How We See Things LF Ed
How We See Things LF Ed
How We See Things LF Ed
We See
Things
A Christian Perspective
By R. Herbert
© 2016, Living Belief Books – an Imprint of
LivingWithFaith.org & TacticalChristianity.org
ISBN 978-1-68419-061-4
Cover: Base image: Couple sitting above the city under stars.
© by elwynn.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Afterword
INTRODUCTION
When you look up on a starlit night, what do you see? For those of
us who live in the glare of modern city lights, it may not be much.
But some three thousand years ago, under the clear desert skies of
ancient Israel, King David thought that he could clearly see God’s
invisible hand in the starry creation:
The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the
work of his hands. Day after day they pour forth speech; night
after night they reveal knowledge (Psalm 19:1-2).
Like King David, most who read this book will probably also see
God’s hand in the creation. That the vastness of the heavens and
everything in them could come from nothing, without cause and
design, seems unimaginable to us. Yet although some people feel
they see the clearest evidence of God in the creation and in events in
their own lives and in the lives of others, there remain those who
see nothing there at all. It certainly isn’t a matter of wishful
thinking or lack of education or intelligence on the part of those
who feel they see an unseen God, as some cynics would like to
believe. The fact that there are equally intelligent and emotionally
mature people on both sides of the “Is there a God?” debate
demolishes that fiction.
So why is it, then, that some people see God where others see
nothing? The apostle Paul gives at least part of the answer in
affirming that:
1 Kings 17 tells the story of how the prophet Elijah fled to the
region of Sidon on the Palestinian coast during a great drought and
famine in Israel. Elijah was led to the home of a poor widow and her
son, and when Elijah asked for a little water and a small piece of
bread the woman replied:
“As surely as the Lord your God lives,” she replied, “I don’t
have any bread—only a handful of flour in a jar and a little
olive oil in a jug. I am gathering a few sticks to take home and
make a meal for myself and my son, that we may eat it—and
die” (1 Kings 17:12).
Elijah told the woman that the God of Israel had promised that if
she did as he asked, “The jar of flour will not be used up and the jug
of oil will not run dry until the day the Lord sends rain on the land”
(1 Kings 17:14). The woman complied and sure enough, after that
meal and others there was still food every day for the woman and
her son as well as for Elijah, “For the jar of flour was not used up
and the jug of oil did not run dry, in keeping with the word of the
Lord spoken by Elijah” (1 Kings 17:16).
This situation must have continued for a while because the Bible
reports, “Some time later the son of the woman who owned the
house became ill. He grew worse and worse, and finally stopped
breathing. She said to Elijah, ‘What do you have against me, man of
God? Did you come to remind me of my sin and kill my son?’” (1
Kings 17:17-18). Elijah prayed over the young man and God
restored the youth’s life. It is only then that the woman said to
Elijah, “Now I know that you are a man of God and that the word of
the Lord from your mouth is the truth” (1 Kings 17:24).
Are we like the Sidonian woman in so often missing the
continuing everyday miracles of our lives and losing faith – despite
those small miracles – when severe problems come on us? We read
the story and wonder, “How could she not have noticed the ongoing
miracle of the lasting flour and oil – especially when Elijah told her
it would be so?” But would the woman read the story of our lives
and wonder, in the same way, why we did not notice the things that
were worked out for us and others around us?
Perhaps this is part of what the Prophet Isaiah referred to when
he spoke the words quoted by Jesus: “You will be ever hearing but
never understanding; you will be ever seeing but never perceiving”
(Isaiah 6:9 quoted in Matthew 13:14). Certainly the “hearing” refers
to hearing the word of God and not understanding it, but the
“seeing and never perceiving” must surely refer to things we witness
but simply do not grasp their significance.
Let us remember the story of the woman of Sidon when we next
face a difficult situation. Rather than fearing the lack of some large
miracle when we need help, perhaps the way of faith is that we
remind ourselves of all the small miracles that brought us to the
point where we are now. But it’s a question we can all ask ourselves
at any time. Are we seeing the ongoing “flour and oil” in our lives?
