to suggest otherwise, we can know there's an understanding of it we just don't have right now.

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  4. Steve, thanks for this post! I'm currently discussing Darin Huffard's book " The misunderstood God with my brother and his Assit Pastor. Bob, the assist, is really concerned with the Darin not being more concerned with God's justice. So many are still caught up with that and the going to hell factor, that He is a HOLY God first and Father some where else down the line.

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  5. He is indeed a "holy God" but that word simply means He is "set apart" not that He is a meticulous moralist who scrutinizes our behavior looking for the slightest missteps. His holiness also speaks the quality of love He has for us - it's other-worldly and set apart from the kind of conditional love mankind knows or understands apart from Him.

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  6. Good words Steve!

    I have also read 'The Misunderstood God' by darin hufford. I highly recommend it to anyone who loves Steve's books.

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  7. I love the distinction between sin's punishment and God's discipline. Great post Steve!

    Regarding the comment above on justice: Surely a grace-based view of a loving Father will give us a desire to see His justice in an unjust world. I don't understand why those clothed with his righteousness fear his justice. We have no reason to. In fact, deep down I believe we long for it. Whenever we see a single mum battling with illness trying to raise kids or an infant getting cut down by a drunk driver, we tend to think "come Lord Jesus come." That's a cry for justice. That's like saying "Come O King of Justice! (See Mt 12:18, Is 42:3-4.)

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  8. I believe "how we see God" is advantaged greatly by our genuine conversion salvation being born again. We cannot see redemptively how God's nature is good in a far perspective without it. Somewhere in our God-consciousness we like to think our world is a playground and exploration is possible as far as the Kingdom of God is concerned and making Jesus Lord of our lives connected to how we follow God's Holy Spirit. We see the death sin brings and grace in the Lord to follow a different drummer than sin has and we glory in the Lord in Paul's hardships knowing that He could be that exalted in seated position in the Heavenlies and be in touch reality with life down here. He like our Lord Jesus made truly great the rightness of being in right standing with God through faith in a grace walk. We no longer live under threat inside or out to a harsh judge or condemning voice from God. We look for signs of God's justice here on earth as it is in heaven while hallowing God's Name as our Heavenly Father. And so it goes we see the unfolding of the nature of God through the face of Jesus Christ in an exchanged life in how life evolves and progreses. Quality of living is exponentially more blessed as we "choose" to look at people pityingly as God does and act accordingly and think with attitude with mercy and compassion! We can love with real love not the unreal facimile of this world system. And when a soul is won to Christ and we pray the Lord of the Harvest to send forth laborers into the harvest the cycle of winning continues only in this Kingdom God gets the glory and we are His pawns. Discipline is seen high above and only in regard to sin bringing death to our consciences and our having at times to learn from it's consequences the discipling of a Good Father! Amen Steve great blog.

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