A Feel for God
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A landscape painter once explained how he had visited a certain view for years to have it absorbed within his soul before putting brush to canvas. Having gained a good feel for the vista, the painting of it came automatically, he said. He just understood the land in his particular way and was able to express that in beautiful paintings wit
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A Feel for God - Michael J Spyker
Chapter 1 – A feel for God
Much of how God is presented is derived from the religious knowledge industry: the Jewish and Christian traditions and the many books written over millennia. What God is like and the nature of humanity has been continually interpreted in accordance with the wisdom and culture of the times. In these modern days, I have been a keen participant in this search for understanding. It has shaped me and given insights I treasure. Is it then the theologically educated who best know what God is about? I wouldn’t think so.
Jesus, for one, had a low regard for how the Jewish religious leaders of his day were guiding the common person. Often he was at loggerheads with the religious authorities and at a given moment accused them of having the Devil as their father (John 8: 44). His own conversations with people were simple and relevant to daily life. Frequently, they were also confusing. What Jesus said then remains open to discussion also today whereby a little knowledge may come in handy. Often though it needs a feel for God, sensed within the soul, to have the Lord best understood.
A transcendent presence in our world has been detected by people from the beginning of human existence. In need of finding a measure of security under this unknown greater reality modes of worship and story-telling evolved to appease the gods and encourage their engagement in human pursuits. Holy places and idols became part of this effort. The figure of an idol could represent nature, like a golden calf, or gods that had a human appearance like in ancient Greece and Rome. Hindu gods may display a mix of human and animal in their conceptualisation while to Buddhism the idea of god is totally foreign. Accordingly, it is suggested that Buddhism is more a philosophy than a true religion. Whatever the case, it does engage the transcendental realm.
The Israelites understood that One God, who should never be depicted, is what interacting with the divine realm is about. This God is so magnificent and beyond human reality that it is blasphemy to verbalise the name Yahweh. Not so secondary names like Elohim. God is holy and all-knowing, creator of the universe. God could be fierce as well as benevolent. The history of Israel as presented in the Old Testament shows how the Jews interpreted the presence of this majesty dwelling above and amongst them.
The arrival of Jesus of Nazareth walking through Israel declaring himself the Son of God suggested a shift in the understanding of God that the religious leaders of the Jews could not accept. One can hardly blame them. People were encouraged by Jesus to call the magnificent, holy God their heavenly Father. The divine majesty thought to be dwelling far away and approachable in fear and trembling was suggested to be fully relational and imminently present. The significance of this was only grasped over time with the development of Christianity.
Jesus selected the idea of a heavenly Father as culturally best in describing what God is really like. Like a good father, who is capable and who cares. God is without gender and can carry the name Mother equally so. Medieval mystic Lady Julian of Norwich referred to Jesus our Mother, which considering that all of creation has been birthed in Christ, makes good sense. The mystery of God is wonderful.
Cognitive understanding alone will not do justice to this mystery. It must be penetrated by intuition also – by having a