What are the small miracles that we are missing?
4. GETTING PROBLEMS IN
PERSPECTIVE
“What you see depends not only on what you look at, but also
where you look from.”
Few people ever think about the fact that they had to learn to see.
Even after infants have opened their eyes, they still have to learn to
see things in perspective in order to understand and properly
interact with the world around them. This is because the human
brain receives millions of nerve impulse messages through the eyes
and must learn to organize those messages in a meaningful way in
order for us to “see” a picture that makes sense to us.
That’s where perspective comes in. Visual perspective is what
allows us to organize the individual points of light our eyes register
into a picture that matches reality – and that process has to be
learned. Spiritual sight is no different. In order for us to truly
comprehend our purpose in living and to understand how we
should live our lives, we must learn to “see” spiritually. First, our
spiritual “eyes” must be opened – something that only God can do
for us (Psalm 119:18, Ephesians 1:18) – but even then we have much
to learn in order to begin to see things in true spiritual perspective.
We have all seen children’s drawings and smiled at the way the
figures and objects in the landscape are placed on the paper in an
unrealistic manner – without fitting together properly. A person
may look as big as a house and things that are supposed to be far
away may appear no further than objects in the foreground. It is
only as children develop that they learn how to make their drawings
match reality by the use of perspective.
We discover, as we get older, that physical perspective depends
entirely on our position relative to the objects being viewed. If we
lie on the ground and place our eyes next to a small rock it will look
as big as – or larger than – a distant mountain. To see things as
they really are, we have to step away from the rock and closer to the
mountain so that we get better perspective and the rock looks as it
is – a tiny stone – and the mountain rears up as a great peak.
It’s easy to see the analogy here. For example, when we get too
close to the problems in our lives and focus on them, they seem
huge and fill our vision more than our mental picture of God. It is
only as we step back from the problems and closer to God that we
see both the problem and God in perspective – because perspective
depends on where we are looking from. Stepping back from
problems helps us in other ways. A mountain looks very different
from a mile away and from a foot away. Up close it may look like an
impassable barrier. From further away we see the passes on either
side that provide ways around that formidable peak.
This is more than just “looking on the bright side.” The old
saying that “We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or
rejoice because thorn bushes have roses” may have a valid point,
but it’s not a principle that will get us through the times we find
ourselves lying on the thorns. When all we can see is the problem
“in our face,” we need to point our face in another direction. That’s
why the Scriptures continually talk about “looking to God.” It’s not
just a trite aphorism. When the psalmist wrote “Look to the LORD
and his strength; seek his face always” (Psalm 105:4), he was talking
about our perspective in life.
Ultimately, the problems we experience will always seem bigger
the closer we are to them. When we keep perspective in mind, we
realize that the only way we can make our problems smaller is to
move closer to God. It’s an obvious principle, but one that we must
always strive to remember. Put another way, what we see in life will
always depend on what we choose to be close to. If we want to go
through life seeing smaller problems, we need to move closer to
God. We may still have problems, but we will better see them in
perspective.
5. BEHIND LIFE’S BLACK PATCHES
“If we look closely, we can see God speaking to us
…. beneath life’s problems.”
The young man sat alone in his cell staring at the letter.
Imprisoned in a country not friendly to Christianity, Matthew (not
his real name) was kept in relative isolation and the only contact he
had with the outside world was in the form of occasional heavily
censored letters he was allowed to receive from his family. The
letters had any words of encouragement – especially scripture
quotations – completely covered over by the heavy black markers of
the government prison censors.
In the long months Matthew had been imprisoned, he had come
to deeply resent those patches of blackness that cut him off from the
love of his family. Until today. Now, Matthew looked at the patches
of black obscuring much of the latest letter he had received and
smiled. Matthew was a happier man.
The truth of the situation had dawned on Matthew like a
personal revelation. He had come to see that the black marks and
patches on his letters did not obscure his family’s love for him –
they highlighted it. He saw that every obscuring black mark was
not a denial of the love felt for him, but proof of it. Sometimes he
could guess that there was a scripture behind the black ink from
quote marks not obscured at the beginning or end of the marking.
