As the old saying goes, “You can learn a lot . . .
As the old saying goes, “You can learn a lot about a person
by the company he or she keeps.” That
being the case, there may be nothing more shocking about the Almighty than the
odd assortment of characters that God chooses to call friends. Consider for a moment that Abraham was a
liar, Jacob was a cheat, Moses was a murderer, Rahab a prostitute, David an
adulterer—yet all of these individuals wind up on God’s list of favorites.
If the Bible’s overwhelming lesson about God is that God is
personal and intimate (especially as revealed in Jesus Christ), then perhaps
its overwhelming lesson about us is that, despite our many flaws and frailties,
we still matter to God. Granted, we
sometimes have trouble believing that.
We think to ourselves that the Creator of the entire universe, with its
trillions upon trillions of stars and planets, must have far more important
things to worry about than us and our petty, little problems. And maybe God does. However, what concerns us matters to God
precisely because we matter to God.
In the creation accounts of ancient Mesopotamia, human
beings are portrayed as almost incidental—inferior beings fashioned only to
serve at the whims of the gods, in order to amuse them. In contrast, the book of Genesis places man
and woman at the pinnacle of creation.
According to Cicero, “The gods attend to great matters and neglect small
ones”—meaning that, since our lives are so small and trivial, the gods have
little interest in us. But the
Scriptures respectfully disagree, witnessing instead to a God who has made
human beings “a little lower than the angels, and crowned them with glory and
honor.”
Some have pointed out that this exalted view of humankind is
the chief difference between understanding life as a matter of fate or as a
matter of destiny. In other words, the
pagan religions tend to see what happens to us in terms of fate. The gods become bored or mischievous, and so
they hurl things in our direction to see how we will respond. The Bible, however, doesn’t speak of life in
terms of fate. We are not merely
slogging our way through a meaningless existence, nor are we reacting to some
god’s random whims. Quite the contrary;
we are created with a destiny, because we are the ones through whom God is
telling a story of eternal significance!
Think of it this way—if you visit a
museum that contains artifacts from ancient Egypt or Syria, you can view any
number of statues of the gods Osiris or Lil or Astarte. However, you won’t find a single statue of
God. In the first place, graven images
of the Almighty are expressly forbidden.
But even more significant, what I think we are offering the world,
instead of some inanimate statue, is a living, breathing story. It’s a story that began with Adam and Eve,
continued on with Abraham and Jacob and Moses, unfolded further with David and
Jesus and the Apostle Paul. And dare I
say it, God’s story is still being told—even through the likes of you and me!
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