If the censors blacked out words individually he could guess from
a short word blacked out after the quote marks that it was probably
the reference to a quoted verse in Psalms, which his family knew
was his favorite book of the Bible. Very occasionally, if he held the
letter up to what light he had, he could make out faint traces of
what was written and have some idea of what was being said to him.
As time progressed, Matthew came to resent the black marks less
and less. Sometimes he would take out a letter and just look at the
marks, because he knew that behind them was the love of his
family. Understanding what lay behind the black marks – even
though he could not see through them – sustained Matthew until he
was eventually released.
Sometimes, when we go through the trials of life, it’s hard to see
God’s love for us. We may even come to resent the black marks and
clouds of life: the illnesses, job losses, persecutions, or whatever
seems to obscure God’s love and concern for us. But if we learn to
see them as we should, we can come to see behind the black patches
in our lives.
On occasion we may be able to make out the loving correction in
things that go wrong (Hebrews 12:6), but this is not always the case.
Often, like Job, we may not see that we are being given an
opportunity to learn or grow. We don’t always see God for the storm
– until we realize we are being taught something and we hear him
speaking through the dark clouds (Job 38:1) or through the dark
patches that seem to come between him and us.
Once we have committed ourselves to God, we can know that his
love is always behind the black patches in our own lives, even if we
may not see it clearly (1 Corinthians 13:12). We can remember that
every dark patch of life, although it might seem to obscure God's
love, in reality is being allowed to happen because it can be used to
teach, guide and form us or to help others in some way. We come to
realize that the black patches of life do not deny Gods’ love for us;
they actually affirm that it is there.
6. SEEING WITH OPENED EYES
“Open my eyes that I may see wonderful things
in your law” (Psalm 119:18).
This verse from the Psalms is perhaps the first one that comes to
mind when we think of seeing things from a spiritual perspective,
but what part of the Bible would you guess speaks the most about
seeing things with spiritual sight? It may surprise you to find that
the answer is the Gospel of Matthew.
The Book of Matthew has several clear themes, but one we often
do not see unless we are “looking” for it is that of “seeing”! We find
this theme expressed in many of the statements about Jesus and in
many of his recorded sayings. Christ’s ministry is introduced, in
fact, with a prophecy from the Old Testament on exactly this theme:
“the people living in darkness have seen a great light; on those
living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned”
(Matthew 4:16). Matthew continues to describe the teaching and
ministry of Jesus by often using the words “see” or “seeing” in a
metaphorical or spiritual sense of seeing beyond the physical.
Consider the following words of Jesus found in Matthew 13:
It’s easy to read these words of King David and to see them as
pleasant poetic thoughts, but if we put them in the context of
modern scientific knowledge regarding the cosmos they take on
added meaning. Today, we have a far better sense of the size of the
universe than David could have had, of course, and we are used to
thinking in terms of light years and stars untold millions of miles
away. But our mathematically-based knowledge may obscure the
fact that we cannot really comprehend just how small we are in
such a huge universe.
It’s helpful to try to realize that though we are less than a speck
on the earth and the earth is little more than a pebble compared to
our sun, the sun itself is only a speck when compared to the size of
our galaxy – and our galaxy is only a tiny dot within its system
which is itself no more than a speck within the universe! Put
another way, the entirety of our vast galaxy would only be the size
of a single blood cell compared to the size of the whole earth if our
galaxy were compared to the universe itself.
Yet despite our staggering insignificance in the physical scale of
things, the word of God reveals that our potential is greater than we
can imagine – to the same extent that we cannot fathom how small
we are on the physical scale! David continues his psalm with an
affirmation of the incredible worth of humanity: “You have made
them a little lower than the angels and crowned them with glory
and honor. You made them rulers over the works of your hands;
you put everything under their feet” (Psalm 8:5-6). Jesus himself
quoted David in saying “… You are ‘gods’; you are all sons of the
Most High” (Psalm 82:6, John 10:34), and the apostle John
developed this thought even further: “…now we are children of God,
and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know
that when Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him
as he is” (1 John 3:2).
So, as humans, we are simultaneously pathetically insignificant
and of incredible, almost indescribable, potential. To see ourselves
properly we must keep both those truths in mind. As Christians we
must learn to live between these extremes – we must never forget
our smallness in comparison to the creation and its Creator. We
must live joyfully – and worthily – in the knowledge of the great
potential the Creator has given us. As the Christian writer and
Holocaust survivor Corrie ten Boom wrote, we need to “Learn to see
great things great and small things small.”
In some cases we should learn to stress the appropriate view of
ourselves – as great or small – according to our particular life
circumstances. The apostle James wrote “Believers in humble
circumstances ought to take pride in their high position. But the
rich should take pride in their humiliation—since they will pass
away like a wild flower” (James 1:9-10). James means that we
should all aim for the middle – we should all aim to neither elevate
ourselves nor allow ourselves to forget the greatness of the position
to which we have been called. We who are nothing have been called
to inherit everything. The truth of that perspective forms the basis
of what we are going to see in the following chapters.
8. A MIRROR WE CAN TRUST
“Reality is a mirror the soul does not naturally seek.”
Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is
like a man who looks at his face in a mirror and, after looking
at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks
like. But whoever looks intently into the perfect law that gives
freedom, and continues in it—not forgetting what they have
heard, but doing it—they will be blessed in what they do
(James 1:23-25).
Some people are defined in their own eyes and in the eyes of others
by their accomplishments, others by their relationships, others
again by their education or experiences. There are clearly many
things that serve as defining aspects of our lives.
Yet, sadly, a great many people in this world would answer the
question “What three things most define individuals?” in a
remarkably similar way: “appearance, possessions, success.”
Although many are not so shallow, of course, hundreds of millions
of people would agree that these are perhaps the three physical
things that “define” an individual in the eyes of others more than
anything else.
But the Christian realizes that these three things are ultimately
meaningless, and that in the long run – at the end of our physical
lives – our looks, money, influence, and all such things will
disappear and that they certainly do not define who we are in the
eyes of God. So what qualities do affect how God sees us?
The answer is a surprisingly simple one and is found repeatedly
throughout the Bible. The three things that define us in God’s eyes
are our attitudes, our actions, and our words. We see this many
times in scriptures such as this example in the Book of Proverbs in
which God, in the personification of Wisdom, states: “… I hate pride
and arrogance, evil behavior and perverse speech” (Proverbs 8:13b)
– in other words: wrong attitudes, actions, and words.
What is especially interesting about this particular verse is that it
does not say that Wisdom hates “evil thoughts,” in addition to evil
behavior and evil speech, but elaborates on the area of attitude by
singling out the example of pride and arrogance. The verse makes
it clear that the God who looks on the heart (1 Samuel 16:7)
particularly dislikes a proud attitude – something which is
underscored by many other verses in Proverbs and elsewhere
(Proverbs 16:5, etc.). In fact, if we study the many biblical verses
that deal with our thoughts and mental state, we find one of the
most commonly mentioned problematic attitudes is that of
rebellious pride that puts itself before God.
This is worth thinking about. It is considerably easier to be
aware of the problem when we have fallen down in deed or in word
than it is when we have slipped in the area of attitude. Secondly,
there are many possible failings of attitude – selfishness, self-pity,
lack of concern, etc. – but perhaps none is so hard to see in
ourselves as pride. And this is an important thing to remember.
Pride has been called the worst of all sins by Christian thinkers
from Augustine to C. S. Lewis and beyond. The fact that pride is so
bad and yet is the hardest attitude to detect in ourselves may well be
the reason it is singled out so often in Proverbs and elsewhere in the
Bible.
In the next chapter we will see some of the aspects of the pride
which infects human nature, but for now we might ask: “Why is
pride so bad?” From a biblical perspective, pride is often an
“invisible” form of hate itself, the very opposite of love. In fact, we
find in the apostle Paul’s great “Love” chapter, 1 Corinthians 13:
“Love is … kind … it does not boast, it is not proud” (1 Corinthians
13:4). These three things are examples of the very opposites of the
qualities hated by Wisdom in the Book of Proverbs – wrong actions,
words, and attitudes: Love is kind – right actions; love does not
boast – right words; love is not proud – right attitude.
It is clear that if we are following the way of Wisdom, the way of
life preached by Paul and found throughout the Scriptures, the
three things that define us are our actions, our words, and our
attitudes. It is usually relatively simple to study to see if we are
living according to God’s way of life in our actions and words – it is
our attitudes that are hardest for us to see in perspective. The next
three chapters look at how we can do that successfully.
10. AT THE HEART OF PRIDE
“The LORD detests all the proud of heart …” (Proverbs 16:5).
As the old saying goes: “at the heart of pride, just as at the heart of
sin, is ‘I’.” There is nothing wrong with a healthy self-identity, of
course, or with the use of personal pronouns, but the point the
saying makes is that we can get into a world of trouble by seeing
ourselves as the center of the universe. In that sense, it is as we
begin to elevate the personal “I” above others, and ultimately place
ourselves ahead of God in our view of things, that self-identity
morphs into pride and pride into sin.
Consider, for example, the words of the prophet Isaiah spoken
against the king of Babylon. Since medieval times, at least, these
verses have often been thought to be spoken metaphorically against
the power behind that king’s throne in the form of Satan himself.
But the identity of the one addressed is not as important as the clear
picture of pride the words give us, because the picture applies
wherever pride is found:
How you have fallen from heaven, morning star, son of the
dawn! You have been cast down to the earth, you who once
laid low the nations! You said in your heart, “I will ascend to
the heavens; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I
will sit enthroned on the mount of assembly, on the utmost
heights … I will ascend above the tops of the clouds; I will
make myself like the Most High” (Isaiah 14:12-14).
It may surprise you to learn that Paul’s words quoted above from
his letter to the Philippians are among the most frequently
misunderstood in all of the apostle’s writings. On the surface they
look straightforward enough – that we should consider others more
worthy or better than ourselves – and that’s how most of us
understand them.
But it helps to avoid a false view of what our own self-concept
should be by better understanding what Paul probably meant. The
word translated “better” in Philippians 2:3 in the KJV and NKJV is
the Greek word hyperechontas. It’s translated “more significant” in
the ESV and “more important” in the HCSB, but are these
renderings accurate? Hyperechontas is an interesting word. You
probably recognize the prefix “hyper” as meaning “beyond” or
“above” (as in hyperactivity), and the word literally signifies to be
above or beyond. It is used four other times in the New Testament,
three of which are in the writings of Paul as we see below (emphases
added to show where hyperechontas is used):
Matthew makes it clear that when Jesus called, the child obediently
and trustingly came to him. It was that obedient, trusting humility
that Christ then commented on in saying that we must become like
such a child and take the child’s “lowly position.” Simply having the
child stand among the disciples did not reveal to them what kind of
person the child was. Humility, obedience and trust were the traits
of behavior that the child demonstrated and to which Jesus pointed
as examples of taking a “lowly position.” So viewing ourselves as
children has nothing to do with weakness or immaturity and
everything to do with seeing ourselves as a child should before his
or her parent – as someone who humbly obeys and trusts the
parent’s authority.
This was Christ’s own attitude. We see this from his first
recorded words in the New Testament – the time his earthly
parents found him, still a child, in the Temple saying “Didn't you
know I had to be in my Father's house?” (Luke 2:49, emphasis
added) – to his last recorded words “Father, into your hands I
commit my spirit” (Luke 23:46, emphasis added). The life of Jesus
shows repeatedly that he saw himself as a child before God, and he
clearly taught his followers to view themselves in the same way.
We must not only see ourselves as the servants of others, as we
saw in the previous chapter. We also need to continually view
ourselves as the children of God if we are to display the attitude
necessary to fully enter the family of the One we call Father. If we
can truly come to see ourselves as children before God and as
servants before others, we will have gone a long way toward
banishing the pride that infects human nature. We will have found
the perspective we need.
PART THREE:
HOW WE SEE OTHERS
13. THE IMAGE WE SEE
“So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he
created them …” (Genesis 1:27).
Earlier, in Part Two, we talked about seeing our own problems and
failures in perspective, and here we look at a natural extension of
this situation. Just as the Spirit of God causes us to see spiritual
problems in our own lives, so the Spirit also often gives us
discernment as we grow, and we begin to see the same or even other
spiritual problems in the lives of others, also.
A natural human reaction to this fact is to want to tell others how
they could change or become better. This may be based on a totally
sincere wish for the welfare of the other person, but we must always
rein in this feeling and be especially aware of two things.
First, seeing a problem in others can pose problems for us. It is
not easy to discern the faults of others and not to judge them to
some degree. Every Christian knows that we must not judge the
motives of others (Matthew 7:1-3), but every Christian is still
vulnerable to doing exactly that.
Judging others improperly often begins with how we look at
them, and we have to learn to view others as we view ourselves. We
know that we can produce excuses and rationalizations for almost
everything we do, and we have to see that others are no different.
As Jesus himself said, some would even kill Christians thinking they
were doing God a service (John 16:2). What may appear to us as a
blatant wrongdoing may not be understood that way by the
perpetrator – so we should avoid judging motives whenever
possible, even in extreme cases. If we can remember this, it makes
it a little easier to follow Christ’s injunction to pray for our enemies
who may often be more misled than we realize.
Another aspect of seeing the problems of others, even when we
are successful in not judging their motives, is the need to resist the
temptation to try to change the other person spiritually. This is
often a matter of humility. It is a matter of accepting the old
television commercial warning “Don’t try this at home, it requires a
trained professional.” It’s much easier to see problems in other
adults than to correct them as God would do, and in most cases we
need to leave that work to the One who is the only true “Trained
Professional” when it comes to matters of the Spirit.
We are not talking about matters of blatant sin within the church
where we are clearly instructed to go to a brother or sister who is in
error (Matthew 18:15-17), but about situations within our families
and personal circles where we sorrow for those who unknowingly
“oppose themselves” (2 Timothy 2:25 KJV) by less than perfect
behavior. It’s a principle we must especially apply in our marriages
and with adult children or friends with whom we interact closely.
Rather than preaching at people, even subtly, we need to pray that
they may come to see the need to change. Being a right example is
always good, but if we are not asked for our input by a mate or
friend, and we are not that person’s pastor, experience shows we
should always pray rather than preach. The spiritual discernment
we are given is not given to judge others, but to protect us or to help
them.
Oswald Chambers summarized this situation perfectly a century
ago when he wrote “God never gives us discernment in order that
we may criticize, but that we may intercede.” It’s an understanding
that is in harmony with everything we find within the New
Testament.
17. WHAT DO YOU SEE?
“When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them, because
they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd”
(Matthew 9:36).
Have you ever noticed, when reading the Gospels, how often we are
told that Jesus noticed something, saw something? We are
frequently told that he observed those around him: “Seeing the
woman…,” “seeing the man …,” “seeing the people...,” “seeing their
faith …,” – even noticing small details of people’s expressions:
“seeing that he had become sad…” (Luke 18:24). Jesus was clearly
observant, and although his eyes took in no more than those of
others, it’s obvious that rather than just looking at people Jesus saw
them in a way that others did not – it is as if he thought about
everyone he saw. The Gospel writers show that at the core of Jesus’
ministry was his ability to focus on others.
Do we have that kind of focus, or do we go through each day so
busy and absorbed in our own lives that we are conscious of others,
but not clearly seeing them in focus? The truth is, we can’t love
without looking – seeing – comprehending. Perhaps part of the
answer is that if we see ourselves as the servants of others, we will
see them differently – as Christ did.
The apostle Paul put it this way: “In your relationships with one
another, have the same mindset as Christ Jesus: Who … made
himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant…”
(Philippians 2:5-7). Think of an attentive waiter in a fine
restaurant, or a rich person’s personal servant. A servant certainly
watches those he is responsible for – staying aware and looking out
for any need that may occur. And a person’s servant doesn’t just
stop at noticing the need – the servant obviously acts swiftly to take
care of it.
That’s what the Gospels show was the natural corollary of Jesus
seeing people the way he did – he didn’t stop at seeing them, he
immediately responded to what he saw: “seeing the woman he said
…,” “seeing their faith he [healed]…,” “seeing… a large crowd he
[asked] ‘Where are we to buy bread, so that these people may eat?’”
Jesus saw and then acted with compassion according to what he
saw. So seeing people in a focused way was only the first half of
what he accomplished with his observant attitude. Always, the
seeing led to acting in some manner in order to help those who
needed help. The focused eye enabled the outstretched hand –
because ultimately, love depends on looking.
We too can accomplish so much more when we train our minds
to really see the people around us, to focus on them and to ask
ourselves what do they need and is there a way we can serve them.
It’s not just about giving physical things; it’s just as much about
seeing people’s emotional and spiritual needs. But it takes a kind of
awakening of the eyes to see like that. We won’t do it unless we
think about doing it – it takes a conscious decision to open our eyes
to really see others beyond how they fit into our own lives.
Perhaps that’s part of what the prophet Isaiah meant when he
wrote: “Then the eyes of those who see will no longer be closed…”
(Isaiah 32:3). He wasn’t talking about the blind, but about those
with vision coming to really see. That may primarily mean coming
to see spiritual truth, of course, but it can also mean coming to see
others as we should see them – as Jesus saw them – through the
eyes of an attentive servant. When we look at others like that, we
see them in a whole new way.
18. GRAINS OF SAND
“To see a world in a grain of sand…” (William Blake).
Occasionally, the fact that the population of Earth is now well over
7 billion sinks into my mind. It usually takes some kind of
Infographic to help me even begin to comprehend a billion, let
alone 7 billion, but at those times I get close, it’s easy to begin to see
how small and insignificant we really are. It’s even hard to find an
analogy to put the understanding in perspective, but seeing
ourselves as grains of sand on an ocean beach or in a great desert
brings the point home pretty well.
It’s an analogy that God himself used in promising that the
descendants of Abraham would be almost innumerable: “I will
surely bless you and make your descendants as numerous as the
stars in the sky and as the sand on the seashore” (Genesis 22:17).
Those living in the biblical age had no idea how vast the universe
really is, of course, but they could see the number of stars visible to
their own eyes and could certainly visualize the vastness of numbers
involved in comparing humans to grains of sand. It’s a simple
analogy, but the more we grasp it, perhaps the harder it is not to
feel totally insignificant. Being one of untold numbers of teeming
humans is one thing, but sand particles all look alike, don’t they?
The grains of sand analogy really can make one feel like a faceless
speck if we think about it too much.
But if you take grains of sand and magnify them under a
microscope about 250 times, you will see that every grain of sand is
in fact different. The grains may be made of shell, stone, coral, or
other substances and they are not only often vastly different, but
they are also all unique. We know that the countless stars are
different, and every elementary-schooler learns that each snowflake
is unique. But seeing that every grain of sand is different somehow
helped me see the endless variety in creation more than anything
else might have done.
The endless variety in grains of sand makes the point that God’s
promise to Abraham was not of countless, faceless masses of
descendants, but of billions and billions who are all individuals in
the eyes of God. And that’s just on the outside! Although the grain
of sand was the smallest particle known in the biblical world, we
know through modern physics that each grain of sand contains an
atomic and sub-atomic universe with its own characteristics. The
line “To see a world in a grain of sand” from the poem by William
Blake comes to mind. In fact, we can understand through the
microscope and through physics theory that every grain of sand is
different both on the outside and on the inside.
It’s an analogy that helps us realize that we may be like grains of
sand, but to the God who made the universe in all its macro and
micro cosmic levels, we are indeed all unique. So being analogous
to a grain of sand is not as dull as you might have thought, and
seeing that fact dispels the idea of our destiny as being part of some
faceless eternal multitude in standard issue, same size, white robes.
The idea of spending eternity getting to know not only God, but also
all those unique “grains of sand” who become part of the family of
God is an amazing concept - something of infinite as well as eternal
variety.
PART FOUR:
HOW WE SEE GOD
19. WHAT WE SEE IN GOD
“True religion is based on what we see in God and what others see
in us as a result of that …”
The Bible makes it very clear that humans are intended to fear God
– in fact, there are over three hundred instances of the concept in
the Old and New Testaments (Ecclesiastes 12:13, Matthew 10:28,
etc.); but a proper understanding of the concept of godly fear can
sometimes be difficult to grasp. The difficulty comes from the fact
that many people only see half of what is involved in fearing God.
For them, such fear appears to be a purely negative thing. Like a
sign saying “Beware of the Dog” or “Danger, Minefield,” the
exhortation “Fear God” suggests only negative emotional responses
of fear for them.
But there is a scripture that gives us the other half of the
equation and helps us to see the fear of God much more accurately.
That scripture is Exodus 20:20 – the verse quoted above. I think of
Exodus 20:20 as the spiritual eyesight verse – it’s the “20/20” eye
check report I need, and you do, too, if we are to see this aspect of
our relationship with God clearly.
Notice that in speaking these words, Moses told the ancient
Israelites three important things:
1. “God has come to test you, that the fear of him may be
before you”: These words make it clear that God wants to be
sure that we do have proper fear of him.
2. “that you may not sin” or “to keep you from sinning” (NIV):
The clear purpose of that fear is to protect us from hurting
ourselves or others through wrongdoing.
3. “Do not fear”: Even though God wants us to fear to do evil
so that we do not receive punishment from him, he actually
commands us not to fear him for any other reason.
When we see the balance of this verse – that we should fear God
and yet not fear him – we see that God treats his human children as
we should treat ours: he encourages proper respect for the
protection of the children themselves, but does not instill fear in
any negative sense. The need for abject fear of a stern and
judgmental God is a figment of the human imagination, as we read
in Isaiah: “… their fear of me is a commandment taught by men”
(Isaiah 29:13 ESV).
In the New Testament we see that Christ also reiterated fear of
God in proper context: “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body
but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can
destroy both soul and body in hell” (Matthew 10:28). These words
are followed immediately by the affirmation of godly love: “Are not
two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the
ground outside your Father’s care. And even the very hairs of your
head are all numbered” (Matthew 10:29-30).
That kind of balanced “fear and not fear” is analogous to the
healthy respect of a child who hesitates to disobey its parent, yet
who feels secure in the parent’s love, and who knows it need not
fear the parent in any other way than punishment for wrong doing.
When we see the true parental love of God in our lives, it should not
be difficult to see the fear of God correctly – to realize that we can
fear God positively without fearing him negatively at all.
21. THE GOD OF LAW AND LOVE
“From His right hand came a fiery law for them. Yes, He loves the
people” (Deuteronomy 33:2b-3a NKJV).
So the principle of God’s use of law as well as love is still alive and
functioning throughout the New Testament, as the writer of the
Book of Hebrews reminds us: “… the Lord disciplines the one he
loves” (Hebrews 12:6). We would not think a human parent did not
love his or her children because the parent gave them rules or
disciplined them, and we must realize that God works with us in
exactly the same way.
As we grow in understanding of God, we come to see that law
and love are actually not opposites, but complementary aspects of
his character. His laws are given out of love to protect our
relationship with him and with others. God’s love does not
somehow negate the purpose of his laws, and the purpose of his
laws does not somehow cancel out his love. The God who gave the
commandments and laws of the Old Testament was a God of love.
The same God who is said to be love in the New Testament is also a
God of law. As we come to see God more clearly, we realize he is
indeed a God of law and love.
22. DOES GOD EXPECT US TO BE
PERFECT?
“Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect”
(Matthew 5:48).